Archive - Culture RSS Feed

Easter Bunny Controversy

Over at Children’s Ministry Magazine they have a poll going…

Question: For children to clearly understand the message of Easter, there should be no mention of anything related to the Easter Bunny or Easter eggs.

Well I voted and don’t usually leave a remark or anything… mainly because I don’t have much to say. But after reading some of the other remarks… thought I might as well… here is my contribution.

I do believe it is important to mention the easter bunny to our kids… One of our most important roles is to redeem the culture we live in. Children must learn to see the God whispers in every area of their lives and culture… God speaks loudly through the praise and worship of His church… but often softly through the popular culture of our world. Teach kids to seek out God in every area of the culture they come into contact with. The devil is not behind every rock and blade of grass… GOD IS!!!!

Have a look (You
need to vote in the Poll)

Muppet Reality Show?

Okay… this post from Puppets
and Stuff

Sunday, February 06, 2005
I can no longer keep silent. It’s time to blow the lid off a campaign of puppet neglect. A little bird told me that the Henson company shot a pilot for a reality show called America’s Next Muppet where puppet wannabe’s get to audition to join the Muppets. Why has this show not appeared in my television program? Why is it not in production? What television executives are depriving me of enjoying this series? What fools do not realize that the American public needs this show? Disney/ABC must pick up this show or they will be perpetrating an act that will live in infamy. Go to your windows right now. Open them up and shout, “I’m mad as hell and I want to watch America’s Next Muppet!”

This from the official site.

The muppets are pretty much my Holy Grail of entertainment memories as a child… and teenager… and adult.

If there was any show of which I could become a cult follower of it would be this one!!

Well… we will see what happens with it!

 

An act of God?

Did you know that 28% of Americans believe their prayers are always answered and 44% believe their prayers are sometimes answered?

- When asked where people pray, 96% of respondents stated they pray at home.

- More than half of Baptist respondents stated that they pray one or more times each day; while 13% of Catholic respondents do not pray at all.

- The majority of respondents who pray stated that they pray for health, family members and to give thanks to God.

- 26% of American respondents felt that the Tsunami was an act of God.

- One in ten Catholic respondents and half of the southern Evangelical respondents in America believe the devastation caused by the South Asian Tsunami was an act of God with religious significance.

Stats from GMI (Global Market Insite), a leading market research services company.

Astounding Hotel Rwanda.

We received some free preview tickets to see Hotel Rwanda last week. So myself and Beci trundled off, anticipation high in our hearts and a very nice ‘power smoothie’ high in my stomach (Blueberry, Raspberry, Yoghurt, Protein Powder, Milk… something else).

I had heard about this movie a month or so before when it was shown at various film festivals around the world and had been looking forward to it ever since.

The movie was brilliant, no real gore and violence just “implied horror” and thousands of Rwandans are slaughtered in the name of revenge. Unlike hack and slash Hollywood blockbusters this is surprisingly more horrific.

It is amazing what the human race is possible of, almost a million people murdered in a one hundred day period. But the movies real strength is seemingly avoiding the blame game and concentrating on what CAN be done to heal and move forward away from the past. You leave the movie inspired to part of the healing process, not a contributor to the death and hate.

Rather than thinking ‘what can I do?’, you leave thinking maybe I CAN do something… after all this man saves over one thousand refugees from both sides of the conflict, while a small drop in the masses that never saw another day, it made a difference to those thousand!

I find myself agreeing with a review from Brian D. Mclaren at Sojourners…

“And then I realize that’s why Hotel Rwanda seemed to me an even more Christian film (forgive me if this sounds crazy to you – but try to understand) than The Passion of the Christ. It evoked in me a wave of compassion for my neighbors around the world, whatever their color or tribe, whatever their religion or politics. And I hear our Lord saying, “As you have done it to the least of these…you have done it to me.”

Rather than pointing a finger at the ‘baddies’ in this picture, it just seems to inspire compassion…

Compassion: Not just for our friends and neighbours, but like Jesus says…
“For our enemies”.

Who’s influencing you?

If you don’t get Time magazine, you will have missed this excellent photo-essay on the 25 most influential evangelicals in America.

Click Here!

Also: Billy Graham may not be as active or as publicly visible as he once was, but he remains the most trusted spokesman for the Christian faith in the U.S. – According to George Barna in a recent poll Billy Graham comes out on top.

Click Here!

Who’s influencing You?

The Importance of Children’s Ministry

Here is a article from Randy White at the White Hutchinson Leisure and Learning Group.

Includes some research from George Barna, a very concise and excellent article.

The Importance of Children’s Ministry

by Randy White
© 2003 White Hutchinson Leisure & Learning Group

No evangelical church has unlimited resources in facilities, money and often a more limiting factor, staff and volunteers. Therefore, to be most effective in its evangelical mission of bring the Love of God to the largest number of the unchurched, it is important that a church focus its resources and efforts where there is the highest probability of success; that it focus on a niche
of the unchurched in its geographic market area who are most likely to be attracted to attend.

This is sometimes referred to as targeting for evangelism. Dr. Rick Warren, senior pastor of Saddleback Valley Community Church in Orange County, California, one of the fastest growing churches in American, points out:

“The practice of targeting specific kinds of people for evangelism is a biblical principal of ministry. It’s as old as the New Testament. Jesus targeted his ministry… [Jesus] publicly identified his ministry target as the Jews.
Was Jesus being unfair or prejudiced? Certainly not. Jesus targeted his ministry in order to be effective, not to be exclusive.”

