Around the bible in 80 days – by Sophie and Jess

It’s amazing that two of our former young people have contributed towards a fantastic new devotional! Check out the story in their own words…

 

Around the bible in 80 days.

‘Around the world in 80 days’ is the name of a novel that came out in 1872. It tells the compelling story of two men

racing against time to travel the world in just eighty days. Of course travelling has become so much easier since then, with vast technology improvements, but in a post COVID-19 world travelling around the world in 80 days is probably near impossible. However, we would like to invite you to do something even better that is entirely possible, journeying through the Bible in eighty days, and we’d like to share with you a brilliant devotional that follows this theme.

‘One True God 80 Devotions’ is an eighty day devotional aimed at teenagers. The idea behind the title is taken from the image of a 180 degree turn – a complete change, a new direction, lives turned around for Jesus. Remember what your life was like when you committed to following Jesus – how much you changed? This book has been created to encourage and challenge teenagers to turn their lives around for Jesus.

This book, produced by Girlz 4 Christ Ministry in America, has been written by over 25 people from at least three continents. Each day starts with a verse or two from the Bible, the author shares a story or thought and it closes with a challenge/action point to encourage the reader to respond. Some of the topics throughout book include faith, friendship and leaning on God through all circumstances. We wrote pieces on self-worth, God-given gifts and social media among other things.

We b

elieve this book has the potential to be a great blessing, and we’re really excited to see what God does through it in the lives of, hopefully, many young people.

If this devotional sounds like something a teenager in your life would benefit from, please prayerfully consider gifting them a copy. ‘One True God 80 Devotions’ is available on Amazon in paperback and kindle format.
And please join us in praying as this challenging idea of a 180 degree turn for Jesus is brought to many teenagers all around the world.

Thank you

Sophie Spree and Jessica Edwards

Camp-Not-Camp is over – but what a ride!

It’s been a great two days – thanks for praying for us. Check out the last two videos. The first to supporters and the second to young people.

 

Camp-not-camp day 1 is over – what a blast!

It’s 8pm, and the first day of ‘camp-not-camp’ is over. Today was all kinds of fun!

We began with a breakfast for new year 7s and heard from a couple of leaders who have recently left school who shared their best advice for starting as a year 7. It was great to see new faces and to have time to just hang out, share stories, play games, and connect up together.

Fast forward to the afternoon and we had our first ever digital cookery lesson! We made frying pan pizzas (or cheat pizzas!) together. Fresh dough, proper home made sauce, and a whole range of toppings. We had great fun, made lots of mess, and even came up with some tasty food.

This evening, to top the day off, we ended with a weird-and-wonderful ‘hot chocolate quiz night’. Far from the usual style of traditional quizzes, we had rounds like the ‘celebrity forehead’ round, and the ‘will it float’. Great fun, with something for everyone – and of course, hot chocolate!

In the meantime, we’ve been getting ready to camp. So some of us have set tents up in the garden (check out the videos below of mine!), and others have made dens in their house. Brilliant fun.

What a great day! It’s a shame that we can’t really be together in the traditional sense at the moment, but doing a innovative camp like this still creates great memories, draws people together, and helps us stay possitive and have fun at this odd time.

Please keep praying for us tonight as we sleep outside (most of us!), and for tomorrow. We kick the day off with breakfast together, and end the day with a movie. Camp-not-camp is being brilliant, do pray that God brings the best from it, and people take another step together towards Jesus.

All the best!

Tim

 

 

Camp-not-camp – Starting today!

Usually at this time of year we’d be cleaning off the tents, packing the minibus, and heading off to a big field somewhere for a week of smelly camping. Odd enough, that’s not happening this year. That’s a blow for us – but it’s not game over! We love to innovate and try new things out, and that’s exactly what we’re doing, starting today.

Today is the first day of ‘Camp-Not-Camp’. This is a camping trip, without the ‘trip’ bit. Tonight, young people from all over Llandudno and Colwyn Bay will be camping in their gardens, living rooms, dining rooms – wherever they can fit a tent – all at the same time. Mass camping, in our own safe spaces!

Around that we are having five different online events. We have two breakfasts, the first this morning will be just for brand new year 7s. We have a cooking lesson (taught by me!) this afternoon, where we’ll make ‘Frying Pan Pizza’ together – which will either be totally amazing, or a total disaster. Either way it will be a blast. This evening we’re running a ‘Hot Chocolate Quiz’ and tomorrow evening we’ll be watch-partying a movie together.

