5 Ways to Celebrate Advent with Kids

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • Advent and its special role in the Christmas season.
  • 5 ways you can celebrate kids and their families during Advent.
  • How you can use the 2024 Advent calendar this Christmas.

The Christmas season is a time for sharing memories, gathering with our loved ones, and a few last-minute trips to the store to buy those gifts you forgot about. But anyone who has ever wrapped a gift for a kid knows Christmas is more than just a single day. The anticipation starts as soon as November (or December 26th for those of us who count down all year long)!

We can start to celebrate Jesus’ birth in the weeks leading up to Christmas Day with that same anticipation. This time is known as Advent, and it’s a way for us to reflect on Jesus’ arrival on earth, celebrate all that God has done for us, and pray for what’s next in our lives. If you’ve never celebrated Advent, there are simple ways to help the families in your ministry connect. Advent is all about reflecting on the hope, peace, joy, and love God brought to earth through Jesus.

Here are a few of our favorites…

SING TOGETHER

How often do you get to sing Mariah Carey’s All I Want For Christmas Is You with your family? This is your moment! You don’t need to be vocal powerhouses for this, either. During the Advent season, encourage families to get together to make a playlist of their favorite Christmas songs. Then, they can choose a singing schedule. Maybe they can make time every day to sing through a song or two or have a weekly Family Karaoke Party. From there, they can just press play, turn up the music, and sing their favorite carols, Christmas anthems, and silly songs together. You might even give an award for the best family Christmas performance!

Singing together is such a great way to connect, build memories, laugh, and worship together. After they sing, invite families to talk through why these songs are special to them or how they relate to the Christmas story. There are so many possibilities for each singing session and conversation!

ADVENT CRAFTS

If families want to give their voices a rest, they could try creating something instead. There are all sorts of great Christmas crafts to make. From nativity scenes to Christmas wreaths and even handmade ornaments, Advent is the perfect season for crafting!

When it comes to making Advent crafts, each family could make individual crafts to put on display or work together on one each week. Then, they could save their crafts with their holiday decorations and add to them throughout the years. Not only is it a great way to spend time with kids, but it also makes for great keepsakes!

LIGHT ADVENT CANDLES

One of the activities we tend to associate with Advent is lighting candles. Traditionally, we light a new candle each Sunday of Advent. Each candle has a color associated with the theme of that week— hope, peace, joy, love. Depending on the tradition, there may be a fifth candle at the center of the wreath that represents Jesus.

As families celebrate Advent, they could craft or buy their own Advent wreaths. Then, each week, have families light a candle and talk about how they see the theme of that week arrive through Jesus. Here’s the order and meaning of each candle:

  • Week 1: Hope (A candle to represent the prophecies about Jesus)
  • Week 2: Peace (A candle to represent Jesus’ birthplace, Bethlehem)
  • Week 3: Joy (A candle to remind us to rejoice like the shepherds in the field)
  • Week 4: Love (A candle to remind us of the message of God’s love given to us through Jesus)

You could even incorporate the candle lighting into your Sunday service together as you help kids explore their faith and relationship with Jesus in a new way.

A JESSE TREE

Another way to celebrate Advent is with a tree! This isn’t your regular Christmas tree, though—it’s called a Jesse Tree. A Jesse Tree is a way to count down the days leading up to Christmas by sharing stories that help us reflect on Jesus’ birth.

Starting on the first day of December, invite families to place a different picture, symbol, or ornament on their tree. Afterward, they can read the stories from Scripture that build on each other, eventually leading to Jesus’ birth on Christmas day. You could print out passages and pictures for families to take home as they decorate their Jesse Tree together. Not only is this a great way to spend time together as a family, but it also helps kids learn stories from the Bible and grow in their faith.

USE AN ADVENT CALENDAR

Finally, one of the most common ways to celebrate Advent is with an Advent calendar. There are all sorts of Advent calendars containing anything from chocolate to LEGO pieces to collectible toys. An Advent calendar comes with special compartments marked for each day of December. Once a day, simply open a box and take out what’s inside. Each day is a new surprise! Advent calendars are simple ways to spend time together, and they’re one of the easiest ways for families to celebrate Advent.

And if you’re looking for an Advent calendar to share with families this year, we’ve got one just for you! Our 2024 Advent calendar is called The Advent Journey. It’s a card deck kids and their families can use to celebrate and anticipate Jesus’ birth. For each day of Advent, we’ve created cards with four different prompts for families…

  • They can read a passage of Scripture inspired by the Revised Common Lectionary.
  • They can share their thoughts with one of our daily prompts.
  • They’ll be challenged to do something together to bring their Advent experience to life.
  • They’ll get to pray together and grow their relationship with Jesus.

Plus, if a family is looking for a way to take their Advent Journey to the next level, we’ve included a helpful guide with extra activities and ways to display their cards.

We’re so excited for you and the families you serve to use this Advent calendar, and we can’t wait to hear your stories! So, if you’re ready to help families begin their Advent Journey this Christmas, check out the 2024 Advent calendar.

Free PDF Resource
5 Ways to Celebrate Advent with Kids

5 Ways to Celebrate Advent with Teenagers

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • Advent and its special role in the Christmas season.
  • 5 ways you can celebrate teenagers and their families during Advent.
  • How you can use the 2024 Advent calendar this Christmas.

The Christmas season is a time for sharing memories, gathering with our loved ones, and a few last-minute trips to the store to buy those gifts you forgot about. But anyone who has ever wrapped a gift for a teenager knows Christmas is more than just a single day. The anticipation starts as soon as November (or December 26th for those of us who count down all year long)!

We can start to celebrate Jesus’ birth in the weeks leading up to Christmas Day with that same anticipation. This time is known as Advent, and it’s a way for us to reflect on Jesus’ arrival on earth, celebrate all that God has done for us, and pray for what’s next in our lives. If you’ve never celebrated Advent, there are simple ways to help the families in your ministry connect. Advent is all about reflecting on the hope, peace, joy, and love God brought to earth through Jesus.

Here are a few of our favorites…

SERVE TOGETHER

Christmas is a time for giving. So, why not invite families to serve together this year? Help families celebrate Advent by organizing a coat drive, asking them to clear out their closets to donate lightly used clothes and belongings, or creating community service projects.

Their acts of service could be something simple, too, like hanging lights for a family or helping to wrap gifts. When families serve together, they spread joy and love while cultivating gratitude and empathy.

STUDY SCRIPTURE TOGETHER

You could also help families make opportunities to study Scripture together. During the Christmas season, we’re so focused on the holiday that it can be an easy conversation starter. Christmas music plays everywhere we go, and there are Christmas movies on every channel. So why not go back to the original stories and explore how we connect with them today?

