Five Ideas for the Summer

Summer can be a challenging time for Life Groups.

Vacations, and family activities can make it hard to stay consistent. Plus, sometimes people (including leaders) just need a break!

Well here are a few ideas to consider if you’re planning on leading a Life Group this summer.

1. Meet Monthly for a Fun Activity

You could have a potluck, meet for ice cream, or even set up a game night that includes the kids. Ditch your study and focus on investing in one another relationally. Get to know one another on a deeper level as you simply spend time together.

unsplash-image-Wpg3Qm0zaGk.jpg

2. Meet Monthly with a Missional or Outreach Focus

The summer is a great time to invest in your community and neighborhood.

Plan one missional activity each month (June, July, and August) that your entire group can participate in. You could visit a nursing home to hang out and build relationships with residents, serve a meal at a homeless shelter, or plan a day of landscaping/cleanup at the church or a local non-profit.

Check out the list of local ministries Cy-Fair Christian Church partners with.

3. Try a New Study

Summer is a great time to mix up your routine. Try a study on a topic you’ve been interested in, check out a video study on Right Now Media, or focus your time on spiritual disciplines like prayer. If you need help narrowing down the choices, check out my 5 questions you should ask yourself before choosing.

You could also ditch the study altogether and use your meetings to share your personal testimonies. As you share your stories with one another, you’ll deepen your relationships in amazing ways, and your discussions will have new meaning and depth. Groups don’t often have time for this during the year, but the summer can be the perfect time.

Alternatively, have each group member sign up to lead a week and share one of their favorite verses or passages. Then discuss the importance of the passage.

unsplash-image-ul_m5dHThaM.jpg

4. Involve the Kids

Often in small groups with children, the adults talk in one room while the children play together in another. While there can be great benefits to this (It’s great to have adult conversations without toddlers pulling on your pant leg!), it can also be great to involve the kids sometimes.

You could designate one night a month to involving the kids, or you could involve them every week if you’re brave. Plan a lesson or topic they can easily participate in. You might even put together a quick activity they can do. A really simple way to involve them is by having dinner together to start the meeting.

However you involve them, the kids will benefit from seeing healthy adult interactions and from being loved on my so many adults other than their parents.

The key: don’t plan anything that takes too long. If you think the adults in your group have short attention spans, you can’t imagine how short the kids’ attention spans are.

unsplash-image-XrzLWellnd0.jpg

5. Take a Break

It’s not always a bad idea to take a break for the summer. Sometimes scheduling simply won’t work, or taking a break will free up group members to participate in other church activities over the summer.

Another great reason: you need a break. That’s why I encourage our Life Groups to at least take a month off in January, May, and September.

If you do take a break just for the summer, remember to communicate clearly by the end of May what you plan to do and remind everyone that you’ll start back up when the Fall Session begins on October 3rd.

Do this  before you break for the summer. That way everyone is prepared and informed. Then touch base with group members as often as makes sense. Even a text message can go a long way in staying connected through the summer months.

Whatever you decide to do this summer, make sure you communicate clearly both what you’re doing and why you’re doing it. Taking a break from your usual routine can actually invigorate your group, so be sure to communicate that fact. Then ensure that everyone’s on the same page.

Keep Your Promise to Pray

"I'm praying for you." Have you ever said this to someone, only to realize the next time you saw them that you didn’t pray for them? If so, you're not alone.

Prayer is central to our personal discipleship and it’s crucial to the effectiveness of our Life Group ministry. If we’re not dependent upon God and relying on his Holy Spirit to guide and direct us, we are powerless—like a grand prix engine without any gas in the tank.

So, if we are going to be effective prayer warriors, we are going to have to be very intentional about prayer. Here are some things that I do to try and keep me on track.

unsplash-image-WukitUSJRgY.jpg

CHOOSE A TIME

Time is my most valuable commodity, but if I’m not aware of it, I will spend it flippantly. I have found that if I don’t designate a time for prayer, it will be squeezed out of a busy schedule. So, set aside a time for prayer each day. For me, the early morning works best. The house is typically quiet before my kids wake up and I can focus. I’m not much of a morning person so I’m usually tired, but I’m not nearly as tired as I am at the end of the day. That makes the trade-off worth it for me.

