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Editor’s Note: In July 2013, the Barna Group released results of a study about the “State of Vacation Bible School” in the U.S.
A UMNS Feature
By Susan Passi-Klaus and Brenda Hauser*
Children learn vacation Bible school songs at First United Methodist
Church, Pasadena, Calif. Photo courtesy of First United Methodist
Church, Pasadena.
View in Photo Gallery
For decades, vacation Bible school has been a staple of summer
programming for local churches. Not only does it keep the church
bustling at a time when attendance traditionally decreases, it also
fills a niche in the community by providing God-centered fun for
children who might never set a foot inside a Sunday school door.
Every year volunteers who help make the thousands of activities
happen learn something new to remember for the future. Here is a look at
some of the ideas and activities from 2012 that churches can
replicate.
Marketing the program
Ginghamsburg Church,
a United Methodist congregation in Tipp City, Ohio, stepped back into
time with 363 children and more than 100 volunteers at its Camp
Courageous: VBS July 9-12.
“Ginghamsburg Church has not facilitated a vacation Bible school in
more than 10 years,” said Emilee Hermon, the children’s ministry
coordinator for the grades 3-5 group. “Honestly, when we were planning
the 2012 children’s ministry calendar, we didn’t even know if we would
be permitted to call it vacation Bible school. VBS had become one of
those clichés that every church felt obligated to host — no matter
what. At Ginghamsburg, we don’t believe in doing something simply
because it’s ‘what we’ve always done.’”
Why the return?
“There’s a nostalgia associated with our parents’ generation,” said
Kelly Flora, coordinator for the infant to age 5 group. “A new
generation longs to experience what its parents had, so when we
announced we were bringing back VBS, excitement grew.”
A new VBS meant new planning, marketing and a new audience, Flora explained.
To fit the needs of families where both parents work, the church scheduled its VBS in the evening.
The next decision was choosing the best curriculum for the church’s
rebranded VBS, explained Ryan Manger, kindergarten to grade 2
coordinator.
VBS student Xoa Dowell visits the Royal Animal Courtyard at Ginghamsburg
Church in Tipp City, Ohio. Photo courtesy of Ginghamsburg Church.
View in Photo Gallery
“The most appealing part of the VBS package we purchased was
the tribe theme,” Manger said. “We were able to split the children
into different tribes and assign a leader as the children visited every
station in the marketplace. The curriculum was perfect for our space.”
Manger said the church decided to change the curriculum name from “Babylon, Daniel’s Courage in Captivity” to “Camp Courageous” with the aim of sounding “less churchy and more community-friendly.”
The next hurdle was getting the word out to families both inside and
outside the church. “As an outreach, vacation Bible school is an
amazing tool,” said Jennifer Morris, Ginghamsburg Church parent and
volunteer.
Marketing VBS in 2012 turned out to be “crazy fun,” Hermon said.
The church posted a Camp Courageous: VBS graphic and information on
numerous public online calendars. Public service announcements were
emailed to a long list of newspapers and radio and television stations
that posted the event on their sites. But Ginghamsburg believes its
best VBS marketing was on Facebook.
The Ginghamsburg Facebook page has
2,896 “likes.” The church has intentionally cultivated a strong
following on its page by placing timely, interactive content on the
page daily.
Hermon took ownership of marketing VBS on Facebook. “We started
about four-weeks out. I’m sure I made well over 60 status updates on FB
about VBS, how to get involved, how to invite, come help setup, come
serve and more,” she said. “We even changed our cover photo from the
current sermon series to Camp Courageous: VBS.”
Another internal marketing tool was Constant Contact.
“With the help of our communication team, we created a spreadsheet of
families at Ginghamsburg with children,” Manger said. “In the
personalized email, we embedded a video produced by the company from
whom we purchased the VBS package. The video gave parents a visual of
what their children would be doing during VBS. We included the online
registration and sent the letter to 600 email addresses. We also asked
our parents to forward the email to any friends or neighbors with
children.”
Ginghamsburg parents took ownership of the mandate to preregister on
the church’s website and invite others, showing radical hospitality to
new families, Flora said.