A family can use one of these Advent reading plans from YouVersion and read through it together. Then, throughout the day or whenever works best for their schedule, they can talk through what they’ve learned and how God’s words are inspiring them. The Christmas season is a perfect time for families to grow closer together through God’s words.

PRAY TOGETHER

Along with reading Scripture, you could also help families create a rhythm of praying together. Before the first day of December, you could write up a few simple prayers based around each of the four themes of Advent—hope, peace, joy, and love. Then, invite families to set aside some time to select one of these prayers to pray, whether at random or on a rotation.

Give families an extra challenge by having them set up a special prayer space in their home and inviting each member of their family to lead the prayer each day or each week. Families can go beyond these Advent prayers by asking each other to share about what’s happening in their lives and praying for the challenges their facing each week.

SHARE YOUR CHRISTMAS MEMORIES

You probably have so many memories associated with Christmas, and the families of teenagers do too! We might remember a special time with our loved ones, a time when we received a perfect gift or a story about our favorite Ugly Christmas Sweater. Some of these stories might be silly, but they can be powerful reminders of God’s presence in our lives and of the relationships we hold with others.

Families can celebrate the Advent season and the birth of Jesus by sharing these stories with each other. Invite parents to talk to their teenagers about their favorite traditions and the stories from when they were younger. Encourage teenagers and their families to talk about what the holiday means to them and their place in the world. Good stories stick with us long after we’ve heard them, so help families share their favorite Christmas stories this year.

USE AN ADVENT CALENDAR

Finally, one of the most common ways to celebrate Advent is with an Advent calendar. There are all sorts of Advent calendars containing anything from chocolate to LEGO pieces to collectible toys. An Advent calendar comes with special compartments marked for each day of December. Once a day, simply open a box and take out what’s inside. Each day is a new surprise! Advent calendars are simple ways to spend time together, and they’re one of the easiest ways for families to celebrate Advent.

And if you’re looking for an Advent calendar to share with families this year, we’ve got one just for you! Our 2024 Advent calendar is called The Advent Journey. It’s a card deck teenagers and their families can use to celebrate and anticipate Jesus’ birth. For each day of Advent, we’ve created cards with four different prompts for families…

  • They can read a passage of Scripture inspired by the Revised Common Lectionary.
  • They can share their thoughts with one of our daily prompts.
  • They’ll be challenged to do something together to bring their Advent experience to life.
  • They’ll get to pray together and grow their relationship with Jesus.

Plus, if a family is looking for a way to take their Advent Journey to the next level, we’ve included a helpful guide with extra activities and ways to display their cards.

We’re so excited for you and the families you serve to use this Advent calendar, and we can’t wait to hear your stories! So, if you’re ready to help families begin their Advent Journey this Christmas, check out the 2024 Advent calendar.

 

Free PDF Resource
5 Ways to Celebrate Advent with Teenagers

Free Advent Calendar for 2024

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • Why the Advent season is a great opportunity for families to connect and reflect.
  • What’s included with your free 2024 Advent calendar.
  • How the four prompts in each Advent card can help you grow closer to your loved ones.

It’s almost the best time of the year! And no, we’re not talking about the days when you get to nap. It’s almost Christmas! The Christmas season is a time of joy, reflection, and connection—but sometimes it goes by so fast that we wish we had more time to really enjoy it. This year, why not make Advent a special time for your family? Introducing the Advent Journey, our free Advent calendar for 2024! It’s a simple and fun way for families to gather together and reflect on the amazing story of God’s love, hope, and presence during the weeks before Christmas.

Free PDF Resource
Free Advent Calendar for 2024


The Advent Journey
isn’t just a calendar—it’s a deck of cards that guide you through daily readings, simple questions, and meaningful activities that will help bring your family closer during the Christmas season.

Each card includes four different prompts:

  • Read a passage of Scripture together.
  • Share your thoughts, experiences, and hopes for the Advent season with a daily prompt.
  • Do something together to make your Advent experience real, like a simple act of kindness or challenge.
  • Pray together to grow closer to Jesus and each other.

This Advent calendar is made to help you pause, connect, and celebrate every day of the season. Whether you’re looking for a kids Advent calendar, something for the whole family, or a way to celebrate Christmas with friends, The Advent Journey is perfect for everyone.

We’re so excited for you to use The Advent Journey calendar, and we can’t wait to hear your stories! Make this Advent meaningful. Gather your loved ones, reflect on God’s greatest gift, and create lasting memories—together.

Ready to begin your Advent journey? Get instant access to your free Advent calendar!

Free PDF Resource
Free Advent Calendar for 2024

Free Resource! A Free Discipleship Activity from Grow Students Curriculum!

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • How discipleship helps teenagers grow closer to God.
  • What’s included with In the Rhythm Prayer Prompts, our free discipleship activity for students.
  • Where to find even more free resources!

“How do you help kids grow in their faith?” This is the question many parents and families have when they enter your ministry. They want to know about your strategy for helping their teenager foster a faith that can last a lifetime.

Your strategy for this process—discipleship—is among the first things you should consider for your ministry calendar. That’s because it’s the lens through which we see everything else we do in our ministries.

How you approach discipleship will affect how your group develops their spiritual habits like…

  • Spending time with God
  • Spending time with others
  • Using their gifts
  • Sharing their story

We value a strong discipleship strategy so much that we’re giving away one of our favorite discipleship activities just for youth ministry leaders like you!

Our In the Rhythm Prayer Prompts are a great way to encourage teenagers to make prayer a habit. Each day, a student simply needs to draw a card and follow the prompt! The cards prompt teenagers to focus on one of these elements of prayer for the day…

  • Posture prompts challenge students to get out of their physical comfort zone for a moment to pray.
  • Position prompts challenge them to pray while participating in a normal daily activity.
  • Practice prompts challenge students to try praying in a new, intentional way.
  • People prompts challenge students to pray for one specific person, or group of people, in their lives.

Here’s everything you’ll get with the In the Rhythm Prayer Prompts…

  • An activity guide with instructions for you, your volunteers, and your students
  • Shopping list
  • 40 unique and editable prayer prompt cards
  • Editable graphics
  • Activity flyers

Whether students participate on their own or in their small groups, you’ll have everything you need to lead them through this discipleship activity from start to finish.

Plus, this free discipleship activity is just a sample of what comes with a subscription to Grow Students Curriculum. With a Grow subscription, you’ll get a complete year of teaching curriculum and our strategy to build the best ministry in seven key areas…

  • Teaching
  • Discipleship
  • Environments
  • Events
  • Volunteers
  • Families
  • Annual Planning

So, if you’re looking for more resources to help your youth ministry grow, start a free trial of Grow Students Curriculum. You’ll get this In the Rhythm Prayer Prompts discipleship activity and a few of our favorite resources.