This presents us a great opportunity to connect with our young people right at the beginning of summer, and give them some really fun memories. It also creates a way for us to provide options for young people who might love the idea of cooking, but really not be up for a quiz. Do you remember those ‘choose your own adventure’ books? This is a little bit like a choose your own camp. They can do as much or as little as they would like.

As usual there will be times to share from our lives, talk about Jesus, answer questions, and share the gospel. What an opportunity right?

So please be praying for us today as we start Camp-Not-Camp, online with our young people. Pray for fun, for good connections, for memories made, for safety, for good weather, for young people to feel safe and loved, and for them to hear and understand the story of Jesus.

Thanks folks!

Tim

 

If you’re a young person or parent – here are all your details. Just remember that meetings are for team and young people only – anyone else will be removed from the meeting. This is just to make sure everyone feels safe and recognise who the registered adults are. The only exception is the year 7’s breakfast this morning, where any new year 7 is welcome to bring a parent or older brother or sister. Thanks! 😀

Wed 5th
10am – Year 7 breakfast – https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82024902979 (Meeting ID: 820 2490 2979)
2pm – Cooking lesson – https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89871097470 (Meeting ID: 898 7109 7470)
6pm – Quiz night – https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81691325961 (Meeting ID: 816 9132 5961)

Overnight camping in gardens in their homes if they want

Thu 6th
10am – Breakfast for everyone – https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86364090822 (Meeting ID: 863 6409 0822)
6pm – Movie night – https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85698363550 (Meeting ID: 856 9836 3550)

 

New Year 7’s Breakfast – This Week!

Hi folks

If you know someone who is about to go into year 7 then please pass this on to them.

We are running a ‘New Year 7 Breakfast’ as part of our Camp-Not-Camp event this week. This will be a friendly, easy session to get to know them.

They are welcome to bring big brothers or sisters, or parents with them (but obviously the new year 7 needs to be there!).

It will be just 40 minutes, from 10am, this Wednesday 5th Aug on Zoom. Please contact us on facebook (TimGoughYFC), Instagram (@LlandudnoYouthForChrist) or email (llandudnoyfc@gmail.com) for the link.

Please spread the word!

Tim

Where were you this time last year?

I was just getting on a plane to speak at Vineyard in Sweden, but more interestingly was the week after that.

The beginning of summer for us usually means summer plans and projects. Last year that was five days away at Soul Survivor, the Golden Spoon Awards, Ice Cream Movie Night, Robot Wars Night, Human Cluedo, Refresh Camp, and (if you can imagine it now) an ‘Ultimate Loo Roll Fight.’

This year? Well we still don’t know.

With the dust around the new social distancing rules still settling, and the continued uncertainty, it’s very hard to plan for summer. For me this will be the first year in 14 that I haven’t taken a group away on camp. I’m not sure what Summer even looks like without camp!

This year the plans will evolve along with the social climate. That said, one thing is absolutely for certain, we will still be telling young people about Jesus.

Whether that’s online through Zoom meetings, or on YouTube, or in very careful gatherings, or just standing on top of Town Hall and yelling. Whatever it takes our job is to tell young people about Jesus as frequently and fully as possible.

The mission doesn’t stop, even if it changes shape.

Please keep praying for us as we discuss options for the summer and do all that we can do to safely serve young people while tell faithfully telling them about Jesus.

All the best!

Tim

 

Photo by Simon Rae on Unsplash

‘Happy Father’s Day’ doesn’t work for every young person

Dads are great right? Mine taught me to use tools and gifted me with a love of puns. It’s amazing to celebrate Dads and all that they’ve done for us.

It’s not always that simple though is it? Below is an article I wrote as a guest column in ‘Premier Youth and Children’s Work’ magazine a few years back.

The good father myth

I recently told a classroom of teenagers a story about a good father, and used it as a springboard to talk about the perfect love of God. There was a girl on the front row, however, who jerked suddenly and glared at me fiercely through tears for the rest of the session.

For years I’ve told these stories about God as a loving father, and I’ve assumed they’ll just get what I mean. There’s a big problem with this though. Parents are not always there and when they are, they are not always good.

