Tuesday, October 29, 2013

My Friend, Ken Moore.

Tomorrow, I will be heading to the funeral for one of the "good guys" in this life, gone to soon. Actually, Ken Moore was without a shadow of a doubt, the best guy I have known in the first 41 (42 tomorrow) years of my life. In a world that has watered down the genuine characteristics of friendship, and everyone has become a "best," Ken was one of a kind and quite literally, the embodiment of the word "friend."

You see, as a youth pastor, we come into a church and make immediate relationships. It's our calling, our passion, our inner drive. It's who we are and I guess you could say it's part of our gifts our Lord has given those in ministry. But, after 17 years of doing this, I have noticed a trend...you come to a church, do your thing, make friends and after some time has passed and your work is finished, you are called elsewhere and many of those friendships end. They don't move on with you. I mean, the fondness always remains, but being in the trenches of everyday life stops and the everyday or every week conversations turn in to 2-3 times a year conversations. Friends on Facebook, followers on Twitter, but the genuine "how's life going for ya" conversations end....

For the first and only time in my life, I had one of those friendships come with me and that friend was Ken Moore. I left Lawrenceville FUMC in 2006 and was still friends with Ken Moore, because he pursued me. From the week I left, Ken and I were on the phone, chatting about the church, the new kids, the old kids, how the move was going and those conversations continued right up until the beginning of this year.

So I wanted to take a moment to explain who Ken Moore was, too me...and to everyone else that knew him.

I first met Ken in the fellowship hall, right before youth group, in 2006. He walked up, introduced himself and his kids, Nic and Natalie. Nic didn't meet a stranger and Natalie was a shy little thing. Ken carried the conversation (as I would find out in every conversation after that, Ken always carried the conversation!). I explained what we did, where his kids would be and then he said the phrase every youth minister dreams about, "ok, so where do you need me," and from that day, Ken didn't miss one single Sunday night, retreat or event...even long after I was gone. It was too good to be true, but Ken always followed up on what he said he was going to do and I also found out as our friendship grew, he always followed through...always!

Ken never approached us and told us what we should be doing better....he always approached those moments with sleeves rolled up, working boots on and standing behind the phrase, "how bout I help in this way..." He always had a plan. It was as if he was not just one step ahead of the game....he was 10-20 steps ahead of things. If there was a new student visiting, the student and family had met Ken Moore already! If there was a student who hadn't been attending, they had received a message from Ken Moore! If the student was in college, graduated from the youth program, they had received a message from Ken Moore.

Over the years, when we met for lunch, the first hour of our lunches (sometimes they went 3-4 hours), were him filling me in on what everyone was up to from Lawrencville FUMC. He had pictures, he had messages, he had stories and he had joy in his voice about every single student and adult he was telling me about.

The one moment that has always been with me was the week before his first Spring Break Beach trip. He volunteered and wanted to be prepared so I debriefed him as best I could. I told him about the group sessions and the small group sessions, the talent show, the free time, the differing roles between a small group leader and a chaperone. When it came time for me to explain the last night, the alter call night, I couldn't come up with any words...only to describe it as intense and for him to be ready. He asked, "what does that mean?" Of coarse, I had to be honest and tell him, no words could really do it justice. I said, "just be ready and you will know what to do when it happens." Years later, Ken would tell me he was terrified of that first Beach Retreat alter call because he had never been in that kind of environment before, with kids crying, hugging, forgiving one another, rededicating their lives to Christ and for some, coming to know Christ for the first time. That night, as the alter call started, I saw Ken, embracing students who ran to him for prayer, encouragement and support. He was changed! He told me he was! He had never prayed with anyone before, in that kind of manner and something changed in his life, on that trip. I saw a man, who had already been present in the lives of so many students already, have a godly presence, purpose and passion that drove him to be the great mentor, friend and counselor he became.

In the years that passed, I took a job at Alpharetta FUMC after serving Smyrna FUMC for 3 years and because it was a little closer to Lawrenceville, Ken decided to surprise me a few times by bringing a car load of students to Alpharetta for youth group. Those moments meant the world to me, to see the middle schoolers I had, all grown up as high school students and some in college. I never asked him to do any of this...once again, it was Ken, rolling up his sleeves and doing what he did best...loving people....genuinely! Looking into the hearts of others, sensing a great need and doing whatever it took to meet that need!

A few years ago, after the birth Audrey, Ken made a special trip over to H& R Block, to visit with Toni, myself and Anita Solty, but it was clear from the minute we walked in the door why he was really there...to meet Audrey! And she took right to him. He had Anita take a few pictures on his phone and these will be forever cherished in my heart.

 


In the last few years, Ken would bring his son, Nic, to the lunches and that was an added bonus because I felt that I never had the chance to fully develop the relationship God had planned for me in the life of Nic. We talked about his kids all of the time and they were his pride and joy. The next hour of our loooooong lunches were about Nic and Natalie and what his wife Angie was up to. He always seemed to have a trunk load of stuff his was taking to the post office or UPS that had to be shipped. He was attending football games, school events, etc...even though I didn't get a chance to be around his family anymore, it was as if I had been a part of their lives over those 8 years I had been gone from Lawrencville because I knew everything that was going on.

