About the Children’s Department: Take the Blinders Off!

[ad_1]

Okay – today I’m writing about something I care so very much about . . . Children’s Ministry. Some of you who read this need to know, what I’m writing doesn’t really apply to your Children’s Ministry . . . but before you read a bit further and decide your ministry isn’t the ministry I’m talking about, read the whole post and ask God to remove your “blinders” and help you honestly evaluate to see if there might be at least some of what I say which applies to your ministry.I don’t have horses . . . the one time I rode a horse the entire camp laughed about it all summer long (I was a counselor at a camp and they thought it would be nice for the counselors to have an opportunity to ride the horses . . . I just couldn’t get my horse to go straight and kept getting “stuck” in the bushes – it was an experience!) 

However, even though my personal horse experience is limited – and not highly successful – I do know about “blinders”. They are put on some horses to help keep them from being distracted by the things around them. Blinders can be good, but I think in Children’s Ministry they can also keep us from being effective.

We don’t know what we don’t know. We think we know what we are doing and we move forward, but when we look back for results – children and families with changed lives – we see our Youth Ministries still ended up being a “salvage ministry” because we really missed the mark in our Children’s Ministry. So, what can we do to keep from “missing the mark”? Consider the following –

When we do not equip parents and grandparents, do not measure what we are doing, and do not know what we do not know, we end up paying too high a price . . . we lose our children. The price is too high to pay. Take the “blinders” off and be sure your ministry is headed in the right direction!

[ad_2]

Source link

Write a comment
Verified by MonsterInsights