When only the PK shows up...
Good Friday Prayer Lunch. It's a thing
we have every year with our youth group. It's always a great event.
We have done everything from collect congregational prayer requests
and pray for hours in the church sanctuary to going to see a
Christian movie and having a discussion over ice cream. We have
prayed on an “adventure lunch” trying some new restaurant no one
had been too. We have prayed over towns as we drove around with pizza
in our laps. We have stuffed a bajillion Easter eggs for a kids hunt
and prayed over our Sunday school children by name.
My absolute favorite year was the one
where we went to the Toledo Museum of Art and searched for sacred art
that depicted parts of Jesus life. When we found two in the record
that were missing on the wall they took us into a special room,
brought the paintings out from restoration, and let us have a private
viewing. World, officially rocked. The Good Friday prayer lunch,
while super casual from year to year, has always felt like one of
those corner stone pieces to our youth ministry.
Then this year, no one could come. It
wasn't a huge dramatic deal. It just was. Everyone had something else
on their schedules, appointments to keep because they were off
school, family to visit out of town, life stuff. The only person who
could come, in fact, was my daughter.
Conundrum. Hmmmmm.... I turned to Dave
late one night, “I'm so disappointed. No one can come to the Good
Friday Prayer Lunch. I guess I'm canceling it.”
Dave, ever the wise one between the two
of us, replied, “What about Macee? What would you do if it was any
other youth? If just one person could come, but it was someone other
than Macee?”
Valid point. “Usually I'd let them
pick. We'd do whatever they wanted to do. You know, bond and all
that.” A smile was beginning to form on my face. He had a really
good point. How had I missed this, just because she was my child. She
needed youth ministry too. What an opportunity! God had just gifted
me with an excuse to shower some love on one of my youth, and that
youth happened to live within the walls of my own home.
Almost twelve years ago, when Dave and
I started doing youth ministry, I read a book aptly named, Youth
Ministry in Small Churches by Rick Chromey, put out by Group
Publishing. I felt overwhelmed by the idea of youth ministry with a
group of 3 or even 5. What if no one came? How do you design programs
for such a small group? I was used to the 20-30 youth or more at an
event, when I was growing up in a large church. I remember very
little of the book except this one piece of advice – if one youth
shows up, you minister to them. I remember the author saying
something about taking them to lunch or getting ice cream and the
opportunity that this moment gives to grow together, to love on them
in a whole different way than your average youth ministry program.
And so we embraced that concept
wholeheartedly. Over the years we have been blessed to know our youth
in a completely different way than I ever expected. We have laughed
with them, cried with them, gathered around impromptu campfires on
lazy summer evenings, held spur of the moment road trips, and
eventually held their babies while their tiny little foreheads were
marked in baptism. These special relationships I would never trade
for anything in a million years.
So, Dave was right. Why wouldn't I
offer my daughter this same ministry? Why wouldn't I accept this gift
of time and energy spent ministering to one of the people closest to
my heart, and do it in the name of the youth group at St. Luke
Lutheran Church, Wauseon, Ohio. I wanted her to know that she was
worth a whole program. That if she could show up, so would I, and so
would the Church. She was worth not canceling for.
I think sometimes we overlook the
faithful children of the church standing right in front of us. We
tuck them in at night, we kiss their foreheads, and we forget that
they need parents, but they need pastors and youth leaders, and
faithful Churches too. They need to know that they are a valuable
piece of the whole.
How many of you deal with this
struggle? Your kids are the only ones in Sunday school? Or in youth
group?
They are worth ministering to, I
promise. I know it's tiring and can feel disappointing when they are
the only consistent ones, but they are no less the Church because
they live at your house.
And churches, these PKs or DCEKs or
TeacherKs, they are all worth a programming budget and time spent by
you and by those who you have called to lead. Just one youth, no
matter who they are matters to the Kingdom, to the Living God.
“Mace, what would you like to do for
the Good Friday Prayer Lunch? Your choice. No one else can come, so
it's me and you!” Her face lit up. “Fun!” she said, and gave my
shoulders a squeeze.
We ended up going to see a movie. We
cracked up and cried big fat tears together. We ate copious amounts
of popcorn with ridiculous amounts of butter on it. We shared the
largest, most unhealthy pop I've ever seen. We prayed for one
another, our lives, our friends, and God's plans. We came home and
deemed it a very successful Good Friday Prayer Lunch.
I'm so glad I didn't cancel. I'm so
very glad for the privilege to minister to a precious child of God,
no matter who she calls Dad and Mom.
The LORD your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves. He will take great delight in you;
Zephaniah 3:17a
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