Lifeline Handbook

Our mission: To ground students’ identity in Christ.

This mission happens through truth, relationships, and experiences

LIFELINE VOLUNTEER EXPECTATIONS

Committing to lead students or leaders is a big deal. You are not only a facilitator of discussion, you are an example to others in how you live your life and follow through on your commitments!

As a leader or coach in Lifeline, our students will be looking to you as a role model in how you live as a follower of Jesus. You have a significant opportunity to help students ground their identity in Christ by how you ground your own identity in Christ– not just on Wednesdays or Sundays, but with your whole life.

Faith Commitment

  • I believe salvation is found in Jesus, by grace, through faith..

    Ephesians 2:8-9

  • I believe Jesus’ death on the cross paid the penalty for my sins. He died in my place and took the punishment I deserve. This substitution takes my sins away because Jesus forgave my sins and took the wrath that I deserve on himself. This makes me holy and righteous before God, which allows me to be in a loving communion with a Holy God now and forever.
    Romans 3:25-26 , Colossians 1:22, Romans 5:6-11

  • I believe Jesus physically resurrected from the dead after 3 days.

    1 Corinthians 15:1-6

  • I believe the Bible is the inspired, authoritative Word of God.

    2 Peter 1:20-21, 2 Timothy 3:15-16

YOUR COMMITMENT TO LIFELINE

As a leader of the ministry, we ask that you commit to leading by example in four areas of your life.

  1. 1. Sexuality– Being an example to students by abstaining from sex outside of marriage.
    That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh. Genesis 2:24

    “Haven’t you read,” (Jesus) replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” Matthew 19:4-6

  2. Substances– Being an example to students by not using illegal drugs of any kind or abusing alcohol.

    Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit Ephesians 5:18

  3. Online Presence– Being an example to students by not posting photos or statuses containing inappropriate imagery or language, hateful or divisive speech, or excessive alcohol.

    Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Philippians 4:8

    Show yourself in all respects to be a model of good works, and in your teaching show integrity, dignity, and sound speech that cannot be condemned, so that an opponent may be put to shame, having nothing evil to say about us. Titus 2: 7-8

  4. Lifeline Attendance– Being an example to students by following through on the role that you are committing to: Consistent attendance and involvement during this ministry year with no more than 4 absences. If you cannot make these commitments, talk with a Lifeline staff member and we can have a conversation about what role is best for you during this season of your life

LIFELINE’S COMMITMENT TO YOU

As a Lifeline team, we commit to helping you in your role as a leader in our ministry in four ways.

  1. Praying for you regularly as a team and as individuals.

  2. Caring for you, not just as a Lifeline leader, but as a human being, and Christ Follower.

  3. Offering the tools, resources, and advice to lead others in the ministry.

  4. Investing in our own walk with God to lead the ministry as people who are grounded in Christ.

  5. We as a team will hold each other accountable to these commitments. If you have reason to believe that we are not following through, we invite you to speak to us and are open to what you have to say.


MIDDLE SCHOOL LIFELINE

EXPECTATIONS

Middle School students have a variety of experiences and expectations of what church is like. You have a crucial opportunity to show them that they can have fun and make friends while growing in their faith. You can do this by being consistent in attendance and balancing the tension between letting them act their age and calling them to grow! Even when the Wednesday nights feel long, you are making a difference that will last forever.

LIFELINE NIGHT BEFORE SMALL GROUP

  • Be on time for leader training

  • Greet students by name

  • Spend time with your students throughout the night

  • Help students engage in the night by modeling participation during games (by cheering), worship (by singing), and teaching (by learning) and by monitoring their behavior to ensure they are not distracting others around them.

SMALL GROUP TIME

  • Bring your bible and encourage students to bring theirs too!

  • (MS only) Refrain from phone use during small group time.

  • Set small group expectations early on and continue to reinforce them with the help of staff and coaches (small group covenant)

  • Reference small group questions provided to kick-start the conversation, and help students apply the teaching to their lives.

  • Encourage all students to share their thoughts on the teaching

  • Consider offering a personal story or perspective related to the teaching to facilitate the conversation.

  • Close small group time by asking students for praises and prayer requests, then end in prayer. (Ex: Popcorn, pair up, leader or student, etc.)

AFTER LIFELINE

  • Walk the group to the front doors and say goodbye to each student by name

  • Check in with your coach or staff members to let them know how your night went and how they can continue to support you as a leader!

  • Make note of any follow up conversations you may want to have with your students as a result of small group time.

OUTSIDE OF LIFELINE NIGHTS

  • Attend Ada Bible Church

  • Maintain contact with your students through texting, emailing, or reaching out to them on social media

  • Prepare for Lifeline nights by reading over the small group questions and making sure you are up to date on events and news found in our leader blog.

  • Make an effort to connect with parents by introducing yourself twice a year via email

  • Remind students to sign up for events like snow camp and mission trips as we promote them on Lifeline nights.

  • Pray for your students and consider what steps God might be inviting them to take.