Over 42 per cent of marriages in the UK end in divorce, almost half of those affect children under the age of 16, and the vast majority of child abuse happens within the family unit. Not everyone knows what a ‘good father’ looks like. Some dads are jerks, some are absent, and some really don’t deserve the title. We cannot indiscriminately trust that young people have any real concept of what a loving father actually is.

This myth – that everyone has some concept of what a ‘good father’ is – has followed our evangelism for quite a long time now. It has permeated every part of our worship, and it still forms the cornerstone of a lot of our teaching.

God is father and he has a truly good father’s heart towards us. We cannot expect, however, that everyone will understand exactly what that means. The father metaphor, in lots of cases, conjures images of imperfection, brokenness, or even neglect and abuse. In some cases it quietly leaves confusion, or just a lonely feeling of absence. In other scenarios, like what happened in my classroom, it can invoke real deep pain and simply propagate entrenched ill will towards God. Incredibly, fatherhood actually becomes an obstacle; a stumbling block to a young person falling in love with God.

Maybe, rather than talking simply about ‘fatherhood’, we should make sure we share the specific traits we’re referring to. So let’s talk about warmth, protection, compassion, strength, solidity, and leadership. Let’s describe fatherhood, not just state it. We can talk faithfully about the fatherhood of God by sharing what it means specifically, without just using the word ‘father’ in isolation.

Perhaps we should develop a philosophy that makes God the original form or ideal version of what father truly means. God is the highest reality of father, which means that He gets to set the tone for what a father really should be. Instead of saying “God loves you like a father,” maybe we could say “God is the father, and He loves you”. This subtle change of orientation stops us making God in the image of our own broken fathers, and creates a new category that He fully inhabits.

My good friend Mark and his wife recently had a baby and she is a little knock out. Cute, excitable and, at times, wonderfully loud. For the longest time she wouldn’t fall asleep without being in physical contact with one of her parents. Mark spent hours sat with this little life sleeping soundly on his belly. Her parents were her safe place. Mark as a dad was a secure and protected zone of absolute love and compassion – and I know he always will be. That’s what good fatherhood does!

Where can our young people find that safe space? How can we draw reluctant young people into the arms of The Father when their own fatherhood relationships are damaged? I know we can’t replace parents, and we really shouldn’t try to, but could our churches and youth groups provide a place of safety and compassion which reflects the safety and compassion of their father in heaven? I hope so! I’d encourage us to think intentionally about how we can introduce The Father to those who have little or broken reference for what fatherhood should be.

Fatherhood can be a beautiful thing – and with God it certainly always is. However, if we trip up on the first hurdle and can’t get past the word itself, then we’ll never get to the heart. We need to speak to our young people about the truth of God as father – a truth that breaks chains and dismantles spirals of self-destruction. Our language needs to be both basic and specific. It should show a real awareness of the problems many young people have with fatherhood as a concept. It is, after all, more important to communicate the real truth than just to use the ‘correct’ words. In the way we talk to young people we need to reach beyond just the word ‘father’ and capture the reality behind it.

We have an amazing opportunity to restore, redeem and even reintroduce what a father could and should be to a world in desperate need of him. Let’s get on it!

 

Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

Do you recognise the photo?

It’s North Shore beach in Llandudno. I took this photo on a 35mm point-and-shoot camera in the mid 1990s. It was Easter People, and this was the week that I gave my life to Jesus.

I was sat on the floor of St. David’s Methodist Church in Craig y Don, which was used as the youth venue. During the evening someone read a verse from Jeremiah that really spoke to me, and I got up the courage to speak to one of the team, and became a Christian there and then. That was the most important day of my life. I can remember exactly the way I felt.

Did you know that the vast majority of Christians accept Jesus before they’re 14 years old? That means that most Christians became so as a young person, and it means that the very best time to share the gospel with someone is when they still are a young person.

There’s never been a more important time to be good at what we do. Youth for Christ in Llandudno are doing all that we can to help young people have that same experience as I did nearly twenty years ago. At the moment that means YouTube content, Instagram Live videos, Zoom meetings, one-to-ones over the phone, and support for parents. The mission hasn’t stopped, it’s just changed shape.

Please keep standing with us. Please consider supporting the work that we do. Please pray for every young person in this town to say ‘yes’ to Jesus.

Thanks!

Tim

I have so many monkeys! Working with high achievers.

Yesterday’s ‘live Reverb thought’ began with me sharing some of my collection of stuffed monkeys. One of them in particular, Damien, was given to me by my youth worker (also called Damien!) back when I was a teenager.

