Young Life

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Young Life
File:Young Life Logo.jpg
Abbreviation YL
Motto "You were made for this."
"Life the way it was meant to be."
Formation October 16, 1941; 83 years ago (1941-10-16)
Founder Jim Rayburn
Headquarters Colorado Springs, Colorado
Location
  • Worldwide
President
Denny Rydberg
Website www.younglife.org

Young Life is an American evangelical Christian ministry based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The ministry was started in Dallas, Texas in 1941 by Presbyterian minister Jim Rayburn. Young Life operates globally as several different organizations with different focuses.

History

Young Life was founded by Jim Rayburn on October 16, 1941 in Gainesville, Texas. Rayburn was a young youth leader who started a weekly club for high school students which, with the collaboration of 4 other seminarians, eventually became Young Life. The headquarters moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado in 1946.[1]

Organizations

Young Life has several branches which focus on different demographics.

Young Life Ministry Branches
Ministry Focus
Young Life College College students.
Small Town Young Life/Rural Initiative Students in small towns.
Urban and Multicultural Young Life Students in impoverished high schools and inner-city neighborhoods.
Young Life Capernaum Mentally and physically handicapped youths.
Young Lives Middle and high school girls that are pregnant or raising children on their own.
Young Life Military - Club Beyond Collaboration with Youth for Christ to ministry to children of active military personnel.
Wyldlife Middle school students.

Camps and clubs

File:Younglife.jpg
Swimming campers at Young Life's Washington Family Ranch.

Young Life maintains summer camps in 17 American states as well as camps in British Columbia, Canada, the Dominican Republic, The United Kingdom, Armenia, and France.[2][better source needed] These camps incorporate Christian messages, with many secular activities mixed in.

The largest of Young Life's camps is the Washington Family Ranch (and accompanying Big Muddy Ranch Airport) in Antelope, Oregon. The ranch was formerly the site of the Rajneeshpuram, an intentional living community centered on the Rajneesh movement.[3]

Young Life also runs the Young Life Club, which is a Christian social club for high school and college students. There are around 700 Young Life Club chapters worldwide, and usually one Club is associated with one high school. Each club is composed of volunteers who contribute their time to mentor and assist high school students based on Christian values and principles.[citation needed]

Young Life Camp Properties[4]
Camp Location Notes
Beyond Malibu Egmont, British Columbia, Canada Wilderness adventure program
Breakaway Lodge Gearhart, Oregon
Buttercreek Lodge Centralia, Washington
Camp Buckner Burnet, Texas Seasonally leased
Carolina Point Brevard, North Carolina
Castaway Club Detroit Lakes, Minnesota
Clearwater Cove Lampe, Missouri
Creekside Antelope, Oregon
Crooked Creek Ranch Fraser, Colorado
Frontier Ranch Buena Vista, Colorado
Lake Champion Glen Spey, New York
Lakewood Lakewood, Pennsylvania Seasonally leased
Lost Canyon Williams, Arizona
Malibu Club Egmont, British Columbia, Canada
Michindoh Hillsdale, Michigan Seasonally leased
NorthBay North East Maryland Seasonally leased
Oakbridge Ramona, California
Pico Escondido Dominican Republic
Quaker Ridge Camp Woodland Park, Colorado Seasonally leased
RMR Backcountry Colorado Springs, Colorado Wilderness adventure program
Rockbridge Goshen, Virginia
Rock Ridge Canyon British Columbia, Canada
Saranac Village Saranac Lake, New York
SharpTop Cove Jasper, Georgia
Southwind Ocklawaha, Florida
Timber Wolf Lake Lake City, Michigan
Trail West Lodge Buena Vista, Colorado Family camp/staff retreat
Washington Family Ranch Antelope, Oregon
Wilderness Ranch Creede, Colorado Wilderness adventure program
Windy Gap Weaverville, North Carolina
Woodleaf Challenge, California

International programs

International Young Life

Young Life began an international program in the 1940s focusing on teens living on military bases. Shortly after that, Young Life expanded from military bases to ministry with local adolescent kids. Currently, Young Life operates in 99 different countries with 120 staff from the United States and 470 national staff members.[citation needed]

Developing Global Leaders

Developing Global Leaders is a mentorship program Young Life operates in developing countries. The selective program partners candidates with individuals in the United States to provide education tuition assistance.[citation needed]

Young Life Expeditions

Young Life Expeditions is a program that offers international service trips for both individuals and groups. The trips are typically 10–14 days depending on the area and time of year.[citation needed]

Criticism and controversy

In November 2007, Jeff McSwain, the Area Director of Durham and Chapel Hill, along with others, was fired after taking issue with the organization's "sin talks." McSwain's theology emphasizes that "God has a covenant, marriage-like relationship with the world he has created, not a contract relationship that demands obedience prior to acceptance [as in that of Young Life]."[5] Tony Jones describes Young Life’s Statement of "non-negotiables" as telling staffers that "they must not introduce the concept of Jesus and his grace until the students have been sufficiently convinced of their own depravity and been allowed to stew in that depravity".[6] Eight members of Young Life's teaching staff based in Durham, North Carolina resigned their positions after these "non-negotiables" were announced.[7]

References

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Further reading

  • Cailliet, Emile; Young Life (1963)
  • Meridith, Char; It's a Sin to Bore a Kid: The Story of Young Life (1977) ISBN 0-8499-0043-3
  • Miller, John; Back to the Basics about the early years of Young Life including a lot of Rayburn's life.
  • Rayburn, Jim III; From Bondage To Liberty – Dance, Children, Dance a biography by his son (2000) ISBN 0-9673897-4-7
  • Rayburn, Jim: The Diaries of Jim Rayburn (2008) Rayburn's personal journals, edited and annotated by Kit Sublett Morningstar Press and Whitecaps Media ISBN 978-0-9758577-7-9

External links