As you read, you will understand why his unofficial moniker is "Well-Said Ed."
Thanks Ed.
Children’s Ministry Principles for Lead Pastors
by Ed Pagh
Very few senior/lead pastors have Children's Ministry experience.
What's even more interesting, if we're to be completely candid, is that many
pastors are scared of Children's Ministry and would rather have a root canal
than speak at a kids' service or teach a class of 2nd and 3rd graders. So we
find volunteers, hire professionals, and coerce people into serving in the
trenches where few pastors dare to tread. Or maybe we just feel as though
Children's Ministry is not what we're paid to concern ourselves with. Our job
as a senior/lead pastor is to lead adults, and if I as a leader can ensure that
the kids who attend on Sundays and mid-week are safe and have fun, then the
parents are happy and we can focus our time and effort on church business and
ministry. News Flash: in a healthy church children should comprise from
18-25% of your weekly attendance. Does it not strike anyone else as odd that a
leader would be so uninformed and personally uninvolved in the lives and
spiritual formation of nearly one-quarter of those they lead? Does a good
shepherd ignore the lambs and focus only on the rams and ewes?
It is true that many senior/lead pastors do have student
ministries experience, but ministry to children is very different from ministry
to teens. Yes, both groups are minors, attend school, and have parental
authority in their lives, but there are many huge dissimilarities. Unlike
teens, children are typically mental sponges and open to teaching, relationally
trusting, intellectually cognitive thinkers and processors, and socially
inclusive. They want to learn, want to please, and want to experience God.
There are always exceptions to these developmental generalities, but the point
is that past experience as a youth pastor does not automatically translate as
experience with and knowledge of Children's Ministry.
What follows are seven key Children's Ministry principles for
senior/lead pastors that will hopefully serve to create value and purpose for
Children's Ministry in today's church. In an effort to keep this as brief as
possible, what is presented are the core concepts, many of which need to be
unpacked and expanded upon in more detail. Think of what follows as the
executive summary of a much larger discussion.
Principle
#1
Children
are the church of today; the church of tomorrow’s leaders.
Often times children are thought of, even if only subconsciously,
as the church of tomorrow. I can see why. They are not adults so they cannot
participate and contribute like adults. They cannot think abstractly, cannot teach,
are not independent, and are unskilled, so their contributions are limited. But
does the fact that children are limited in the ways they can be involved in
church life mean that they are not or should not be an active part of church
life to the fullest extent possible? Sequestered
to classes or Children's Church, kids never hear their pastor's voice, so they
do not develop a relationship with him or her. They never get to observe full
worship, watch their parents model worship, or even serve alongside their
parents.
This limited thinking on our part as pastors may cause us to
inadvertently fall into one of two traps. The first trap is to defer children's
involvement until they are in their late twenties or married. Until then,
Children's Ministry is a de facto child care during church. But I believe when
Jesus said to allow the children to come and spend time with him that he meant
children should have equal access to him and be included not excluded,
incorporated not isolated. Thus, Children’s Ministry is not childcare while the
adults do “real” ministry. Rather, it is a way to include and incorporate
children into the life of the church and should be designed as such. The second
trap is to use children as a tool "grow the church" (i.e. to get to
the parents). I hear this a lot. If you want your church to grow (more adults),
have a great Children's Ministry. While this may be an effective short-term
strategy, I believe we need to have a great Children's Ministry for the
long-term sake of the kids and our future. The moms and dads that attend as a
result are a bonus, not the goal.
Although the level of children's involvement is limited to the
level of their development, children have much to contribute to church life.
Consider ways to include them as much as possible in church life: worship,
serving, teaching, sharing, helping, etc. Also, think long-term. Prepare/teach
children for college, not for Jr. High. Find ways to connect Children's
Ministry with church life and family life, as well as forging a partnership
with the parents to nurture spiritual formation in children. And without
question, provide sufficient resources to accomplish the goal.
Principle
#2
Children
are the largest marginalized (peripheral) and powerless group
in our church and we should serve them as such.
in our church and we should serve them as such.
Have you ever considered children in this light? Think about it.
Children cannot serve themselves. They cannot fund themselves. They cannot lead
themselves. They are dependent on adults for virtually everything. This makes
them dependent and powerless, which puts them on the margins of society as a
whole. This doesn't mean we don't value children. We do. But socially we value
them less than adults and more than the family pet. Consider, for example,
where children often sit at a large Thanksgiving family meal...at the
children's table. Yes, there are parents whose lives seem to revolve around
their kids, but by and large adults value adults more than children.
In the gospels we find that Jesus spends much of his time
ministering to the poor, the lame, the blind, the sick, women, and others who,
in his day, were powerless and dependent and living on the margins of society. We, the
church, are called to care for and minister to, like
Jesus, those on the margins in our culture. So we develop compassion and
benevolence ministries like food closets and helping with the homeless, the
widow, and the orphan. But we don't ever list serving our church kids with this
group. Why not? They are just as powerless and dependent. I contend that as a
marginalized, powerless people group, children represent those in the margins
of society who are also powerless and dependent. Wait a minute, you say,
children have their parents to care for them. Sure, but not during church they
don't, and that's the point. As churches have become more life-stage based in
approach, children have been pushed farther and farther to the margins, so much
so that in many churches today they are considered a disruption and distraction
in the adult worship service. How do we change this attitude? We serve the
children. In fact, I believe that if we can learn to serve children, we can
learn to serve anyone. It's time to re-value our children, to excise the idea
of childcare, and to serve and love children as a way to learn to serve and
love our neighbor.
Principle
#3
When we
capture a child’s imagination we can capture their hearts.
