Random Randomness

Kurt on May 27th, 2008

Missions Trip:
Our missions trip to the reservation in AZ was great. Aside from the usual missions trip highlights, a highlight for me was the fact that a huge percentage of the students that attended the trip were kids who aren’t super involved in our ministry. Many of them were kids who I’ve never really met so I had a great time learning new names, hearing new stories and all that good stuff.

Weekend Program:
It was week two of our “Heroes” series and our subject was the “Sinful Woman” (the woman who poured her perfume on Jesus’ feet). Jason Petty, one of our high school pastors taught and did a fantastic job.

Small Group Curriculum:
I’m spending all day tomorrow editing/tweaking/re-writing 10 scripts for small group video curriculum for next school year. We’re setting aside two days in a couple of weeks to try to film all 10…YIKES. But, our leaders and students seem to really like the stuff so it is time well spent.

New Regional Campus:
This weekend we will launch student ministries on our 3rd regional campus in Corona, a community about 45 minutes East. Sadly, I won’t be able to be at the launch because I’ll be on vacation.

Coke:
It’s time to make it official: I have switched my loyalty from Pepsi to Coke. Even typing this makes me feel disloyal and like I’m betraying an old friend. I’m sorry, Pepsi.

Apache Indians…Here We Come!

Kurt on May 22nd, 2008

I’m leaving in about an hour on our Mission trip to AZ to partner with a youth center on an Apache Indian reservation. I’m going along with a team of four dads as part of the “early crew” who will shop for food, supplies, meet with the leader of the youth center etc. so we’re ready to go when our students arrive tomorrow night.

Likely won’t be posting much over the long weekend.

Grappling For Resources?

Kurt on May 21st, 2008

Jr. High Grapple, a new resource from Group Publishing has me really, really interested. Much more than merely curriculum it is an online community, gives students a chance to vote for upcoming program elements and more.

I’ll be really interested to see how this resource is received and used….I love the idea, but it also feels really different and risky, which is why I love it so much!

If you try it, I would love to hear your reports.

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Kurt on May 20th, 2008

I’ve tried creating “features” in the past but I haven’t had much success being faithful to them, but I’m going to try it again. The Good, The Bad and The Ugly will be a new occasional post in which I’ll feature a good, a bad and an ugly from my ministry.

THE GOOD:

PRIZE WHEEL: We invested a couple hundred bucks for a decent quality spinning prize wheel. It has about 30 slots and each slot has a different prize listed. Instead of constantly buying prizes that we think kids might like (and spending way too much time and money…) we decided to buy a tub full of goofy prizes and let kids spin the wheel to see what they win. Plastic dinosaur, can of corn, rubber spatula, pair of socks etc. are all on the wheel and ready to be won. Students totally love it.

THE BAD:

WEEKEND FOLLOW UP: Man, we just can’t seem to get this one right. I really want to do a better job of following up on students who attend our weekend program, but I have an aversion to mandated check in systems. The result: really poor follow up! Because we don’t take it seriously, we simply aren’t following up on students the way we should. I have to figure this one out…probably just sucking it up and creating a mandatory check-in of some sort.

THE UGLY:

VOLUNTEER DISILLUSIONMENT:

Had a tough meeting with a key volunteer in our ministry the other day. We mad a major decision that effected [...]

Continue Reading “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly”

Monday Miscellaneous

Kurt on May 19th, 2008

- Joined Twitter about a week ago. Interesting. I’m surprised that I enjoy getting frequent updates from buddies.

- This was a great weekend in our JH ministry. We kicked off our “Heroes…from average to awesome” series with a lesson on Gideon. Lots of creative elements, great music and a pretty good lesson. We had students totally engaged from start to finish.

- I’m sure I’ll see Indiana Jones even though I’m not a huge fan and I’ve heard this one is a bit of a let down which is a bummer considering all the hype and incredible hassle to get it done.

- It’s hot, hot, hot and I’m realizing that I’m not quite ready for Summer. I’m ready for all the fun it brings, just not for the heat!

- Last night, a crew of us snuck into the Refinery, our soon-to-open student center, to play the inaugural game of basketball on the new court. High temps mixed with stuffy building mixed with lack of running water. But we had a Great time.

- Not sure which I’m more excited about: Our upcoming Mission trip to the Apache Indian Reservation in AZ. or my vacation that immediately follows. I haven’t taken a full week off in well over a year and we have absolutely nothing planned for this one….which is PERFECT!

Leadership Gold #5

Kurt on May 16th, 2008

The 5th, and final, nugget from Stanley:

“When your memories exceed your dreams, the end is near.”

- Most churches are living in the “good old days” and trying to figure out how to recapture them instead of creating new ones.

Takeaway: Don’t let past success or current momentum overshadow your vision…keep vision out in front.

Question for junior high ministry: Are you more excited about the past successes of your ministry of the future potential? What memories from the past are actually jeopardizing your future?

Twitter Dee, Twitter Dumb?

Kurt on May 15th, 2008

Okay, I’m not so sure about this but I got talked into trying twitter. Sounds kinda dumb, but sure seems like lots of people are lovin’ it so I’ll give it a shot.
www.twitter.com/kurtjohnston

If you have an account let me know and I’ll follow you.

Leadership Gold #4

Kurt on May 15th, 2008

The fourth nugget from Andy Stanley:

“If we got kicked out and the board brought in somebody new, what would they do? Why don’t we just walk out, come back in and do it ourselves?”

- Sometimes the most obvious, important changes are the ones current leadership doesn’t see or is unwilling to make.

Takeaway: Acknowledge what’s not working and own up to why you aren’t doing anything about it.

Questions for Junior High Ministry: What’s in decline? Where are we manufacturing energy (in other words, what things are we spending way too muchtime convincing ourselves and other people are important, when nobody seems to believe that’s the case)? What underlying assumptions do we have that may no longer be accurate?

Leadership Gold #3

Kurt on May 14th, 2008

The third random leadership thought from Andy Stanley at Drive:

“What do I believe is impossible to do in my field but if it could be done would fundamentally change my business?”

- Most great advances were once viewed as impossible or unreasonable.

Takeaway:
Pay attention to the people who are breaking the rules.

Question:
What is the “impossible dream” in your junior high ministry? What is something you want to see happen but have never been able to achieve?

Think big…what is something that can’t happen, but if it could would fundamentally change junior high ministry as a whole?

Leadership Gold #2

Kurt on May 12th, 2008

Another of Andy Stanley’s random leadership thought from his closing general session at DRIVE.

Thought #2
“The next generation product almost never comes from the previous generation.”

Andy’s takeaway for us:
Change is coming, and change is usually good. Most of the significant changes in ministry won’t be brought about by those leading the way today. They will be brought about by the next generation of church leaders. Current church leaders need to decide if the will fight change or fund change. Older leaders need to learn to be students not just critics.

What might this mean in a junior high setting?
- How much of my current approach to junior high ministry is fresh? How much of it is simply stuff that has worked for me in the past and doesn’t seem broken so I’m not really open to changing?

- How can older JH leaders begin to “fund” some of the thinking and innovation of younger leaders?

- Am I willing to learn from younger leaders who will usher in next season of JH ministry, or am I a critic of their way of thinking, leading etc.?