Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Real Youth Ministry, August 29, 2005
I am shocked that this book has not received a review yet. Dean does a masterful job in her book locating youth ministry practice in theology, rather than in popular methods of education or developmental theory. She does use developmental theory to ground her theology, but it is theology that drives her book. I am convinced that youth ministry needs to become much more theological and jettison the pragmatic methods in order to become faithful to the gospel. Dean outlines an approach to youth ministry that intertwines the passion found in almost every young person with the Passion of Jesus Christ. A wonderful book that is well-deserving of your time if you are invovled in youth ministry.
Be warned: this book is fairly academic in tone and style. It has extensive footnotes and was originally written as a Masters thesis. So, this is not a light, easygoing read. But if you are unfamiliar with the academic genre, this book is worth taking the time to read. Also, Dean comes from a mainline background, so some of her references and assumptions might be unfamiliar to those outside the mainline tradition.
A worthwhile read. Every full-time youth pastor should read this book.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Read this book. Yesterday., August 12, 2006
In a nutshell: 1. Mainline denominations are having trouble reaching youth. 2. Youth are passionate people. 3. The gospel is fundamentally about passion -- Christ's passion. 4. Our churches lack passion. 5. Solution for reaching youth boils down to the church becoming passionate about the gospel.
But Dean says all this much better than I do. Listen to this (p. 25): "What if mainline Protestantism's disappointing track record with young people (in and beyond the church) has not been primarily a failure of models, educational strategies, historical cycles, or institutional support, but a failure of theology? Is it possible that the "problem" facing youth ministry reflects all too accurately a malaise infecting mainline denominations generally: a flabby theological identity due to an absence of passion? That would be ironic. Most young people come to us brimming with passion. Could it be that, instead of fanning this youthful zeal into holy fire, we have more often doused it, dismissed it, or drowned it in committee meetings? The theological challenge youth pose to the church is blunt: Are we who we say we are? Do we practice passion, transformed by a Love who never disappoints, and live by a faith so convincing that we stake our lives on it? Or are we just another sagging social convention, like Dracula, that needs young blood to survive?"
The whole book is written with that much passion. Dean argues, passionately, that if we are to speak meaningfully to youth, we must first connect the passion of Christ with the passion of youth. When that happens, the result is a passionate faith.
Care about youth? Care about the state of the church? Read this book. Yesterday.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Terrific Youth Ministry Resource, September 7, 2005
This book is one of the best I've read on what is truly at stake and essential in youth ministry. It does come with a warning though: One adult volunteer I gave it to found it overwhelming at first read. So I highly recommend it for those in the field and in the habit of talking about these things, but recommend perhaps wading in with some other ones (maybe The Godbearing Life, which Dean co-authored) before tackling this one. But do reach that point, if you at all can.
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