We can’t wait to hear how the In the Rhythm Prayer Prompts help your students grow in their faith!

4 Youth Ministry Discipleship Activities from Grow Students Volume 8

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • The 4 spiritual habits that help teenagers grow in their faith.
  • How the new discipleship activities in Grow Students Volume 8 help teenagers build these habits.
  • A quick overview of each fun, new quarterly discipleship activity.

When it comes to helping teenagers grow in their faith, we believe there are four spiritual habits to target. These habits are the decisions, behaviors, and rhythms that help us grow spiritually over time. If you’re like most people, when you hear “spiritual habit,” you start to think about reading the Bible, prayer, or going to church. These are important spiritual habits, but they’re not the only ones that matter.

While there’s no definitive list of spiritual habits, we think these four are worth targeting to help your teenagers grow:

  1. Spending time with God
  2. Spending time with others
  3. Using your gifts
  4. Sharing your story

These four habits sit at the core of our discipleship strategy (and if you don’t have a discipleship strategy yet, steal ours!). We believe spiritual growth should be the lens through which we see everything else we do in our ministries. So, each quarter, we focus on one of these four spiritual habits with a specific discipleship activity.

Here’s each quarterly discipleship activity you’ll find in Volume 8 of Grow Students Curriculum.

SMALL GROUP PARTY KITS

With teenagers, we’re convinced the spiritual habit of Spending Time with Others is most important to cover at the beginning of every school year. It’s the time when students build new friendships and begin a new year with their small groups. If we want teenagers to continue to grow during this transition, they need space to grow in their relationships with each other, like in their small groups. Small Group Party Kits will help group leaders easily create a fun and welcoming environment for their group. We’ve made it easy for small group leaders to choose a kit and create an event that gives teenagers a chance to spend quality time together.

SPIRITUAL GIFTS ASSESSMENT

The holiday season is a perfect time to move teenagers to serve others. Before they can use their gifts to serve, they need to know what their gifts actually are. So, how can you inspire them to discover and use their gifts? That’s where this Spiritual Gifts Assessment tool comes in. Students can complete the Spiritual Gifts Assessment individually on their own time or with their small groups. Either way, it’s designed to help teenagers identify who they were created to be and what they were created to do.

BIBLE JOURNALING PAGES

While you are already encouraging teenagers to spend time with God all year long, the Easter season may be one of the best opportunities each year to help them engage with God on their own. That’s where these Bible Journaling Pages come into play. You can use these devotional templates to guide teenagers through the Bible on their own or with their small groups. In this activity, teenagers will build their own journals using a variety of modules we’ve provided for you to help them experiment with a variety of methods of reflection.

THE WHAT IF PROJECT

In The What If Project, we provide everything you need to help your group make a difference by partnering with a local organization that is making wrong things right in the world. First, students will serve alongside that organization to share the good news of Jesus with their actions. Then, they will debrief and use their creativity to share their stories of what God taught them through this one-day event. While this event can be done anytime during the year, we suggest pairing it with the teaching series What If…, which is all about partnering with God to make wrong things right in the world.

Those are each of the four quarterly discipleship activities you can find inside Volume 8 of Grow Students Curriculum. And if you’re already using Grow Students, we’ve given you everything you need for each activity—instructions for each discipleship activity, editable graphics, shopping lists, flyers, debrief guides, handouts, and more!

Free PDF Resource
4 Youth Ministry Discipleship Activities from Grow Students Volume 8

20 Ideas for Discipling Teenagers

No matter how long you’ve been serving in youth ministry, one of the first things you hear about is discipleship—what it is, how to make it easier, and how to get teenagers to invest in discipleship on their own. At its core, discipleship is helping people grow and develop their relationship with God. But as much as we might want it to, discipleship doesn’t happen right away—especially for teenagers.

There are times when discipleship can feel challenging, and if you’ve never had to think through a discipleship strategy before, it can be challenging to know where to start. But here’s the good news—you’re not on this journey alone! (if you need a discipleship strategy, you can steal ours!)

That’s one of the reasons why we host GrowCon every year. It’s an online conference offering practical strategies, ideas, and resources for youth ministry leaders like you—and it’s completely free!

This year, for GrowCon24, we invited Danny Sugimoto to share some ideas to help youth pastors think about discipleship differently. Not only does Danny have years of experience working in youth ministry, but he’s also the Director of Content Strategy at Stuff You Can Use!

Check out his session from GrowCon24 below, or if you just can’t wait to hear his ideas for discipleship, keep reading for a quick summary. Be sure to snag the notes for this session and a practical exercise we made just for you!

If you’re looking for new ways to help teenagers grow in their faith, here are a few ideas …

1. HELP THEM BUILD SUSTAINABLE HABITS

You’re probably serving in youth ministry to help teenagers grow closer to God. This process takes a lot of time, but it’s easier when you help teenagers create habits that shape the decisions, behaviors, and rhythms they put in place. You can help teenagers develop habits for spending time with God, spending time with others, using their gifts, and sharing their stories. Instead of asking teenagers to “do more,” you can help them look at their current habits to see what God is already doing in their hearts and minds. Then, it’s not a matter of adding something new but making a slight, sustainable shift in how they approach the habits they already hold.

2. HELP THEM PERSONALIZE THEIR TIME WITH GOD

If you compared the spiritual habits of two people, it’s not likely those habits would be exactly the same. Faith is personal to each of us, and we can let teenagers have some freedom in spending time with God. Not everyone is wired to wake up early in the morning for a devotional. It might be easier to listen to the Bible than to read it ourselves. So what if we inspired teenagers to spend time with God in ways their bodies and minds are already wired to prefer?

This might look like helping them learn to …

  • Set a regular time to read through a book of the Bible each day.
  • Take a walk and pray or take in nature and their community.
  • Journal through a prompt, a passage of Scripture, or as a way to process their faith and questions.
  • Disconnect from an app, their phone, TV, video games, or something else.
  • Schedule a few times of silence throughout the week so they can be still and listen or reflect.

3. HELP THEM INVEST IN THEIR RELATIONSHIPS

Each teenager in your ministry is already invested in relationships—whether in person, online, or a combination of the two. Often, we challenge teenagers to make new relationships that are focused on faith, but instead, you can help them be more intentional with the friends and family that are close to them. You could help them learn to show these people love, care, and kindness by modeling what it looks like to follow Jesus closely.

You can invite teenagers to invest in their relationships by …

  • Organizing a hang-out or group activity.
  • Calling a family member or friend to talk.
  • Organizing a study group to share their knowledge.
  • Sending a card in the mail.
  • Asking for help with a problem or a task.

