All hands on deck

 

Turning the good ship SS Ministry even as it continues sailing in uncharted waters

August 28, 2022

Photo by Sensei Minimal via Unsplash

A recent edition of Leading Theologically took on a nautical theme as host the Rev. Dr. Lee Hinson-Hasty and guest Gina Yeager-Buckley launched into this topic: “Turning the Ship: What Ministry Feels Like Right Now.”

Listen to the full conversation between Hinson-Hasty, senior director for Theological Funds Development for the Committee on Theological Education of the PC(USA) and the Presbyterian Foundation, and Yeager-Buckley, associate for Presbyterian Youth and Triennium, by going here or here.

“In some ways, this is a pessimistic title I’ve given you,” Yeager-Buckley told Hinson-Hasty. “But I think that’s OK because a lot of us are feeling this way right now. Right now it feels like I’m in the hold where the steamy hot engines are and I have no windows and no steering wheel and I’m being asked to turn this ship, cancel an event that’s beloved by thousands, and then figure out something new.”

“I think we are being asked constantly in ministry to turn this ship,” she said. “For me right now as a follower of Jesus Christ and a youth worker I feel like I’m being asked to turn a ship of hundreds of years of white privilege and turn it so I’m grabbing young people onto this boat. It’s really hard and good and baffling work, turning it while also building it and needing to repaint it and, oh yeah, there’s big holes in it and it’s sinking.”

“It’s not like, ‘Shipbuilding. It’s fun!’” Yeager-Buckley said. “It’s hard.”

The Rev. Dr. Lee Hinson-Hasty

“I am a sailor. I get this,” Hinson-Hasty said. “Your sail tears or your rudder breaks. You’ve got to figure out new ways of doing things. I think pastors and youth workers in the church feel this way right now.”

Yeager-Buckley said those pastors and youth workers who’ve spent two years engaged mainly in online ministry “are paddling with their hands. We’re dealing with imperfect technology, but I think we’re getting pretty good with it.”

“One thing I hope it teaches us is we will make mistakes and we will have to learn from them and give grace,” she said. “Things may never be like they were, but certain parts will come back. I don’t want people to feel hopeless [about ministry to young people], especially youth workers. We will always have young people around us.”

What Yeager-Buckley strives to do more of in her own ministry is “find the energy to work to want relationships more than programs. At the start of the pandemic, part of me wishes we had slowed down like everyone else, watched the world and developed relationships more than throwing out programs. … What’s going on in the minds and hearts of these anxious young people that we have?”

Not only are many young people anxious, thanks in part to social media, “they have more ways of sharing their anxiety directly,” Yeager-Buckley said.

Gina Yeager-Buckley

In spite of all the challenges, churches and worshiping communities are finding ways to minister to young people — even when the young people aren’t readily apparent.

“I just saw the coolest thing,” Yeager-Buckley told Hinson-Hasty, tacking into a story told to her by a colleague in 1001 New Worshiping Communities. A certain church — as other churches have in recent years — wondered how to continue with its youth ministry when there were no more youth attending regularly. This church “summoned up their energy and their creativity and started doing things to support their local school’s sports teams,” Yeager-Buckley said, including providing them snacks and “respite care” for the athletes’ parents over the holidays.

“I love that. Those are the stories I want people to hear,” she said. It matters, she said, to ask a parent, “What can I do for you as a parent? We need to support these accompaniers of youth and their families.”

“On this ship, people know each other by name,” Hinson-Hasty replied. “We are part of a community and we aren’t waiting for people to come to us. We’re engaging them. I want to be on that ship.”

Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service

Revised Common Lectionary Readings for Sunday, August 28, 2022, the Twenty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year C)

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Let us join in prayer for:

PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff

April Davenport, Associate General Counsel, Legal Services, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Kathie Davenport,  Program Administrator, Church Engagement, Board of Pensions

Let us pray

Dear Lord, the source of our strength, you are good to provide for our needs in whatever circumstances we find ourselves. Thank you for your guidance and wisdom to carry out the work you have called us to do. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.


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