Dr. Kara Powell and the team at the Fuller Youth Institute have been working hard for the last six years to try to figure out how to help kids have long-term faith, or “Sticky Faith”.  We asked Kara to share a few excerpts from her brand new book that would be most helpful to parents wanting to intentionally set their kids on a lifetime trajectory of faith and service.

This is an excerpt from Chapter 5 of Sticky Faith: Everyday Ideas to Build Lasting Faith in Your Kids

 

Find Compromise If Your Kid Doesn’t Want to Go to Church

About half of the time I share the importance of intergenerational worship with parents, I get asked,“Should I make my kid go to church?” Believe me, as much as I am an advocate for intergenerational worship, I’m not naïve about how teenagers feel about sitting through church. I felt that way a fair amount myself as a kid.

This is a tough question, one I wish we could discuss over coffee so I could ask more questions about your kids and family. But not knowing your specific family, let me say this: while your long-term goal is intergenerational connection primarily in and with a church family, the first hurdle is to help your kid to feel like they are part of something they are choosing and enjoy. Forced friendships do not work very well for adolescents. Depending on the issues your child is dealing with and why they do not want to go, perhaps you could consider the following:

1. Make sure your kids know that, as important as church is to you as the parent, you respect their desire not to go. At the same time, let them know that being a part of God’s family is an important part of your family’s life.

2. Find ways to connect your child to Christian friends in casual or organic settings. As these intentional relationships develop and deepen, your child will have a greater internal incentive to get involved.

3. Find out what, if any, faith activities they would like or are willing to be part of. (I would do all you can to steer away from “making” them attend.) Perhaps a parachurch group, or a different church’s worship service, or a Bible study would help them feel more connected and involved. Sometimes a friend’s church or youth group will become a place where they can connect with a faith community.

4. In the end, do your best to seek a compromise. Depending on their age and your family’s circumstance, ask your child to attend with you once a month, especially if they are plugged in somewhere else, and to do it out of love and respect for you and your faith. If they are attending a different church, you should probably offer to attend that church with them monthly also.

Taken from Sticky Faith by Kara Powell & Chap Clark. Copyright © 2011. Used by permission of Zondervan. www.zondervan.com.