Youth Minsitry Resources

Grammy’s & Tourette’s!

on February 7th, 2012

Jamie Grace earns Grammy nod, battles Tourette’s


JONATHAN LANDRUM Jr.
Published: Yesterday

In this Jan. 17, 2012 photo, contemporary Christian recording artist Jamie Grace poses for a portrait in East Point, Ga. Grace’s song “Hold Me,” featuring TobyMac, is nominated for a Grammy Award for best contemporary Christian music song. (AP Photo/Greg Foster)

ATLANTA (AP) – When Jamie Grace performs music, all of the uncontrollable facial twitches and involuntary body movements called tics become an afterthought.

**Meet Jamie Grace at the Simply Youth Ministry Conference**

Tourette’s syndrome has plagued the 20-year-old singer for nearly half of her life. But she hasn’t allowed the incurable neurological condition to completely weaken her faith. Grace says she wants to use her first trip to the Grammys as another platform to share her inspirational story of resolve to motivate others.

“I’m not the only person who has something in their life they can’t control,” said Grace, sitting inside her dorm room where the walls are lined with Johnny Cash posters while the record player plays the country legend’s song “I Walk the Line.”

“It’s all about taking control over what I can control and that’s saying, ‘Hey, I’ve got Tourette’s, but I can also play guitar, I can also sing and write songs about it,’” she said. “Hopefully I can encourage other kids who are going through crazy stuff too.”

Grace’s song “Hold Me,” featuring TobyMac, is nominated for best contemporary Christian music song. She wrote the guitar-driven ballad at a time when she felt lonely in her dorm room at Point University – a small Christian college in suburban Atlanta.

“I saw that there was depth there,” said TobyMac, a Grammy-winning Christian rocker who signed Grace to his label Gotee Records in 2010 after he discovered her through YouTube. He took notice of her when he learned that she posted a three-minute medley on the online website that included 12 of his songs.

TobyMac saw potential in Grace’s airy vocals, her ability to play several instruments and her savvy songwriting. Her constant message of hope and perseverance in songs drove him to introduce himself to her through Twitter.

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“She really did intrigue me because she’s writing songs that are meaningful,” he said. “Her songs have light to them and sound like they can be around for a long time. Her songs have heart to them, unlike most songs that have a hooky track or melody. She has a beautiful story to tell through her music.”

It has been a tumultuous road for Grace, who was diagnosed with Tourette’s at the age of 11. When she took medication to combat the repetitive symptoms, she said the medicine caused her to lose her hair and made her feel emotionally inattentive like a “zombie.”

At the time, Grace – known by family and friends as a bubbly character – lost her motivation to sing and thought boys would never find her attractive. She remembered asking God why she had to struggle to walk on her own, couldn’t hold a fork to eat food, or had to wear biker gloves to protect her scared knuckles because she would unconsciously punch things as a result of her Tourette’s.

Mona Harper, the mother and manager of Grace who also homeschooled her, said her daughter would be sick four times a week from the medication.

“She lost her unction to go out in front of people and sing,” said Harper, who is a co-pastor with Grace’s father at Kingdom City Center in suburban Atlanta. “Things regressed for her but she showed a lot of resilience, and wasn’t dismantled by the things that were happening to her. The beauty of it for me is to see her bounce back and not break down.”

Grace’s breakthrough from her somber state came after she heard a testimony by Christian singer Tammy Trent, and her grandfather bought her a drum set when she was 14. She went on to learn how to play the piano, guitar, banjo and the ukulele.

For Grace, music became a stress reliever from her Tourette’s. She realized that her recurring twitch did not happen as often the more she beat her drums, strummed her guitar or sang a melody.

“It’s almost like I’m in another world,” she said. “Everything goes silent and it’s so amazing. … I learned how to manage it through music. I can still follow my dreams and I know that God hasn’t forgotten about me. I just had to pray about it.”

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Grace said she had to lean on her faith more since she stopped taking her medication about four years ago. She has learned how to cope with her condition and hasn’t allowed it to have a stronghold over her life.

“If I didn’t have Tourette’s, I don’t think I would be as strong as I am now,” said Grace, who has her own nonprofit mentoring program called GraceTalk. “I wouldn’t have the strength of resilience to speak with the 14-year-old girl who doesn’t feel beautiful.”

In the spring, Grace will graduate with a degree in child and youth development. Along with continuing her musical career, she wants to help families with children who have Tourette’s and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

TobyMac feels strongly about the longevity of Grace’s music career. With her being a young black singer who has an infatuation with country music, can sing R&B and gospel, and can play the acoustic guitar, he expects her to make more appearances at music’s top showcase in the future.

“She’s full of surprises and has all of these different facets,” he said. “She can really make a mark. For her to earn a Grammy (nomination) this early in her career, I think it’s an amazing sign of things to come for her.”

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Follow Jonathan Landrum Jr. on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/mrlandrum31

What It Is All About?

on February 5th, 2012

I, Jon Batch, am apart of the SYMC team and have been helping with the conference for several reasons allow me to explain.

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  1. I really get pumped pup and renewed when I am with people (friends really) who are alongside me in the youth ministry trenches and they get me.
  2. I really enjoy extra learning and time developing my youth ministry mind and faith in God
  3. I spend a lot of time in my student ministry creating and fostering a safe place mentality, a place where any student can come to and feel safe to be at, and I want that for each youth worker who comes to the simply youth ministry conference. Each person who walks the halls or browses the book store or sits in the main session and needs a renewal.

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My prayer is that this conference helps you feel inspired, challenged, loved, equipped, supported and a part of the family.  Then you can return to the trenches and help students and their families to Christ.


