Ways to get students to pay more attention during your sermon

3 ways to get your students to pay more attention during your sermons blog postWhen you speak, you notice so much. I can speak and see students texting, laughing, doodling on paper, and then the ones who are bored out of their mind. We see so much. Well, we can complain about how they are not right with God if they are not willing to pay attention, or we can try to be more effective at getting them to pay more attention. I choose to take the latter approach. So, how can we get them to pay more attention during our sermons in youth group?

  • Engage them- Students must be engaged in the service. Use illustrations that include volunteers. I usually do not do this often, but going to do this more to engage them during our sermons. Ask questions for them to answer. Make consistent eye contact with the students. Allow them to read verses instead of the speaker always reading. These are just a few of the ways that you can engage students during your sermons. 
  • Train Small Group Leaders- Small group leaders must be trained to help the speaker with this. The speaker should not have to worry about speaking and making the students listen and pay attention when there are leaders in the room. Train your leaders to help you and pay attention to the students.
  • Be concise- I am as long-winded when it comes to speaking as possible, but I am learning to make my sermons more concise to keep the student’s attention more effectively. Sometimes, I can say what needs to be said in a much shorter amount of time than I say it.
  • Be relevant- The Bible is always relevant! The Bible contains the answers to our students questions so be relevant by using the Bible. Also, be practical. The students need to see how the Bible influences their every day life. Make this a point of emphasis when preparing your sermons. Will this help the students live as they leave?
  • Be illustrative- Be intentional about your illustrations. Be pointed about your illustrations. Students gravitate to illustrations and stories so do not be afraid to use them regularly to drive your Biblical point home.

Question: What do you do to help your students listen more intently during your sermons?

5 Things about your Sermons

5 things your sermons must have blog postOne of the primary responsibilities of being a youth pastor is teaching. We teach a lot, and must develop our speaking. I have grown to love studying and teaching as much now than ever before. I do not consider myself a great speaker, but I am trying to improve my speaking to be the most effective for the Gospel’s sake that I possibly can be.

 

Here are 5 things that I am learning about the sermons that I preach: 

 

  1. Your sermons must be Passionate- Are you passionate about what you are speaking about? If not, do not expect many positive results from your audience. Passion is always a characteristic of the most effective speakers. 
  2. Your sermons must be original- Now, curriculum is one thing, but if you are googling or checking around what other preachers are speaking on a couple of days before you speak, there is a major problem. Look, back in the New Testament church, the primary responsibility of the preacher was to pray and study. So, make that your top priority. I hate hearing how preachers get sermon outlines from everyone else, and claim them as their own. Come on, we need integrity from our pulpits today.
  3. Your sermons must be Illustrative- I always write out my manuscript, and then go through it, and try to see how I can make it come alive to the audience. Make sure that you have illustrations, and have something to make it come alive and make it applicable to the lives of your audience.
  4. Your sermons must be modeled- One thing that I try to do is model and make sure that I am working on what I am teaching. Do not get up and teach on a subject that you are not modeling. For instance, be careful speaking on evangelism if you are not personally in the community evangelizing people. The audience (especially students) will know if you are faking. They can spot hypocrisy from a mile away.
  5. Your sermons must be prayed over- You should spend time praying about the points in your sermon. Spend time praying for your audience. Pray for the Holy Spirit to speak through you. Always remember that you cannot do anything on your own so you better be praying for God to speak through you, because with God, it means nothing!

Book Giveaway- “Speaking to Teenagers”

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My friend, Tom Shriver blogs regularly about student ministry at tomshriver.com. Tom is giving away the book, “Speaking to Teenagers” by Doug Fields and Duffy Robbins. I encourage you to stop by his blog to enter for your chance to win. The contest ends Tuesday!!

I have personally never read the book, but I have read many books by the two authors, and know that they will not disappoint. Go here to register for the freebie, and while you are there, subscribe to Tom’s blog!

Click here to enter the giveaway!!!

 

Things to Remember When Speaking to Students

Things to remember when speaking to students blog postI have been speaking regularly to students for 8 years. I have definitely come a long way. I remember starting out feeling that I had to be this deep theologian, and for some reason I taught so deep, nothing was happening in the students’ lives. Then, I went into a vague sort of phrase where I was talking about how the people in the Bible responded to life, but never made it directly practical to how a student should respond in life. I have learned so much in my short tenure of speaking to students. Now, I do not claim to have it all together by any means, but here are a few things that I have learned in these 8 years.

