Doug Fields’ new role

regarding the Doug Fields news today, I’m posting a brief comment and linking to the press release and video from YS as well as a  great blog post about it from Tim Schmoyer (Life in Student Ministry)

A thank you from Kami (and Group/SYM team) for all of the youth workers who’ve reached out today:
Thank you for the support, prayers and trust in our team at Group/SYM, as well as for the support for Doug, Mark and the YS crew. Today hasn’t been easy–transitions in ministry are never that easy, but when we look at both organizations, we see people who are dear friends. There is a deep mutual respect in our relationships, regardless of which team jersey we’re wearing. We all serve the same awesome God. And we all share a passion for loving youth workers, who deserve our full attention and every ounce of love, support and encouragement we can give them.
We’re thrilled for YS, and we’re also thrilled for how God’s hand has been stirring in the ministry of SYM & Group–especially in the past year through our relationships with so many awesome youth workers in the trenches. Doug’s not just been a great leader, he’s been a masterful teacher who leaves behind a great legacy with this SYM team. Nothing’s “over” at SYM–SYMC 2012 is in full-throttle planning mode, and our team remains intact and excited about what’s beginning!

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OK–for those of you who are new to the SYMC blog–this is the behind-the-scenes report on all conference happenings as they move from brainstorm to execution, plus breaking news, cool stuff, and the good, bad and ugly parts we’re probably not supposed to share. The year-long journey of planning a conference is a huge part of our team’s real-life ministry to youth workers, and we thought we’d share the the glimpses of holy grace that compensate for the gritty frustrations along the way. You’ll get inside the heads and hearts of the folks on the conference team who are thinking/planning/praying for youth workers needs. And, your comments and input on the blog give us the feedback that makes the conference great!

FYI for returning readers: the blog took a hibernation when I took a sabbatical of sanity. (the event team continued on with some exciting staff/company changes, but I (Kami, the self-appointed SYMC blogger among a variety of other conference roles, took a time out.) Since this blog is about the real truth behind our conference ministry–here’s the scoop: I returned from SYMC 2008/Cincinnati in February full from the experience, but ultimately broken by the long journey that took us there. Part of it was the sheer strain of the amount of work on a tiny staff, but it went beyond that. I had felt God’s call on my heart to serve youth workers so loudly that it drowned out the balance in my life for anything else. I totally neglected my role as a wife, mother and friend, and rationalized my workaholic ways all in the name of God. It became clear that my own prideful addiction to performance/achievement/affirmation overtook what began as authentic calling to ministry. Exhausted, disallusioned, broken and bitter I wrapped up some final projects, left my position at Group and limped home to heal my life.

It’s now been 5 months and I’ll share bits and pieces of that healing time in future posts. I’ve learned that committing to ministry of any kind means committing to continual personal and spiritual recovery and renewal along the way. My friend Megan Hutchinson from Saddleback and SYMC 2009 Track Leader for Helping Hurting Kids has said it best: just breathe.

So, with a great big breath I’m throwing a healthy leg back on this conference pony. I’m totally inspired when I watch the SYMC promo video, and reminded about healthy spiritual balance in the words of the accompanying song, Sweetly Broken, by Jeremy Riddle. I’ve been there. I’m grateful for the amazing team that continued planning SYMC 2009–I’ll re-introduce the whole crew (and new faces) soon. Thanks to Doug Fields for refusing to believe I could really walk away, and a huge thanks to Rick Lawrence for carrying this torch high and keeping it burning so brightly along with everything else on your plate: you are a true champion!


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