4. HELP THEM FOCUS ON THEIR GIFTS

Every teenager in your ministry has a series of unique gifts, talents, and skills. As a youth pastor or ministry leader, you can give teenagers opportunities to discover which gifts God has given to them. Make space during your weekly environment to let them explore who they are and who God designed them to be. That means carving out specific responsibilities where the teenagers in your youth ministry can step in and lead. Let them explore their gifts safely, and support them when they make mistakes and grow.

You could help teenagers explore their gifts by having them …

  • Take a personality assessment.
  • Serve in your youth group.
  • Be an advocate for a cause/person.
  • Share something they have, like their energy, resources, or time.
  • Help someone with homework or studying.

5. HELP THEM SHARE THEIR STORIES EASILY

For a lot of teenagers, talking about their faith can be pretty scary, but it doesn’t have to be. Sharing about faith doesn’t always have to look like a long conversation. Instead, the goal should be to make faith a regular, go-to part of their conversation. That means you can help teenagers find the language they need to talk about their faith. You might even help them by giving them smaller, practical steps to talk to others about their faith and share what God is doing in their lives.

This might look like inviting teenagers to …

  • Share part of their story on social media.
  • Start a conversation with a friend about spiritual practices.
  • Talk about a struggle they’re having, how they’re growing, or a big question they’re processing.
  • Ask someone they respect to share their story with them.
  • Create something that represents their story.

These are just a few ways you can help disciple teenagers so they grow in their faith. And we made a great exercise to help you think through how some of these ideas can fit into your ministry context. On your own or with a team of volunteers, you can brainstorm, map out, and build on these twenty discipleship ideas to create something unique for your youth ministry. Check it out below!

And if you’re looking for even more ways to help your teenagers grow in their faith, we’ve made some for you in Grow Students Curriculum! With every volume of Grow Students Curriculum, you’ll get …

  • 50 weeks of teaching lessons
  • Parent & volunteer tip videos
  • Parent & volunteer conversation guides
  • Quarterly events & discipleship activities
  • Volunteer meeting guides
  • And more!

Discipleship is an important part of ministry, and we’d love to help you with your discipleship strategy. (Again, feel free to steal ours here!) Whether you use these twenty ideas to help your teenagers or start up a free trial of Grow Students Curriculum, we hope it helps you as you lead teenagers in discipleship!

20 Ideas for Discipling Teenagers
Free PDF Resource
20 Ideas for Discipling Teenagers

The Four Spiritual Habits for Teenagers

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • How your discipleship strategy shapes your youth ministry.
  • The 4 spiritual habits that help teenagers grow!
  • How to use each habit in your ministry!
The Four Spiritual Habits for Teenagers

If you’re an adult (or even a “professional” Christian), then the idea of spiritual habits is probably pretty familiar to you. Spiritual disciplines, quiet time, devotions… whatever you call it, you’ve probably established a few rhythms in your life to help you grow spiritually.

Or, at least, you’re working on it.

Maybe you…

  • Start your day with a quiet time.
  • Follow a Bible reading plan.
  • Listen to worship music while you drive.
  • Subscribe to sermon podcasts.
  • Go to church, attend a small group, or serve somewhere.

If you’ve been following Jesus for a while, you’ve probably figured out a few ways to grow spiritually. Since you’re a grown-up, you’ve had a little time to figure out this whole “spiritual growth” thing.

The teenagers in your ministry, on the other hand, aren’t grown-ups, so they might need a little help from you to figure out how, exactly, to grow spiritually.

So, what should spiritual growth look like for teenagers?
And how can you help them develop spiritual habits?

When I (Elle) oversaw small groups in the middle school ministry at my church, this question came up pretty often—like the time I was meeting with one of my brand new small group leaders, Peter. Peter was a college-aged guy, brand new to leading small groups, and was really, really, excited to start serving. During our first orientation meeting, while I was showing him the ropes of being a small group leader, he stopped me and asked this question:

“Okay, but… how do I help my small group grow spiritually? What’s my goal?”

It was a pretty good question. And since Jesus always answered questions by asking another question (but mostly because I needed a second to figure out what to say next) I asked Peter, “Well, what do you think your goal should be?”

“I don’t know,” he said. “Maybe my goal could be to get every guy in my small group to read the Bible seven times a week?”

Considering Peter was leading a small group of sixth graders, that was a pretty big goal. And when I say “big,” I actually mean “definitely not going to happen.” So, although I kind of loved that he was dreaming big, I said, “No, getting twenty eleven-year-olds to read the Bible seven days a week was maybe not the right goal.”

But it was a great question.

How do we help teenagers grow spiritually? What should our goals be?

Before we can answer that question, we should probably start by agreeing on how anyone grows spiritually.

This is where spiritual habits come in. Spiritual habits are the decisions, behaviors, and rhythms that help us grow spiritually over time. If you’re like most people, the first things that pop into your head when you hear “spiritual habits” are probably…

  • Reading the Bible.
  • Praying.
  • Going to church.

Sure, reading, praying, and going to church are important spiritual habits. But they’re not the only spiritual habits that matter.

So what is the complete, final, definitive list of spiritual habits? Well, there isn’t one. Not officially. You can organize, categorize, and define spiritual habits in a number of ways, but feel free to steal our list if you think it’s helpful. It’s a list of the four spiritual habits we use inside Grow Curriculum to help teenagers, and their leaders grow spiritually. Here they are…

1. SPEND TIME WITH GOD

This is an obvious one, right? It’s so obvious, in fact, that sometimes it’s the only spiritual habit we can name. After all, isn’t “growing spiritually” synonymous with “spending time with God”? Well, not exactly. Spending time with God is a big part of growing spiritually, but it’s not the whole picture. That’s why it’s just the first of four spiritual habits.

Spending time with God may not be the only spiritual habit, but it’s still a pretty important one. After all, if teenagers are ever going to make their faith their own, they’ve got to start spending time with God on their own. It means opening the Bible on their own, having conversations with God on their own, and discovering how they best connect with God through worship on their own.

HOW CAN WE HELP TEENAGERS SPEND TIME WITH GOD?