Jon Batch
Director of Student Ministries
Dearborn Hills UMC
jbatch@dhumc.com
twitter: @jonbatch

I Serve Youth Workers!

on February 1st, 2012

This will be my third year at SYMC, and to say that I am excited is an understatement.  I have had a countdown going on my computer for weeks, and just recently made one of those elementary school paper chain countdown things in my office.  (Seriously, it droops over the picture wall!)

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SYMC 2010 in Chicago was my first year.  I went with a couple of other youth workers in my local network who had been before and said how great it was.  I was kind of reluctant to go.  I had been in a valley in my ministry and felt like I was on my way out.  I thought that I would go and maybe get a few good nuggets of info here or there, hear a couple of good bands, and head back to a situation that I wanted so desperately to flee.  What I got from SYMC was so much more.  Yes, I did get some information that I was able to use in my ministry, and yes, I heard some good music, but I got so so much more than that.  I got back my passion for ministry, this wasn’t something planned but God knew what I needed and showed me just that at SYMC.  I also strengthened old relationships and built new friendships and relationships.  Those people I met have become some of my closest friends to this day and have since helped support me through the hardest ministry stretch of my life.  I am eternally grateful for the SYMC family, for loving and supporting me, my family, and the ministry that God has called me to.

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This year at SYMC I am serving as a volunteer on the behind the scenes team.  I am helping wherever needed, from chair drops to making copies, and all that odd stuff that happens for any event.  The team is full of wonderful people who truly love this conference and want this it to be an amazing experience for everyone who is going to be in Louisville.  One of my goals that I have embraced on this team is to make it so that everyone in attendance has a time to just relax, refuel, laugh, learn a little bit, and most of all, to just Breathe!! I can’t wait to catch up with you all in just a few short weeks!


Ben Halsch
Husband, Youth Guy, Crazy.
The Shueyville UMC
ben.halsch@gmail.com
twitter: @bhalsch

Type A Personalities Unite!

on January 31st, 2012

After being diagnosed with a potentially debilitating disease in my  early 30s I was sure that I would never have my dream of being married  ever fulfilled, but God had something else in mind.  I was working on my 6th year of ministry at a local church when God worked in a very mysterious way…. a friend and collegue that I had gotten to know through a ministry network – went from being a ministry friend to a husband in less than one year!  God is so good and because of that goodness I have the honor of being married to a Youth Pastor which is both a blessing and at times a challenge.

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I am so excited to be leading the Connect Group for those women who are married to Youth Pastors.  As a youth pastor’s wife I wear so many different hats, volunteer, secretary, sounding board, treasurer, and best friend.  There are days that I am just astonished at how God uses our individual gifts to do so much for his kingdom and there are those other days when our schedules and need for family time gets put on the back burner.  What I do know is that the victories and trials of life together in ministry has molded us and shaped our marriage into something far greater than I could have ever imagined.

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We don’t have it all together…. we never will, but I believe that through sharing in this journey together as wives of Youth Pastors we can encourage one another, support those who are hurting, laugh with the stories we have to share, and celebrate the joy of being part of God’s call to love Him and love students.

The Connect Group ministry at the SYM Conference is a great way to connect with those that are in the same boat as you.  This will be my third year leading a connect group and I am so excited about this time.  The friends I have made in these groups over the past four years have been awesome.  Many of us has stayed in touch and still chat as we seek to allow this relationship to be more than a one weekend thing but a lifetime of encouraging, connecting, and praying for one another.

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There are so many options at the conference that it can be overwhelming!  As a bit of a Type A person, I suggest sitting down with your schedule and mapping out the things that you really want to be sure to attend, a list of things that are potentially interesting, and cross out those things that don’t apply to you.  If you want to network with others that are in your same life situation, I highly suggest making Connect Groups part of your must do list.

I am looking forward to my time at the conference, and especially my time spent with my connect group of Youth Pastor’s wives!


Jana Snyder
Speaker/Counselor/Educator
Taraja Ministries
janalynn8@gmail.com

There…I am family!

on January 30th, 2012

I didn’t think I’d last this long.  I imagined that I would either a) quit or b) be fired after a short time.  There are some days, like many of us, that I consider throwing in the towel.  When those thoughts come, my mind and heart are brought back and reminded why I do what I do.  I’m also reminded of the “who;” Who I have helped, directed led…and…wonderfully…who has helped me.

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For me, the Simply Youth Ministry Conference is a family reunion.  It’s a time for me to get away and meet up with my family.  Not friends.  Not just.. people.  But family.  Old and new.  From the minute I was first introduced to the ministry to even today… the one word to describe SYMC is family.
There are no pedestals.  We are all on the same level.
There is no hierarchy.  We are all equal.

You have that “little brother” that you can’t wait to give an arm punch to.. and maybe a Noogie.
You have that “older sister” that you like to tease…and she enjoys teasing you.
You have that “dad…” the one that when you say something a little inappropriate.. he gives you “the eyes..” .. and than cracks up too, because he’s in Youth Ministry.
You have that “mom…” the one that just wants to bless you, hug you, feed you, listen and care for you.
You have the multiple cousins.. the ones where you can not see each other for a year.. and pick up where you left off.
You have that “crazy uncle…” (enough said…)

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But here’s the beauty of it all.  The Simply Youth Ministry is a family.  And while we may not be related by blood.. we are connected through His blood.  Our lives thread together, because of His life.  And that, my friends, is a beautiful thing. It’s a beautiful thing to read; it’s an incredible thing to experience.

Why do I go to the Simply Youth Ministry Conference…because there, no matter what…I am accepted.  I am loved. I am cherish, honoured, respected, welcomed.

There.. I am family!


Andy Disher
Youth Pastor
Kingsville Community Church
andrewdisher@gmail.com
twitter: @andydisher