HIGH SCHOOL LIFELINE

EXPECTATIONS

You are a leader to your high school students: this is an identity statement that is just as true outside of Lifeline as it is on a Sunday night! Your students need your wisdom to help them navigate their high school years, they need your presence to challenge them to consider how God is calling them to live, and they need your love to show them that you are for them no matter what. Lean into the relationship, challenge them, ask the hard questions, and love them through it all!

LIFELINE NIGHT BEFORE SMALL GROUP

  • Text students with a personal invite to come to Lifeline.

  • Be on time to leader training

  • Greet students by name.

  • Spend time with your students throughout the night

  • Help students engage in the night by modeling participation during games (by cheering), worship (by singing), and teaching (by learning) and by monitoring and disciplining their behavior to ensure they are not distracting others around them.

  • On teaching discussion nights, ask thoughtful questions and let your students do a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to processing the message. Ideally, you should be talking 20% of the time.

SMALL GROUP TIME

  • Bring your bible and encourage students to bring theirs too!

  • Set small group expectations early on and continue to reinforce them with the help of staff and coaches (small group covenant)

  • Reference small group questions provided to kick-start the conversation, and help students apply the teaching to their lives.

  • Encourage all students to share their thoughts on the teaching.

  • Consider offering a personal story or perspective related to the teaching to facilitate the conversation.

  • Close small group time by asking students for praises and prayer requests, then end in prayer. (Ex: Popcorn, pair up, leader or student, etc.)

  • If you’d like to enjoy the hang-out activities with your small group, feel free to end your discussion time early and hang-out in the atrium.

AFTER LIFELINE

  • Walk the group to the front doors and say goodbye to each student by name

  • Check in with your coach or staff members to let them know how your night went and how they can continue to support you as a leader!

  • Make note of any follow up conversations you may want to have with your students as a result of small group time.

OUTSIDE OF LIFELINE NIGHTS

  • Attend Ada Bible Church

  • Maintain contact with your students through texting, emailing, or reaching out to them on social media

  • Prepare for Lifeline nights by reading over the small group questions and making sure you are up to date on events and news found in our leader blog.

  • Make an effort to connect with parents by introducing yourself twice a year via email

  • Remind students to sign up for events like snow camp and mission trips as we promote them on Lifeline nights.

  • Pray for your students and consider what steps God might be inviting them to take.

  • Meet up with students outside of Lifeline nights to form small group community.


LIFELINE COACHES

As a Coach you are an extension of staff, helping to guide leaders and students during a night of Lifeline. You have the important role of serving our leaders by building relation­ships with them and serving our students by making them feel like they belong at Lifeline. We as Staff trust that you can make decisions that help aid in the experience of Lifeline. You are winning as a coach when your lead­ers feel known, loved, and supported by you as people and as leaders in the church.

Here are some examples of things you can do, or activities you may be asked to assist with during a night of Lifeline. We want your passions and gifts to be used!

OUTSIDE OF LIFELINE NIGHTS

  • Greet leaders by name and welcome them! Catch up on conversations from the following week.

  • Facilitate conversation during leader training/dinner and share your advice.

  • Reach out to leaders who are running late or who have not shown up.

  • Take note of any one-on-one follow up conversations that might need to happen as a result of what is shared in leader meeting.

  • Keep an eye out for opportunities for you and your leaders to share (Coach devo/leader stories/student stories).

CHECK-IN TIME

  • Greet leaders by name and welcome them! Catch up on conversations from the following week.

  • Facilitate conversation during leader training/dinner and share your advice.

DURING SESSION

  • Crowd control (includes helping leaders if they are not addressing students.

  • Be a host on stage with Lifeline staff (announcements, games etc.)

  • Engage in the session, worship, games (lead the example!).

  • Leader stories/share a part of your story.

SMALL GROUP TIME

  • Fill in for missing small group leaders or...

  • Choose a small group to sit next to during the program / teaching part of the night and make an effort to engage the students throughout the night.

  • Help clean up.

END OF THE NIGHT

  • Say goodbye to students!

  • Check in with leaders under your care before they leave at the end of the night.

Helpful Resources

Reimbursements

Both leaders and coaches have funds available to care for the people under their care. So, turn in receipts so you can get reimbursed! Submit reimbursements within 30 days of purchasing a meal/coffee. Just be sure to save your receipt and send either a picture to lifeline@adabible.org, or give the physical receipt to one of your campus staff members.

  • Small Group Care: Take your group out for ice cream, buy snacks for a party, etc.

  • One-on-one Care: Take someone out for coffee or a meal.

  • Leader Community (Coaches only): You are able to take your group of leaders out three times a year.

Leader Toolkit

This is a tool where you can easily view all of your leaders, their groups, and find contact information. You can find this here.

Lifeline Staff

Lifeline campus staff members are here for you; personally and for your leaders and groups. When in doubt if you should ask or tell them, please share

Weekly Info

Every week we post an update on Lifelinestudents.org with information about the teaching content and small group time for your upcoming night of Lifeline. We also send the link to that out in a text reminder. If you aren’t receiving these weekly texts and would like to opt in, talk with your Lifeline staff.


Lifeline Safety Protocol

LeadersAl Shepard