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IDEAS FOR FAMILY MINISTRIES
GIVE A FAMILY
STRENGTHENING EMPHASIS TO EXISTING CHURCH ACTIVITIES
Without
adding new programs to an often already overcrowded church calendar,
a family strengthening emphasis can be given to existing church
services, programs and activities.
Sabbath
School
Include occasional features in adult, children and youth
divisions which deal with specific family themes.
Invite fathers or mothers as guest speakers with features
for junior, earliteen, youth Sabbath Schools on family life themes.
Have a panel of parents and a panel of youth discuss family
issues.
When teaching the Sabbath School lesson, use family illustrations
and make applications to fit family settings.
Give opportunity for young mothers/parents to study their
Sabbath School lesson together in a corner of the room where their
children are being taught theirs.
Give children opportunities to present special music, features
or other presentations to the adult Sabbath School.
Have whole families meet together for song service and a
short multigenerational feature before dividing by age group.
Organize parent support groups arising out of the Sabbath
School context, such as a cradle mothers' group.
Worship
Service
Preach sermons on specific family topics.
Use examples from different family living situations as sermon
illustrations. Listeners identify with the human interest aspect
and receive encouragement to grow even if not all such illustrations
have successful endings.
Provide a "Children's Corner" during the worship
service with children's stories or other features tailored especially
for the young. Include points which can be discussed at home.
Prepare a children's activity sheet or a special children's
church bulletin which draws young people into the various aspects
of the worship service.
Take into account the needs of children, adults, singles
and marrieds when planning the worship service and selecting music.
Have couples or families lead various aspects of the worshipproviding
special music, reading scripture, announcing hymns or praying.
Involve youth in leading congregational worship or serving
as ushers or greeters.
Insert a time of fellowship at the beginning of the worship
service when worshippers may greet one another.
Provide opportunity for members to give ideas and suggestions
of sermon topics and other aspects of the service which could have
a more positive effect on marriage and family living.
Include a bulletin insert with special thoughts from Bible
and Spirit of Prophecy on family living.
Distribute a handout at the close of the sermon with practical
ways the message of the morning can be put into practice at home.
Throughout the church year acknowledge and affirm the various
kinds of familiesnewlyweds, couples with small children, families
with teenagers, couples in mid-life, single parents, divorced persons,
step families, multigenerational families, widows and widowers,
and singles who have never been married.
Provide child-care from time to time for single parents so
that they can enjoy the full blessing of the worship service.
Build into the yearly worship program appropriate emphasis
on the secular and church calendars of special days such as Mother's
Day, Father's Day, Christian Home and Family Altar Day.
Use responsive readings on the family from the hymnal or
use other appropriate scripture passages.
Have a special time of commitment for couples/families at
the close of the worship service.
Prayer
Meeting or Mid-week Service
Study biblical marriage and family themes, i.e., marriage
covenant, love, forgiveness, mutual submission, fruits of the Spirit
in the home, using spiritual gifts in the family, family worship.
Study accounts of Bible fathers, mothers, children or whole
families.
Select for study "family" portions of Spirit of
Prophecy books such as The Ministry of Healing, Education or entire
books such as The Adventist Home.
Pray for specific church families by rotation.
Invite testimonies of God's blessing in family living.
If families with children do not regularly attend, plan a
monthly mid-week family night with spiritual activities and features
of interest to children and youth, perhaps beginning with supper
together.
Have a family worship demonstration as part of the mid-week
service, with selected families demonstrating interesting and effective
family worship ideas.
Sing the special hymns for families from our hymn books.
Feature a series on one of the family topics that is of high
interest to the congregation and show how the Bible is practical
to every day family living.
Adventist
Youth Meetings
Plan programs around topics of interest to youth regarding
family living, building relationships/friendships, communication
with parents, handling and resolving conflict, dating, preparing
for marriage, etc.
Have Pathfinders or other AJY groups earn the honor in Family
Life.
Plan some family-oriented events periodically at Pathfinder
and other AY meetings such as socials or outingscamping, hiking.
Have a panel discussion with two panelsone of teens
and one of parents. Let them ask each other "What I've wanted
to know but never dared to ask. . ." questions.
