Getting Students into the Bible

For years we’ve been bothered by the reality that our students are largely Bible ignorant.  Most of them don’t read the Bible regularly or even have a strong grasp of how to navigate it’s pages.  Part of this is is due to the fact that students don’t read much of anything in our culture and part of this is probably due to the fact that we as parents and youth workers are dropping the ball.

Our student ministry team is making an effort to think creatively on how we can get students into the Bible.  Our first idea is embedded in our Wakes teaching series.

Wakes Bumper from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

This is a four week teaching series on influence from the book of Acts.  As part of the experience we invited our volunteers and students to read through the book of Acts together.  We sent this bookmark home with each student and built this website: lifelinestudents.org/wakes. We built the website because students usually only read physical books if there is a grade dependent on it but they will often read voluntarily on their phones.

Wakes_Bookmark

 

The beautiful thing about this project is that it cost us basically nothing–only printing and shipping for the bookmarks.  Through a couple announcement videos and encouraging students to post to instagram and twitter with  #lifelinewakes we’ve created a little buzz.  So far so good.  We’d love to hear your ideas on how you are getting students into the Bible.

Wakes – Acts Reading Plan from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

Introducing the LifeLine Team

I am pumped to announce that the LifeLine Team is complete.  It took us quite a while to hire everyone but the work has been worth the effort.  Our team is set and I’m confident that God has brought us the right people.  Here’s our announcement video from this past week which unveils our team.

 

Announcements / September 15 & 18 from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

The verdict is still out on the pronunciation of “Chipotle” but if you’re curious, here is what we all do:

LifeLine @ the Kentwood Campus

  • Jon VerLee, Campus Youth Pastor
  • Jason Magnusun, Middle School

LifeLine @ the Knapp Street Campus

  • Kirk Bierens, High School
  • Steve Carigon, Middle School

LifeLine @ the Cascade Campus

  • Tom Skilling, High School Groups
  • Jake Houf, Middle School Groups
  • Elisa Talmage, Female Small Groups
  • Christian Stevens, LifeLine Weekends

LifeLine Central Support

  • Al Shepard, Production
  • Molly Rayman, LifeLine Admin
  • Jon Grunden, Middle School Director
  • Aaron Buer, High School Director

Welcome Back to LifeLine!

It’s that time of year again.  LifeLine, our student ministry, is back in action.  We had a great kickoff week with close to 700 students and over 100 volunteers.  It was an absolute riot.  Here’s the announcement video we kicked the year off with.

 

Lifeline Welcome from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

Also, we’ve started something new.  We’re posting our teachings to soundcloud.com.  Here’s my first teaching of the year:

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/110079017″ params=”” width=” 100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

In Case You Thought I Was Normal…

Part of what makes Camp LifeLine so outrageously fun are the program characters.  Our students love Chucky and Lucky, El Mattadore, Strawberry Sam and the rest.  If you’ve never seen these videos or characters you will think we’ve lost my minds…sorry about that.

By the way, if you knew me in high school or college, I assure you that I’m just as intelligent and popular as I was.

Camp 2013 Opener from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

Camp LL 2013 | Wednesday Story from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

 

Camp LL 2013 | Friday Story from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

Nickleback+Nursery Rhymes= Nurseryback

We place a premium on fun.  If you’re not having fun in student ministry then you’re not doing it right.  We show a funny video of some sort every time our student ministry meets.  Sometimes, as in the case of this one, the topic is really for our volunteers.  We don’t mind being occasionally irrelevant to our students because one of our values is providing a fun environment for volunteers as well as students.

Last week at Camp LifeLine we made a bunch of ridiculous videos and this one is probably our best ever.  Just watch it.  If you laugh…share it!  Feel free to show it in your student ministry if you need a funny video this week.  Enjoy…

NurseryBack from LifeLine Student Ministries on Vimeo.

