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Michelle Curtis

The End of Youth Ministry? 

February 15, 2024 by Cindy Angela

by Michelle Curtis

I don’t like to read books alone. So when Brooke Martin, Pastor of Youth & Community Formation for Mosaic Conference, invited me to join a book study group for The End of Youth Ministry? by Andrew Root, I jumped at the chance.  

The book study group, comprised of youth Pastors and leaders, gathered around back porches and youth rooms to discuss a few chapters every other week. We lamented the difficulties of leading youth ministries in 2023. We shared how much we love our youth and how much we want them to know Jesus’ love. We waded through the philosophical parts of the book, trying to make sense of how they apply to middle schoolers.  

Some of the biggest takeaways felt like both “aha!” moments and also a reminder that youth ministry should not be different than any other ministry in pointing people to the core of our faith. We, with Paul, proclaim Christ and him crucified. Root’s writings challenged us to help youth walk toward the cross, not away from it.  

© Andrew Root

Instead of focusing primarily on fun, Root told how walking with youth toward the suffering they see and experience can help us all to see our stories as part of Jesus’ story of death and resurrection. When we walk toward suffering together, we can start to see and name how God brings new life out our death experiences. The whole book is based on how a youth group was transformed by the experience of gathering together in a hospital waiting room when one of their members almost died. There they had an opportunity to hear stories of how God brought life out of death in the lives of two adults in their church.  

Among our book study group of youth pastors and directors, I was the only one whose job title didn’t formally include youth or faith formation. I serve as co-Pastor of Ambler Mennonite Church along with my husband, Jacob, and we’ve shared the role of starting a monthly youth group over the last few years.  

Sometimes I feel jealous of churches with the staff and size to gather their youth together every Sunday and Wednesday. But I’ve realized that one of the gifts of our small church is that we are intergenerational by necessity. When we put together boxes of food for our neighbors each December, we intentionally invite the youth, but the whole church has to come together to make it work. We’re too small to do otherwise.  

When my parents were in youth group, it was their whole social network. They had activities most days of the week. Instead of longing for that past, Root encourages us to understand what has shifted over the last few decades. Instead of trying to compete with all the extracurriculars filling the lives of our youth, Root encourages us to see clearly what youth ministry is for: joy. It’s for helping youth to experience the joy in community that grows out of walking through suffering together and seeing how God brings life out of death.  

We’re all still chewing on the book’s implications for each of our ministries. I’m thinking more about how to walk with our youth toward the cross, and how to help them find themselves in God’s story.  

Youth Groups completing various challenges during the Mission Impossible event at Souderton (PA) Mennonite in September 2023. Photo provided by Brooke Martin. 

To be clear, Root is not advocating that we do away with fun. He ends the book in a Dairy Queen with ice cream and friendship. In that spirit, we ended our book study with coffee and Yum-Yum donuts, celebrating the relationships that we’ve built through these weeks together.  


Michelle Curtis

Michelle Christian Curtis is co-pastor of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church with her husband, Jacob.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ambler, formational, Michelle Curtis

How Long, Lord?

May 26, 2022 by Cindy Angela

In light of the horrific and tragic school shooting in Uvalde, TX this week, and the other acts of senseless violence in our country and throughout the world recently, we share with you the words of Pastor Michelle Curtis of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church, with her permission. Pastor Michelle sent this message to her congregation on Thursday, May 25.


Dear Ones,

This morning finds me on my knees praying, “Lord, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.” I don’t know what else to say when the morning’s headline reads “19 murdered children.”

Lord, have mercy on the grieving moms and dads.  
Lord, have mercy on the children who watched their classmates killed.  
Lord, have mercy on Eden, and all teachers. 
Lord, have mercy on our kids, and all students.  
Lord, have mercy on our nation.  
Move our leaders beyond partisanship to act with courage and wisdom.

I’ve been searching and searching for words of hope or comfort. But what could I say—what could anyone say—in the face of the tragedies around us and the griefs among us? This morning all I can do is return to Psalm 13 and invite you to pray with me:

How long, Lord? 
How long will mass shootings make headlines week after week? 
How long will children die in schools? 
How long will racism lead to murder and hate crimes? 

How long, Lord?  
How long will atrocities go on in Ukraine, 
and violence upend lives in places that aren’t making headlines? 
How long will the bad news inundating us leave us terrified, or anxious, or numb?

Listen up, Lord our God!  
We need you to answer us.  
No one else has the power to rescue us.

