Thursday, April 4, 2013

Walk-A-Thon


This Saturday, April 6th, we are having our 5th Annual Not-Quite-5K-Walkathon. This fundraising event is to raise money for all of our summer opportunities. We don’t want money to be an issue for a high schooler who wants to go to camp or a college student who wants to go on our mission trip to Macedonia.

Our Walk-A-Thon is just a couple days away! We’re excited to walk in community around a track and raise support! If you want to send in a tax-deductible donation to Young Life and help kids and college students out this summer, you can go to Give to Young Life and check “camp scholarship.” You can donate to someone specifically by typing their name in the box or donate to camp scholarship in general and we will allocate the donation to kids who need it. You can also mail a check made out to Young Life to PO Box 1325 Fayetteville, AR 72702.

Thank you for your support! We’re excited about what God is doing this summer and are so thankful that you’re willing to take part in it! 

NWA Young Life
Staff Team and Volunteer Leaders

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Har-ber Club!


Golly, where do I start? Young Life started at Har-ber high school about two years ago, and it was no easy task getting it off the ground. But God has been so faithful through the whole process, and this spring semester we finally got to launch club, one important aspect of Young Life. The fact that club is now happening absolutely blows me away. God is doing something big at Har-ber high school, and I am so excited and so thankful that He asks me to be a part of it. From the skits to the songs to the games to the relationships, I know I am a part of something much bigger than myself.

The Har-ber team was so excited to meet and bounce ideas off of each other to plan the first Har-ber club. The love and passion everyone had was so obvious and encouraging. We wanted to make sure that every single piece of club was great, even the little details, knowing that this isn’t our club, but the Lord’s. When we finally decided on the songs, the mixer, the game, and the time (7:27), I could see the excitement in each and every person’s eyes, that we were REALLY doing it! From the new leaders who had just been placed this past semester to those who have seen this thing grow from the beginning, every one of us was ready and all that talk in the past about how great planning club would be had just become a reality.

The day of our first club had finally arrived.We didn’t have a sound system, we had never used this particular projector before, some of the details were still a little hazy… But, man, did God show up. Maybe because it was our first club or that everything went so smoothly, but it was the most memorable club I have ever been a part of.  The energy, the atmosphere, everything about it was incredible. It’s hard to find the words to really describe the way club made me feel. After it was all over and our young friends had gone home, everyone on the team was exhausted. But we were so excited and ready to do it again the next week!

It still blows me away and will continue to blow me away the plan that God has for each of us. I am so grateful to be a part of a team that is just as passionate about this ministry as I am, and I am so excited to see how God continues growing Young Life at Har-ber high school!

JD Allen
HHS Team Leader

Thursday, February 28, 2013

ARC 2013


This past weekend we had the privilege of attending ARC , the ArkLaMiss Regional Leadership Celebration in Monroe, LA. We brought a busload and a few extra cars of staff, committee, and volunteer leaders to join 400 other Young Lifers from Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.


It was a weekend to celebrate and worship; to be encouraged. It was a weekend to be challenged; to walk away different than the way we came (Ezekiel 46:9). We reunited with old friends. We made new friends. We even got to visit Duck Commander!

The semester is halfway over. It’s easy to feel burnt out and to start dragging our feet. The Lord is always gracious in giving us rejuvenation just when we need it. We were able to walk away from this weekend with full, joyful, and excited hearts.

Some tweets over the weekend from leaders of the ArkLaMiss Region:

“So thankful for this weekend at @YLARC2013 Definitely the spiritual rejuvenation I needed! And confirmation that I’m doing the right thing!”

“So blessed this weekend. Thanks to everyone @YLARC2013 for your hard work…”

“Pretty much the best weekend ever.”

“Always super impressed by these staff and volunteers.”

“Young Life and Duck Dynasty! What else could a girl want?!”

We also made a Harlem Shake video while on the party bus down to Monroe!









Thursday, February 7, 2013

Everyone Has a Story

Gregg Stutts is an executive pastor at the Church at Arkansas in Fayetteville. He is also a good friend to Young Life. As we continue telling individuals' stories in our area, we want to share this blog post that he wrote a few months ago. To see Gregg's full blog, click here.

