Friday, December 5, 2008


Christmas Quotes - Giving (12:00AM)

Christmas is the season of Giving

"Christmas is doing a little something extra for someone."
- Charles Schulz

"We make a living by what we get but we make a life by what we give."
- Winston Churchill

"If there is no joyous way to give a festive gift, give love away."

"Mail your packages early so the post office can lose them in time for Christmas."
- Johnny Carson.

"I once bought my kids a set of batteries for Christmas with a note on it saying, toys not included."
- Bernard Manning

"Let us remember that the Christmas heart is a giving heart, a wide open heart that thinks of others first. The birth of the baby Jesus stands as the most significant event in all history, because it has meant the pouring into a sick world of the healing medicine of love which has transformed all manner of hearts for almost two thousand years. Underneath all the bulging bundles is this beating Christmas heart."
- George Mathew Adams

"A Christmas candle is a lovely thing; It makes no noise at all, But softly gives itself away; While quite unselfish, it grows small."
- Eva K. Logue

"Were it not for the shepherds, there would have been no reception. And were it not for a group of stargazers, there would have been no gifts."
- Max Lucado, God Came Near

"Unless we make Christmas an occasion to share our blessings, all the snow in Alaska won't make it 'white'."
- Bing Crosby

"Christmas is the season for kindling the fire of hospitality in the hall, the genial flame of charity in the heart."
- Washington Irving

"Do give books - religious or otherwise - for Christmas. They're never fattening, seldom sinful, and permanently personal."
- Lenore Hershey

"The best of all gifts around any Christmas tree: the presence of a happy family all wrapped up in each other."
- Burton Hillis




Thursday, December 4, 2008


Christmas, So You Think You Can Dance? (12:00AM)

This is probably more appropriate for children rather than youth, but I have included it on the website anyway as we have a lot of children's workers who visit.

Introduction
In this Christmas Party Game, participants must dance to the Christmas Holiday Music until it stops.

Game Description

Game Materials

Game Preparation

Game Play




Wednesday, December 3, 2008


The Twelve Days of Christmas Birthdays (12:00AM)

Introduction
Use this Christmas Party game involving the popular Christmas tune "The Twelve Days of Christmas" to raise the energy level and get everyone involved.

Game Description
Participants will stand up when the "Twelve Days of Christmas" verse corresponding to their birthday month is sung or heard.

Game Materials

Game Preparation
None needed

Game Play

Take it to the Next Level
Like many Christian traditions, the secular is often mingled with the spiritual. Sometimes meanings are lost. Sometimes the meaning is revised as we get further and further away from the historical events that inspired them. While Christmas and December 25th is almost certainly NOT the actual date of Christ's birth, it is an opportunity to celebrate the fact that Christ the Savior was sent to us more than 2000 years ago. God came down, and because of his birth, death, and resurrection our lives are forever changed. Because of his birth and what he did, we can be born again. God became flesh and suffered on the cross that we might receive a new birth and be reconciled with God. It doesn't matter when you were born, you can be born again today if you will accept Christ into your heart.

To Note
Contrary to some stories circulating around the internet, the song is very unlikley to be a symbol or metaphor for he basic tenets of the Christian faith. Click here for for details.

CC2007_mini.jpgMore Christmas Resources for Youth Groups
Click here to find out how you can immediately download more than 200 of my best Christmas games, Christmas illustrations, Christmas activity ideas AND MUCH MORE in a useful ebook for only $19.97




Tuesday, December 2, 2008


Obstacles to Prayer Groups (08:00AM)

Fear
One of the number one fears that people have is the fear of public speaking. While prayer is communication with God, if there are other people listening and it is a corporate prayer meeting, people are similarly afraid of prayer. This fear can be somewhat alleviated if we provide training for those that will lead prayer, and avoid putting people on the spot to pray without prior notice and training. Stress that prayer is communication with God. It is talking to God. Also stress that in private, you can pray to God in whatever way most comfortable for you, but in corporate prayer it is best to do it in such a way that you benefit those listening in on your prayers with God.

Communication Issues
Prayer is communication, and like every other form of communication it only develops with training and experience. Many people have not developed the skill of communicating verbally with God so they may tend to repeat prayers and phrases they have heard -- simply stringing together prayers they often hear. The best way to overcome this is to provide specific guidance for prayer items.

Unrealistic Expectations
Many people think that they will be considered less spiritual if their prayers are not on the level of the pastor or other church leaders. We need to stress in training that God is more concerned with our heart than how polished our prayer sounds.

