Youth Outreach Through Heavy Lifting

Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Wailuku, Hawaii, set up a small weight room and recruited part-time volunteer coaches for a weightlifting ministry that has proved effective at reaching youth in the community.

Participants begin with basic physical fitness, including push-ups, sit-ups, crunches and dumbbells. Eventually, the students who come to the church’s Queen Emma Athletic Club move on to full back squats and learn proper weightlifting techniques, such as the “clean and jerk” and the “snatch.”

Keku Akana, a former competitive weightlifter and retired deputy police chief in Maui, started the athletic club in response to the congregation’s Episcopal priest calling in 2003 for more focus on outreach.

Akana says one student came to the club as a suicidal 14-year-old living in low-income housing with a grandparent. The student ended up graduating high school with a 3.5 grade point average and went on to community college—changes Akana attributes, in part, to the ministry.

Each session ends with a coach reading Scripture, a prayer, a devotional or some other kind of positive thought, Akana says.

“Eventually, God and the Holy Spirit will plant the seed,” Akana says. “It may be a word or it may be a workout that is the seed. [The club] is not about building numbers in our church. We’re here to serve and let the Holy Spirit decide where the chips fall.”

An article about this ministry originally appeared in the September/October 2008 issue of Outreach magazine.

Subscribe to OutreachEach issue of Outreach is designed to bring you the ideas, innovations and resources that will help you reach your community and change the world. Check out our current subscription offer »

 

 

Faith in the Midst of Panic Attacks

Faith doesn’t always take away anxiety, but it always moves us toward the God who is greater than our anxiety.

Jamin Goggin: Why We Need Pastors Who Confess

"When a pastor chooses to live an unconfessed life, they put themselves in far greater danger than when being vulnerable." -Jamin Goggin

Kingdom Fellowship AME Church: ‘A Heart for the People’

Kingdom Fellowship also carries on the tradition of addressing community needs. “The Black church has always seen itself as providing not just spiritual leadership, but holistic leadership,” Pastor Matthew Watley says.