It was about then as a young person that I realised I really wanted to go into ministry. This was quite a big deal for me because, as an academically high achiever, everyone wanted me to pursue something big and crazy. My English teacher wanted me to go into politics, my science teacher suggested research, my psychology teacher pushed psychiatry, and my geography teacher wanted me to pursue geology. All of these sounded fun and interesting but none of them brought my teenage heart alive like telling people about Jesus did. It came as a big shock to everyone then, when I withdrew from studying ‘PPE’ at Oxford and went instead to what my dad colourfully called ‘Vicar Factory.’

I sometimes wonder if a lot of youth work oddly sidesteps the ‘high achievers’, letting them just get on with it and work things out for themselves. I think if we do this then we will really let a lot of our young people down. They don’t need ‘leaving to it’, they need feeding, stimulating and challenging. They need to be held accountable to God’s calling on their lives so that they don’t just put all their confidence in their brain power or rely too much on their grades.

Being a high achiever doesn’t make you immune to anxiety, poor self-esteem, or immense amounts of stress (ask any university professor!). It can sometimes, however, make you incredibly lonely. Even saying ‘I’m a high achiever’ is enough for a teenager to draw bullying and resentment from both peers and adults alike. It’s also really difficult for a high achiever to distinguish between what they can do (in terms of their high ability) and what they should do (God’s calling on their lives). Because they get high grades, it’s too easy for leaders and parents to push them towards the former without much thought towards the latter. That’s called being trapped by achievement.

It’s so important that we engage a wide range of very different young people. At Youth for Christ we provide this through our growing variety of projects. However, as someone who was a high achiever myself when back at High School, I try hard to make sure that I’m keenly aware of those particular young people in our groups today.

Through one-to-ones, in depth studies, prayer times, Q&As, guidance counselling, and just through providing lots of opportunities to share, we have been able to offer real support to those young people who have the added stress and loneliness of doing well at school.

Youth for Christ is about reaching every young person. It’s strange how often we unknowingly leave some out because we think that they don’t need us. There are so many types of young people that need our attention and the high achievers are just one group who are often overlooked in youth groups.

So, what’s your area? Do you have experience with high achievement? What about sports, arts, additional needs? Are you naturally louder or quieter, loquacious or introspective? Do you love knitting, writing, cooking, reading, making videos, or playing the kazoo?

Not only is there room for all, we need a wide variety of volunteers to reach the enormous variety of young people who exist. Young people, after all, are just people – and they come in all the shapes and sizes that the rest of us do. Can you bring something unique to share with our young people? Get in touch and start a conversation with us about what you could add to those under our care today.

Can you help us out with YouTube?

Related to this, we have just started a YouTube channel for young people. This is being brilliant, but it’s very limited at the moment. We need 100 subscribers before we can advertise our own link to young people – which will make it far easier for them to see it and share it with their friends.

Can you subscribe to our new channel here and help us get there? You can find it here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz295XuUp4GFgb-0qOYUU_w

 

Photo by Jared Rice on Unsplash

Can you guess how much of what we do is run by Volunteers?

Today begins National Volunteer Week 2020. This is a perfect time to call out our awesome volunteers!

For the 2019 Annual General Meeting, we worked out that we work with around 5000 young people a year. Between 40 and 50 young people were spending at least an hour a week with us, some young people were spending ten hours a week with us (the average was about four hours a week). Lockdown notwithstanding, these numbers have grown over the last year.

The most important number we worked out, however, was that it takes about 150 ‘people hours’ a week to run Llandudno Youth for Christ, and two thirds of that is done by volunteers.

Two thirds of what we do is entirely voluntary!

100 hours a week is done by volunteers!

That means Youth for Christ in Llandudno simply would not exist without our incredible team of committed, passionate, compassionate, and tireless volunteers.

Did you know that we have over fifty volunteers at Llandudno Youth for Christ? Everything from our Saturday Café, our frontline youth work projects, one-to-ones, schools work, administration, management and governance – is fuelled and carried by our amazing volunteers.

I know I’m biased, but I believe our volunteers are simply the best in the world.

So this blog today, from my heart, is simply a huge shout out to our incredible team of volunteers.

Thank you. Every one of you. You know who you are. We know who you are. And young people are meeting Jesus because of you.

Happy Volunteers’ Week!

 

Photo by ray sangga kusuma on Unsplash