Have a Pathfinder open house when parents are invited to
see what the young people are doing.
Invite parents to help on a short term basis, to teach a
craft, a progressive classwork component, or an honor.
Meetings
With Church Board and Councils
At one of the regular meetings, plan a brain-storming session
for the Church Board and/or Church Ministries Coordinating Committee
(or the Sabbath School Council, the Youth Ministries Council, the
Personal Ministries Council, the Board of Elders, etc.). Assign
the topic "How Our Church (Sabbath School, Youth Group, Board
of Elders, etc.) Can Strengthen Families." Make specific plans
to implement ideas and suggestions that arise.
Plan a few minutes periodically for in-service education
of council members. Study topics such as communication, temperaments,
self-worth, conflict resolution which will improve the quality of
church family life and spill over to individual families.
Provide opportunities for families of board/council members
to fellowship together to build better bonds and feelings of "family"
among leaders.
Church
Social Meetings
Focus different programs throughout the year on various aspects
of family livingmarriage, mothering, fathering, grandparenting,
and include programs that focus on family clustering groups (which
might include all church members divided into "super families").
Build church social programs around family holidays in the
calendar such as Mother's Day, Father's Day, Valentine's Day.
Plan a round-robin social that moves among several homes
with each family responsible for one game or activity and end up
at the church for refreshments.
Select films, videos and other programs carefully so as to
convey and deepen Adventist family values.
Sponsor a "Family Talent Night" with various families
in the churches presenting the combined or separate talents of parents
and children.
Create a place mat for Sabbath potluck with activities and
puzzles that will get the church family communicating multigenerationally.
Evangelistic
Meetings
Present doctrinal messages around family themes such as the
fatherhood of God, making our earthly homes a foretaste of our heavenly
home, being faithful to our family promises and covenants as God
has been faithful to His eternal covenant with us, presenting the
Sabbath as a time for rest and renewal of relationships between
God and ourselves and between family members, and family finance
and Christian stewardship.
Include talks on family life as a part of evangelistic meetings.
Feature families during meetings (see above on the Worship
service). Let families or couples present special music or give
personal testimonies.
Give special Bible studies on family living to candidates.
Distribute handouts and literature on family life to evangelistic
congregations.
Plan some visitation time for families as wholes as well
as visiting individuals within families. Endeavor to work for the
family as a unit.
Organize visitation using several from a family as a visitation
team.
Communion
Services
Designate a special place for couples and/or families who
wish to share the ordinance of footwashing together.
Explain to families with unbaptized children how to teach
their children the meaning of the communion service.
Plan a special time when children with their parents may
sit together with unconsecrated emblems and sample them for the
purpose of instructing their curious and inquiring minds.
As children grow older, let fathers wash the feet of their
sons and mothers the feet of their daughters to teach them and to
give them a sense of specialness and inclusion in the service.
Have a simulated passover meal as families before the communion,
explaining the symbols and the meaning to the Hebrew family and
the new understanding brought by Christ to the Communion.
Baptismal
Services
Celebrate the candidate's membership in his/her own family
as well as membership in the church family.
Include the entire family in the preparation of a child for
baptism, providing opportunity for parents to recommit themselves,
siblings to look back or forward to their own decision as well as
making sure the child to be baptized understands the step he is
about to take.
Give family members opportunities to share feelings about
their loved one's baptism by song or personal testimony.
When young people are baptized, meet with the family to pray
and share ways in which all can be supportive of the newly baptized
young person.
Include a "welcome to the family" by giving each
member some special paper as stationery on which to write words
of encouragement and welcome to be part of a scrapbook keepsake
for the new member.
Where possible, baptize members of the same family together.
Some find a special sense of unity in being baptized simultaneously.
Encourage baptismal candidates to invite their extended family
members to be present. Recognize the potential of this event to
give renewal and stimulation to family relationships.
Encourage families to remember and commemorate baptismal
dates of family members at home.
Remember in a special way at church the anniversaries of
current members' baptisms.
Child Dedication
Services
This is an occasion which naturally generates warm feelings
of familyness throughout the congregation. It affords an excellent
opportunity for a special message about the importance of a family,
child-rearing, parenting, etc., in the sermon or in a special feature.