Violation of confidences
Sometimes it can become a fine line between honestly praying for someone in need and turning the prayer request into little more than gossip sessions or finger pointing sessions. We need to pray for so and so because he did such and such.... Keep confidences and private prayer requests private. Make sure that even in prayer that everything we say is edifying to those who are listening. (Ephesians 4:29)

Planning issues
Many prayer meetings lack variety and become boring and routine. Vary the format and introduce a variety of concepts, styles, and vary the focus to add a little life to meetings that have become stale.




Monday, December 1, 2008


Height of a Building (08:00AM)

A young boy was touted as the next Einstein. One of the world's greatest thinkers was brought in to test him to see how smart he really was... They set him down and gave him an exam. On the exam there was ONE question alone...

"Using a barometer, how would you determine the height of a building?"

The boy read the question, quickly wrote an answer and turned it in to the examiner. The examiner was quite surprised the young boy finished so quickly.. He read the answer.

"I would tie a sting to the barometer, lower it until it touches the ground, and then measure the string to determine the height of the building."

The examiner said, "While that would work, that is not the answer I am looking for. Please try again.."

The boy went back to his desk.. He was troubled.. he was scratching his head and in such concentration that the examiner thought to ask him if he was OK... if he needed some help. Was he having difficulty coming up with an answer?

The boy replied, "oh no... that's not my trouble... I have so many good answers I cannot decide which one to write down."

Eventually the boy wrote down a formula involving barometric pressure to calculate the height above sea level and determine the building's height.

The examiner was satisfied with the answer, but was also curious... "Do you mind telling me what some of your other answers were?"

The boy replied:

"I could measure the length of the barometer and then use it to mark the wall in the stairwell. When I reached the top I would multiply the marks on the wall by the length of the barometer and would be able to calculate the height of the building."

"Or I could drop it from the top of the building and use a stop watch to time the fall. I could then use the formula for gravity and acceleration to determine the height of the building."

"Or I could get up early and as the sun rises, measure the shadow cast by the barometer and the shadow cast by the building and using a simple ratio, determine the height of the building according to proportion."

The boy continued with several more ideas.. Eventually the examiner asked him, "What was your favorite solution?"

The boy replied, "I would go to the guardhouse and show the barometer to the guard. I would tell him how this was such a wonderful barometer and all the wonderful things it could do for him.. I would then tell him... If you will only tell me the height of this building I will give you this barometer for free"

There are many solutions to a problem... Sometimes we are so intent on elaborate strategies and methods to solve a problem that we forget the simple things... Maybe we should just ask...

Are you bringing your problems to God?




Sunday, November 30, 2008


Youth Christmas Party Planning Checklist (11:51PM)

Christmas is just around the corner... Have you prepared for your youth Christmas Party yet?

If you don't get things moving well in advance, instead of enjoying the Christmas Vacation with the youth, you could end up being totally stressed and miss valuable opportunities to impact their lives and those of their friends and families.

So here's a Youth Christmas Planning Checklist... (FIRST DRAFT - IDEAS WELCOME for improvement)

Form a Christmas Party planning committee

Coordinate your Youth Christmas Party with the church as a whole

Decide the Christmas Activities Schedule

Decide your Goal for the Christmas Party

Plan the Details for the Christmas Party

Tentative Christmas Party Program

CC2007_mini.jpg
More Christmas Resources for Youth Groups


Click here to find out how you can immediately download more than 200 of my best Christmas games, Christmas illustrations, Christmas activity ideas AND MUCH MORE in a useful ebook for only $19.97


Christmas Party Finances

Christmas Party Arrangements

Christmas Events Publicity

Equipment and resources needed for the Christmas Party

Handling emergencies

Christmas Party Volunteer Training

The Day of the Christmas Party

After the Christmas Party

This document is a guide only. It contains general information and is not intended to represent a comprehensive checklist. Have suggestions to add? Any words of wisdom? Please click on the comments link below and share with us your wisdom and experience in regards to organizing Christmas Parties for your youth!




Monday, November 24, 2008


Top Ten Reasons College Students Are Going Home for the Thanksgiving (08:00AM)

10. You'll know that your turkey is a Butterball rather than a Grade E yet semi-edible furball.

9. Your mother will not be serving your mashed potatoes and stuffing with an ice cream scooper.

8. Pumpkin pie is a great alternative to green Jello.

7. After your eighth glass of cider, your emergency dash to the bathroom will not be delayed by having to line the seat with toilet paper.

6. Clean underwear, comfortable bed, access to a car, bedroom larger than a 12x14 cell ...okay, even if it is for only four days.

5. To eat your meals the only trek you'll have to make is from the couch to the kitchen, rather than the dorm to the dining hall ... in below freezing weather.

4. Instead of listening to "when I first started teaching here ..." you can be entertained by "when your mother was your age ..." and "during the Depression we weren't lucky enough to have brussels sprouts. Heck, all we could afford was the sprout!"

3. You can eat your corn steamed with butter rather than popped in your microwave.

2. You'll know the hair in the shower drain is your own.

And, the number one reason college students are looking forward to Thanksgiving...

1. You won't be eating your Thanksgiving meal off a tray!




Sunday, November 23, 2008


Thank God (04:34PM)

A man had been lost and walking in the desert for about five days. One hot day--actually, they're all hot--he comes to the home of a preacher. Tired and weak, he crawls up to the house and collapses on the doorstep. The preacher takes him in and nurses him back to health. Feeling better, the man asks the preacher for directions to the nearest town. The preacher tells him the directions, and offers to lend him his horse to make it. The preacher says, "However, there is a special thing about this horse. You have to say 'Thank God' to make it go and 'Amen' to make it stop."

Anxious to get to town, the man says, "Sure, okay" and gets on the horse. He says, "Thank God" and sho 'nuff, the horse starts walking. A bit later he says louder, "Thank God, thank God," and the horse starts trotting. Feeling really brave, the man say, "Thank God! Thank God! THANK GOD!" and the horse is soon up to a full run!

About then he realizes he's heading for a huge cliff and yells "Whoa!" But the horse doesn't even slow! It's coming up REAL QUICK and he's doing everything he can to make the horse stop. "Whoa, stop, hold on!" Finally he remembers "AMEN!!!"

The horse stops a mere two inches from the cliff's edge, almost throwing him over its head. The man, panting and heart racing, wipes the sweat from his face and leans back in the saddle. "Oh!" he says, gasping for air, "Thank God."




Friday, November 21, 2008


Thanksgiving Dinner (08:24AM)

"It was the day before Thanksgiving--the first one my three children and I would be spending without their father, who had left several months before. Now the two older children were very sick with the flu, and the eldest had just been prescribed bed rest for a week.

It was a cool, gray day outside, and a light rain was falling. I grew wearier as I scurried around, trying to care for each child: thermometers, juice, diapers. And I was fast running out of liquids for the children. But when I checked my purse, all I found was about $2.50--and this was supposed to last me until the end of the month. That's when I heard the phone ring.

It was the secretary from our former church, and she told me that they had been thinking about us and had something to give us from the congregation. I told her that I was going out to pick up some more juice and soup for the children, and I would drop by the church on my way to the market.

I arrived at the church just before lunch. The church secretary met me at the door and handed me a special gift envelope. 'We think of you and the kids often,' she said, 'and you are in our hearts and prayers. We love you.' When I opened the envelope, I found two grocery certificates inside. Each was worth $20. I was so touched and moved, I broke down and cried.

'Thank you very much,' I said, as we hugged each other. 'Please give our love and thanks to the church.' Then I drove to a store near our home and purchased some much-needed items for the children.

At the check-out counter I had a little over $14.00 worth of groceries, and I handed the cashier one of the gift certificates. She took it, then turned her back for what seemed like a very long time. I thought something might be wrong. Finally I said, 'This gift certificate is a real blessing. Our former church gave it to our family, knowing I'm a single parent trying to make ends meet.'

The cashier then turned around, with tears in her loving eyes, and replied, 'Honey, that's wonderful! Do you have a turkey?'

'No. It's okay because my children are sick anyway.'

She then asked, 'Do you have anything else for Thanksgiving dinner?'

Again I replied, 'No.'

After handing me the change from the certificate, she looked at my face and said, 'Honey, I can't tell you exactly why right now, but I want you to go back into the store and buy a turkey, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie or anything else you need for a Thanksgiving dinner.'

I was shocked, and humbled to tears. 'Are you sure?' I asked.

'Yes! Get whatever you want. And get some Gatorade for the kids.'

I felt awkward as I went back to do more shopping, but I selected a fresh turkey, a few yams and potatoes, and some juices for the children. Then I wheeled the shopping cart up to the same cashier as before. As I placed my groceries on the counter, she looked at me once more with giant tears in her kind eyes and began to speak.

'Now I can tell you. This morning I prayed that I could help someone today, and you walked through my line.' She reached under the counter for her purse and took out a $20 bill. She paid for my groceries and then handed me the change. Once more I was moved to tears.

The sweet cashier then said, 'I am a Christian. Here is my phone number if you ever need anything.' She then took my head in her hands, kissed my cheek and said, 'God bless you, honey.'

As I walked to my car, I was overwhelmed by this stranger's love and by the realization that God loves my family too, and shows us his love through this stranger's and my church's kind deeds.

The children were supposed to have spent Thanksgiving with their father that year, but because of the flu they were home with me, for a very special Thanksgiving Day. They were feeling better, and we all ate the goodness of the Lord's bounty--and our community's love. Our hearts were truly filled with thanks."

Source: Andrea Nannette Mejia- in "Chicken Soup for the Christian Soul." 101 Stories to Open the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit

Chicken Soup for the Christian Soul -- Conversation Starters to Open the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit





Is the Internet Harmful to Youth? (08:02AM)

I recently read with interest about some recent research by the MacArthur Foundation into the use of the internet involving 800 youth and their parents over a period of three years.

Source: Facebook, MySpace Beneficial To Teens by By Mike Sachoff

While the internet most definitely has lurking dangers hidden behind many of the links, not to mention porn, predators, malware, misleading and outright untrue information, unsavory groups and more, there are also some very real benefits to youth.

Here are some of the conclusions:

Your thoughts?




Thursday, November 20, 2008


Fruit Basket Turnover - Thanksgiving Version (10:44PM)

Game Description
This is the classic fruit basket turnover game modified for a Thanksgiving theme

Game Materials

Game Preparation

  1. Set chairs in circle with the chairs facing towards the center of the circle.
  2. Have the youths sit in the chairs close enough to close all of the gaps.
  3. Select one to stand in the middle of the circle and then remove his or her chair and the circle close the gap.
  4. The person in the center of the circle points to each of the other players and gives them a name, such as "Corn," "Cranberries," "Pumpkin," "Squash," "Turkey," or any other food related to thanksgiving. Limit the items so that the youth are divided into 3 or 4 groups and everyone is assigned a label, including the youth in the middle.

Game Play

Variations

Take it the the Next Level
Each time a person ends up in the center they must share something they are thankful for.




Wednesday, November 19, 2008


For what we are about to receive (10:50PM)

Two men were walking through a field one day when they spotted an enraged bull. Instantly they darted toward the nearest fence. The storming bull followed in hot pursuit, and it was soon apparent they wouldn’t make it. Terrified, the one shouted to the other, "Put up a prayer, John. We’re in for it!"

John answered, "I can’t. I’ve never made a public prayer in my life."

"But you must!" implored his companion. "The bull is catching up to us."

"All right," panted John, "I’ll say the only prayer I know, the one my father used to repeat at the table:
’O Lord, for what we are about to receive, make us truly thankful.’"




Tuesday, November 18, 2008


ButterBall Turkey Hotline (12:45PM)

Over the years, the Butterball Turkey Talk-Line staff have had their share of memorable calls -- inquiries that stand out from the crowd because they're heartwarming or amusing. We asked some of the veteran staff members to tell us their favorites; plus, we rounded up a bunch of our own personal favorites from the Talk-Line archives. It's hard to beat the call from a trucker who planned to cook his Thanksgiving turkey on the engine of his truck ("Will it cook faster if I drive faster?"), but some of these come pretty close.

WARNING: Do not attempt to adjust your screen -- these are real incidents, true stories -- from the front lines!




Monday, November 17, 2008


Turkey Talk (12:38PM)

What does a turkey say?

"Gobble, gobble, gobble"?

A jewelry-lovin' turkey?
"Bauble bauble bauble"

A dyslexic turkey?
"Boggle boggle boggle"

A turkey in the shoe repair shop?
"Cobble cobble cobble"

A turkey with a sore leg?
"Hobble hobble hobble."

A football turkey say?
"Huddle, huddle, huddle"

A dieting turkey?
"Nibble, nibble nibble."

A turkey who argues a lot?
"Squabble squabble squabble."

Dizzy Turkey?
"Wobble wobble wobble!"




Thursday, November 13, 2008


Once Lost, Now Found: Creative Scavenger Hunts (06:01PM)

Announcing.....

scavenger_hunts_ebook_lg.jpg

"Once Lost, Now Found: Creative Scavenger Hunts"
http://www.CreativeScavengerHunts.com

On any given day, there are hordes of people going to the Creative Youth Ideas website looking for Scavenger Hunt Ideas. In fact, it's one of the most searched for phrases people type into the search box on my website.

I've put a few ideas on the website and a few hints "on how to conduct a successful Scavenger Hunt", but for the past one year I have been working to create a one-of-a-kind resource to help youth groups plan their own scavenger Hunts.


scavenger_hunts_ebook_sm.jpg"Once Lost, Now Found: Creative Scavenger Hunts" is a 160 page e-book explaining everything you need to know to easily plan your very own scavenger hunt: Customizable Item Lists, Rules, Riddles, Safety Tips, Guidelines, Scoring, Tips for Facilitators and MORE! There are more than 50 complete ideas (scavenger hunts, photo hunts, video hunts, amazing race, etc.) to use at home, around the neighborhood, at the mall, in the park, on the beach, at church, and around town! Click Here to Learn More.




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