4 Marks of a Successful Small Group Ministry

It seems that every week we are faced with new, grim statistics on the state of the Church and the faith, or lack thereof, of our young people. Faithful Catholics everywhere are looking for ways to stand in the breach and more effectively proclaim the truth of Jesus Christ and His Church to our youth, creating environments where true discipleship can occur. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if there was a Catholic youth ministry program that could accomplish all this and be as simple as “just add water”?

As appealing as that idea is, no such thing does or can exist. Ministry is complicated. Every parish has different staffing and program structure. Some have full-time youth ministers, while others are run by faithful volunteers. People are beautifully complicated. And conversion isn’t linear. 

Here Are a Few Tips for How to Connect With Middle School Youth

So, what’s a Church to do? With YDisciple, we make no promises of a one-size-fits-all ministry resource. Instead, we offer solid content and guides to help parish, parents, and individuals share faith with teens. And while there is no fail-safe roadmap for small groups, we have discovered that there are four “marks on the map,” if you will, that will help you launch and sustain small group discipleship in your context. 

Mark #1: Partner with Parents 

Study after study shows that parents are the primary influencer of teenagers’ faith lives. From the time parents choose to baptize their child, they take responsibility as the child’s primary faith educators. No program can replace them, but ministries often relegate parents to chaperones and snack providers.

Small Group Discipleship is different. We recommend partnering with parents from the beginning to help form the group, host the group (where Safe Environment policies permit), and sustain the group as it grows. YDisciple also makes sharing the group’s content with parents easy, so parents can be aware of what is discussed, and small groups can serve as a springboard for faith-sharing in the home. Are you a parent? You can start a group for your teen with the tools provided on our Promotional Resources page. No need to wait for an “official” program to start. These resources are free whether you subscribe to YDisciple or not.

Mark #2: Engage other Faithful Adults 

Your parish may have a youth minister or maybe even two. Your parish may have no youth minister or a person who wears multiple hats, with youth ministry being just one. Even a full-time youth minister cannot adequately meet the needs of all the teens in his or her parish boundaries. YDisciple gives you the tools to “multiply” the youth minister, equipping other caring adults in the parish to become, in a sense, co-youth ministers, focused on the needs and customizing the formation of the handful of teens in their group. 

Watch The Youth Ministry Mindset, Ep 5: Empowering Adults

Mark #3: Encourage Ownership for Teens and their Families

At every turn of the process, we want you to think about how we can ensure these small groups are “owned” by the teens and their families. Teens are more likely to be committed when they feel that the group is not “St. Michael’s small group” but “My small group.”

Consider these simple ways this sense of ownership can be developed:

  • Ask teens who they would like to have in their group instead of assigning groups 
  • Ask parents to invite other families personally 
  • Ask teens who in the parish they want to have as a mentor instead of recruiting mentors through the bulletin 
  • Meet in homes or coffee shops, when permitted, instead of classrooms 
  • Ask teens and families what day and time works best, rather than scheduling for them
  • Ask teens what they want to discuss instead of following a linear curriculum

Mark #4: Start Small, Think Big

Small Group Discipleship is scalable. Whether you have a thriving youth group at your parish or a small parish with only a handful of teens at all, we recommend starting just one or two small groups. If a small number of groups get off the ground well, expect organic growth. Teens will start talking. Parents will start talking. Others will want to form groups not because of a flyer but because of word-of-mouth. Think “Mustard Seed” to Movement (Matthew 13:31-32). 

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