Make the dedication service special with an appropriate charge
and words of encouragement to the parents.
Offer family members (siblings, parents, grandparents) the
opportunity to share with the church family their joyful feelings
over the presence of this little one among them.
Record the dedication services and give the tape to the family.
They will be able to remember and celebrate this event annually.
Give the parents and child a special gift book (Child Guidance,
The Adventist Home, or some other appropriate title).
Prepare a special message for this dedicated child which
he will later read (at age 11 or 12) which will encourage him to
prepare for baptism.
Give the family a folder which shows all the church has to
offer in assistance to the parents and to their child as he/she
grows.
Make it a whole family event by including extended family
as available in the dedication event.
Make a scrapbook of photographs, the church bulletin of the
day, dedication certificate, etc, that can be added to on the occasion
of other significant events in the child's life.
Wedding
Services
Encourage the bride and groom to think of their family when
planning their wedding. Perhaps they can include special words or
thoughts of tribute to parents or other family members during the
ceremony or at their reception.
Provide engaged couples with premarital guidance, helping
them to identify issues which they need to discuss and to develop
the skills with which to manage their relationship successfully.
Select and train one or two couples who enjoy being married
to meet with the engaged pair to talk about what marriage means
to them.
Build wedding sermonettes around scriptural passages about
marriage with practical application for the new couple.
Recognize the potential of a wedding to be a time of togetherness
and renewal for each of the families concerned. Encourage them to
invite family members to this event.
Funeral
Services
Be sensitive to the special needs of the grieving family,
anticipating their immediate and continuing physical, emotional,
social and spiritual needs and providing for them in their time
of loss.
In preparing and delivering the various parts of funeral
services, highlight those aspects of warmth and humanness in family
living which characterized the deceased, giving relatives the opportunity
to relive the treasured moments of family life together.
Vacation
Bible School
Build the VBS theme around the topic "Family."
Include family living features to help children learn how
to live successfully in their families.
Involve families of children in VBS graduation ceremonies.
Give opportunity for church families to mingle with non-church families
over a fruit drink or during a graduation dinner or banquet.
Conduct VBS in the evening conjointly with a family life
program for parents.
Where possible, consider using father-mother or grandfather-grandmother
leader/teacher teams in VBS for the modeling effect it will have
upon the children.
Have a "parent" component so the whole family attends
together.
Church Campouts
Emphasize family strengthening at church retreats or family
camps. Include special programs of Bible studies, nature studies,
or social activities (games, recreation) which give parents and
their children/youth opportunity to interact with each other.
Church Newsletters,
Bulletins and Bulletin Boards
Share encouraging news from the various families within the
membership.
Include articles, columns and features on family topics.
Post items on bulletin boards which encourage families.
Church Library
Build a family life lending library which includes books,
periodicals, audio and video cassettes, and possibly even films.
Feature a family life book/cassette-of-the-month. Give a
promotional preview and encourage families to read/listen to the
specially selected library item.
Encourage members to read/listen to a selected book/tape
by passing copies through the church using an attached routing list
of names.
Lay Activities/Personal
Ministries
Encourage families to work together as teams for missionary
activity. As parents join with their children to distribute literature,
to ingather, to visit new interests, or shut-ins at home, there
is a double blessing, upon themselves and upon those they visit.
Pastoral
Visitation
Pastors and local elders who visit with members in their
homes, can be alert to individual family needs and opportunities
created by significant family events such as weddings, births, baptisms,
funerals and other life crises. During the visit, minister to the
needs generated by these circumstances. Put members in touch with
people, programs or resources which they can utilize.
Make arrangements to visit families at worship time through
the week or on Friday or Sabbath evening. Offer to lead the family
in family worship, sharing creative ideas and suggestions to encourage
them in this daily experience.
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
FOR SPECIFIC NEEDS
A formal
program is not necessary for every family life need that surfaces
in the congregation. Many responses will be informal and may be
adequately met through one-to-one contacts or in the normal round
of church activity. Carefully planned and presented programs are
useful, however, 1) to instruct and inspire, 2) to expose participants
to more effective models for relating, and 3) to provide opportunities
for relational growth.