  • Keep their attention- It is important to think through your illustrations before getting up to speak. Have solid, fun, and pointed illustrations to keep their attention. It is important also to remember to get their attention from the very beginning as well using an illustration, a story, or just be energetic. 
  • Teach one main thought- Now, some may read this, and think that this means dumbing it down for students. This is not what I believe at all. Think of it as zeroing a thought in, not dumbing it down. It is taking a concept, and driving it home. If you come to youth group bringing 5-7 concepts, make that a teaching series, and discuss 1 concept each week. 
  • Have a sense of humor- This is something that I have had to learn. I have a sense of humor, but felt that the pulpit was not the place for it when I first started. Now, I have learned that it is okay when appropriate. By the way, your main objective better not to make them laugh. That is the wrong focus, but it is okay to have a sense of humor to keep their attention while you try to preach the Gospel.
  • Teach transparently- Use personal illustrations of how you struggle. Admitting a struggle is not a sign of weakness, but rather a sign of maturity. Students can see right through hypocrisy so be authentic.
  •  Use technology- I try to always use the PowerPoint and screen when teaching to students if it is available  It helps the ones taking notes on paper or on their phone. You have to be up to date with technology, and students appreciate this.
  • Teach in love- Be direct, Biblical, but loving in your message. Students appreciate this, but remember there is a balance between responsibility on our part in the Christian life, and teaching in love. You can go too far on both sides of the spectrum.

Hope this helps you in teaching to students.

A Strategy for Sermon Development

Below is a guest post from my friend, Blake Appleby. This guest post challenged me as a speaker, and I felt compelled to share it with you today. 

“I heard a preacher once say, “Your messages are best cooked in a crock pot, not a microwave.” I cannot disagree with this statement. I believe the more time we spend marinating in the text, the more our passion will build and the more effective we will be. It also provides ample time to gather clear thoughts.

With that being said, I strive to be twelve weeks ahead.  Now, I’m not saying that I have twelve weeks of messages ready. I’m simply stating that I prefer to have an idea of what is on the horizon instead of rushing to prepare.

Over a twelve week period, I break down messages in three ways. First, I’ll spend three weeks on aRelevant Teaching. These messages tend to lean more towards the topical side of communicating the Word. Next, I strive to devote six weeks to Expository Preaching. This means we are going to travel verse-by-verse. Finally, I will schedule three weeks for Doctrinal Teaching. For instance, we could breakdown the Trinity, or another important doctrine.

12 Week Example:

January:
Week One: How To Start Well (Relevant Teaching)
Week Two-Three: A Walk Thru Romans (Expository Preaching)
Week Four: Trinity: The Father (Doctrinal Teaching)

February:
Week One: What Does the Bible Say About Dating? (Relevant Teaching)
Week Two-Three: A Walk Through Romans (Expository Preaching)
Week Four: Trinity: The Son (Doctrinal Teaching)

March:
Week One: March Madness: Anger (Relevant Teaching)
Week Two-Three: A Walk Thru Romans (Expository Preaching)
Week Four: Trinity: The Holy Spirit (Doctrinal Teaching)

Note: Most of the Relevant and Doctrinal Teachings I share with our students are verse-by-verse, exegetical, contextual teachings.
This is a pattern, and often times God has a way of breaking our patterns. I am not so focused on a pattern that I neglect His presence and prodding. On multiple occasions, God has divinely interrupted my plans and led me to speak from a completely different passage. But, He has allowed this pattern to stick more often than not. It works, and I hope it can work for you.

What are your thoughts? How do you prepare? Do you have a preaching calendar?
Message me at bappleby@fbcumatilla.org if you have any questions, or if you wish to discuss this any further.”

About Blake: Blake Appleby was born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida. He currently serves as Youth Pastor at First Baptist Church of Umatilla. Blake is married to his beautiful wife, Meredith. Blake  is passionate about reaching students with the Gospel. God has blessed him and his wife with an ability to effectively communicate with teenagers. Outside of ministry, he is an avid runner, coffee drinker, and writer. In the summer of 2013, Blake will launch a new student devotional entitled, Free. If you are interested in having Blake speak at your church, or student events- you can contact him personally at blakeappleby@gmail.com or here.

Connect with Blake:
Blog    Twitter    Facebook

 

[Freebie Friday] James Series with Outlines for Teacher/Students, PowerPoint, Games

Today, I want to give away a good resource for senior pastors or student pastors! This is an entire series that we did with our students through the book of James in our summer youth program. The sermon series is called, “Living out what lies within.” The series is in a customizable format for you to edit and make the sermons your own. I have provided sermon outlines, sermon fill in the blanks for the students, games, and PowerPoint presentations for your ministry. I hope that this will be a helpful resource for you.

Download the Series HERE! 

[Question]: Was this freebie a help to you? If so, please leave a comment, and let me know.

Freebie Friday: Graduation Sunday [Message Outline]

We all like FREE stuff! I love receiving free stuff, and also sharing free stuff. Today, I want to share a free graduation Sunday message outline that you can use and tweak to fit your setting and style. My friend, Blake Appleby, has provided an original message outline that is great to use for graduation Sunday.

Go HERE & Download this FREEBIE!