God, we’ve trusted in your steadfast love before. 
Help us to trust again.  
We want to rejoice in your salvation.  
Open our eyes to see your goodness, 
even as we cry out, “How long?”

May God’s grace, peace, and love hold you close today,  
Pastor Michelle  

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Michelle Curtis

Saying “Yes”

March 18, 2021 by Cindy Angela

Where did my call to ministry begin? Was it when I invited Jesus into my heart in secret at the age of four? Was it when my parents read me missionary biographies, and I proclaimed that I too wanted to be a missionary? Or when I decided to be baptized at 12? Was it when I asked my grandfather to teach me Greek at age 15? Or during my five months in Chile with Eastern Mennonite Missions’s YES program and learned that overseas missions is not my calling yet I can participate in God’s mission anywhere?

I’m not sure when the call began, but I remember the moments when I began to say “yes” to God’s call to pastoring. 

Michelle Curtis, co-pastor of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church. Photo provided by Michelle Curtis.

I said “yes” the summer I finally realized my childhood dream of becoming a camp counselor at Spruce Lake Wilderness Camp. I had just finished my first year at Messiah College, majoring in Bible. I loved planning Bible studies for each age group. I delighted in engaging my campers’ questions and sharing what I had learned. When I wrote to my pastor, Sandy Drescher-Lehman, to tell her all about it, she responded, “You’re doing ministry!” I was not convinced. But I kept pondering her words. Maybe, just maybe, my love for teaching the Bible had something to do with ministry. 

I said “yes” two summers later in an internship at Souderton (PA) Mennonite Church. I did not want to be a pastor. But I did want to go to seminary, so following  Pastor Sandy around for ten hours a week didn’t seem like a bad idea. 

Pastor Sandy sent me to the Friendship Sunday School class, a self-described group of women ages 70+. They embraced me as an earnest 21 year-old, and gave me the honor of teaching them. I soon realized that teaching meant I got to ask all the questions and then soak in their wisdom – wisdom that came from decades of reading the Bible as their beloved friend. Their “yes” to me helped me keep saying “yes” to becoming a teacher of the Bible.

I said “yes” when I went to Anabaptist Biblical Mennonite Seminary (AMBS), dreaming of future Ph.D. work and teaching. But I discovered I was far more interested in taking “electives” like Foundations of Worship and Preaching. I agonized over whether to switch M.Div. concentrations from an academic track to a pastoral one. 

Michelle Curtis with her husband, Jacob. Photo provided by Michelle Curtis.

I remember the day Jewel Gingerich Longenecker, Dean of Lifelong Learning at AMBS, told me that my deep, theological mind was not only acceptable for a pastor but a gift to the church. I would not have to stop thinking and reading and dabbling in the academic world to be a pastor! In that light, pastoring began to seem possible.

I said “yes” on a Tuesday in March when the first crocuses had just bloomed. After a full day of leading worship in chapel and then communion in class, something was shifting inside me. As I walked home, the sun shone on my face and joy bubbled up inside. I heard the Holy Spirit whispering in me, “I am a pastor. I am a pastor!” Eventually I heard the specific call to pastoring. Finally, I accepted, “Yes, I am a pastor.” Then I breathed, “Thank you.” And, “Help!” 

Those “yeses” paved the way for many more yeses that have led me to the joy of co-pastoring with my husband, Jacob, at Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church, where we continue to say, “Thank you Holy Spirit for leading us here!” And, “Help us serve you faithfully!”

Filed Under: Articles, Call to Ministry Stories Tagged With: Michelle Curtis

Ambler Co-pastor Receives Awards

September 8, 2020 by Conference Office

Photo credit: Peter Ringenberg

Jacob Elias Curtis participated in the August 22 commencement and commissioning service of Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary (AMBS), Elkhart, IN. He graduated from AMBS in May 2020 with a Master of Divinity with a major in Pastoral Ministry. 

Curtis — who names his home communities as Dublin, Ireland; Denver, Colorado; and Goshen/Elkhart, Indiana — also was selected to receive this year’s Award for Excellence in New Testament Exegesis from the seminary’s Bible Department and this year’s Heart of the Community Award. 

In May, Curtis and his wife, Michelle Curtis (MDiv 2018), became co-pastors of Ambler (PA) Mennonite Church, a congregation of Mosaic Mennonite Conference.

Filed Under: Articles, Blog Tagged With: Ambler Mennonite Church, AMBS, Jacob Curtis, Michelle Curtis

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