I’m so glad you asked. Here are a few ideas…

  • Give them a Bible. Preferably one with words they can understand… and written in ways they would actually say. Personally, I love the NLT, the NIV, The Message, and The Voice translations. They’re all written in language that’s easy to read, easy to understand, and easy to remember.
  • Help them memorize Scripture. Your students might be good at memorizing movie quotes, song lyrics, and whatever viral quote is happening now, but memorizing Scripture probably doesn’t come quite as naturally. That’s why it’s so helpful for us to give teenagers simple, practical tools for memorizing Scripture. For teenagers, maybe that means starting a texting or social media campaign, creating wallpaper for their phones, or even handing out a good old-fashioned note card.
  • Teach them to pray. If you’ve been talking to God for a while, it’s easy to forget how strange prayer can seem to someone who hasn’t been talking to God for an entire lifetime. No matter their age, teenagers need us to model conversations with God and teach them how to have conversations of their own. So, regularly pray out loud with your group, teach them about prayer, and give them opportunities to talk to God alongside you. You might even give them simple strategies to pray, like my four favorite prayer prompts: Please, Thanks, Sorry, Wow.
  • Help them discover their spiritual wiring. Gary Thomas’ book Sacred Pathways is one of the best resources I’ve found for helping people identify the unique ways they are wired to connect with God. Some of your students will connect with God by going outside. Others will love to worship through music, or dance, or the arts. Some will love to learn, some will love to serve, and some will love to sit quietly with God in solitude. If we want to help our groups grow spiritually, it’s so important that we teach them to connect with God in the many ways they are uniquely wired to connect with God — not just in the ways we prefer to connect.

So, spending time with God is the first of four spiritual habits. This habit is all about developing a personal friendship with God. Because, just like any friendship, we can only grow closer if we’re spending time together. But if we want to grow spiritually, spending time with God isn’t the only spiritual habit we need to develop.

2. SPEND TIME WITH OTHERS

Yep, engaging in healthy community can—and should—be a spiritual habit we help our teenagers develop. But “healthy community” doesn’t just mean hanging out with Christians. This spiritual habit is about growing in Christlike relationships with … well, everyone. Christians and non-Christians, too. Because sometimes, it won’t be another church potluck or Bible study with our fellow Christians that will grow us the most. It might be a friendship, an investment, or a challenging conversation with a non-Christian that makes the biggest difference in our faith.

We see this most clearly in Jesus, of course. When he discipled his followers, he didn’t disciple them in one-on-one conversations in the privacy of their homes or the nearest Starbucks. He discipled them in real life, in the context of relationships that were real, and messy, and challenging, and imperfect.

In Jesus’ ministry, it was often his disciples’ interactions with each other, or with people who didn’t follow him, that prompted some of his most significant teaching opportunities.

SO HOW CAN WE HELP TEENAGERS SPEND TIME WITH OTHERS?

Here are a few ideas …

  • Create consistent small groups. If you know anything about me, you know that I’m pretty convinced small groups are the answer to just about everything. But when it comes to helping teenagers develop community … well, small groups are a pretty obvious first step. In small groups, students are given opportunities to grow closer to their peers, to an adult who cares about them, and grow in community with people who believe like they do and with people who don’t.
  • Offer opportunities for connection. I get it—when it comes to your weekly environment, you’ve got a lot to do and probably not enough time to do it. When you’ve got to pull off worship and small groups and announcements and your sermon, letting students “hang out” might seem like a waste of time. But it’s not. It’s really not. If spending time with others is a spiritual habit, then creating opportunities for teenagers to connect with each other—and with the adults who lead them—should be a priority. So, whether it’s before your service, after your service, during the week, or at your events, prioritize relationships. Create space, through unstructured time, for students to hang out, play, talk, and connect.
  • Make your environments visitor-friendly. Sure, we all say we want visitors to show up to our programs. We all tell our groups to bring their friends to church, but if we’re not working behind the scenes to create environments that are welcoming to and mindful of, first-time guests… well, we can’t really expect those guests to show up (or come back). If you’re not sure if your environments are visitor-friendly, ask your group this question: “What is it about our church that makes you not want to invite your friends?”
  • Encourage students to engage in their communities. Sometimes, we make the mistake of believing our community is the only community that can help teenagers grow spiritually. But that’s not true, is it? We might be ministry leaders, but we don’t own the market when it comes to healthy community. In fact, if the only community our groups see as “healthy” community are the ones our churches offer, then we’ve actually done them a pretty big disservice. If we really want our groups to grow spiritually, we should probably think of creative ways to help them build relationships (with both Christians and non-Christians) in places outside our church—like their schools, their neighborhoods, and their sports teams.

So, we’ve got to help our students practice the habit of spending time with others, both inside the walls of our churches and outside those walls, too. Because when we engage in community, listen to different perspectives, and process our faith with others, we get a bigger picture of who God is… and that helps us grow.

3. SHARE YOUR STORY

Our students need to learn how to talk about God. But this spiritual habit is way bigger than just knowing how to share the story of your salvation—although that’s part of it. Sharing your story is the spiritual habit of making faith a regular, everyday, go-to topic of conversation in our lives.

It’s about discovering God in every aspect of your story…

Your past, your present, and your future –
The good times, the bad times, and the in-between times –
And then sharing what you’ve found with other people.

Because when we talk about God and God’s place in our story (or, more accurately, our place in God’s story), it helps us believe, understand, and take ownership of our own faith. That’s why sharing our stories is such an important part of growing spiritually.

SO HOW CAN WE HELP TEENAGERS SHARE THEIR STORIES?

Here are a few ideas…

  • Create consistent small groups. I know, I know, I already said this. But I also said that small groups are the answer to pretty much everything. So, yes, they’re an answer to helping teenagers develop healthy community, but they’re also an answer for helping teenagers have healthy conversations about their faith. When small groups are done well, they become safe places for teenagers to process their beliefs, their questions, and their experiences.
  • Share your stories. When you teach, be intentional about sharing stories from your own life and faith journey. In fact, you probably want to tell one personal story in every message you ever teach. When you share your stories and how God used those stories to help you grow spiritually, you give your group a model for what it looks like to find God in their stories. And when you share your stories of failure, disappointment, or mistakes, you let them know that God can work even in the toughest situations—and that they’re not alone.
  • Invite students, and volunteers to share their stories. Your stories, dear ministry leader, are really important, but they’re not the only stories that matter. When you invite students, and volunteers to share their stories regularly (maybe on stage, in a video, or on social media), you help your group connect with even more people and even more stories.
  • Create space for hard questions. If you want teenagers to get comfortable having conversations about their faith, it is absolutely essential that you help them have healthy conversations about their doubts, fears, and questions. The truth is, your students do have doubts, even if they’re not expressing them. So, if you want them to have a healthy faith, give them the opportunity to talk about those things openly.

Help your students share their stories because they’ll grow spiritually when they make it a habit of talking about their faith.

4. USE YOUR GIFTS

Here’s the fourth and final spiritual habit: your group needs to know that God made them unique and special with really specific gifts, talents, passions, and resources. Then, they need to use those gifts to love God, love others, and influence the world around them.

When we use our gifts, we acknowledge that the things we’ve been given weren’t given to us by chance. They were part of God’s design. Using those gifts really can be a spiritual habit because when students begin to discover who God made them to be, they grow. And when they use their unique identity to make a difference in the world, they serve others and give back to God who made them.