I also find that starting my day with prayer helps me see my day through a different perspective. If I’ve started my day praying for patience or peace, as I interact with people or begin to get overwhelmed, I’m able to reflect back on my early morning prayer. If I choose the evening for my daily prayer, I’m usually regretful about how I behaved throughout the course of my day. Morning prayer helps me to be proactive, not reactive.

Mark 1:35-37 tells us that Jesus used the early morning to pray. And though the bible doesn’t always say when he prayed, it mentions morning prayer in many different places (Ps. 5:3; Ps. 30:5; Ps. 88:13; Ps. 90:14; Ps. 143:8; Isa. 26:9; Isa. 50:4; Job 1:1-22) was probably not a one-time occurrence.

CHOOSE A SPACE

I don’t have a home office yet, but I plan to have one setup in the future. Until then, the kitchen table is my space for prayer. The fact that it’s near the coffee maker helps. I like that it’s by the window so I can see the sun peaking up over the horizon as I pray. It’s comfortable, and it’s clean (usually). It’s also try to keep it free of other distractions that might send me down a rabbit hole like my phone, or any unfinished work from the day before. These things are constantly begging my attention, so I need to be far from them to focus.

Jesus didn’t have a place to lay his head (Matt. 8:20), but that didn’t stop him from choosing a space. He often withdrew to find a quiet place away from his disciples where he could focus his attention on the Lord (Matt. 14:23; Mat. 26:39; Luke 6:12; Luke 5:15-16; Luke 9:28)

CHOOSE A METHOD

I try my best to keep my prayer need list in one place and for me, my notebook works best. It’s tempting to use my phone for my prayer list, but if I open my phone, I’m tempted to check my email or Facebook and then I’m doomed to distraction. I can also easily make notes and updates in my notebook to document any updates on prayer. However, a device may work for you, just try to centralize it so your list is not scattered all over. Make a prayer list and keep it in one place.

I also like to use an acronym to help focus my prayer. I use the ACTS method to organize my thoughts:

A - Adoration (praising God for all of his attributes)
C - Confession (confessing my sin and need for the Savior)
T - Thanksgiving (thanking God for all my blessings)
S - Supplication (asking God to meet my/our needs)

This method keeps it short and sweet for me. When I get to the supplication portion of my prayer, I simply refer to my list and pray through the things I’ve written down. Some of those prayers may have been answered so I can give thanks during the thanksgiving portion.

There are many different methods of prayer, you don’t have to just use this one. It’s not about being legalistic. In fact, you don’t have to use a method at all. It’s not about being legalistic, for even Jesus gave us an example of how to pray in Matthew 6:5-14. So, I find this acronym helps me stay on task. Choose one that works for you and try to stick with it.

unsplash-image-CKlHKtCJZKk.jpg

BE SPECIFIC

I realized a while back that my prayers were very generic. So much so, it was hard for me to recognize when/if God was answering them. The bible tells us to approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need (Heb. 4:16). Make no mistake, God answers generic prayers, but the answers are harder for us to see. Specific prayers demand an extra level of trust, but when we see answers, we can be assured he answered them.

One of our members requested that we pray for a translator to help interpret for a family coming to the US for a pediatric heart surgery. This particular language was very hard to find a translator for—in fact there were only a few in the country. We prayed specifically for that language and within the day, a translator had been located here in Houston. Praise God! We knew he was the only one who could’ve made that happen.

FOLLOW UP

Since you have a list, and you have set aside the time, follow up with the people you are praying for. This reassure them that you are indeed praying for them. It will also help give you more specific ways to pray for them if the situation has changed. If the prayer has already been answered, it will give you something new to thank God for. So follow up with the people on your list!

WHAT METHOD WORKS FOR YOU?

Let’s be a people committed to prayer, so that when we say we are going to pray for someone we mean it. These methods can help make certain that we will. I’d be interested to hear what methods work best for you? What are the things you do to help you stay consistent? Do you use an acronym? Let me know in the comments below.