Youth Ministry gets a facelift
We’ve got a lot of friends all around the country who we get to see at national events, conferences, gatherings, and the like – ministry folks, young and old, from mainline, evangelical, emerging and other parts within the mosaic we call the church. We really like hanging with ministry people and listening to their stories. (We love it when they bring us snacks as well. Just saying.)
Events are a great opportunity for us to play catch-up and talk about all the good stuff sparkhouse is doing. We talk about our new Green VBS curriculum (ReNew). We also talk about re:form, and how it uses students’ own creativity and participation to truly educate (literally “to draw out” or “to bring out” by a process of discovery) from within the community. Juxtapose this with the old model of indoctrination, where pastors have to hurriedly cram as much theology as possible into young brains, and in the process, reduces their students’ roles into passive receivers of data. We explain that re:form just isn’t like that at all: it’s been re-formed, from the ground up.
That’s when they get The Look. That glossy-eyed, hopeful, “oooOOoo-COOL-I-Can’t-Wait-To-See-This” look that tells us we’re on to something big here. We listen to our friends talk about their ministries, and ask them about how their youth ministry programs fit in to the rest of their vision. And that’s when they share that their programs are simply not working. Kids are dropping like flies. They can’t bear to go another year using the old curriculum they’ve been handed.
Leaders and kids alike are primed and ready for something completely different. Which is why we’ve been heads-down working with a brilliant team of gifted theologians, youth ministers, artists, writers and animators to create re:form. Thousands of collective hours later, we’ve emerged with a whole new model for youth ministry.
re:form trusts that your own community of faith — combined with scriptures and the active participation of the Holy Spirit — is equipped to teach, guide and direct youth without a mandated list of “this is what you have to believe”. Think of re:form as the spiritual version of Tinkering School.
And what we came up with is causing those same youth ministry friends to get really jazzed:
We painstakingly drew and animated 40 hilarious animated short films that allow kids to encounter concepts from the historic Christian faith. These videos mash up biblical characters, pop culture, woolly mammoths, zombies, ducks (you gotta have ducks, right?), and guys in hazmat suits to get their sometimes snarky point across. See a sample. The videos are coupled with an Anti-Workbook for every student — that’s where they do a bunch of drawing, cutting and pasting, journaling, planning, reflecting and just thinking.
Leaders get the aptly titled Leader Guide — all the tools youth ministers, teachers, pastors, parents or volunteers need to facilitate genuine conversations and help kids respond.
So our question for you is, does re:form get you jazzed? Tell us about it. We want to know what you think!




