For more than 50 years, relational or incarnational ministry has been a
major focus in youth ministry. But for too long, those relationships
have been used as tools--as a means to an end--where adults try to
influence students to accept, know, trust, believe, or participate in
something. While our motives may be good, it's possible that by focusing
on these goals, we're not ministering the whole person. When we choose
not to engage in the full life of a student, we run the risk of failing
them and our ministry. In this thoughtful and insightful book, Andrew
Root challenges us to reconsider our motives and begin to consider
simply being with and doing life alongside teenagers with no agenda
other than to love them right where they are, by place-sharing. As he
shares stories of his (and others') successes and failures in relational
youth ministry, you'll find practical ideas to help you recreate the
role of relationships in your youth ministry. If you're involved in the
lives of teenagers, whether as a youth pastor, volunteer youth worker,
church leader, or parent, you'll want to read this book and work
together to discover the value of place-sharing in the lives of teens.
You'll see that it's time to tear down the old structure of relational
youth ministry and start again.