Updated 09:38 pm.EST, Fri November 20, 2009

Ministries|Fri, Oct. 23 2009 08:18 PM EDT

Longtime Youth Specialties Leaders Laid Off

By Lillian Kwon|Christian Post Reporter

Youth Specialties president Mark Oestreicher was let go from his position this week after seven years of leading the prominent youth workers organization.

He was informed on Monday by the leadership team of Zondervan that he was being "released" from the company for reasons not specified.

"Youth Specialties has been going through a transition since Zondervan purchased it several years ago, and at this time we feel we need to make a change," Zondervan President and CEO Moe Girkins said in a statement.

When Zondervan, a major Christian media and publishing company, acquired Youth Specialties in 2006, Oestreicher and other YS staff maintained that their mission and "outside the box" attitude would not change. The YS website explains, "Marko, Tic, and Karla vowed that YS would continue to do what it has always done – love youth workers and provide them with the resources and training they need to bring teenagers closer to Jesus."

But since then Tic Long, who oversaw all events and served at YS for over 30 years, and now Oestreicher have been let go.

Long, who was considered "the glue" that kept YS together for so long, said his farewell in July.

"Tic I thought was a steady hand at the wheel," Wayne Rice, co-founder of YS, told The Christian Post. "I don't know all the reasons why, I'm not even sure Tic knew the reasons why [he was laid off]. I just didn't think it was in the best interest of Youth Specialties to let go of the only guy who had been there from the early days."

Rice started YS with Mike Yaconelli – who died in a tragic car accident in 2003 – in the 1960s. Their goal was to create a professional networking of youth workers. They felt at the time that youth ministry was not taken seriously and was perceived by many as the toy department in the church.

"We felt like youth workers needed to be treated with respect," explained Rice, who left the organization in 1994 over differences with Yaconelli on the vision and direction of YS.

Today, Rice believes Youth Specialties has accomplished the task of elevating youth ministry and giving it legitimacy. He's proud of the organization.

But after watching the organization from the sidelines over the past several years, Rice felt the organization was disintegrating.

"It's disheartening," he commented. "I had hoped YS would continue to provide help for youth workers and be a key force in youth ministry for a long time. It may still be."

"I think what has happened is symptomatic of whether or not [YS] will be vital or not. I hope it will be," he added.

He explained that YS has always functioned as a family. There was a sense of "real brotherhood and camaraderie" that always kept YS vital, he noted.

That sense of family was apparently felt by youth pastors familiar with YS. When news spread that Oestreicher was released from his leadership post, youth workers began blogging about their shock and disappointment.

"It must suck to be Moe Girkins, CEO of Zondervan, because she obviously does not get how youth pastors work and operate," wrote Jeremy Zach, a youth pastor from Laguna Beach, Calif., who admitted he didn't know Oestreicher personally. "We are a Band of Brothers who fight until the end. One cannot simply 'mess' with the youth pastor population and expect youth pastors to play along."

Jason Vines, spokesman for Zondervan, came across such blog entries and told The Christian Post that many of the discussions are "very uninformed."

"There's a lot of chatter out there," he said.

Vines declined to provide details about Oestreicher's firing, noting that it is a "personal matter between Zondervan and the employee."

"I think it's fair to both Zondervan and to Marko not to go into that area of questioning and answering," he said.

But he explained that they wanted to move the organization forward and stressed that they remain completely committed to the vision and the mission of Youth Specialties.

The publishing company is currently in talks with several organizations about possible partnerships that would propel the ministry forward. Final negotiations are taking place with one organization, which Vines would not identify at this time. An announcement detailing the partnership is expected to be made as soon as next week.

And until that deal is finished, decisions on new leadership for Youth Specialties will be delayed, Vines noted.

Zondervan's Girkins has meanwhile urged for patience as the process proceeds. "Our plan is for Youth Specialties to be relevant, impactful and extraordinary for many years to come," she said.

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  • Tue Oct 27, 2009 9:31 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    pepperw, have you ever attended a YS convention? Have you ever spoken with one of its founders? You draw conclusions without much input. How about citing the reason you think YS has a problem.
    YS has been effective for decades. The Zondervan dicission is not related to major protests from youth workers who use its material and attend its conferences.

  • Tue Oct 27, 2009 3:18 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 6

    Nice try Rhi bran, but you are the one who uses the Christian Post
    to attack Christians and tries to act so superior. Why is that?
    Why do you feel the need to detsroy?
    "I have no problem with Jesus" is quite the statement...Examine your own
    negative outlook on everything. How many youths have you turned off to
    the Gospel with your constant criticism of everything, Your attitude
    toward "the church" is boring.
    Jesus suffered and died on the Cross for you. He loves you and cares about your
    life. Why don't you accept the gift of joy and peace of mind that is waiting for you?

  • Mon Oct 26, 2009 7:30 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 9

    lpepperw, It is eactly your sort of over simplification and personal attacks upon those who do not shar your view that cause a great many youth to look upon the church as an unnecessary or even destructive force in their lives. The church allows youth to look at the spiritual dimension of existence. YS provided skills and opportunities for people to grow without playing inquisition.

    Some of my best friends are Christians and I have no problem with Jesus, only the distortion of Jesus used to attack and villify those who don't fit the orthodox mold, or is it prison?

  • Mon Oct 26, 2009 3:16 pm Agree: 9   Disagree: 16

    oh rhi, You forgot to mention the youth pastors personal attack on someone he didn't
    know.
    Besides, why do you care? You don't like Christiians and don't believe that Jesus is
    who he says he is. This is none of your concern. But, I guess you would cheer on
    anything that hurts the Gospel of out Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

    "The spark of the divine blazed in Jesus. I do not believe that a person born 1,000 years ago also participated consciously in creating the universe." Rhi Bran

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:58 pm Agree: 5   Disagree: 0

    lpepperw, your pesonal attack against this youth director is a sad commentary. Have you attended a national or regional YS convention? Do you suppose that all the thousands of youth workers who have benefited from YS over the decades are somehow suspect. YS brought experienced adult youth workers together to share their skills. It was never intended to be a doctrinal watch dog.
    It also brought people to speak on controversial issues facing youth. I only attended one national convention in Atlanta around 1980. The field trip introduced me to the people at Koinonia Farm and the original Habitat for Humanity. Subsequently the experience led to a decision which changed the course of my life. I imagine that many youth workers past and present are feeling cheated by the Zondervan decision. It is up to Zondervan to show they are not changing YS into a copy of other corporate driven programs.

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 8:04 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 10

    Hopefully Zondervan is returning to the core beliefs of Christianity
    and shaking off the emergent movement influence.
    Jeremy Zach, a youth pastor from Laguna Beach, Calif.,
    needs to grow up before he leads anymore youth.

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 4:48 pm Agree: 3   Disagree: 1

    Oldstudent, you are right. YS's sense of humor and irony helped us laugh at ourselves and reexamine how we express the truths we hold.

  • Sat Oct 24, 2009 7:44 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    RHI,

    Your comment seems quite on target. Although Yaconelli and YS has had some theological issues since the beginning, they knew the youth culture enough to be able to network and help youth workers and they were a big part of making sure that people don't think that youth ministry is some purgatory or some stepping stone to "real" ministry.

    The door was a great website, too bad it is a shadow of its former self...

    Grace and Peace,
    Jim

  • Fri Oct 23, 2009 11:20 pm Agree: 5   Disagree: 1

    I think it is pretty obvious that the spirit of YS, the same guys who gave us the Wittenburg Door magazine, was not in keeping with a coporate image. It is a loss to youth workers and those who have benefited from YS over the last forty plus years.

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