Evangelising and training young adults in 2024: A conversation Part 2
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Responding to a recent announcement by the University of Tasmania that the planned move to a centre-city campus will no longer go ahead in its entirety, the staff of the University Fellowship of Christians got together for a video conversation about the significance of this revised plan. We discuss the changes to ministry among university students and other young adults that we have observed since the COVID-19 lockdowns and what inter-denominational community, ministry and mission looks like among Hobart's young adults in the 2020s.   Young Adults as a ministry category0–3:57 — An important time of development, transition and shared experience.3:58– 5:55 — Different definitions of ‘young adult’: ‘emerging adult' (18–23) vs 'not adolescent but not middle-aged’ (18–30).5:56–8:59 — Important milstones for emerging adults in spiritual formation: decisions, failing, learning, and growing in responsibility and independence.8:59–10:36 — Making the young adults category too broad increases the temptation for some people to stay immature. Church leaders need to give adult responsiblity to those in their mid-to-late twenties.10:36–14:42 —Making the category too broad both neglects the specific strategic needs of emerging adults and fails to address the different pastoral needs of those in their mid-to-late twenties.14:43–15:43 — Comparing evening services and mid-week young adults groups.15:46–19:11 — The danger of unhealthy demographic silos in the church. The value of wider all-ages integrated church community and ministry. The benefits of inter-denominational young adults ministry19:12–25:31 — Specialists in evangelism and leadership development benefit local churches and denominations. Inter-denominational ministry fosters a crossover of social groups and learning experience.25:32–29:52 — A vision for urging emerging adults to opt for more.29:52–30:42 — Enriching the training of young adults involved in apprenticeships and internships.30:42–32:31 — All Tasmanian churches should have some interest in a ministry to UTAS, given its place in Tasmanian society and culture.32:32–34:00  — The best way to reach UTAS in the 2020s is through relational networks, not geographical locations.34:02–35:50  — Effective inter-church and inter-denominational ministry requires a lot of proactive intentionality and discipline. Final thoughts35:51–38:44  
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Responding to a recent announcement by the University of Tasmania that the planned move to a centre-city campus will no longer go ahead in its entirety, the staff of the University Fellowship of Christians got together for a video conversation about the significance of this revised plan.We...
Published 11/24/24