I went to lunch today at a friend’s restaurant. Last week at this time, he was in Houston at MD Anderson waiting for the results of his latest scan. Unfortunately, he found out the next day his cancer is back.
While at his restaurant, he pointed out a guy who has a similar type of cancer that’s even more advanced. The doctors told him there’s nothing more they can do. If you were to see my friend or this other guy, you’d never know they had cancer.
After lunch, I was in Wal-Mart and got into a conversation with the greeter that probably lasted thirty minutes. As we talked, she told me she started singing in bars in 1958 at the age of 13. She’d make more money in two nights than her dad did in two weeks working for Philips Petroleum. At one point, she and a guy named Harold Jenkins won a singing competition. Harold later changed his name to Conway Twitty.
She also knew Janis Joplin who called her one day and told her to get to Love Field (Dallas) where she’d pick her up. In a plane. Janis said they were going to a concert in upstate New York. The year was 1969. The concert was Woodstock.
This woman has a story. So does my friend. We all do.
Everyone has a story.
Some of us are in a good part of the story. Health is great. Job is going well. Finances are in good shape. No major relationship problems.
But others are in the midst of a story they never wanted.
The person who cut you off in traffic has a story. Maybe he’s been unemployed for two years and is embarrassed every time his wife and kids have to go to the store to buy groceries with food stamps. And now he’s late for a job interview that could change everything. He didn’t mean to cut you off. He was just in a hurry and didn’t see you.
The girl who sits near you in class has a story. She’s friendly, pretty and smart. But her dad is an alcoholic. Sometimes things get out of hand. That’s when he hits her mom. Like he did again last night. They’re too scared to call the police.
The man in line behind you at the store is addicted to pornography. The shame and guilt are killing him.
The woman in front of you buying the diapers isn’t buying them for her baby. They’re for a baby shower she’s going to. She has no children and recently miscarried for the third time.
I’m as guilty as anyone when it comes to forgetting all this. Someone was tailgating me the other day and it made me furious. Later, I thought about how I should have stopped in the middle of the street and had a “talk” with the person. I felt wronged and wanted revenge. But what if it was someone who was late for something important or just had to go to the bathroom really bad?
That person had a story. I just didn’t care.
What if I did care though? What if rather than being angry, I just pulled over so I was no longer in the way? And if pulling over wasn’t an option, what if I simply took the time to remember that everyone has a story. Including tailgaters.
What if my prayer for others was the same as Paul’s greeting in Ephesians 1:2, “Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.”
Isn’t that what we all want and need? Grace. And peace. From God our Father. And from Jesus.
The next time you and I are tempted to get angry or defensive or ignore someone we cross paths with–what if we at least took the time to ask God to give them grace and peace?
Because everyone has a story.
What’s yours?

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Living in Real Community


This past week at Young Life College Late Nite, we had the honor of hearing from guest speaker, Matt Mooney, founder of 99 Balloons. To read more about this foundation, click here.

Matt shared briefly with us the importance of real community. We have an innate desire to be relational, to live in community. But often in this busy, independent world we isolate ourselves. Real, rich community is a choice. Proverbs 27:17 compares it to “iron sharpening iron.” It can be challenging and painful at times. But it is always full of joy and freedom. And it is good. When we live in community we are living life to the full.

As the semester picks up and you get busier and busier with your schedules, we want to encourage you to choose community that will strengthen, encourage, and sharpen you. And we hope that Young Life can be a place where you find that. 

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

A UA Student's Story


I remember the first time I ever heard of Young Life. It was my sophomore year in high school, and I was just beginning to find my identity as a Christian through a cell group with my friends at my church. It wasn’t enough though. I found myself slipping into the same harmful routines. I was introduced to Young Life by a few of my new friends from school, and proceed to continue with it throughout high school. The first club I ever attended was ultimately my favorite one. I remember wondering why everyone was so friendly and honestly just weird. For the first time, I realized that I could be around people that didn’t judge me. People that liked me for me. I was hooked after that, and knew I would continue going from then on.

