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November 20, 2006

Brian Littrell, Rebecca St. James Team Up For Christmas Tour

Brian Littrell, of the Backstreet Boys, is shaking up Christian music.

As part of the boy band that started it all, Littrell and the other Boys sold over 80 million records (a new Backstreet Boys album is reportedly in the works for '07) and accumulated a ton of fans worldwide.  This past spring, Littrell came out with his first solo project, a Christian album, which has produced two hit singles so far.

Next month, Littrell is hitting the road with contemporary Christian artist Rebecca St. James on a Christmas tour.  (See the article about the tour in today's Christian Post).

In the interest of full disclosure, yours truly is producing four of the dates on this tour.  If the email traffic that is hitting my inbox is any indication, Littrell has the potential to attract some people to a Christian concert who probably would never otherwise attend.  And that's a good thing.  I'm excited about what God is doing -- and will do -- through his ministry.

As of this writing, Brian and I have not yet met, but I am already impressed with him.  He agreed to extend his tour, sans Rebecca, for one day to play a free concert we are doing for members of the military and their families at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot on Parris Island in Beaufort, South Carolina.  (Avalon will join Brian for this performance).  Many members of the Navy and Marines from this community are either currently deployed or soon will be.  This concert will be a blessing to these families and I am grateful to Brian and Avalon for supporting it.

November 17, 2006

Ministers on MySpace

MySpace may be on its way to being "yesterday" in the minds of teens (at least according to some in the media), but it's still pretty hot.

NewYork-based hitwise.com rated MySpace the No. 1 site for the week ending Nov. 11, accounting for about 5 percent of all U.S. Internet traffic.  Alexa.com, another ratings site, put it in the No. 3 spot among U.S. websites.  Either way, MySpace has more than 100 million accounts with a demographic that is dominated by teens and people in their 20s.

Opinions about MySpace vary, with some youth pastors seeing it as a helpful ministry tool and others loudly condemning it as the work of the devil.

Certainly, MySpace does have the potential to get kids in trouble...but they're not the only ones.  I recently did some consulting with a church in the southeast that has dismissed its youth minister over some postings (about the church and its leadership, among other things) on his personal MySpace page.

Today's Minneapolis Star-Tribune carries a story about how some youth pastors view the popular web site.  As for me, I don't have a MySpace page...I'll just stick to blogging about youth ministry.  Seems safer.

November 16, 2006

Can you hear me now?

Now that seemingly every teenager in America has a cell phone, the question is:  where is it okay for them to have them?

New York City Schools, America's largest school system, has not allowed cell phones for years, but students have carried the gadgets mostly without consequence. When the city began random security checks for weapons last spring, searchers started finding and confiscating hundreds of cell phones -- setting off a charged debate.

Parents who oppose the cell phone ban are ranting in e-mails to the city's government that the policy is unreasonable, irresponsible, and hints at "thoughtless fascism," the Associated Press reports.

Many youth pastors -- myself included -- routinely ban cell phones and other electronic devices from mission trips, retreats, camps.  Part of the purpose of such events is to get away from the distractions of the world, we reason.  We understand the need of parents to be able to communicate with their kids in the event of an emergency, so we take great pains to provide emergency numbers before we leave. 

My advice:  if you have such a policy, this is the time to put it in writing and have it officially endorsed by your church's governing body.  If it hasn't been a problem in your ministry yet, stay tuned... 

November 15, 2006

Air Guitar Goes High Tech

Everyone knows that youth pastors are supposed to play the guitar, right?  Well, thanks to some Australian scientists, there's hope for the rest of us.

Apparently, they have developed a high-tech T-shirt that turns the strumming of an air guitar into music.

The T-shirt has motion sensors built into its elbows that pick up the wearer's arm motions and relay them wirelessly to a computer which interprets them as guitar riffs, Richard Helmer, an engineer who leads the research team from the government's Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, told the Associated Press.

One arm is interpreted as picking chords while the other strums. The "wearable instrument shirt" is adaptable to both right and left-handed would-be rock stars.

"It's an easy-to-use, virtual instrument that allows real-time music making even by players without significant musical or computing skills," Helmer said in a statement.

"It allows you to jump around and the sound generated is just like an original MP3," he added, referring to the digital audio file format.

November 11, 2006

Group Works On High School-College Transition

The former "Ministry Edge" dropped its name and existence this week to birth the Youth Transition Network involving some 40 leaders from major ministries such as Campus Crusade for Christ, InterVarsity, the Navigators, Chi Alpha Ministries and the National Network of Youth Ministries.

The mission:  to better transition high school youth to college.

"I'm giving everything that I built in the last two years away ... so that we can work together nationally in a neutral environment to transition youth," Jeff Schadt, a major coordinator for the Youth Transition Network, told The Christian Post.

The effort to grow the network for a major unprecedented national campaign for youth transition began in March of this year. It now has the commitment of prominent church and ministry groups that will help propel the campaign kickoff next year, the Post reported.

"This whole campaign is designed to ... help transition our youth to get connected to ministries before leaving home [for college]," commented Schadt.

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