About Blake:
“Blake Appleby is a passionate communicator of the Word of God. Since the age of 16, he knew God’s desire for his life was to preach the Gospel, so that students far from God could experience life in Christ. God has allowed Blake to partner with various school systems, church groups, mission programs, and even colleges to proclaim the Gospel. He’s fueled by a desire to see this generation of students make much of Jesus. He would be honored to partner with you. Are you hosting a weekend retreat, DNOW, a week of camp, or an event where students gather? Don’t hesitate, contact Blake today!”

Connect with Blake:
Twitter
Blog
Facebook 

Bible Study: Man’s continued rebellion

Revelation 20:7-9

Think about the literal 1,000 year reign of Christ. That is a long time of peace, prosperity, good health, joy, comfort. Christ will reign on earth for that amount of time. Now, it is important as we go further to note that all who enter the Millennial Reign of Christ will be saved. This includes those who endured the tribulation period, and accepted Jesus gift of Salvation. During the Millennial Reign, the Christians will have babies, and they will still be born with depravity. Now, the earth will be ruled and reigned by Jesus during this time. All those people born during the Millennial Reign of Christ will still need to trust Christ as Savior

David said in Psalm 51:5, “…In sin, did my mother conceive me.”

So, Satan is loosed, and we see a final rebellion after an incredible 1,000 years. Now, mankind has had a history of rebelling after given chance after chance. It is their choice to do right or wrong, and I want to remind you tonight that it is your choice whether you do right or wrong!

        I.            Mankind’s first rebellion

  1. The test Genesis 2:17. The test was that they could not eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. That is the only restriction that they were given.
  2. The failure Genesis 3:6. Now, did they fail or succeed? They failed. They were deceived by satan by having her doubt and question God. Satan made her believe what made sense to her rather than what the Word says.
  3. The judgment Genesis 3:22-24. They were expelled from the Garden of Eden. They faced death now at some point, because if they had of not sinned, they would have lived on earth forever. Sin now passed upon all men Romans 5:12

      II.            Mankind’s continued rebellion

  1. The test. Throughout history from Adam until now, we have seen many people walk the face of the earth, and everyone has been given a chance to accept Jesus into their lives. Everyone in the Grove has been a test of accepting or rejecting Jesus. Even after the test of Salvation, you are given a test of living for Jesus or not living for Jesus.
  2. The failure. Yet, many people have rejected Jesus. Some of you have rejected Him over and over again, and some Christians have accepted Him for Salvation, but are not living for Him, and we fail!
  3. The judgment. Hell is the judgment for unbelievers.

    III.            Mankind’s final rebellion Revelation 20:7-9

  1. The test. Everyone in the Millennial Reign of Christ knows about life with Christ, but yet some will choose to reject and rebel against Him when Satan is loosed. Satan deceives many at this final rebellion. So many that it likens the number to the sand of the sea.
  2. The failure. We see that a huge number of people fail and follow the deceptive lies of Satan.
  3. The judgment. God calls fire from Heaven, and it consumes the enemies of Him. They all will be cast into the lake of fire.

From the beginning of time, God has asked man to obey Him. Man has consistently chosen not too, because of the sin nature that we are all born with, but ultimately it is your choice. What is your choice today? Will you choose to obey God or to reject Him?

Guest Post: 10 Ways to Lose a Teen’s attention

Quick post—the top ten ways to completely bore and disconnect with those you teach:

1. Say something not worth hearing—This is basic, but if you want people to listen, start by saying something worth hearing. The number one reason we lose the attention of those we teach is that we’re not convincing them that what we have to say is important. Since there is nothing more important than teaching young people God’s Word, we’d better make it worth hearing.

2. Say something with no passion—Have you ever heard someone teach with no voice inflection, no dynamic—nothing but monotone droning. It’s miserably hypnotic. If you’re not passionate about what you teach, don’t expect anyone else to care about it either.

3. Talk down to them—Make your listeners think that you believe they are completely stupid. Come across like you are gracing them with your brilliance and you can’t believe they don’t already know this stuff. Insult them with sharp sarcasm, personal jabs, and harshness. This will shut them down for sure.

4. Yell or scream at them—There’s a difference between preaching with passion and just raising your voice out of sheer frustration, and teens can tell the difference immediately. Preaching will stir them, but plain old yelling will just irritate them.

5. Teach outside of their context—Have you ever heard someone teach truth in a way that had no practical connection to your life whatsoever? The connection between truth and real life is not always as obvious as we would like it to be. Keeping attention requires that we constantly ask of truth: “Why do you matter to real life?!”

6. Shoot from the hip—When we don’t prayerfully prepare substantive, biblical material, we shoot from the hip—speak off the cuff—frankly, RAMBLE. If you really want to shut teens down, just start rambling and come across like you have nothing to say that was worth premeditation.