SO HOW CAN WE HELP TEENAGERS USE THEIR GIFTS?

Here are a few ideas…

  • Create opportunities to serve. It’s one thing to tell students to serve others and to use their gifts. But it’s another thing entirely to actually create opportunities where they do that. Maybe you need to restructure some things in your church so that it’s easier for your groups to serve. Maybe you need to move away from an adult-led worship band, so more students can help lead. Maybe you even need to let go of some of your desire for “excellence” in your programming so your group can take ownership and help create your weekly environments. Mission trips are a great solution, too… but if mission trips are your only avenue for them to serve, you may want to rethink your serving strategy.
  • Showcase their unique talents. In ministry, we often accidentally communicate that the only way to serve God in ministry is from a platform. Speaking and leading worship are great ways to help students serve, but they’re not the only gifts they can use to serve God and others. Whether it’s art, or science, or baking, or sports, your groups are overflowing with talents. They may just need your help to discover how those talents can be used to love others in new and creative ways.

So those are the four spiritual habits that help teenagers grow spiritually.

  • Help them spend time with God.
  • Help them spend time with others.
  • Help them share their stories.
  • And help them use their gifts.

But before we wrap up, a few things to remember…

  • Your students won’t all grow in the same way. God made them unique, after all.
  • They won’t grow at the same pace. They’re all on a unique journey.
  • But they can all grow just a little bit more. You can’t force spiritual growth, but you can help them take one more step toward a faith that’s growing.

And hey, thank you for the investment you’re making in the spiritual growth of the students in your ministry. I know it’s not always easy. Actually, it’s really hard sometimes. But as you get ready for another day, or another week, or another year of youth ministry, we really hope you remember this: what you are doing is making a difference.

I know that’s hard to remember when the seeds you’ve been planting seem to be taking so long to grow, and you know there’s a pretty good chance you may never even see the end result. But keep going.

-Elle Campbell

The Four Spiritual Habits for Teenagers

5 Apps for Youth Ministry

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • How apps can help teenagers grow in their faith.
  • Why you should help teenagers use technology well.
  • 5 youth ministry apps that can help teenagers spend time with God.
Free PDF Resource
5 Apps for Youth Ministry

There’s probably no greater duo than teenagers and their phones … except maybe youth ministry and pizza. Phones and technology are where teenagers go in their freetime, and no matter how you feel about it, it’s not going away any time soon. Tablets, computers, and web-based learning are a large part of education. Apps and social media fill teenagers’ few minutes when they’re not doing homework, playing sports, or joining in their other hobbies outside of school.

For so long, phones and technology have come across as a distraction from service and ultimately, an opponent to ministry.. Maybe you’ve felt like the teenagers in your ministry were too connected to their devices. Maybe you’ve even been tempted to lock up phones in a box before your weekly meeting.

We get it. Teenagers really can be distracted by what’s happening elsewhere on that tiny little screen. But technology is such a core part of how teenagers learn, create relationships, and make sense of their world.

So, what if you could help teenagers learn to use their phones and devices to practice spiritual habits and grow their relationship with God? What if, instead of pushing against technology, we helped teenagers learn to use their phones as a tool to keep growing?

It might seem more difficult than the most impractical Impossible Shot, but it’s as easy as helping teenagers find an app that connects with them, their personalities, and how they learn.

To help you get started, we’ve put together this list of our favorite Bible apps for your youth ministry.

Dwell: Audio Bible

Dwell is a great app for youth ministries looking to help teenagers listen to the Bible. Dwell lets you choose from 20 different voice options and 12 different translations of the Bible, so teenagers can customize what they hear. Plus, Dwell includes over 75 listening plans to help teenagers build a habit of spending time with God. You can learn more here.

Verses

If you know a teenager looking to memorize the Bible, take a look at Verses. This Bible app is designed to help teenagers memorize passages of Scripture through quick and easy games. Each game helps teenagers remember passages through listening, reordering, typing, and eventually speaking the passage out loud. With seven different translations, teenagers can choose their favorite and start memorizing Scripture on their own or with friends. Learn more here.

YouVersion Bible App

Chances are, your teenagers already have YouVersion on their phones. This is one of the most commonly downloaded Bible apps, but it’s so much more than a place to read Scripture. Teenagers can find the verse of the day, follow reading plans with their friends, and even export their favorite verses as images to share with others. You can even find Grow Students devotionals! Check it out here.

BibleProject

Teenagers often have more questions about the Bible than their youth pastor can answer on their own. So, what if you set them up with an app that could help them explore the Bible with helpful resources and information? That’s where the BibleProject app comes in. This app helps teenagers develop new skills and tools to understand the Bible through podcasts, videos, reading plans, and more. The BibleProject app is a great resource to have on hand for you, your teenagers, and your team of volunteers. Learn more about the BibleProject app here!

Habits by Grow

Asking a teenager to start a new habit is an uphill battle — especially without the right support, encouragement, and system for tracking. That’s why we created Habits by Grow. With this youth ministry app, teenagers and their friends can help each other grow closer to God by tracking activities that help them work through four spiritual habits — spending time with God, spending time with others, using their gifts, and sharing their stories. It’s all part of our discipleship strategy (which is yours to steal!) Teenagers can choose from pre-selected habits or create their own that match how they’re trying to grow. Check out Habits by Grow here.

(iOS & Android)

This is just a small list of our favorite apps for youth ministry. Chances are you have your own list of favorite apps that help with discipleship. Apps like these can do so much to help teenagers grow in their faith by helping them make spending time with God a regular part of their week. It’s all about engaging with teenagers in ways that are helpful and make sense to them.

Free PDF Resource
5 Apps for Youth Ministry

That’s one of the things we focus on in Grow Students Curriculum. We wanted to provide youth pastors with helpful, engaging tools that can help their teenagers grow closer to God. In every volume of Grow Students, we include …

  • Editable graphics
  • Printable posters
  • Annual Strategy Guides
  • Room design ideas and instructions
  • Worship & background music playlists
  • 50 weeks of lessons with outlines and editable lesson guides
  • Access to all of our apps, including Habits, Slides, Hubs, and the Grow Games Apps
  • And so much more!

So, if you’re looking for new ways to engage with your teenagers and help them grow in their faith away from their phones and devices, we’d love to help you! Just check out our free trial!

An Annual Discipleship Strategy for Youth Ministry from Grow Curriculum

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • Why it’s so important for your youth ministry to have a clear discipleship strategy!
  • How Grow’s 4 spiritual habits can be used to measure, evaluate, and encourage spiritual growth in teenagers.
  • How to steal our annual discipleship strategy and use it in your ministry for free!