The question that is typically raised is who should be targeted? An investigation of research on reaching the unchurched shows that families with younger children, and more specifically the children, are often the best target market.

Probably the most convincing argument why targeting children’s ministry for evangelism can be the most effective is research on the probability of people accepting Jesus Christ as their savior for a lifetime relationship. Research by George Barna and the Barna Institute of over 1,000 adults in May 2001 puts the probability at

  • 32% for children between 5 and 13 years old,
  • 4% for children between 14 and 18, and
  • 6% for people 19 years and older.

In other words, attracting younger children to a church to learn about the Love of God will have 5 to 8 times the impact of attracting the same number of older children or adults. Barna’s research on faith development and discipleship also found that the moral development of children is complete by age 9.

Non-religious oriented research on children’s moral and values development substantiates that the foundation for lifelong values and morals are formed at the earliest years.

The May 2001 Barna’s research also showed that church attendance by children has a lifelong impact. The majority (61%) of adults who attended church as children still attend regularly, while only 22% of those who were not churchgoers as children attend church today.

Early churchgoing also has an impact on whether parents bring their children to church. For parents who were churched as children, 63% take their own children to church. That’s double the proportion among adults who were not churched and now have children of their own (33%).
George Barna states:

“The research is very clear: if Jesus is not already part of their lives by the time they leave junior high school, the chances of them accepting Him as their Lord and savior is very slim (6%, to be exact). With children, it is just the opposite. Because of the challenges and insecurities they face in life, they are very open to being a part of a community of like-minded people who
grow together. Children have a tremendous influence within their families and on the choices they make in all areas of life…
The greatest evangelical window currently available is among young children.”

R. S. Lee, the author of Your Growing Children and Religion says it this way:

“The first seven years [of life] constitute the period for laying the foundations of religion. This is the most important period in the whole of a person’s life in determining his later religious attitudes.”

Research has clearly substantiated the Bible verse
“Train up a child in the way he should go, and
when he is old he will not depart from it.”
(Proverbs 22:6)

Sources

  • Barna, George; Re-Churching the Unchurched. Ventura, CA: Issachar Resources,
    2000.
  • Barna, George; Re-Churching the Unchurched. Ventura, CA: Issachar Resources,
    2000.
  • Barna Research Online. Adults Who Attended Church As Children Show Lifelong
    Effects. URL. (accessed 1 February 2003)
  • Kohlburn, Lawrence. The Psychology of Moral Development. San Francisco:
    Harper & Row, 1984.
  • Rainer, Thom S. Surprising Insights From The Unchurched. Grand Rapids, MI:
    Zondervan, 2001.
  • Rainer, Thom S. Surprising Insights From The Unchurched. Grand Rapids, MI:
    Zondervan, 2001.

For additional information on the unchurched, visit the Barna Institute website.

From White Hutchinson Leisure & Learning Group’s website

Postmodern Children’s Ministry

I forthwith present a review of “Postmodern Children’s Ministry” by Ivy Beckwith… Well its not really a review so much as the main points that really stood to me somewhat kinda… a bit…

I have been insterested in Postmodernism in relation to Ministry ever since hearing Leonard Sweet speak at a conference. He since has become one of my favourite authors and the topic of Postmodernism one of my favourites. So it was with interest that I saw Ivy Beckwith’s book at Koorong in Sydney. I am no book reviewer, so I will mostly focus on key points that really stood out to me.

Key Points:

1. The Foundation of Faith.
“Often the work that happens in the church nursery is seen as little more than baby-sitting. No wonder it’s hard to find committed volunteers! The cargivers in our church nurseries need to know that they are doing much more than helping parents”. (Pg. 45)

- It’s leadership 101… Your team NEEDS to know that they are serving a cause much bigger than themselves. If not retention rates will plummet and you will find yourselves with new leaders each year.

2. Evangelizing Children.
“The school-age years are the time that many churches and parachurch organizations advocate the aggressive evangelization of children… Unfortunately, once the prayer is prayed, parents and religious education leaders often breaethe a sigh of relief. “Whew! That one’s taken care of.”… But parents and churches whoe are truly interested in the positive soul care of the child will not be as concerned about this one-time experience as they will about the ongoin immersion of the child in the things of God and Jesus.”; (Pg. 62)

- Very good point. In our transient culture we may have only a small window of opportunity to impact a child’s life. And so we should seek for that open heart to receive salvation. But for those children who are with us for a significant period of time my goal is to see life change in their attitude and foundations in scripture. Results are found not in the moment of salvation, but often in the moment of transformation, when you see a child respond differently to the way they once would have. It took me two years with one child in our children’s ministry to see a change in their participation in worship. Just last weekend for the first time thay truly connected with Christ in worship.

3. The family factor.
“Family is everything to a child. Family is the first palce a child forms and experiences relationships. It is a child’s first experience of community. Family is where a child learns language and motor skills and where she develops her first view and understanding of the world. Family is the first place a child experiences love, intimacy, forgiveness, and physical care. Conversely, family can also be the place where a child experiences her first emotional violence, neglect, indifference, and physical hurt”;. (Pg. 101)

- Our ministry MUST include the family, otherwise our effectiveness is stunted. Every parent wants the best for their child, they are interested and motivated to see their spiritual development progress. Somehow, show your parents what you do… impress upon them every single time they come across your ministry that THEIR CHILDREN MATTER! Your hour and a half… or whatever a week cannot compare to their living breathing relationship with their kids. Love their kids and commicate that love to the parents.

David Wakerley

Page 7 of 7« First...«34567