A Youth Minister to Youth Ministers

I am blessed to be the Executive Director of the Center for Youth Ministry Training. My daughters occasionally ask me what I do at work. This question has an easier answer for folks who sell things or make things or help people or teach. My typical response when my girls ask me is, “I answer questions.” Answering questions is the primary role of my job. I work with the CYMT staff to answer questions. I answer residents’ questions. I answer partner church questions. I answer donor questions. Hopefully at the end of the day, the answers have moved the ministry forward.
However, my favorite part of my job is being a youth minister to youth ministers, because part of running a graduate residency in youth ministry is ministering to youth ministers. All of our key staff members (Executive Director, Director of Coaching, Youth Ministry Professor) are former full-time youth ministers. God called us from the ranks of ministering to teenagers to minister and train those who do what we love. We all still volunteer with youth ministries, and we still have a “youth group” as well, they are just older.
We have just returned from another CYMT retreat. Residents were in class eight hours a day for three days. But between classes, at lunch and dinner, and in the evening, we are a family … the CYMT family. A family of ministers who love and care for each other. During these times, I am privileged to:

  • Listen to the burdens on someone’s heart
  • Encourage
  • Guide others as they discern God’s call
  • Pray with those who feel empty
  • Dance and play
  • Worship
  • Celebrate

Occasionally, we find ourselves as staff referring to “our kids” when talking about our graduate residents. We correct ourselves, because we know that they are adults. We don’t mean it in a demeaning manor, but instead in an endearing way. As former youth ministers, we loved “our kids.” The same is true for our graduate residents!
This year, we have 37 graduate residents in the CYMT program, which is a pretty good-sized youth group. What a joy to be a youth minister to youth ministers!

Share

About the Author

Ministry Leadership Center

Stay Inspired

Sign up to receive fresh ministry insights, free tools, and more.

More Articles

Leader stands in front of a church. A church that has a culture that may need to change.
The start of a new year brings new, fresh energy and ideas to ministry. Before you jump in, consider these five missteps faith communities commonly make when launching a new ministry.
Youth ministry leader in conversation with students, illustrating faith formation through relationship rather than performance
Flashy events may draw attention, but lasting faith is formed over time. This article invites ministry leaders to reconsider what actually shapes belief in young people and how faithful presence matters more than performance.

Stay Inspired

Subscribe to receive a monthly roundup of fresh insights and free tools for senior ministry leaders.