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January 23, 2012 Posted by Mark Oestreicher
Here’s my bottom line early: Have a mission that can be lived and then create ways via programming and routine life application for your kids to practice living it out.

My youth group (Roadside) has a three-word mission statement that the youth recite every week. A leader yells, “We are…” and then the group responds “righteous, responsible and respectable.” At that point the Roadies begin a time of sharing the ways in which they’ve lived that mission out over the last week. It’s simple and a constant reminder to the kids what all this church stuff is about. Little do they know there are pages of notes dedicated to outlining the ways that we go about achieving this mission in the ministry.
This is an important question in so many ways as we commit to remembering the following:

1) Our undertakings are always to be about the mission of God. That is, our mission is to participate with God in the activity of restoring the world to its intended wholeness.

2) Our programming is always designed within the particular cultural context that we be and do ministry. This will mean that our various stated missions will be created with unique social nuances in mind and, therefore, be distinctly our own in the sense that they are directly related to our immediate settings.
I'm writing my response to this question just one month after starting a new call as associate pastor at First Presbyterian Church of Ashland, Oregon. This topic has frequently been on my mind as I've been learning a new culture here at this church.

So right now, I can't speak exactly to how my current programming is informed by our mission statement. However, the church I last served went through a long process of trying to do just this, and I'd like to share that with you.
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