 

Youth Ministry Videos 101

A few years ago we came to terms with a painful truth.  Students don’t listen to us when we talk to them from the stage.    Don’t get me wrong, I’m pretty sure they nominally pay attention to the teachings but they never listen to announcements.  Every time we take the stage and invite students to sign up for a retreat or to tell them about an event that will drastically change their lives they stare at us blankly and remember nothing.  Meanwhile, the energy in the room plummets.  By the time we start our worship set the girls are texting and the guys are asleep.

One thing we noticed about our culture is that people always pay attention to screens.  Call it being addicted to technology or visually stimulated or whatever you want but a compelling image or a well done commercial captures us.  If you don’t know what I’m talking about schedule your next team meeting at Buffalo Wild Wings and see how much you accomplish.

So, based on our observations about the power of screens we started shooting video announcements.  In the beginning it was just me sitting in a chair talking and it has evolved into rap videos and other ridiculousness.  I know we aren’t breaking new ground here and plenty of other ministries use video announcements but ours are way better than theirs.

OK, not really but we have been amazed at how video announcements have contributed to our student ministry community and culture.  Adding some ridiculous characters and YouTube spoofs has amped up the fun level.

If you’re interested in getting in the video announcement game, here are a few suggestions.

1.       Invest in Good Gear

Filming can be as inexpensive and simple as pulling out your iPhone and hitting record but we all know that isn’t going to yield a visually pleasing end product (not to mention the audio). Here’s the thing. Your students and volunteers all watch TV in HD and probably movies on Blu-Ray. A good set of gear and trained people will help get you comparable quality.  People appreciate well made videos.

In the film world, you get what you pay for. A video shot on a two thousand dollar camera and a fifteen hundred dollar lens will look better than a seven hundred dollar camera on a standard kit lens. And the same goes for audio and microphones. It can be daunting at first with all the choices, but that’s where people with experience come in. Chat it up with someone you know who does film, tell them what you plan to do and ask what lens will be best for you, what tri-pod they’d recommend, which lens best fits your needs, etc.

2.       Find and Film Expressive People

There is a reason that not everyone is an actor.  This doesn’t mean that your videos require professional actors but it does mean you need expressive people.  Maybe this is you, maybe it isn’t.  This could also be a great opportunity to pull in students and volunteers.  Trust me when I say that the wrong people on video are worse than the wrong people on stage.

3.       Act like a Clown

Sometimes the announcement needs to come from you—even if you’re not expressive.  We’ve discovered that acting normally while filming will make you appear like you just woke up from a nap.  You have to amp up your energy.  Focus on making your face more expressive.  Talk with your hands and act like you’re overly excited.  I know this sounds ridiculous but trust me.

4.       Keep it Short

Our biggest mistake in creating announcement videos has been length.  Anything over 5 minutes is WAY too long.  We aim for 4 minutes or shorter if there is some sort of storyline or 2 or 3 minutes if it is a simple announcement.  Never overestimate the attention span of your students.  Squirrel!

5.       Delegate the Filming and Editing

If you’re like me, editing software might as well be in Chinese.  I’m helpless.  No problem.  There are a bazillion people out there who love to film, edit and produce videos.  They’ll probably also complete projects 40x faster than you could.  Take advantage of people who want to serve.

6.       Grant Creative Freedom

Over the last 4 years, video characters and ongoing storylines have dramatically increased the fun in our student ministry.  Especially in middle school, a few reoccurring characters can be brilliant.  My advice, find some funny people and turn them loose to create ideas and videos.  If you have someone who can do voices, plug them in!  You can score costumes for basically nothing by spending an afternoon perusing local thrift shops.   Amp up the fun in your student ministry by getting ridiculous with announcement videos.

7.        Steal Ideas

We’re all on the same team right?  Our early video ideas were all stolen—usually from Saddleback.  Sorry!  Sometimes we still steal great ideas because, well they are great ideas.  Here’s our Vimeo page.  Feel free to steal our ideas or at least laugh at how bad our early videos were.

photo credited to SPDP