7. Use no illustrations or personal insights—Jesus was a great story-teller. He connected truth to tangible application and real life situations. Listeners need to connect with the teacher or preacher in tangible ways, and nothing can kill a great truth better than failing to give it a personal, real-life connection.

8. Talk about nothing but yourself—Have you ever heard someone tell you how great they were for 45 minutes and call it a Sunday School lesson or a sermon? Sometimes we could title our lessons, “If You Would Do What I Do, You Would Be Great Too!” Personal illustrations are helpful, but teens shut down when we cross over into bragging and self-exaltation.

9. Speak with lots of distracting idiosyncrasies—You can completely derail your listeners every time you speak if you will just develop some nervous twitches, odd phrasing, annoying postures, or awkward gestures—like frantic pacing or ill-timed arm waving. Everybody in your youth group will be able to impersonate you, but they will never remember a single thing you teach. If you want a good litmus test on this—just ask someone to impersonate you. If they have a tough time, then you’ve probably done a good job at minimizing your idiosyncrasies.

10. Have no relationship with them beyond your platform—Never personally interact or develop a relationship with those you teach. Just be a distant, platform figure with no presence or concern for real people. Remember, the health and quality of your personal relationship with your listeners is what gives you the right to be heard in the first place.

BONUS—Make it NO FUN whatsoever! Have you ever known someone who was gifted at draining every ounce of fun right out of a room as soon as they stepped in? Guaranteed—if your listeners aren’t enjoying listening, they will quickly find something else more enjoyable to think about—it’s just human nature.

It’s pretty painful to try to listen to a lesson from a speaker that didn’t work to gain and maintain your attention! It’s even more painful to be that speaker! (Yes, I know this from far too much personal experience.) Let’s work to make God’s Word come alive to those we teach!

All right, now it’s your turn! How has someone else lost your attention over the years?

Cary Schmidt is the youth pastor at Lancaster Baptist Church in Lancaster, CA. He is blessed with a wife, and 3 children. Cary is an author, a sought after speaker, and an avid blogger. You can learn more about Cary through his blog at http://www.caryschmidt.com/

7 major topics you should preach on each year in student ministry

I love the book, “the 7 checkpoints” by Andy Stanley. Andy is the lead pastor of North Point Community Church in Georgia. This is an excellent book that challenged me. It helped me and gave me some of my philosophy in our student ministry. He challenges us on 7 major things, and I have taken this, and applied it to our student ministry, well, some of it. Here are 5 things that I try to preach on each year in our student ministry. Obviously, I preach on many other things throughout the year, but I try to speak on these topics each year in different formats and designs:

  1. The Gospel- I try not to be judgmental, but in a student ministry our size, it is hard to believe that everyone in there is a believer. Also, if you are not having visitors enter your student ministry, something is wrong. The Gospel should be included in every student ministry setting. Sometimes, we speak specifically to the church, but somewhere, the Gospel needs to be implemented, and people need to be given a chance and explanation of how to accept Jesus into their lives.
  2. Relationships- Students need to be reminded of the importance of choosing Godly friends. They need to constantly be warned about the direction that they are headed can be determined by who they are hanging around. Students do not see the value of this principle, because they only see the “right now,” but as they get older, they do see that friends play a vital role in the direction that they are headed at the time.
  3. Choices/Decisions- Students need to be taught how to make Biblical decisions. After all, when they graduate youth group, they will be making some of the biggest decisions of their life with who to date and marry, what college to attend, what occupation to study, and where to work. We must teach them the importance of making good and wise decisions so that when they graduate, they can make wise decisions.
  4. Sharing their faith- Students have the biggest platform of anyone when it comes to sharing their faith. Many students attend rather large public schools, and come in contact with thousands of people each day. Some days, I only come in contact with the people who I work with here in the church office. Students are bombarded with people, and we must teach them the importance of sharing the Gospel with them, and teach them how to share the Gospel with others.
  5. Obedience to parents- Parents will echo this. I oftentimes send out a questionnaire to my parents asking them what topics would they like to see addressed to students, and this one is always mentioned. It is something that ALL students struggle with, and they need to be reminded about the Biblical principle of honoring and obeying their parents.
  6. Sex/Dating/Purity- This is a biggie! I addressed this recently, and it goes over well. It is something that you need to address regularly, because it is something that students are going to struggle with. Culture and Hollywood have distorted the view of sex to our students. Therefore, because they are bombarded with what culture and society thinks so heavily, we must give them what the Bible says about these things.
  7. Communication- I go through a series on communicating every year. I discuss social media, because that is the top way that students are communicating today. I also discuss gossip, and the dangers that it brings. It is important for students to understand that their words can destroy others. When speaking of this, make sure that you mention the importance of using your tongue for good like sharing the Gospel or building someone else up.

If you have another format that you use in your student ministry, please share. I would love to hear it. You can comment below: