280 likes | 297 Views
Join Dr. Michael Tino, UUA Director of Young Adult and Campus Ministry, as he explores contemporary worship and its impact on young adults. Gain practical ideas for implementing contemporary worship in your congregation and understand what young adults want from their worship experience.
E N D
Spiritually Vital and AliveCreating Inspiring and Contemporary Worship Dr. Michael Tino UUA Director of Young Adult and Campus Ministry General Assembly 2006 – St. Louis, MO
Goals for Participants • Understand what young adults want from worship experience • Take a look at our current worship services through young adult eyes • Learn a model for UU contemporary worship • Get practical ideas for implementing contemporary worship in your congregations
The Hard Data, Part 1 • Interfaith survey of congregations done in 2000 (2005 data are being analyzed now) • Over 500 UUA member congregations responded • Congregations self-identified descriptions that matched them
FACT facts • 5% of UU congregations reported 60% or more young adult members • What makes these congregations different?
Congregational Culture • Largest difference between high-YA and overall: • “Spiritually vital and alive” • #1 among high-YA congregations: • “Inspirational and uplifting worship services” • #1 among shrinking congregations: • “A close-knit family”
Descriptions of Worship • Descriptions used more often by high-YA congregations than the overall include: • Sense of God’s presence • Exciting • Predictable • Reverent
Initial Data from FACT 2005 • Congregations with 40% or more young adults (11% of total) were more likely to report “exciting” and “joyful” worship • Congregations with 20% or more young adults (45% of total) were more likely to report “joyful” and “inspiring” worship • Congregations with less than 10% young adults (20% of total) were more likely to report “informal” worship
The Hard Data, Part 2 • 80% of 1st year students are interested in spirituality • 76% searching for meaning and purpose • 48% “seeking,” “conflicted,” or “doubting” • UU students score highest on: • measures of social justice involvement • spiritual searching • respect for different religious viewpoints • UU students score lowest on: • religious commitment
The Hard Data, Part 3 • Generation Y is diverse, progressive and pluralistic • 23% do not identify with any faith group • Faith expressed in highly personal ways • 35% describe themselves as “spiritual but not religious”
Anecdotal EvidenceWhat do young adults want from worship? • Energetic, alive, spiritual • “Makes you feel something” • Embodied • Multiple voices/perspectives • Participatory • Welcoming • Not in the morning
What does a typical order of service look like? How would you describe the music that is performed? What is the feeling of the worship service? What topics are addressed? How are new people welcomed? How are young adults welcomed? Worship In Your CongregationWhat might young adults think of it?
“Contemporary” does not mean: • stupid • irrational • loud • coming from a particular theology • irrelevant to people who are not 18-35
Some Existing Models • Circle Worship • Covenant Groups • Soulful Sundown and other music-centered services
Circle Worship • Intimate, participatory worship • Participants share reflections on a theme • Similar to most UU youth worship • Main drawback: severe size limitation
Covenant GroupsNot your typical “worship” • Covenant groups offer an atmosphere like circle worship • Small Group Ministry model is adaptable for different sizes of groups • Resources available from UUA to implement YA groups
Soulful Sundown & Other UU Ideas • Soulful Sundown • Energetic evening worship format • Music is central to worship format • Resource guide available from UUA Bookstore • Multimedia aspects add to worship experience • Message is given in short segments • Can be based on poetry, jazz for contemplative, reflective mood • Rituals such as silent candle-lighting
Tips for Contemporary Worship • Spice it up—with different perspectives, different voices, fresh music • Give people the message in manageable bites • Create a spiritual atmosphere and tone
More Tips • Get out of the Sunday morning-only mold (think “both-and”) • Think about adding multimedia components • Balance intimacy and hospitality • Ritual that is participatory and welcoming to newcomers
Hospitality is More than Worship • Invite people to fuller participation in your congregation • Young adult activities—social, social justice programs • Small Group Ministry, Covenant Groups, classes, etc.
Outreach • Web site • Flyers, posters including catchy logo • Know where young adults are in your community and how to reach them • Press releases • Advertising in local media
Budgets Large and SmallHow much does this all cost? • Budget size depends largely on how ambitious a program you want • Sometimes require start-up costs • Costs could include budgets for: • Hiring musicians • Supplies for worship • Outreach • Food • These programs will take staff and volunteer time and energy • Successful programs are not built overnight
Resources from the UUA • Consultations and trainings • Phone or in-person consultations • Local, district and regional trainings • Printed Resources • Soulful Sundown guide • Covenant Group manual and curricula • Grant money • Program and staff grants from $500-$50,000 • Billings Fund (up to $2000) for public events
Coming Soon:Contemporary Worship Conference • Feb 22-24, 2007 • First UU Church of San Diego, CA • Workshop proposals due Sept 1 • Scholarships will be available • On-line registration coming soon
Contacting Us • UUA Office of Young Adult and Campus Ministry • www.uuyan.org • 617-948-4273 • ya-cm@uua.org • Michael Tino, director • mtino@uua.org • 919-401-9944
On The Web • www.uuyan.org • Main web site for Young Adult & Campus Ministry • On-line resources and tips for congregations • www.connectuu.com • UUA Youth & Young Adult database • Register people, local groups, events