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"Shakespeare's
immortal tale of star-crossed young lovers gets a music video-style
updating in this hip, Florida-set, pistol-packing adaptation." That's
what a review said about 1996's Romeo and Juliet, starring
Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes and directed by Baz Luhrmann.
The movie stayed true to the original language and plot of the Shakespeare
play, yet it transported the story into the context of the rough
ganglands of the '90s. This is, in its simplest form, what youth
ministry has to accomplish as it enters a new millennium of proclaiming
the mystery of the gospel to the next generation (minus all the
guns and teen suicide, of course).
It has always
seemed odd to me that the church should be so interested in seeing
young people join its ranks, and yet, do little in the way of adapting
to the culture in which those young people exist. Terms like "seeker-sensitive"
or "seeker-friendly" are so often thrown about, and yet the focus
of these terms always seems to be about adults in the local community
of believers.
Imagine, though,
if a number of middle-aged and older adults caught a vision like
the one David hints at in Psalm 71: "Since my youth, O God, you
have taught me, and to this day I declare your marvelous deeds.
Even when I am old and gray, do not forsake me, O God, till I declare
your power to the next generation, your might to all who are to
come."
Imagine if we
began to see a number of church plants occur in the midst of youth
culture itself, rather than inviting youth into adult expressions
of Christian faith and practice.
Imagine whole
families, retired couples, singles and other adults not only relocating
to form the prayer and financial foundations for these new church
plants, but also allowing themselves to become the adults, grandparents
and loving mentors most young people today do not have. The risks
would be high and the relocation uncomfortable, but it all sounds
like something that might just happen in the upside-down Kingdom
of God.
Many sacrifices
would occur along the way for the adults: The music won't seem to
be very worshipful-- but then, worship is about lifestyle and the
heart more than noise, right? The clothes the youth might wear would
not be what one would consider Sunday-best-- but then, the Lord
does not look at the outward appearance, but at the heart, right?
The venue might be a warehouse with a cold floor to sit on-- but
a few chairs could be found if needed, right? Most of the sermon
would include illustrations that relate to youth and young adults
and may seem irrelevant, but let's be frank here-- if mature Christians
are relying on Sunday morning (or Saturday night, for that matter)
to fill their spiritual need for the week, something is dreadfully
wrong.
Here's the point,
and the possibility: There are youth pastors all over who know that
what we are doing in churches right now is just getting by. Very
few new believers are being added to the Kingdom of God through
our evangelism efforts, and those who do accept Christ often do
not continue in the church after they graduate from high school
because the only church body they know stops ministering to them
the moment they graduate. Something has to change, and the exciting
thing is that it doesn't have to exclude everyone else. Think of
it: Expressing an inter-generational church in the midst of youth
culture, for youth culture!
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