
"Presence-Centered Youth Ministry"
written by Mike King
Reviewed by Murray Brown
Many youth ministry books are not particularly “new”.
They are repackaged ideas or the collation of other's work
with the author’s own spin added. Presence Centered
Youth Ministry is a youth ministry book that boasts about
the fact that is draws on other’s work yet ironically
it comes across as the most original youth ministry book
I have read in years – perhaps ever. What’s more
it is not only original but in my opinion it is a profound
and immensely valuable contribution to youth ministry thinking
and practice.
They say the best books are the ones that manage to put
into words what we’ve been thinking, and Presence Centered
Youth Ministry does that for me. Frequently throughout the
book I found myself saying “Yes!”.
If you leaf through its pages, you will see words like “liturgy”,
meditation” and “creeds”. You might even
think you have picked up a Catholic youth ministry book when
you read phrases like “prayer rope”, “praying
with icons” and “the sign of the cross”.
Perhaps my enthusiasm for this book betrays my liking of
contemplative worship and my belief that the Catholic approach
to youth ministry has much to teach us who are Protestant.
But before you dismiss this book as “not your thing”,
at least check out the first chapter. In it Mike King traces
his own thirty year background in youth ministry which began
as evangelical as the best of us. If that chapter causes
you to become curious then read chapter 2: Dysfunctional
Evangelical Youth Ministry. This was the highlight of the
book for me. and is summed up by the quote that “The
notion of youth workers as entertainers and program directors
must give way to youth workers as authentic shepherds, spiritual
guides with a holy anointing to lead youth into the presence
of God.” Some of the problems with evangelical youth
ministry that Mike King highlights are a lack of tradition,
age segregation, and “decision-ism”.
If you find yourself disagreeing with his analysis they
may not be much point in reading on, but if his words resonate
with you the following chapters describe the role of the
youth worker in this paradigm, along with suggestions of
specific devotional practices related to scripture and prayer
which he has used effectvely in his own work with young people.
The practical suggestions are useful. They are practices
used by Christians down through the ages. But even if you
are hesistant about introducing these into your youth ministry
(and Mike King wisely recommends you don’t until they
have become part of your own devotional life), don’t
miss the overall message of this book. It is a call back
to a youth ministry approach that seeks to establish an awareness
of the presence of Christ in our youth ministries, but more
importantly it is a challenge to us as youth workers – to
make Christ the very centre of our own lives and to deepen
our own devotional practices. If you miss this point you
miss the main purpose of the book and simply use it as another
book or programming ideas. It is so much more.
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