4. How are you using technology and social media to reach and teach your teens?
It’s a blessing and a curse. A blessing in terms of being able to reach so many so fast. A curse because it can be a temptation to ONLY use social media as a communication point. While Facebook as a tool has been extremely helpful, and it does allow us to reach to where kids and parents are, I wouldn’t say it’s our most valuable tool because it limits mass communication in some ways. Even from a fan page, you can send updates, but it goes to a separate inbox, making it not as visible to students. We can’t do mass wall posts, and if we use it too much, students just end up ignoring our communication. To top that off, not all families are connected to Facebook, and of the ones who are, maybe half of them are addicted to it. So really, if we’re being honest with ourselves, this should only serve as a supplement to our more concrete methods of getting word out.
By more concrete methods, I mean specifically tangible things we can put in the hands of those we’re trying to reach or put in front of them. Repetition is essential. So aside from week to week handouts, billboards we print monthly schedules on and other papers we hand out that students love to throw away (yes I said it), we still haven’t abandoned snail mail. In fact, we probably see more response to advertising and promoting that way than anything else. It may not be as visible as the social avenues, but parents notice it, remember it, put it on the fridge, etc. And if it’s a goal of a youth ministry to work WITH not against parents, this is a good thing.
I’m going to venture out and say that most of us in ministry use social media because we “have to.” Because everyone else is doing it and it’s the right thing to do, we give in to the pressure and use social media for advertising and promotion purposes. Does it work for that? A little, probably. But I’ll take the risk of saying social media is more useful for teaching and instructing than it is for advertising. Think about it, our students are bombarded with screen media every day of their lives. Television ads, internet popup ads, billboards, magazine ads, myspace ads, facebook ads on the sidebar that we can choose whether or not we like them and even those annoying 30 second ads that you see when you are watching a show on Hulu. What are our teens programmed to do? TUNE OUT THE NOISE!
Here’s a valuable question to ask: Is what you’re pushing/promoting using social media just more noise?
My thoughts on teaching stem directly from the final thoughts on reaching out using social media and maybe even serve as an answer to the problems presented. We try to use the above mentioned avenues as a way of continuing a discussion we had in person. Discussions can stem from what the students are learning in our midweek growth groups to what the message was about or even something we know God is challenging one of our students with. Questions are great discussion points not only to get a conversation started, but to see where our students stand on what they know and what they believe. It’s much more effective than a survey or something they’ll begrudgingly fill out. It requires intentionality on our part and a willingness to do work in order to pull answers out of the clutter rather than just expect students to answer direct questions we put in front of them about where they are in their spiritual journey.
The better your ministry is at drawing people in to discussions and teaching they know they’ll be fed by with the help social media, the more receptive they’ll be when you use it for “noise.” Make sense? Not only will our kids pay attention to what we’re posting, if we do a good job and are consistent with it, they could eventually begin to look for it! Not good at consistently handling the online or social media stuff? Hand it to someone who is good at it, who you can trust, and who will consistently stem conversations from what is happening face to face in your ministry to the media sites.
As a ministry we also use Youversion.com to help our students not just with consistent study of the word but with being committed to studying the word, which we feel is more important than using guilt to fuel a teens devotional life. God bless lifechurch.tv for believing it’s more powerful to empower others and give away their resources than becoming rich off it. Ustream.tv has been very helpful with online discussions and Bible studies, allowing the face of the presenter to be in the home of everyone tuning in without actually being there. It has a live chat function that is almost “idiot-proof” where teens can sign in and be a part of the conversation live with the presentation. While we do have a Twitter that posts updates from our youth fan page, no teens use it and literally scoff every time they see the logo or a link to our Twitter page. Let’s be honest, Twitter is primarily used by adults. Kids think it’s silly and foolish in most cases. But if a parent is active on Twitter and chooses to follow us, it’s one more way to touch base, and the way we have it set up is automatic so there’s no extra effort given on our part as using it as another means of connecting.
5. If you were teaching youth ministry to prospective youth pastors what are the top 3 things you would say to them?
- Parents are your friends! Learn to get along with them, utilize them and work with them. The earlier you do this, the earlier you’ll have success. THEY ARE NOT THE ENEMY, odds are they’re concerned about their child’s best interest.
- Multiply yourself early and often. The sooner you decide to let go, not have to be the “relevant guy,” and allow others to help lead, the longer you’ll last in youth ministry. It’s the fastest way to become a “lifer.”
- Learn to rest. Want to burn out and do something stupid or leave ministry before retirement? Work 7 days a week, don’t protect your Sabbath time and be sure to be accessible non-stop. If you don’t learn to rest you’ll learn to resent your ministry and the people you serve.
Part 1 and Part 2 of the Interview.
Eric Ebbinghaus is the Director of Student Ministries at Greeley Wesleyan Church in Greeley, CO.
He blogs at www.ericebbinghaus.com.
Follow him on Twitter.
Check out the church website.