One of the challenges in youth ministry, as a profession, is that there are a lot of entry points but not a lot of agreed upon credentials.
A short list of how people get into youth ministry as a vocation:
- They earn an undergraduate or graduate degree in youth ministry.
- Or a more general ministry degree like Christian ed, masters of divinity, masters in ministry, etc.
- They have a degree in something else but answer a calling into vocational youth ministry.
- They grow into the job or are mentored into it via their local church.
- They intern their way into vocational youth ministry.
- They fall into it. Literally, they didn’t intend for this to become a career but somewhere along the way someone asked them to consider it.
- They are born into it. Their parents are vocational church workers and they grew up in and around it.
- They have no formal education but applied to a church and leveraged their volunteer ministry as experience enough to land a job.
- They just answered the call. Don’t know how to explain it, but here they are.
Education Matters
I love all of these entry points. I really do. This is one of the fun things about youth ministry. If you can do the job, if you are talented or gifted in some way, if you love teenagers, if you can teach, if you can mentor, if you can disciple– If you love Jesus and you love teenagers you can answer the call.
The body of Christ needs all sorts of youth workers entering the field from all sorts of different entry points.
But.
BUT.
BBBUUUUTTTTT.
No matter how you entered this vocation you need to understand the value of formal education. It is awesome that our tribe welcomes all kinds of people from all kinds of background. And, unlike many professional vocations, youth ministry isn’t a place that requires $80,000 in students loans as the minimum requirement to applying for a $32,000 per year job.
But that doesn’t mean formal youth ministry training is somehow something you can sidestep.
It might not be the entry point. But formal education must be a waypoint.
A Reality Check
One of the things that scares me. Actually– terrifies me when you think of the long-term implications-– is that there are so many people in long-term youth ministry that have absolutely no formal training. Yes, there is value in self-study. And yes, you can get mentored. And yes, there’s a lot of fantastic curriculum out there.
That’s scary to me from a youth ministry perspective. How can history not repeat itself if you don’t know the history of youth ministry? How can you avoid pitfalls if you have no idea what the pitfalls are? On and on.
It’s downright terrifying to me from a theological perspective. Going to church is good. Reading books is good. Going to conferences is good. But that’s not academic rigor.
It’s awful hard to tell the difference between great theological insight and horrible, crappy, made-up-on-the-spot-crap that flows out of some people’s mouths.
The trained ear has a finely tuned B.S. meter.
The untrained ear isn’t so finely tuned.
Sometimes I read an article by someone or have a conversation with someone who is wondering how a person has gotten so popular among pastors despite being absolutely full of crap. And I think: It’s because so many people are in full-time vocational ministry that have no formal training.
A Low Entry Point is Not a License to Skip Education
Here’s the point.
I love that youth ministry is one of the church vocations with a low entry point.
But, if you came in through an entry point that didn’t include formal youth ministry education at the undergraduate or graduate level, and if you don’t have any theological training… I’m begging you: Get in school. Take a class a semester. Figure out how to get a ministry degree or a seminary degree.
Invest the time. Invest the money. Go back to school or start school or take a class online or do whatever you have to do. Don’t buy the lie that you can fake it ’til you make it forever. You can’t. You will be better at your job, you will lead students better, you will last longer in vocational ministry, and you will invest better stuff into the lives of students if you take the time to invest in your education.
Do it for your church.
Do it for your students.
But more importantly, do it for yourself.
Get Coaching
If you find yourself 5-6 years into vocational youth ministry and things are starting to get complicated. Like, you absolutely love it but in the past few years you’ve started to find it hard to balance life in ministry with having a life or you’re feeling in a rut or whatever– check out the Youth Ministry Coaching Program.
Leave a Reply