Programs
may be conducted in a wide variety of settings and on different
schedules reflecting the needs of the target audience and the particular
aims and objectives. Programs for the general church may take the
form of an annual family life Sabbath, weekend, or week coinciding
with special times in the calendar year such as Mother's Day, Father's
Day or in the church's calendar such as Christian Home Week or Family
Altar Day.
Other
programs may be multi-generational with families in the church or
community as the target audience (or "super families"made
up of biological families joined by other church members for the
duration of the program). Family camps provide an excellent setting
for multi-generational activities.
Some
family life programs will be focused on special topics. They may
be single sessions or multi-sessions depending on the content and
aims. Parent education classes may be held on an intensive weekend,
for instance, or over an extended period, perhaps one night a week
for a month or more. In one church the Cradle Roll/Kindergarten
mothers met one Sunday morning per month at a Mothers' Brunch to
share and study.
Experiential-type
programs generally require longer periods of time. Marriage strengthening
programs, for this reason, usually take a block of timesuch
as a weekendto accomplish their goals of relational growth.
And, while certain attitudinal changes may occur in a relatively
short time, behavioral changes require extended periods. Those kinds
of programs, therefore, such as marital care groups, family clustering
groups, divorce and grief recovery groups, which have behavioral
change as part of their intention, may need continuing sessions
for 6 to 12 months or more.
USING A FAMILY
LIFE APPROACH IN OUTREACH
The great
invitation we have to extend to others is to a place in the family
of God. What better way to begin than with entry events (which may
merge into pathways) that speak to family needs and provide non-members
with an opportunity to become more acquainted with the church, its
message, and its people. Bridges between the needs of families and
the sharing of the gospel are too natural to be left unbuilt. Here
are a few ideas:
Seminars
on Topics of Community Interest
Family finance
Family stress management
Caring for your aging parents
Vacation Bible School
You and your child (parenting classes perhaps associated
with VBS)
You and your teen
Family health (This may take the form of Fun Runs, Aerobics,
etc., that whole families can participate in together.)
Family nutrition
Temperament testing
Singles enrichment
Marriage enrichment
Films series on family issues
Accenting
"Family" Aspects of Calendar Holidays
Mother's/Father's Day services (Poll the community for outstanding
parents and honor them.)
A Family for the holidays (Match lonely people in the community
with caring church families willing to share their holiday celebrations
with them.)
Programs/Support
Groups Which Capitalize on Family Transitions/Stress Points
Prenatal classes
In-laws
Newlyweds
Preparing for marriage
Making the most of retirement
Your family and your handicapped child
Stress management for teens
Coping with loss and grief
Parents' support group for chemically dependent youth
Making it through mid-life
Coping with divorce
Helping children cope with divorce
Meeting the challenge of single parenting
Acknowledging
Special Family Events
"According
to an article in the New York Times (June 1, 1984), when
a baby is born, couples begin having 'sober thoughts of mothering
and fathering, doctoring and proctoring, education and, for adults
who do not belong to a religious institution, religion.'
"That's
right, religion. Some psychologists suggest, and a sampling of what
some have termed the 'unchurched' affirms, that 'often with parenthood
come the first real spouse-to-spouse discussions of religion. They
are frequently followed by membership in a church or synagogue.'
"'Kids
are the catalysts for tremendous growth in adults, particularly
when it comes to such things as religion,' said William Damon, a
psychology professor at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts.
"'Parents
must transmit to their offspring what the social order is all about,'
Professor Damon said. 'And to some extent that means parents must
first figure out what they believe in.'" (Signs of the Times,
April, 1985, p. 7.
A packet
of materials might be assembled in an attractive folder which could
include items such as:
- An introductory
subscription to a missionary magazine.
- A Bible
Course enrollment card or first lesson of an actual study guide
series.
- A description
of a Cradle Roll program at the local S.D.A. church with an invitation
to attend.
- A coupon
for a gift copy of a children's book such as My Bible Friends.
- A sample
copy of Our Little Friend, the tiny tot's Sabbath School paper.
- An invitation
to any parenting programs, nutrition classes, VBS programs, marriage
or family enrichment programs, etc. being offered by the local
church.
- An appropriate
letter from the pastor giving congratulations on the arrival of
their new baby.
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