avatar
February 20, 2012 Posted by Mark Oestreicher
Personal suffering is not something I have escaped. It isn’t something anyone has escaped. I didn’t choose to experience it, but now that I have, I wouldn’t try to escape it. As I think about my life in ministry, I realize suffering is alive in three simple ways: past, present, and future.

My past suffering shapes my perspective on the current realities present in my life and ministry. As I filter through my past, there is one milestone I would describe as life-changing suffering. My mother passed away when I was fifteen after a four-year battle with cancer.
Most youth workers survive their experience in youth ministry to go on to bigger, more grandiose experiences, like becoming a senior pastor or selling TVs at Best Buy. Those of us who stick it out find ourselves changed by the many trials of working with pre-adults. I have my share of stories, but one sticks out in particular.

In a previous church, within six months, my evaluation went from “exceeding expectations” to “if things don’t change, we’ll have to find someone else.” When I asked, I was given no direction about the changes needed, so I had the sinking feeling I was on borrowed time. Sure enough, several months later, I was asked to resign.

Like a lot of fellow youth workers, I traded a business cubicle for a youth ministry office. Wide-eyed and overly optimistic Kristen and I longed for a career revolving around our faith and family while impacting the lives of teenagers.

And in ten years of working in the local church, our lives certainly revolved around our faith, family, and impacting the lives of teenagers. Some of our proudest moments have come in seeing that growth through the long haul. There have been so many times when I’ve grabbed Kristen and said, “This is so worth it!”
+ Expand All



Slant Topics

Search by tag

Brooklyn Lindsey Lilly Lewin Josh Hayden Senior Pastor Leading Change Theology Kevin Farmer Cliche Tiffianie Shanks Formation Kurt Rietema Marko Boundaries Josh Griffin Moving On Mistakes Short-Term Missions Laura Larsen Calendars Spiritual Formation Just Acts Prayer Lars Rood Mark Oestreicher Isolation Expectations Teams Recruiting Volunteers Dave Rahn Holy Spirit Children's Ministry Paul Martin Eric Iverson Ministry Context Methods Proclamation Future Karina Veas Jim Hampton Chris Folmsbee Difficult Friends Healthy Boundaries Church Response Albert Tate Teaching God's Story Tradition Giving Community Steve Argue student leaders Kara Powell Lisa Sharon Harper Solitude Love Homosexuality Suffering Media Family Oriented Church Environments Imago Dei Church Improvement High School Mission of God Rest Michael Novelli Children Anti-Intellectualism Encouragement Interns Mission Statement Leadership Beauty of God One-on-One Relationships Apologetics God Environments Tash McGill Youth Ministry Discussion God is dead Parents Middle School Adam McLane Books Young Leaders Jason McPherson Leading Up Sarah Arthur Awareness Andy Root Salvation Ian Macdonald Time Social Media Tony Myles Justice Academia Environment Marriage Resources Culture Consumeristic Church Internships D.Scott Miller Empowerment intergenerational ministry Oversharing Volunteers Dating Claire Smith Disagreement Scripture Scot McKnight Faith Luke MacDonald Transition Ministry Gospel Planning Mike King Joel Daniel Harris Adam Walker Cleaveland Jeremy Zach Evangelism Worship Gatherings Discipleship Sex Journey Communion Programming Community Developement Kerygma Evidence Friendship Joel Mayward Archie Honrado Narrative Theology Theology of Play D. Scott Miller Hope Brian Berry Partnering Longevity Failure Danny Kwon Vulnerability Cross-Cultural Michelle Lang Research Cultural Context

  • UN
  • ArtofMercy
  • Reverb
  • CMPC