I have a wonderful idea to share with you that can easily and inexpensively be incorporated in your student ministry and should produce an immediate impact. I call it "Worship Stations" and this idea is growing rapidly in popularity. The first time I heard of worship stations was from one of our youth pastors who had just returned from a ski retreat at
Snowbird Wilderness Outfitters. I have also experienced the use of stations in church services, on college campus, and this last summer we setup worship stations at our D.I.R.T. Camps.
At Snowbird they have a prayer chapel (a rustic cabin up on a hill) that is a great example of worship stations. Inside the candle lit cabin you will find an altar for prayer and several composition notebooks for writing prayers on and around the altar. Next you might notice a sand garden that is about a foot and a half wide and three to four feet long. This is for a person to write their sin in the sand as an expression of confession and then wipe it away as a picture of forgiveness. They also had a world map laminated on one wall where the focus was missions. You could use a dry erase marker to circle the area of the world that you prayed for. They had a station to pray for our troops and write them a letter. They also had a cork board for writing praises on note cards and more. The cabin was opened throughout the week for students to visit and by all accounts they loved the experience.
A great benefit of worship stations is the opportunity you give students to respond to God, especially at the conclusion of a message. Think about it, every week (hopefully) you are presenting a Christ honoring message in some form to students that you hope will generate a heart-felt response. In the typical scenario we find ourselves giving an "altar call" (which I have done many times) or making some closing statement that says we hope they will respond somewhere, sometime. Now how unfair is that? With your message you bring them to a place where God may be speaking to them but you never lead them into an opportunity to respond?
Worship Stations have become an anchor in our D.I.R.T. Camps. It is impossible to fully express the spiritual impact they have. At the end of each night's message being able to offer something much richer that the standard invitation. Of course we invite students who wanted to receive Christ to speak with a counselor, but we are also able to say, "If you have a friend who is not a Christian there is a cross where you can write their name and pray for their salvation. If you want to praise God there are some clear plastic sheets that I want you to write your words of praise on and then place them on the over head projector for all to see...." We had a communion table setup and we has several areas where students could pray. We had a prayer journal to write in and there were counselors stationed around the auditorium that students could talk to about spiritual needs.
At our camps each night 90 percent or more of the students engage in some form of response during the invitation time. Each night this time of worshipping God goes on for 30 minutes or more. It is powerful and amazing. As some students would return to their seats we would join in praise and worship while others continue in their response. Only God knows all the decisions, prayers and life transformations that take place during a week of camp. I can tell you it is one of the most dynamic times of worship I have ever experienced.
I want to encourage you to find some space in your youth area to experiment with worship stations. Be creative and prayerful about it. Ask God to show you how to incorporate worship stations in ways that fit your world. I believe you will be amazed!
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Want to get students interested in a "Cause" that will truly change the world?
Check out "THE Cause" at http://www.dare2share.org/thecause/