How do you get the young married adults to participate?
That’s the $1,000,000 question. We have quite a few couples show up, however. Our fearless leader(s) are married. We have another married couple soon to have a child. Another newly-wed couple that met at our group and will be having a child. Another couple that’s going through RCIA (the husband is; the wife might be soon). And another couple that moved away, with the husband going through RCIA now too.
At initial invitation, honestly, a couple should be invited by another couple (goes back to the “see yourself in the group, then you’ll want to be part of the group”). When I’m trying to talk to people after Mass to invite them, I don’t “go after” couples, since there’s a 99% chance they won’t come around. And a group of friends is also hard, as it might appear I’m friendless at initial invitation. So, if I’m alone, I find someone else who is alone and try purposefully reach them after Mass. Remember, this isn’t an announcement. This is individually making the effort to introduce yourself, and invite them. Get their contact information, such as a phone number, to remind them. One of the key parts of all ministries isn’t waiting for people to come to you -
you have to go to them.
I imagine that it would be harder when they have small children, trying to get away from them for events. Do you provide childcare or are your events child-friendly?
It is hard. We meet at our leaders’ house. We tend to discourage kids from coming, but obviously its better for the couples to come than to not if they don’t have an alternative. We make it work. The kids will go upstairs typically. Younger kids (e.g. babies, toddlers) tend to stay with their parents. We understand. I wouldn’t call it child-friendly necessarily, but they have a projector upstairs, so a good kids movie tends to be sufficient; at the same time, I wouldn’t call it anti-children either. We may be drinking beer, but we (well, most of us) know how to moderate ourselves, both verbally and consumption wise.
I am just curious because when I tried to work with several young adults and a deacon at my previous parish to get something going, it just never really got off the ground. I’m not sure why, but then, I always felt a little strange as a single person trying to relate to the married people, even though we were about the same general age.
Yes, that can be strange at first. The couples I have the best [and easiest] time talking to are couples who trust each other enough to not have to be sitting next to each other (Note: I’m not saying couples can never sit next to each other, but they should grow to a point where they don’t need to be on top of each other either). Of course, you still have to work with the couples who are constantly together in a social setting, but we don’t have many of that any more, as both individuals become comfortable with the group as a whole and more-so specific members.