As one of the four main elements (fellowship, education, worship, service) to any youth ministry effort, Christ-like service is one of the most powerful ways to show youth the Gospel in action. Taking part in a Christ-like effort to help others can be a life-changing event. It enables us to experience what it means to help people not because we want to be "nice," or because we expect to "get something back in return," but because of a genuine connection we feel to them as God's children.
Below
are listed "doable" ways youth can reach out and help others in imitation
of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Please review these and make this kind
of ministry a regular part of your community's youth ministry efforts. Above
all, remember the key to involving youth in Christ-like service (as with any
youth ministry effort) is consistency, consistency, consistency!
1
Go through the teen study unit Reaching Out: Our Call
to Minister: Take the time to study and discuss the Church's teaching on serving
others. This study unit includes discussion on the importance of our attitude
when helping others, discovering our God-given gifts, and provides a step-by-step
guide to planning a project. The unit is available from the Orthodox Christian
Publications Center [O.C.P.C. 973/ 694-5782).
2
Review the Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries: Every parish receives
at least two installments per year full of articles, which explain successful
activities parishes have sponsored throughout the Church. Pick one and do it.
3
Servant Saturdays: Plan a Saturday every six months when your youth group
will help people in the parish (elderly, shut-ins, single parents, etc.) Obtain
a list of people from your parish priest and call them to ask if they have any
tasks your group can do to help them. Make a list of all the people you will
be helping along with their addresses and phone numbers, the jobs requested,
and estimate of how long it will take to do them, and the number of people needed.
Schedule to do it on a Saturday. Meet at the parish with a bunch of bag lunches,
transport everyone to their assignment and meet back at the end of the day for
pizza and a movie.
4
Community Cleanup: Choose an area in town to keep clean for the next
6 months. Contact city officials to ask if they would provide trash bags or
paint to cover graffiti-covered walls, etc. One Saturday a month take a team
of teens (it doesn't have to be all of them every time) to clean up the area.
After, go back to the church for refreshments and relaxation.
5
In Search of a Square Meal: Prepare a list of groceries needed to a complete
nutritious meal, including dessert. Choose a local agency that distributes food
to people in need. Form groups of 4 or 5 (include at least one adult in each
group). Give a copy of the grocery list to each group along with cloth grocery
bags and a supply of your church's business card. Instruct the groups to go
door to door asking the people to donate one or more of the items on the list.
Be sure to supply the people one of the church's business cards so that they
know this is legitimate. Have groups explain that the food is being collected
as a donation to (name of the agency with which you are working). Give groups
2 hours to collect all their items. Tell them that they are not to buy anything.
When they have completed their list or at the end of 2 hours, have everyone
return to the church to gather the food and debrief their experience over pizza
and maybe a movie.
6
Storm Troopers: Form teams of kids to go to people's houses to shovel
their driveway after a snow storm or clean up their yard after a bad wind storm.
Make a contact list of the "troopers" as well as the people that you
will be helping.
7
Collect Recycle-ables: go to a recycling station get your deposits and
give to a local charity. You can even connect it to a project to help clean
up an area of town (see above).
8
Start a Tutoring Program out of Your Parish: Parish youth can sign up
to help younger children with reading, writing, math, or science. Offer tutoring
services each month in the evening, providing a quiet, relaxing atmosphere that
is good for studying, followed by some fun. Contact local elementary schools
about offering your services.
9
Committing to Community Service Hours: Go as a group to a local town/city
council meeting and offer to donate 200 hours of community service to any project
the council determines under "new business."
10
Prepare Meals for a Nearby Soup Kitchen: Contact a local soup kitchen
and offer to prepare a meal. Find out what to cook, ask for food donations from
people in the Church, and gather at the Church to prepare the meal.
11
Prepare "Sunshine" Packages: Ask your parish priest for the
names and addresses of people who are currently in the hospital, sick at home,
or who are new to the community. Design a "sunshine" package that
would be appropriate for their situation, make and deliver it to them.
12
Going out on Limb: As a group plan on extending yourselves to people
no one spends time with, the people no one really likes. Eat with them in the
cafeteria; walk home from school with them; invite them to an activity the youth
group is sponsoring; etc. Make it a regular part of your gatherings to discuss
as a group their difficulties, and successes.
13
Closet Cleaning: Have everyone in the group go through their closets
to collect items in good condition that they would be willing to give to people
in need. Give it to a local service organization that distributes clothing to
people.
14
Buy a Toy: Save money from allowances and jobs, go to a toy store, and
buy a fun toy for a child whose family might not be able to afford them. Bring
the toys to a local social service organization for them to distribute.
15
Provide Worship Services for Residents in Institutions: Contact your
parish priest about joining him when he visits the local prisons, nursing homes,
and hospitals to help with singing the responses and reading at services. Vespers
and moliebens are great services to have since anyone can attend them and those
attending get to hear a large amount of biblical readings.
16
Book Drive: Most institutions (prisons, nursing homes, homes for the
developmentally handicapped) have poor book collections for their residents.
Contact the director of an institution near you and ask for a list of books
that would be helpful for them. Make it a project to collect copies of the books
and deliver them to the institution, incorporating a visit with the residents.
Most institutions have persons who will help prepare your group for a visitation.
17
Neighborhood Labor Day: Send out small postcards to everyone in the parish's
neighborhood announcing that the youth of the parish would like to show their
appreciation for the church's neighbors by a having a work day. Provide a
space on the postcard for them to indicate what kind of assistance they
would find helpful (mowing lawns, washing windows, etc.). Then indicate the
day and time you would be able to come, mentioning that there is no charge.
18
Offer to help people who are sick with chores: When people are sick or
in the hospital, they are often not able to keep up with many of the day to
day chores in their home. Talk to your parish priest about offering assistance
washing windows, taking out the garbage, vacuuming their homes, weeding gardens,
getting groceries, etc. to people who are ill, or to those who are spending
a lot of time caring for someone who is ill.
19
Sponsor a Child Overseas: Using money from jobs and allowances sponsor
a poor child overseas. Its an inexpensive but personal way to provide lifesaving
help to someone in need. Many agencies that have these types of programs (Save
the Children, UNICEF, etc.) advertise on TV.
20
Do a Major Study of Poverty in Your Community: Interview city officials,
social service agency leaders, and persons who are homeless. As a group, discuss
possible recommendations to improve services to the poor and share them with
parish and community leaders.
21
Participate in Project Mexico: Project Mexico is an Orthodox agency that
builds simple homes for the many homeless people in Tijuana, Mexico. The conditions
are very safe and everyone regardless of their knowledge of carpentry can participate.
They also run the OCA St. Innocent orphanage for boys. Plan to go as a group
during a school vacation. For more information contact them at 619/448-1368.
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Department
of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministry |
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