Ginghamsburg’s financial investment for the 363 children who
attended VBS was $8.25 per child. The church plans to send a follow-up
Constant Contact email to all new families participating in VBS. The
email will include an embedded video of highlights from VBS and an
invitation to return to worship.
As they do with all programs, the Ginghamsburg staff and volunteers plan to evaluate Camp Courageous: VBS to figure out what to do next.
The Rev. Jonathan Hart, “Jonatron,” stands with a little Transformer
from Shalimar United Methodist Church VBS. Photos courtesy of Shalimar
(Fla.) United Methodist Church.
View in Photo Gallery
Developing individual curriculum plans
Susan McLain, children’s director at Shalimar United Methodist Church in Shalimar, Fla., writes her own curriculum or uses ideas she finds on the Internet.
“God just gives me ideas,” she said. “I try not to do the same thing
everybody else is doing, and I try to think of things that are
relevant to kids in this day and age.”
This year, her theme was a takeoff on the popular children’s action
figures “Transformers.” She built lessons around Romans 12:2, NRSV.
“Don’t be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing
of your minds, so that you can discern what is the will of God — what
is good and acceptable and perfect.”
“If we can just get them in the door,” McLain said, “we can tell
them that Jesus was the first Transformer because with everyone he met
and everywhere he went, lives were changed.”
Getting help from Cokesbury
Judy Halverson takes advantage of the hard work of the VBS team at the United Methodist Publishing House. As VBS director for Hillview United Methodist Church in Boise, Idaho, she relies on Cokesbury’s packaged curriculum
because it is attractive to group volunteers who need not spend hours
to prepare. This year’s theme was “Operation Overboard: Dare to Go Deep
with God.”
“I used to teach in the olden days when it was up to one teacher to
take care of each group,” she laughed. “We had to do it all — Bible
lessons, crafts, games. Nowadays, they have it designed so it takes the
burden off the teacher to provide all the activities.”
Halverson noted other ways VBS has changed.
She said that as children are immersed in television, electronic
games and computer entertainment, it becomes harder for crafts, crayons
and Kool-Aid to compete. To try to keep up with the times, she has
changed the way she teaches her summer program.
“How we use media is much different now,” she said. “We use a lot
more multimedia. We use more videos projected on the big screen. We
tend to have many activity centers, and (participants) eagerly
anticipate moving to new stations frequently.”
Reaching out to Habitat for Humanity
For First United Methodist Church in Pasadena, Calif., the source for their summer study was the local Habitat for Humanity organization.
With a theme “Labor of Love,” participants built a playhouse for an
area family. The curriculum turned teachers into engineers and children
into carpenters who receive Bible lessons as blueprints. The church
was the “construction zone.”
“It’s a simple, understandable concept for young children about
helping others — in this case to have a home of their own,” said the
Rev. Debbie Gara, associate pastor. “I love that because every child
can benefit knowing that they are giving to other children that don’t
have what they have. How cool is that?”
Finding a place among competition
Competition among community VBS programs is tough. Leanna Wilkerson is a VBS planner at First United Methodist in Clinton, Ky.
In her neighborhood, most children go to every VBS in town so she
wanted to find a hole nobody else was filling. This year, she did a
series of one-day summer events that involve elementary-age children.
She called it “SPF-12” — “Summer Praise Fun 12.” Three of the events
were “More Than a Movie,” “Build and Bible Day” (in conjunction with
Habitat for Humanity) and “Water Park Splash Day.”
Wilkerson shared a story that illustrates what she thinks every children’s program should be about.
“I asked a little boy who was here for our after-school program
where he went to church. He answered, ‘Well, this is my church.’ Even
though we never see him on Sunday morning, this is where he feels he
belongs. That’s what I want children to feel like after they’ve been to
VBS.”
Learn about a traveling VBS program in Kansas for small churches.
To learn more about children’s ministry ideas, visit the United Methodist Board of Discipleship.
*Passi-Klaus is public relations specialist/writer for the Public
Information Team, United Methodist Communications, Nashville, Tenn.
Hauser is communication and marketing specialist for Ginghamsburg
Church.
News media contact: Maggie Hillery, Nashville, Tenn. (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
First published Aug. 3, 2012.
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