.
Quo Vadis?
.
Is
Christian Youth Culture Possible?
.
an
interview with Michael Shaughnessy,
Director for Kairos
both in North America and
Internationally
Kairos
Youth Culture News: Mike, those who know
you, know you have lot's of ideas about
youth and youth work. What's next?
Mike:
Christians pray that God's kingdom would come on
earth as it is in heaven – on earth, not just in
heaven. We shouldn't settle for something less
than the kingdom. We too easily accept the
prevailing culture as inevitable. Unfortunately,
that means many young people are missing out on
the hope, joy, beauty and goodness that God
intends for them on earth (not to mention
heaven.) Many Christian parents and youth
workers are limited by a strategy that just
tries to keep evil out. They must say "NO!" over
and over again, or just give up and give in. In
Kairos we see this challenge and are doing
something about it. Our goal is to build a
positive youth culture that promotes whatever is
true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just,
whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever
is gracious (Phil. 4:8). This includes more than
just whatever is spiritual. It includes every
area of human culture: food, sports, games,
music, art, dress…
Kairos Youth
Culture News: Why not just
eliminate youth culture totally!
Mike:
Eliminating youth culture is impossible to do.
Isolating Christian youth from youth culture
completely is also unrealistic. Even the Amish
admit that. More importantly, we have a
commission from Christ to bring the gospel to
the world. We should not just write off youth
culture. We should want to transform it and
those who live in it. Besides, shaping today's
youth means shaping tomorrow's world leaders.
Kairos Youth
Culture News: Creating a
new youth culture... That seems like a lot
of work!
Mike: Oh,
it will be. It was a lot of work to build
Florence Cathedral, but it was done. I think we
need to do this and for two good reasons. First,
we lose too many young people to the powerful
world of youth culture. Their lives get messed
up. They lose what faith they have. We need to
provide an alternative culture, a whole culture
– not just a good youth group and some Christian
music. We need to provide a place where youth
can flourish. The second reason we should do it
is exactly because this mission is big. Its
vision is big. It will provide a place in
mission for all sorts of our young people, not
just youth workers. This mission will need
businessmen and women, web designers, musicians,
writers, clothes designers, video editors, sound
geeks... That's a short list. I have a longer
one and it's growing.
Kairos Youth
Culture News: Where do you
begin?
Mike: Like with any
good project – get the right people and the
funding. I think I have a good start on the
right people. I am hoping our readers will help
with the funding.
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