When planning your year, we always recommend you start with your discipleship strategy. That’s because spiritual growth should be the lens through which we see everything else we do in our ministries. We believe there are four spiritual habits that help teenagers (and adults, too) grow closer to God. These four habits aren’t anything new. They’ve been talked about countless ways, by countless numbers of people. Your church is probably already talking about them in your own unique way, so feel free to change the language to fit your context if you need to. The words aren’t important, but here’s what is: if these four spiritual habits are the behaviors that help teenagers grow closer to God, we need a strategy to help students engage in these four spiritual habits on a regular basis, year after year. If you’re an adult (or maybe even a “professional” Christian) the idea of spiritual habits is probably pretty familiar to you. Through spiritual disciplines, quiet time, devotions — whatever you call it — you’ve probably established a few rhythms in your life that help you grow spiritually. Maybe you …

  • Start your day with a quiet time.
  • Follow a Bible reading plan.
  • Listen to worship music while you drive.
  • Subscribe to sermon podcasts.
  • Go to church, attend a small group, or serve somewhere.

Since you’re a grown-up, you’ve had a little time to figure out this whole “spiritual growth” thing. The teenagers in your ministry, on the other hand, aren’t grown-ups, so they might need a little help from you to figure out how to grow spiritually. This is where spiritual habits come in. Spiritual habits are the decisions, behaviors, and rhythms that help us grow spiritually over time. If you’re like most people, the first things that pop into your head when you hear “spiritual habits” are probably reading the Bible, praying, or going to church. Sure, reading, praying, and going to church are important spiritual habits, but they’re not the only spiritual habits that matter. So what’s the complete, final, definitive list of spiritual habits? Well, there isn’t one. You can organize and categorize and define spiritual habits in a number of ways, and feel free to steal our list if you think it’s helpful. It’s a list of the four spiritual habits to help kids, teenagers, and adults all grow spiritually. But just knowing what helps teenagers grow spiritually doesn’t guarantee they will grow spiritually. If we want to give teenagers as many chances as possible to grow, it’s so important we have a discipleship strategy that is based on these four spiritual habits. But how? That’s what this post is all about! We hope this strategy we’re about to unpack will give you a framework for discipling teenagers that you can replicate and improve year after year. With this Annual Discipleship Strategy, you’ll learn a system for helping students grow spiritually all year long. If you’re familiar with Grow Curriculum & Annual Strategy, some things in this post might sound familiar to you. That’s because everything we do in Grow Students Curriculum is based on the strategy we’re about to break down for you! But don’t worry if you’ve never used Grow Students in your ministry before. You can still steal our strategy! Take the ideas you find helpful, ignore the parts that don’t quite fit your context, and combine them with the unique language, vision, and strategy of your church. Okay, are we ready? Let’s get started!

Free PDF Resource
An Annual Discipleship Strategy for Youth Ministry from Grow Curriculum

THE 4 SPIRITUAL HABITS

Before we talk about our discipleship strategy, we have to define the spiritual habits that are the foundation of that strategy.

1. SPEND TIME WITH GOD

This is an obvious one, right? It’s so obvious, in fact, that sometimes it’s the only spiritual habit we can name. After all, isn’t “growing spiritually” synonymous with “spending time with God”? Well, not exactly. Spending time with God is a big part of growing spiritually, but it’s not the whole picture. That’s why it’s just the first of four spiritual habits. Spending time with God may not be the only spiritual habit that exists, but it’s still a pretty important one. After all, if teenagers are ever going to learn to live out their faith, they’ve got to start spending time with God on their own. It means opening the Bible, having conversations with God, and discovering how they best connect with God through worship on their own.

2. SPEND TIME WITH OTHERS

Engaging in healthy community can, and should, be a spiritual habit we help teenagers develop. But “healthy community” doesn’t just mean hanging out with Christians. This spiritual habit is about growing in Christlike relationships with — well, everyone. Christians and non-Christians, too. Because, sometimes, it isn’t another church potluck or Bible study with our fellow Christians that will grow us the most. It might be a friendship, an investment, or a challenging conversation with someone who doesn’t believe the same things you do that makes the biggest difference in our faith. We see this most clearly in Jesus, of course. When he discipled his followers, he didn’t disciple them in one-on-one conversations in the privacy of their homes or the nearest Starbucks. He discipled them in real life, in the context of relationships that were real, challenging, and imperfect. In Jesus’ ministry, it was often his disciples’ interactions with each other, or with people who didn’t follow him, that prompted some of his most significant teaching opportunities.

3. USE YOUR GIFTS

Teenagers need to know that God made them unique, special, and with really specific gifts, talents, passions, and resources. They also need to use those gifts to love God, love others, and make a difference in the world around them. When we use our gifts, we acknowledge that the things we’ve been given weren’t by chance. Everything is a part of God’s design. Using those gifts can become a spiritual habit. When students begin to discover who God made them to be, and then use their unique identity to make a difference in the world, to serve others, and to give back to the God who made them, they grow.

4. SHARE YOUR STORY

Here’s the fourth and final spiritual habit: teenagers need to learn how to talk about God and who God is to them. But this spiritual habit is way bigger than just knowing how to talk about your relationship with God or why they made a decision to follow Jesus – although that’s part of it. Sharing your story is the spiritual habit of making faith a regular, everyday, go-to topic of conversation in our lives. It’s about discovering God in every aspect of your story and then sharing what you’ve found with other people. When we talk about God and our place in God’s story, it helps us believe, understand, and share about how we live out our faith. That’s why sharing our stories is such an important part of growing spiritually.

HOW DO I TURN THESE HABITS INTO AN ANNUAL STRATEGY?

When planning your year of ministry, we always recommend you begin by planning your discipleship strategy. That’s because we believe spiritual growth should be the lens through which we see everything else we do in our ministries. Here’s how we approach it …

  • Divide the year into quarters.
  • Assign one spiritual habit per quarter.
  • Create one experience or activity each quarter that will help teenagers put that spiritual habit into practice.
  • But before you do any of that, if you want to make sure your discipleship efforts actually stick, make sure your ministry is set up in a way where you can connect every teenager in your ministry to:
    • More than one caring adult who can invest in them (like you or their small group leaders).
    • A community of peers who can grow alongside them (like a small group).

If you’re using the Grow Annual Strategy to plan your year, here’s how that could look …

FALL: Spend Time with Others

Every fall, we focus on the spiritual habit of spending time with others because it’s so important for teenagers to build strong relationships and community at the beginning of the school year. These relationships will help them stay connected throughout the year and will help them feel safe enough to be honest and open during discussion times. To help teenagers practice this spiritual habit, you might …

  • Create small group party kits to help small group leaders have fun and build deeper relationships with the students they lead.
  • Hand out fun and meaningful conversation starters to help teenagers have easier and deeper conversations with each other in small groups or at school.
  • Give a challenge for teenagers to make a new friend, have a specific conversation with a friend, or reach out to someone who might need a friend.