Ken was a details guy! I say this while laughing out loud because I can't clearly express the long, drawn out stories that he would tell me about things that I normally wouldn't care about...and even in my ADD state, I still had no idea who he was talking about sometimes, but the stories were so fascinating about who he was helping and what he was doing to organize this and that, I stayed glued to him. Not to his stories, just him...because I knew, every single time I was with Ken, I was in the presence of someone that was special. Someone who cared about others more deeply than the average person. Someone who treated every chance meeting, with a stranger, acquaintance or friend as a meeting of purpose.

This past Thursday, Ken had come to my mind, in a way where I knew I should have called him, but I didn't. I got busy and forgot. I never once thought that I wouldn't get to talk to him ever again. These last few days have been filled with emotion and sadness because I learned on Sunday night, right before youth group had started, that Ken took his life. I have struggled with the person I knew him to be and the road that he must have traveled to get to where he had ended up. In speaking with his best friend and some others, I was able to put the missing pieces together in my heart and know that Ken had not been himself lately and the battle with depression and anxiety that had been such turmoil in his life lately.

It's going to be hard to say goodbye to a one of a kind, well....really, a once in a lifetime friend, tomorrow. I don't want to say goodbye. So, Ken....I know and we all know that what happened was not you. It was a succumbing to who you thought you were and those of us that know you, the hundreds of youth and adults who have posted on your Facebook page speaks volumes to who you really were, I love you and will miss you greatly! I'm not angry, just deeply saddened and heartbroken. I know you are completely healed and healthy and I consider myself to have been blessed to have known the "best guy" I have ever known.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Girls Weekend - God's provision


Girls Weekend - November 1-3


One of the areas I have always joked about in my world, is that I am secure in masculinity, even though I have been surrounded by females my whole life. (Trust me, it has rubbed of in many ways because I am not your typical guys guy!) I didn't have any male cousins, my grandfathers passed away when I was younger, my own father wasn't present in my life and my uncles also passed away when I was young. So, as I sit here, contemplating our girls weekend coming up in November...as a father of 3 daughters, I am beyond excited for this event!

I have been doing youth ministry for 17 years and while youth culture changes every 3-4 years, one thing that hasn't changed in all of those years, is the influence the media, culture and peers play in the lives of female adolescents regarding their image and self esteem. I have seen it in youth ministry and I have seen it played out in my own house. Young girls are being bombarded with "what pretty is," or "what a real girlfriend is like," or "what you wear determines how you feel about yourself and how others define you"....I could go on and on for pages here, but if you have a female in your house under the age of 18, you know what I am talking about.

For years I have wanted to have a girls only weekend, but for as connected as I am to the feminine side of life, you wouldn't want me putting together a girls retreat. That would be a disaster of epic proportions! 

Over a year ago, God dropped a blessing in disguise into our laps in the youth ministry department, with the hiring of Kari Hines! We had no real idea the talent and passion she was going to bring to this position of youth ministry assistant....we only knew we needed help, especially in the area with our female students. 

Kari has been prayerfully and diligently putting together an amazing girls weekend for quite a while now, and it is shaping up to be an amazing opportunity for our female students to have a life altering encounter with God, as they focus on the theme, "are you walking with God or running with the world?"

The retreat is over a full weekend and mainly focused on high school girls, but Friday night is a celebration for all of our female students from 6-12 grade. Kari has lined up some very powerful moments that will draw each girl to take a look inward, as they connect and uncover the beauty that God has created in each one of them. But more important, it's not just the "what" they are going to focus on, but also the "how." 

Christin Hoffman, one of our former students here at Alpharetta First UMC, will be graduating from Auburn University in December and I have had the pleasure of waking along side of her the last 2 years as I have watched God completely grab a hold of her heart and do a radical transformation in her life in the area of connecting with her gifts and abilities and her relational skills with girls of all ages. She will be our main speaker for the weekend and if you have ever been in the room when she opens her mouth, get ready to fall out of your chair laughing and then have a box of tissues handy as well!

We have also been blessed to build a relationship with the UGA Wesley Foundation over the last year and their talented worship band and the girls from Wesley Foundation are coming to lead us in worship on Friday and Saturday. 

Meals will be provided and there are more activities planned than what I have space for here! Please go and sign your female student up for this event! I signed my 6th grade twins up this afternoon and can't wait for the opportunity they will have in joining together with their peers and the older girls of our church, as they meet together to worship our God, encourage one another and dig more deeply into what it means to walk with God. 

Thank you to Kari Hines for her direction, gifts and passion for the female students of our church and community! They don't know how truly blessed they are to have you walking with them at this crucial point in life. And thank you you to all of the mom's and volunteers who have agreed to volunteer for this event...from hosting girls in your homes, to serving the meals, to shuttling these girls to the Methodist Youth Center! Your service to our girls is appreciated far more reaching than what I could actually communicate. As a dad of 2 daughters that will be attending on Friday, thank you from the bottom of my heart for what you are about to create in the lives of each student that participates. (I am speaking as a father here, not the youth pastor)

Get your student signed up now at www.afumc.org and look for the youth tab. You can register online or at the Methodist Youth Center. If you would like to help in the volunteer area, please contact Kari Hines at khines@afumc.org.