The first event I ever did with YL was summer camp to Frontier Ranch. It was one of the best weeks of my life. Period. The months preceding the camp, I didn’t know how I would pay for it. Luckily, I was able to work different jobs and fundraisers to raise some money.  We worked at a few different homes just cleaning, organizing, or doing anything they needed us to. That's when I really started to see the depth of YL and how many hearts Jesus can reach through it. I had never experienced such a welcoming group of people, whether they knew me or not. When I got to camp I had an incredible experience. The things I learned, the people I met, and the relationships I built from it really helped show me God's love for me. I understood why and how I wanted to pursue a relationship with him and that I wanted to live life to the full.

School progressed and the burn to pursue Jesus grew stronger and stronger. My senior year in high school I saw myself transformed by the people around me. I was realizing that this was something God wanted me to be apart of. My boy and YL leader, Carlyle, came up to me one day and told me about an upcoming trip this summer. He explained it was different than camp and that it would be a handful of senior guys or veteran camp goers to go backpacking in Colorado at a camp called Wilderness. I agreed to go and began the ritual worrying of how I was going to pay for it. I began doing fundraisers and got to go on the trip. From seeing the storm chasers to sleeping outside of a motel in a van, we finally arrived to basecamp. I just want to say that this was the best week of my life. I almost died twice, and learned so much about the nine guys I went with. I was so moved by the love of Jesus these men shared. I was even more moved by the way we got through the toughest of situations: Me getting altitude sickness and having no inhaler for my asthma. Sliding down loose dirt toward a raging river, not knowing where to go next. The list is endless.  My heart felt so warm and full, just from the fact that men like me were pursuing Jesus.

One of the last things YL led me to was small group. During my first semester of college I was invited to have small group at my leader’s house every Monday. Last semester we studied the journey to becoming a better man. I can honestly say I am a better man. Just by admitting that I have flaws and becoming vulnerable with this group of young men, I took a huge step into that journey to becoming a better man and the journey to pursue Christ. Without YL in my life, I fear I would have never gotten to experience these wonderful people in my life. God used YL to lead me to Him and He succeeded.

Dmitri Love
University of Arkansas, freshman

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

A Wyldlife Leader's Story


     Where do I even begin? I guess I could start with the fact that I grew up in a warm, loving Christian home, but the truth is that I did not know Jesus personally until very recently. I lived life with Jesus in the back seat, only going to him when I needed him. I knew there was something missing in my heart. Throughout high school I tried filling that hole I felt with popularity, good grades, material possessions… But I never felt whole. No matter what I did, I always felt worthless. The comfort and self-worth I got from my successes never lasted more than a few weeks. All along I knew exactly what I needed, but it wasn’t until my life completely flipped upside down that I truly met Jesus. 

     Toward the end of my freshman year of college at Texas Christian University, I found out that due to finances and the increase in tuition, I could no longer afford to stay. During this time my dad lost his job, my mom was diagnosed with diabetes, and I was about to leave the country for 2 months on my own. I got on a plane to Costa Rica, so overwhelmed and stressed and clueless of what I was going to do with my life the following year. To make matters worse, I landed and met my mama tica (Costa Rican mom I lived with) and she didn’t speak a word of English. While in the mountains of Costa Rica I remember coming to terms with what had previously happened back in the States. I knew change was needed, and so I asked Jesus to come into my heart and transform me. From then on, God has been in the driver’s seat and my life is changed forever. I no longer feel the weight of it all on my shoulders and I feet a part of something greater than this world.

     God was with me when I decided to attend the University of Arkansas and He was with me all the way through that transition. I had been involved with Young Life back in junior high and high school and absolutely loved it. When I came to Arkansas, I immediately started leader training and was placed on the Wyldlife team this past semester. I am so pumped to start next semester sharing God’s love with junior high kids; a love and a presence that is so persistent and perfect. It’s no surprise that I have been the happiest I’ve ever been since meeting Jesus. He is always good.  He is always kind, forgiving, mighty, wise, compassionate, understanding, merciful, sovereign - you name it. My God is everything. And I’m so excited about what He has invited me to be a part of here at Arkansas!

Logan Marx,
Wyldlife