Jesus was a master at capturing the imaginations and hearts of his
audience. How? He taught in parables and metaphors, many times drawing from the
rich supply of his teaching environment: animals, birds, flowers, people, etc.
But parables and metaphors require abstract thinking, which makes them
interesting for adults, but difficult for kids who tend to be concrete
thinkers. Children, though, do have vivid imaginations that stimulate learning.
Creative and imaginative play is their way of learning and practicing social
behaviors, responsibility, relationships, etc. This is why toys, crafts, and
other hands on stimuli are important for learning and development. Children's
Church and Sunday School usually do not have a supply of Bible-based toys with
which to teach and play, but we can create an environment through decor, paint,
furniture, and staging that can stimulate the imaginative and learning centers
of their brain. Visit any children's museum or learning center and you will
find colorful, tactile, and inspiring environments. When we do this in our
churches, we open the door to the child's imaginative learning, which is a
gateway to their head and heart through which we share the love of Jesus and
the gospel story. We should be willing to invest sufficient resources to make
Children's Ministry spaces beautiful and engaging learning environments.
Principle
#4
Adults
can tolerate children’s environments better than
children can tolerate adult environments.
children can tolerate adult environments.
The interior designs of most churches are not kid-friendly
environments. Instead they are bare, white, sterile rooms with a minimum of
color and decor. The thinking behind these bland environments is usually
functional in nature. To get the most out of our facilities, our rooms are
multi-use, multipurpose. Since many groups, departments, events, and age groups
share the space, we leave our rooms plain and drab, decorating only when the
women's ministries closet is graciously opened. Children do not tolerate drab
well. They get bored with it. White-walled rooms are antithetical to learning
for kids. As a result, I believe we should cater to the children when it comes
to room decor. Strike a balance, if need be, but adults can tolerate colorful
walls, murals, even high-end tactile set design for the sake of kids better
than kids can tolerate dull white walls.
Principle
#5
The
purpose of Children's Ministry is to prepare children, not protect children.
Hang on. Don't think this means that safety is not important. It
is. Safety (physical, emotional, relational, spiritual) in Children’s
Ministry is paramount and should be incorporated into everything that is done:
environment, activities, leaders, check-in/out, peers, etc. However, safety is
not the primary goal of Children’s ministry; rather it is a primary responsibility
as we minister to our children. There is a difference. Let's place the emphasis
on discipleship while simultaneously being safe and secure. Children's Ministry
is not the babysitter. They have a God-given mission to reach and teach
children for Christ.
Principle
#6
Adults
find they are called to Children's Ministry
after they become involved, not before.
after they become involved, not before.
I have met very few adults who have told me they felt called to
serve children before they ever tried serving children. Almost every called, committed
Children's Ministry worker I've known has been coerced, begged, or bribed into
serving children, then fell in love and felt called to continue to serve
children. In part this is because Children's Ministry is, for the most part,
invisible to the adults except for the few minutes a parent is picking up or
dropping off a child. This is also partly because adults do not understand what
it means to serve in Children's Ministry. Many of them have the misconception
that serving children is like playground duty during a lunchtime recess or
refereeing a soccer game of 6 year old girls. Lead pastors need to be aware
that simply asking people to serve where they feel called will likely not
produce many children's workers. The lead pastor can do three things to
publically help with Children’s Ministry: 1) connect serving children as a
gateway to other serving ministries, 2) help adults see the connected value of
Children’s Ministry with the life of the church, and 3) have a personal passion
and enthusiasm (value) for Children's Ministry. The attitude and perspective of
the lead pastor towards Children's Ministry will set the tone for how the rest
of the adults in the church will perceive Children's Ministry. The kids cannot
advocate for themselves, and you as the lead pastor are the most influential
voice in the church.
One long-term effective way of grooming adults to love and serve
children is to implement a way for youth to serve children. This is a ministry
in itself which will need supervision, support, resources, etc., but over the
long run can raise up adults who appreciate the importance and need for an
effective and well-resourced ministry to children.
Principle
#7
The
primary children’s pastors in your church are the parents.
Even if we have the best Children's Ministry environment, workers,
curriculum, etc., the reality is that we only get to spend two hours a week
with the kids. In reality, we get less time because of sports events, sickness,
vacations, adult attendance rhythms, etc. Our influence in the spiritual
formation of the children that attend our churches is minimal. It's the parents
who are the primary people responsible for the spiritual formation of their
children. This is why when the nation of Israel is told to love God with their
whole being, the very next command connected to this idea is to pass this love
of God along to their children as they experience life together. Therefore, the
more our parents transform into Christlikeness, the more effectively children
will be discipled.
Part of an effective Children's Ministry will have a parenting
component. This can take many forms and be approached in many ways: classes,
involvement, preaching, outings, events, etc. The key is to help parents both
understand and embrace their own spiritual growth for the sake of their
children. Tensions between parents and children are generally not resolved by
fixing the child or new discipline techniques, but by the parents taking
responsibility to transform and mature spiritually.
One last note: As pastors we are concerned that people attend
worship on Sundays, and rightly so. But this presents a challenge for churches
with only one service. If we can't release parents and others from worship to
serve our children, we have a conflict of values that needs resolved. Why is it
that we think that Sunday morning is the only time our sheep get a shot at the
trough? I propose we release people into ministry and let people serve and miss
hearing the sermon on Sunday (perhaps on a rotation basis?). Then we need to
get creative and take advantage of social media, bible studies, small groups,
and other ways to help people grow in the Word. Truth be told, most people grow
more when serving and teaching than just passively listening to even the best
of sermons.