Program Information
The Children, Youth and Family Ministry Program at Luther
Seminary has gone through some exciting changes. Now with the
addition of Children's Ministries, students can be prepared to serve
those in their first third of life. The ability to custom make one's
degree offers students the flexibility to choose electives that will
best prepare them for their current and future ministries.
Residential Concentration
The residential concentration in Children, Youth and Family
ministry is designed for individuals who are interested in a
ministry to young people and their families in either a church or
para-church ministry context. This degree program provides theology,
theory and practice in a holistic educational environment.
Courses
In the M.A. CYF Program, nine of the eighteen courses are core
requirements in biblical studies, church history and theology. The
other nine fall within the CYF Ministry concentration and include
three required core classes and six electives. You will have
tremendous flexibility in designing a concentration to focus on one
of the following areas:
- Children and Family Ministry
- Youth and Family Ministry
- Young Adult Ministry
- Outdoor Ministry
In the M.Div. CYF Program, students seeking ordination with a
concentration in CYF Ministry fulfill the M.Div. requirements and
focus their four-and-one half electives in their CYF Ministry area
of choice.
Community
In
addition to seminary wide community-building activities, the CYF
ministry program continually seeks ways to add to your growth in and
through community. The CYF program offers retreats, weekly
gatherings, learning events, bi- weekly cohort groups, and lots of
opportunity for one-on-one interaction. The time students, faculty
and staff spend together are a key part of the educational process
and in developing as public Christian leaders.
Context
All CYF Ministry students will have the opportunity to extend their
learning process beyond the classroom. Residential students work in
salaried positions, typically 15 to 20 hours a week within area
congregations. Distributed learning students continue working part-
or full-time in their ministry site while fulfilling their academic
coursework. You will benefit from supervision and leadership
coaching in your field experience.
As CYF Ministry seeks to help shape public Christian leaders with
particular enduring understandings and competencies, being connected
to a ministry context is vital. Therefore, all CYF students - MA or
M Div, residential or DL - are engaged in leadership in contextual
ministry site. This site is the place where students discover what
it means to engage theology and mission in a particular locale,
refine their own vocational call and grow their leadership
abilities.
Residential CYF students typically work part-time in a ministry
position in the greater St. Paul area. Distributed CYF students work
part or full-time in a ministry position in their area. MA students
are working/volunteering in a context throughout their course of
study. MDiv students focusing in CYF Ministry also participate in a
CYF contextual site alongside their first twenty courses.
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Next Steps
Request more information or contact one
of our faculty or staff members.
Two Options for M.A Degree
Luther Seminary offers two options for completing the Master of Arts
concentration in Youth and Family Ministry.
The residential option is a two-year degree on the campus of Luther.
The Distributed Learning option allows the student to take classes
in short, intensive courses on campus and through on-line and
independent study courses. This allows the student to remain in
their present location and ministry.
Fill out an online form and let us know
about your interest.
CYF Distributed Learning Stories
Kara Clark
Being a part of the Children, Youth and Family distributed learning program is giving Kara Clark more than an education. “It”s changing the way I do ministry,n’t she says. “It”s changing the way I lead Bible studies, the way I read the Bible and interpret it. It”s like putting on a new pair of glasses.”
Read more
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