Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

Public TV, Radio Stations to Increase Local Investigative Coverage
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars

PointsSouth: Articles 2007

Home > PointsSouth: Articles 2007
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, Subscribe via e-mail
Marissa Harshman
The online publication of Poynter's Summer Program for Recent College Graduates.

PointsSouth - Logo
PointsSouth - Editions
PointsSouth - First Edition
PointsSouth - Second Edition
PointsSouth - Third Edition
PointsSouth - Fourth Edition
PointsSouth - Fourth Edition
PointsSouth - Beats
PointsSouth - Southeast
PointsSouth - East of 34th
PointsSouth - West of 34th
PointsSouth - Gulfport
PointsSouth - Northeast
PointsSouth - Maggiore
PointsSouth - The Point
PointsSouth - The Beach
PointsSouth - Media
PointsSouth - Text
PointsSouth - Photos
PointsSouth - Audio
PointsSouth - Video
PointsSouth - Graphics
PointsSouth
The Program
About the fellowship
PointsSouth
Meet the Team

Southeast
Ashley Mills
Joey Kirk
Shoshana Walter
Eric Chima

East of 34th
Mary Andom
Billy Kulpa
Julia Robinson
Mallary Jean Tenore

West of 34th
LeeAnn Watson
Bill Couch
Chasity Gunn
Liz Barry

Gulfport
Amanda Determan
Tory Hargro
Zack Quaintance
Matthew Pleasant

Northeast
I-Ching Ng
Cynthia Reynaud
Lauren Kuntz
Nick Escobar

Maggiore
Erik Oeverndiek
Erin Cubert
Isabel Ordonez
Kalen Ponche

The Point
Tracy Boyer
Shirley Knowles
Jeremy G. Burton
Marissa Harshman

The Beach
Jenessa Farnsworth
Jason Fritz
Arek Sarkissian
Dwayne Steward
PointsSouth
The Faculty
Program instructors
PointsSouth
Previous Years
See past projects


Worship for the Web generation

Every few seconds light flashes in the dark room. A neon green sign glows “Wired.” Two children stand in front of the room, bouncing in place with anticipation as each child’s legs are tied together with yellow nylon rope. “Eye of the Tiger” booms through the speakers as the children wait for their signal. Someone shouts “GO,” and two children run in circles, wrapping their partners into mummies. After a minute, the toilet paper mummies race toward a box of Milk Duds.

This isn’t a birthday party. They aren’t at a carnival. This is church.

ADDITIONAL CONTENT
Click here to experience the youth program at Pinellas Community Church.

Click here for a site including photos and an interactive map of churches in the Pinellas Point neighborhood.
Bursts of light, loud music, fun games and flashy music videos have all become part of regular church life at Pinellas Community Church in St. Petersburg, Fla. Churches across the country are using unique techniques to attract the attention of middle and high school students who live in a fast pace, here-and-now world.

“Ten, 15, 20 years ago was a time when someone who was trying to bring in a video game system would not be looked well upon, but now we know we have to speak the language of the day to our young people,” said Mike Conaway, a pastor at the church who was involved with youth ministry in North Carolina, Texas and Florida for 11 years.

The last 10 years have been a time of change for youth ministries across the country, Conaway said. Youth services were structured much like adult services; the only difference was the age of the attendees.

Conaway said churches now focus on what is interesting to middle and high school students, creating curriculums that grab young people’s attention and deliver messages related to the Bible.

“Instead of being bored and trying to listen, they make it fun,” said Camdon Hay, 12, who will be a seventh-grader at Thurgood Marshall Fundamental Middle School in the fall. “You can actually pay attention because there are skits and educational games.”

At this St. Petersburg church, Camdon and other middle school students file into a small room with chairs stretching from one wall to the other where their service, called Wired, takes place. The church also has a high school group called thirtyonesouth that is structured similarly to Wired. In both classes, students are greeted with flashing lights, booming music and glowing TV screens. While parents are singing worship songs, their children are scrambling to the floor to recover candy thrown to them by staff members. The youth services begin with a game and are followed by a music video, prayer and finally a 15- to 20-minute message.

The opening games, such as the toilet paper mummy races, are used to get students active and involved, and then tie into a Bible message for the day. The game with students wrapped in toilet paper was later related to four vices that young people are wrapped up in — laziness, fear, pride and guilt — instead of being wrapped in qualities God wants them to possess.

Cassandra Holt and her family have been attending Pinellas Community Church for nearly two years. They left their old church because Holt and her husband, Bob, thought the other church wasn’t engaging enough for their two daughters Sierra, 14, and Samantha, 11.

“We were getting what we needed, but the girls weren’t,” Holt said. “Here they use things like Extreme Makeover and Fear Factor and they use it in a way that (the girls) understand and that relates to the Bible.”

In addition to using familiar television shows, the youth leaders try to keep the messages short in order to hold the attention of restless middle and high schoolers.

“Kids these days are interested in music and the hip-hop lifestyle,” said Chris Davis, a parent and volunteer for Wired and thirtyonesouth. “They come in from a world where they are in the music videos and playing video games and on the skateboards. If we cater to their lifestyles, they’ll stay interested.”

Another way the church is trying to keep young people interested is by addressing common issues that teens face in their daily lives. In February and March the church devoted four weeks to discussion about sex and relationships during the adult and youth services. The series discussed common perceptions about sex and looked to the Bible for answers. Holt’s daughter Sierra was in middle school at the time and attended the sessions. The Wired staff was able to teach Sierra things she wasn’t able to verbalize to her daughter, Holt said.

“She told me she learned it wasn’t just a physical choice, but also a spiritual one,” Holt said. “I was already talking to her about sex, but it helped for her to hear about it from them.”

Holt said she is happy the church takes on tough issues and teaches them to her two daughters in an age-appropriate manner.

The issues discussed in church and the methods used to spread God’s principles to young people are not unique to Pinellas Community Church, Conaway said. A book written by Youth Pastor Doug Fields titled “Purpose Driven Youth Ministry” has been instrumental in teaching churches across the country ways to reach young people in their areas. Fields teaches at best-selling author and prominent evangelical leader Pastor Rick Warren’s Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif.

Fields’ book focuses on using the interests of preteenagers, or tweens, and teenagers, such as music and video games, to attract young people to church, Conaway said. Saddleback Church has been a major influence in youth ministry for the past 10 years, and as a result Conaway said he has seen the number of youth ministries across the country grow.

As Pinellas Community Church’s youth ministry evolved over the past few years, the church’s youth membership has increased. The percentage of people under the age of 18 who attend the church has always held steady at about 30 percent, Lead Pastor Mark Canfield said. However, in the last few years, youth attendance has jumped to nearly 40 percent.

Youth aren’t just attending the services. They’re getting involved in the programs, and not just when it’s time to wrap each other in toilet paper and race to a box of candy. The greeters, sound technicians and emcees in the youth services are all high school and middle schoolers, reaching out to their classmates.

David Biglow, 16, who will be a senior at Northeast High School in the fall, has been an emcee in the Wired and thirtyonesouth services for nearly a year. He attended Wired periodically while his mom was in the adult service. Eventually he started coming on his own and became a fixture in the youth ministry programs. At first David said he was uncomfortable coming to Wired because he was jumping into a new environment and meeting new people. But, he quickly embraced the bright lights and loud music.

“The general environment is good. There are flashing lights and me doing crazy stuff on stage,” David said. “Everyone gives off energy. It’s not bland. It has flavor.”
Posted by Marissa Harshman at 2:08 AM on Jun. 25, 2007
Tools:
Comment, e-mail, Permalink, Share
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers
More media jobs