WINTER: Use Your Gifts

Every winter, we focus on the spiritual habit of using your gifts because the holidays are a perfect opportunity for teenagers to serve others in a meaningful way. To help students practice this spiritual habit, you might …

  • Create a fundraiser or collection to help teenagers make a difference in someone’s life.
  • Hand out gift assessments to help teenagers figure out how God has made them and how they can use their gifts to make a difference.
  • Give a challenge for teenagers to serve somewhere alongside their friends, families, or small groups.

SPRING: Spend Time with God

Every spring, we focus on the spiritual habit of spending time with God because after half a year of building relationships and trust with teenagers, it’s a great time to challenge them to go deeper in their faith. Plus, it’s Easter! And Lent is a great time to encourage students to try new spiritual habits over the 40 days leading up to Easter Sunday. To help students practice this spiritual habit, you might …

  • Create a special prayer or worship event for teenagers to participate in.
  • Hand out devotionals or Bible reading plans for teenagers to do on their own or with their small groups.
  • Give a challenge for teenagers to practice a new spiritual habit with their friends or families.

SUMMER: Share Your Story

Every summer, we focus on the spiritual habit of sharing your story because many churches are already thinking about mission experiences and, with the new school year about to begin, it’s a great time to challenge teenagers to think about the difference they can make in their schools and communities. To help teenagers practice this spiritual habit, you might …

  • Create a storytelling segment in your weekly program to give teenagers, student leaders, or adult leaders a chance to share their stories of faith.
  • Hand out faith conversation starters to help teenagers talk about who God is to them in small groups, at home, or with friends.
  • Give a challenge for teenagers to write and then share with someone their faith story so far.

Plus, once every quarter, we recommend giving students a spiritual growth survey to help them (and you) evaluate and track their spiritual growth. Okay, maybe this seems like a lot to do, but it doesn’t have to be! Like you, we know that our time each week is limited, and no one has endless hours to spare — not even on something as important as discipleship. That’s why, if you’re using Grow Curriculum, you know we’ve already done a ton of this work for you! For every quarter of every year, we provide an activity or experience that corresponds with that quarter’s spiritual habit, and we include everything you need to make it happen — supply lists (with links to purchase the supplies), instructions, graphics, handouts, and more! And here’s the good news: there is a way to structure your discipleship strategy so that you do the least amount of work for the biggest impact. That’s what the Grow strategy is all about. In case you missed it, check out this article about planning an entire year of ministry. It’ll show you how all seven of these methods for investing in parents might look on your annual calendar, alongside an annual strategy for your:

We’ve said this before, but we’ve got to say it again! These ideas we’ve talked about are nice … but these ideas only become a strategy when you put them on your calendar and turn them into actions. When you have an annual plan to turn your ideas and goals into a strategy, you’ll make a much bigger impact. So whether you use Grow Curriculum or not, we hope you’ll steal our strategy! We developed it over lots of years of ministry, with input from lots of church leaders and lots of trial and error. Take it, tweak it, and make it your own. We really hope it helps you be just a little more awesome at what you do this year!

Free PDF Resource
An Annual Discipleship Strategy for Youth Ministry from Grow Curriculum

4 Fresh New Teen Discipleship Activities from Grow Students Volume 7

In this post, here’s what we’ll cover:

  • The 4 spiritual habits that help teens grow in their faith.
  • The new discipleship activities in Grow Students Volume 7 to help teenagers build these habits.
  • A quick overview of each fun, new quarterly discipleship activity.

When it comes to helping teenagers grow in their faith, we believe there are four spiritual habits to target. These habits are the decisions, behaviors, and rhythms that help us grow spiritually over time. If you’re like most people, when you hear “spiritual habit” you start to think about reading the Bible, praying, or going to church. Sure, these are important spiritual habits, but they’re not the only spiritual habits that matter.

While there’s no definitive list of spiritual habits, we think these four are worth targeting to help your students grow:

  1. Spending time with God
  2. Spending time with others
  3. Using your gifts
  4. Sharing your story

These four habits sit at the core of our discipleship strategy (and if you don’t have a discipleship strategy yet, steal ours!). We believe spiritual growth should be the lens through which we see everything else we do in our ministries. So, each quarter, we focus on one of these four spiritual habits with a specific discipleship activity.

Here’s each of the quarterly discipleship activities you’ll find in Volume 7 of Grow Students Curriculum.

THE BIGGER BETTER BEST CHALLENGE

The Bigger Better Best Challenge is a new spin on the classic youth group game, where you trade something small for something bigger and better, alongside friends. In this friendly competition, small groups will spend multiple weeks (or months) working together to trade up, win prizes for their group, and get to know each other better along the way.

THE OVER THE TOP CHALLENGE

With this discipleship activity, we’re providing everything you need to help students support local organizations dedicated to meeting the needs of your community. In this month-long activity, small groups will work together to develop creative ways to express “over-the-top” generosity. They will collect and donate needed items to benefit local community organizations and use their unique gifts to support and make a difference in what those organizations do in your community.

IN THE RHYTHM PRAYER PROMPTS

Prayer can often seem hard to understand and even harder to build into our lives as a daily habit. To help teenagers spend time with God, we’ve created these In The Rhythm Prayer Prompts to encourage teenagers to practice a brand new pattern of prayer this season. We’ve built a deck of 40 prayer prompts that teenagers can take home with them, draw from, and use to talk with God in a new way each day. You can print out these prompts for teenagers to use at home, have a small group leader text them to their teenagers, or post them on your ministry’s social media accounts.

LONG STORY SHORT POP UP

When it comes to sharing their stories of faith, it can sometimes be hard for teenagers to put their stories into words. Long Story Short: The Pop-Up is a one-day event that will give students opportunities to craft their stories through tons of creative outlets! From art, poetry, and music, to videos, photography, technology, and even a little gardening, this event will guide students through a variety of activities, each designed to help teenagers understand and communicate their faith stories in new, powerful, creative, and unique ways. While this event can be done anytime during the year, we suggest pairing it with the teaching series Worth Sharing, which is all about sharing your story of faith with others!

Free PDF Resource
4 Fresh New Teen Discipleship Activities from Grow Students Volume 7

Those are each of the four quarterly discipleship activities you can find inside of Volume 7 of Grow Students Curriculum. And if you’re already using Grow Students, we’ve given you everything you need for each of these activities — instructions for each discipleship activity, editable graphics, shopping lists, flyers, debrief guides, handouts, and more!