Trevin Wax is one of my favorite bloggers. Today he wrote an absolutely awesome piece called Anonymous Youth Pastor’s Letter to a Parent. It talked about some of the struggles youth pastors go through and how we as parents of youth can support our kids’ youth pastors better. I commented that the next article should come from the parent’s perspective, and that, being a parent of youth, boy, could I write that article. One of Trevin’s readers suggested I go ahead and write it, and I thought it sounded like a fun and challenging project, so here’s the result. (The first three paragraphs are an homage to Trevin’s letter.)
CAVEAT: This is addressed to an amalgam or “everyman” youth pastor, not to any of my kids’ youth pastors/workers past or present. In fact, some of the things I mention in the letter are things my kids’ youth pastors got RIGHT that I really appreciated.
Dear Youth Pastor,
I need to get something off my chest.
When I first put my child into your youth group, you told me how excited you were to be showing my kids what it means to love Jesus, be part of His Church, and grow as a Christian. You told me you were praying for my child and that you had his back. You had high hopes for the youth ministry.
I had high hopes too. But I must confess that I am frustrated right now because I feel like youโre working against me, not with me.
My husband and I are Christian parents doing our best to pour the gospel into our children every day. We understand that we are the ones responsible to God for the spiritual upbringing of our children, and we take that responsibility seriously. Very seriously. And that includes what he is exposed to in youth group.
โLet no one look down on your youthโ notwithstanding (update: please see my remarks regarding this reference in the comments section below), youโre 25. You know nothing about parenting a teenager. I repeat: nothing. No, the fact that you and your wife have an infant or a three year old does not qualify you as a veteran parent. I have a couple of decades of life experience and parenting on you. I remember being 25. It was that glorious time of my life when I knew everything and had fresh ideas that people in their 40s just wouldnโt understand because they had passed the โcoolโ stage of life.
Look deep into my eyes, Bub. I am your future.
Listen to me when I explain to you that my kids donโt need another peer. They need mature, godly leadership. Not a buddy. Not an idol to be emulated with the latest clothes from Abercrombie, the hippest glasses frames, edgy tattoos and piercings, and enough product in your hair to put bouffanted church ladies to shame.
You are not a rock star.
Youโre a teacher. Youโre a caretaker of young souls, and youโre influencing them for eternity. One way or the other. And one day, youโll stand in front of God and answer for the way you led my, and other parentsโ, children. Makes your knees knock a little, doesnโt it? Good. It should.
So, when I drop my child off at your youth Bible study or Sunday School class, hereโs what I expect. When you say you want to โshow my kids what it means to love Jesus, be part of His Church, and grow as a Christian,โ I expect that to mean that you will teach them the Bible. Not some watered down, comic book, MTV, โWhat does this verse mean to you?โ version of a Bible story, but the whole counsel of God. I want you to put more time and effort into prayer and studying Godโs word so you can teach it properly than you put into hooking up the oh-so-fabulous light show and making inane videos that appeal only to the basest nature of eighth grade boys.
Do you know what these kids are learning in school? If they can be expected to learn Shakespeare and higher math, you can expect them to learn sound biblical doctrine.
When youโre choosing a Bible study curriculum or DVD, or youโre looking at a Christian camp or concert to take the kids to, do your homework. Just because somebody claims to be a Christian author, speaker, pastor, or worship leader doesnโt make it true. Where is this person, doctrinally? Whatโs his church background and training? Listen to his sermons. Examine the lyrics of her songs. Read some of his books. Does this person rightly divide the Word of truth? Does he exalt Christ and revere Godโs word? Does he call sinners- my child and the other children in your youth group- to repentance and faith in Christ, or are his sermons an exercise in navel gazing and nagging about how to be a better person?
Lead my children to serve the church. And Iโm not talking about getting paid to do it, either. Theyโre old enough to help clean up after Wednesday night supper, help in the nursery, assist with a childrenโs class, serve at a senior citizensโ banquet, work at a church work day, help set up chairs and tables, etc. Over the last few years, the youth group has become the entitlement community of the church, always asking for handouts and rarely giving anything back. Letโs teach them to serve. Because the youth that serve today will be the adults that serve tomorrow.
Teach my children that a mission trip is not a glorified vacation, and that missions isnโt just feeding the hungry or building houses for the homeless. Missions is proclaiming the gospel before and after and while theyโre doing those things. Teach my children how to share the gospel properly and encourage them to do it often.
Lead by example:
1. Plan ahead and be organized. If you know youโre going to need to do six fundraisers for youth camp, start them in September and space them out over a few months. Donโt wait until mid-April and have one every weekend. Show up on time. Secure your parent chaperones and drivers well in advance. Follow through on what you say youโre going to do.
2. Obey those in authority over you. Whether that means following the pastorโs instructions or obeying the speed limit and not putting 20 people in a 15 passenger van, when you flout the rules, youโre tacitly teaching my kids to do the same.
3. Be a man, not an overgrown adolescent. Boys, especially, need to see strong examples of what it means to be a godly man, and these are becoming rarer and rarer in the church. They already know how to be adolescents. Show them how to be men.
4. Prioritize safety and chaperonage. Do you know how many horror stories Iโve heard about children dying in church van wrecks on the way back from youth camp, and youth sneaking off and having sex during a lock in? I donโt want that to be my kid. I love him far more than you could ever think about loving him. Donโt be lax about keeping him safe and monitoring his whereabouts and behavior.
And, finally, my dear youth pastor, know that I love you and want to come alongside you and help in any way I can. You see, my husband used to be a youth pastor, so I know itโs a tough and often thankless job. Iโm praying for you as you seek to disciple that band of crazed teenagers in the youth room.
Go with God, dear youth pastor. Go with God.