From the stone wall on 7th Avenue
West this crisp, blue-sky morning, you can see the Bainbridge Island ferry clear
across the Sound as it emerges from the harbor, bound for downtown Seattle, and
the streets are filled with the orange of a well-painted fall season. It’s a helpful reminder of why we’re in
ministry.
“Life,” said F. Scott Fitzgerald, as
our colleague Kristen reminded us last week, “starts all over again when it
gets crisp in the fall.” No doubt. For us at Lazy F, the awesome and extremely
fun process of planning for summer 2014 began in August before the 2013 staff
even left, and the busyness of our campers’ lives started afresh as the leaves began
to turn.
And they are busy, our
campers: youth ministry has known this for a long time. Here in Seattle, as around the country, teens
are bustling with college-level courses, starting their marathon of preparation
for the AP exams in the spring. Surely it’s
applaudable: see Proverbs 8 about the virtue of the acquisition of
knowledge. But nowadays, it’s coming at
a cost.
“My kids would be part of the life of
the church,” a parent at a church on Seattle’s Eastside told me yesterday, “if
it weren’t for the bajillion things that are taking energy out of their lives
already. They’re exhausted.”
They’re not alone. A few weeks ago, a Maryland school
district proposed delaying the daily high school start-time to 8:15 a.m., fifty
minutes later than they currently start, in an effort to secure more sleep for teens
(albeit at the cost of moving the middle schools back to 7:45). Queen Anne teens, who attend Ballard High, start first period at 7:50 a.m. Across the
pond in Bothell, it’s a half-hour earlier, and “zero period” begins as early as
6:20.
Much of our pattern of early-morning
school-starts is an accident of circumstance: parents do need to get to work,
and buses do need to serve multiple schools.
But in a culture that prizes intense homework, college-level classes in the
high school years (again, a good thing), and leadership in extracurriculars, teen-life
often pays the difference in sleep and downtime.
Maybe there’s a divine message for
us in autumn, when the vegetation goes through its cycle of resigning to the
need for rest, quiet, and rejuvenation in preparation for the life-filled
explosion of spring and summer. Summertime
“dies” into autumn, which yields the “resurrection” of spring, as Our Lord told
us: “unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground
and dies," Jesus said, "it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds”
(John 12:24 niv).
The
universe is an artwork, and the Artist, the triune God who made it, appears to
think that rest and refreshment are so important that they’re designed
into the very fabric of the world we move through at this time every year. Too bad, then, that this is the time at which
we ask our youth to become more busy.
Isn’t that backwards?
The ministry need couldn’t be
clearer. If God wants us to rest, and if
we’re driving our teens to exhaustion, then maybe the church has a call to balance
its ministries of activity and creative bustle for kids (please, let's not do
away with broomball and skiing!) with countervailing opportunities to learn the Christian
disciplines of quiet, stopping for a moment, sleep—giving them the chance to just
“be”, to bask in our Lord’s prevenient grace for them just as they are.
In camping and youth ministry, at
Lazy F and elsewhere, let’s take a cue from this delicious, Christ-designed
season of leaves, Pumpkin Spice Lattes, and knit beanies, and ask how we can
embrace Jesus’ call to stillness, peace, grace—and ask the Holy Spirit
to infuse our ministry design with a dose of the rest that our kids long for.
John Harrell
Program
Coordinator
2. Who are the teens in your life? Ask them how they feel from day to day. How do they feel about their level of rest?
3. How does your church invite teens to
experience God’s prevenient grace through stillness and peace? How can you lead by example to help the teens
in your life experience God’s peace this autumn?