Tuesday, March 9, 2010

It's Game Time!


Over the years we played hundreds of different games at youth group, from the sophisticated to the stupid.  I assume most student ministries are like that; I could be wrong.  I think our games always had a lot of variety and creativity, and I know that some of them are quite memorable to the kids who played them. If you happen to be a former youth of mine who is reading, I'd love to hear which ones you remember. I bet someone from every group I was ever a part of remembers the Egyptian Mummy Race (see pic at right).  Let's take a stroll through the game Hall of Fame:
  • The grand poobah of all my games was Sardines.  I learned it as a kid from my youth leader, DB3, and then passed it along to every group I ever worked with until Waycross, where we had no decent place to play without disturbing people.  This was hide and seek in pairs, and it was a riot.  The kids at Springfield were really good at it. 
  • At TNT we often played versions of TV games shows.  We played Remote Control, a game of TV trivia based on the MTV show.  We did our own versions of the Dating Game and the Newlywed Game.  The Newlywed Game was especially fun because we would partner students who barely knew each other and make them guess at the answers to the questions. It was often hilarious.  We also used board games such as Taboo, Win, Lose or Draw and Outburst to create games we could play with a large group.
  • We had a great game we played on the pool tables at Springfield and Kissimmee called PIG.  It involved rolling a pool ball and sprinting around the table, and it was awesome.  We played a similar game on a ping-pong table called Round Robin.  Other active indoor games for the groups included classics like Fruit Basket Upset, Shuffle Your Buns (a musical chairs variation), Broom Hockey and Do You Love Your Neighbor?  All of these required lots of movement and lots of noise, so they were very popular!  And I haven't even mentioned the cults of Four Square players that sprung up at Springfield, in Kissimmee and in Tampa...
  • We played Brain Games, too.  These were always fun, but there was always someone who just never figured them out, so they often took a VERY long time to play.  "It can be Snoopy, but it can't be a dog..."
  • We played dozens of different Name Games designed to help students learn each other's names.  These games, at every stop along the way, were pretty much universally despised...
  • We had some outdoor games that were favorites as well.  Go Tag was a classic that used tons of energy and created mass confusion.  It also allowed lots of opportunities for creative cheating (Best creative cheater ever?  Todd Willis in Kissimmee), one of my favorite things about youth group games!  Wild Softball was another favorite, featuring a softball bat, a kickball and running the bases backwards or playing without a third base.  We also tried Wet'N'Wild Softball, where you were hosed down between third base and home plate.  We occasionally played football and basketball like normal people...but not soccer.  Don't get me started on soccer!
  • Over the last few years of my ministry, at Wesley Memorial UMC in Tampa and in Waycross, we had a lot of fun with a device call The 4-Way Grinder.  It was basically a tug of war between 4 individuals with inner-tubes wrapped around their waists, all pulling in different directions (see picture at right).  Only minor injuries were recorded...
Why so many (and such weird) games?  For fun.  For exercise.  To build group unity and give the students a shared history to talk about.  All of those reasons and more add up to the main reason- being strange and unpredictable helps put butts in the seats so we can talk about Jesus.  It's pretty simple, really.  And it helps convey the message that following Jesus is NOT dull, boring or predictable.  It's a wild ride... and one with a GREAT finish!

Because of Jesus,

2 comments:

  1. Cheryl Meadows3/09/2010

    Oh my goodness Carl! You forgot about playing pass the pigs on the pooltable at Springfield. That game had such an impact on me, I can't go without having a pass the pig set to this day, and I am now 32 years old! I had lost my set in the move back to NC from VA Beach in 05, and I went on a mad search for a new set. They were nowhere to be found..and rarely anyone even knew what I was talking about. I had given up hope of ever playing pass the pigs again. Well lo and behold, My husband Jesse deployed to Iraq in October of 2006, and in one of the random care packages he got that some random person just sent over there...Guess what was in it??? A Pass the Pigs Set! He made sure to send it home to me because he knew how I was about it, and I even thought about having it bronzed...lol..not really...just figuratively. Anyway I thought you might like that story..sad but true. The life of a pass the pigs addict.

    Cheryl

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  2. Thanks, Cheryl, for an amazing story! The last time I lost my set of Pass the Pigs I had to order new ones from Amazon- they are very hard to find! Good luck with your addiction... :)

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