Lastly, this event has been prayed up for months now and we ask that you join us in praying for everyone involved in this upcoming Girls Weekend! Invite your friends from school. This is an open event to all female students in iur community! 

In His Joy,

Jay

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Catalyst - Day 1

So, in the only way I know how to start an actual day off right, I locked my keys in my car when I got to Catalyst Conference! I mean, within seconds of pulling in and checking my phone to meet Ashley in the parking lot, "bang!" The door shut and curse words were flying through my head, but I just laughed it off instead of getting mad.

I didn't want to have that moment set the tone for the rest of my day! I texted my wife to explain my blunder and her and Audrey showed up, like a knight on a horse, prepared to slay the "bad day dragon"....

Reggie Joiner cranked the conference off well with an incredible look into how we are failing our children and youth in church and Christian education inside the church. I need to go back and read my notes again, because he was firing them off, one after the other. 

I could tell we were all refreshed and prepared for the day after that....but what I didn't expect was the friendship that Turner and Christin had formed with another catalyst attendee...she sat with us and was like a normal part of our team! Her testimony was out of this world...literally, just one of those testimonies of complete brokenness and complete transparency! She actually stuck around the whole day with us and we were truly blessed by her presence. 

We then broke into our lab sessions and didn't truly get a break until 5:30pm. The labs I visited were: 

1. Knowing your identity as a church - by Leonce Crump. His main statement that resonated with me was, "how you gonna serve a community if you don't know the needs of the community around you." He encouraged church leaders to get involved in the community by asking questions, so when people in your community come to your church, you are answering the questions they are asking.

2. Missional Ministry - by Jo Saxton. I had never heard of her and didn't know what to expect. She was on spot in calling the church to look back in order to look forward. Not a looking back at what once was, but rather, at once worked that we dropped and forgot about...the early church didn't have budgets, buildings and rock star worship...they had Jesus. That was their whole marketing scheme....to make much if Him by meeting the needs of commonality in the community.

3. Hyper linked - by David Kinnaman. I was really looking forward to this one because I had read his 2 books and as one of the leaders in Barna Research group, his information was going to be current, factual and relevant. His whole premise was to say, technology has changed the world entirely...and the church sucks at embracing a powerful tool to advance the gospel....2 huge statements he made that drove home his point. 
- we all used to have to buy the things, individually, that are now located right within our pockets....video cameras, picture cameras, record players/tape players/CD players, calculators, board games, telephones, tv's, VCR's, etc....are all now located on a single device. It has taken a massive amount of technology over the last 100 years and placed them all on one single unit! Wow!
- want to know the importance of technology? Look at what this generation is learning to do without that were and still are standards for us, good and bad...don't need a bank to do banking, don't need a library to read books, don't need magazines to read current issues, don't need tv sports scores, dont need a mall to go shopping, don't need church to know Jesus....see the trend?

Lastly, the evening session with Bob Goff was out of this world and yet so simple! I will save that for a post on its own. I was cheering one minute and destroyed the next! Compelling stories of what loving others actually means for us. 

Tomorrow is the day the conference moves over to the actual big room at the Gwinnett arena and Kari will be joining us tomorrow, so our whole team gets the chance to learn together. Expectant for tomorrow! 

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Catalyst - The Night Before

Last year, I had the opportunity to attend a leadership conference for church leaders called Catalyst. In a nutshell, thousands of church leaders converge upon the Gwinnett Arena, here in Georgia, and the participants and raked over the leadership coals! 

The speakers are worth the price of admission but the take aways are even greater....the resources we get to leave with are amazing! I still haven't finished reading all of the books I received for free last year! 

Last year, I wandered out into the highway of fast traveling vehicles and I never caught my wind because I felt so hurried and rushed! This year, I am more prepared, laid back and ready to be refreshed, recharged and relaxed! 

Over the next few days I will attempt to keep all of my thoughts and ideas together as I give thanks for this year, while looking back at last year....

Last year, it was Turner Lee (middle school coordinator) and myself....fast forward to this year, we are taking a team each day...a college student who is praying about ministry, our youth ministry assistant and one of our incredibly committed youth volunteers! This team has helped me be more prepared over this last year than any of the 16 other years I have been in youth ministry! I couldn't think if a better way to celebrate what God has blessed me with, than to get a jump start on the next year as a team! 

Kari, Ashley, Christin and Turner, you all hopefully know how much I appreciate you and what you do for me as an individual, not just as a youth pastor! You have each enriched my life, specifically in areas that I am weak in and have been so gracious and kind to put up with me (I am not being self deprecating here, haha!) because my weaknesses are apparent and your patience, mercy and kindness is apparent! 

I could not do what I do without your support, love and patience! 

Ok, mushy stuff is over! Let's get prepared to open our minds and dream, rest our busy minds and listen and calm our anxious hearts and learn! 

First up, tomorrow morning...Reggie Joiner...couldn't think of a better way to get things rolling!