Recent Posts

Six Comments That Will Destroy Your Ministry


Here are six comments that discourage involvement and SIX positive alternatives to use instead.

No ministry leader would purposely turn away an eager volunteer. But sometimes the most innocent of comments can have that result. When you are busy planning for six activities, behind on a deadline, and hurrying home after a meeting, the last thing you want to do is listen to a new idea or walk through how a new member can get involved.

Those conversations take so much time. But that is pretty much what you need to do if your ministry is going to thrive in the future though.

Excellent communication skills

To help your group change its habits, I have collected six common lines guaranteed to kill the enthusiasm of even the most enthusiastic newbie, along with what you should say instead.

“We will have someone call you.” 

We all know what this really is. It is a complete brush off. Be careful about using “we” as a generalization, too. It depersonalizes the statement so no one is accountable.

A better way to end the conversation is “do you want to talk to Joe about that? Here is his phone number.” Or, set up an appointment to call ot meet with the person.

By opening a line of communication, where your volunteer can have his questions answered, you encourage the volunteer.

“We tried that already” or “That won’t work.”

No one wants to repeat mistakes, but sometimes ideas that failed before can be successful with new people or a new situation.

Instead, respond with “we had a bad experience once with a similar idea. Maybe it is time to reconsider and take in your approach. Would you please detail your idea and how you would implement it?”

Allowing your enthusiastic team member to detail their idea and formulate it into a plan let’s them know their input is valued and appreciated.

They may discover for themselves why it won’t work, or they may discover exactly what needs to be done to make it work.

Their detailed plan will also allow you to discuss it with them without appearing dismissive.

“We have always done it this way.”

Just because your ministry has settled into a comfortable pattern, that does not mean it is perfect. Change is hard, it is disruptive, and it takes time. It can also energize of the group.

A better response would be, “we are so used to doing things a certain way, it is hard to consider changing it. Can you explain how your new idea might improve the ministry?”

new ministry ideas
The best ideas are the one’s you hear.

Again, by listening to the idea rather than just quickly dismissing it, you make your team members feel valued and this will encourage them to present ideas in the future. Ideas that just might be invaluable to your ministry’s growth and success.

“That committee is full.”

Rather than cut off the volunteer, find a better place or his or her skill. Try this line next time, “I think there are already enough volunteers for the amount of work in that committee. But we could certainly use help in this area. would that interest you? We would love to benefit from your talent.”

My family once belonged to a church for five years. Although we were active in a traveling children’s ministry and prison ministry, our church never had anyway w could help.

We asked, again and again, to be involved with the children’s ministry, with cleaning the church, with maintenance, (I have carpentry experience), but the pastor never found a way for us to serve in the local church. Every need was met by other members. For the 5 years we were there, we always felt like outsiders.

We have belonged to other churches where from day one we were asked to participate in one way or another. If someone wants to help, find a way to involve them.

“Call if you have questions.”

You might as well finish the sentence, “ because this is all the training you are going to get.”

You might intend it as a sincere offer to provide help without micromanaging, it can also sound like a dismissal.

Try closing the conversation with” I will give you a couple of days to look over the material and then I will check in to see how it is going. In the meantime, here is my phone number and email address if you have questions.”

“Run all decisions by me”

 Why does every little decision have to be run by the pastor or children’s minister? That is what a committee or a delegated volunteer is for.

Make sure your volunteers know the mission and know what decisions they can and cannot make. Let them take ownership of the project. Your volunteers develop a sense of pride in their accomplishment, and a sense of responsibility for the project or program.

This will build better leaders and better children’s ministry.

Our words and statements send a message. They do not always send the message we wish to send, so it is important to consider how your words will be received.

Remember volunteers are just that. They are giving of their time, and finances, to help your ministry be a success and to reach children for Christ.

Be an encourager, not a discourager.

Build a better children’s ministry with these books by Dennis Regling, available at Amazon

How To Recruit & Keep Children’s Ministry Volunteers


How To Retain Ministry Volunteers

With some thought and planning, you can turn occasional helpers into committed volunteers.

One of the challenges of children’s ministry is keeping your volunteers engaged in and active in the ministry.

Perhaps you had some success finding volunteers. Some new parents have offered to help work with the young children. Why does it feel like, with every new activity or event, you are starting all over, looking for new volunteers?

Wouldn’t it be great if you had a team of loyal, dependable parents you could count on not only to help out at each event but maybe even to take over planning new programs?

It is possible. With these simple strategies, you can convert one time helpers into longtime volunteers.

Have A Plan

It takes time and planning to develop a solid team of volunteers. The keyword is cultivate. Recognize that it takes time and find a volunteer who has the time. This person should be dedicated to getting to know the parents and finding out their unique interests, discover their time commitment, passion, and skills. 

By tailoring tasks to individuals’ experience and interests you are more likely to keep those volunteers and engaged beyond a single assignment.

Get Organized

 In order to leverage church members’  talent and skill sets, you need to plan your volunteer assignment.

Too many times ministers ask for help at the last minute, limiting the size of the volunteer pool. For an upcoming event, even if the venue is booked, the schedule has been planned, and the food is arranged, nailing down the volunteer schedule is critical.

Parents who have jobs or care for elderly family members, for example, need notice to schedule. Advanced planning also helps you figure out what exact tasks have to get done and the skills required. How many volunteers are needed and how and when certain tasks, such as decorating or set up need to be completed.

Also, know who has volunteered in the past and what they did and where they did it.

For anyone who has volunteered, find another job for them within three to four months. At least ask, otherwise, they may disengage.

Volunteer management software or a shared spreadsheet to help you stay on top of details like this. The Top 15 Free and Inexpensive Volunteer Management Software Solutions

Be  Specific And Personal

Too often ministry leaders send out a generic request for volunteers. A busy parent is more likely to respond to a finite and specific task, such as updating the ministry website or helping with cleanup, than to a notice that says “volunteers needed.”

kid min
Be Specific With Your Volunteer Needs

When you are clear about what exactly you need from your volunteer force, you can make specific requests of the members at your church. A personal appeal more effective than a call for volunteers in the church bulletin.

If you know a parent works the overnight shift, ask him to help with an event during the daytime hours, not with an evening event. If you are are remodeling your chidlren’s classroom, enlist the help of members are painters or carpenters. 

At our church, members who are carpenters and have workshops build VBS sets and are happy to do it, but these same men would not necessarily be comfortable taking part in a skit or teaching a lesson to young children.

When church members feel they have a meaningful contribution, they are more likely to volunteer again.

Provide Context

People will be more likely to get involved that your ministry is well-run and that the work you are doing supports a vision and specific goals.

For example, if you are raising money for a puppet ministry, allow church members to adopt a puppet. Have pictures of various puppets and the cost. Let them donate to buy a specific puppet. Or donate lumber or materials for a stage. When they see their puppet, or their curtains being used, it gives them a sense of accomplishment in their giving.

When church members see exactly where their money is going, they will be more motivated in their giving. We all give so much to the church and to missionaries that additional giving can sometimes be hard, but when you know exactly what the need is and where the money is being used, it makes it easier and creates a willingness.

I will give my last dollar to a hungry man, but giving a little more to a generic “Feed the Poor” program can be hard when personal financial responsibilities need to be met. It is easier to give when we can see the result of our giving.

It is sometimes hard to give when you do not know how the money will be spent.  By having a detailed list of your ministry’s needs and a specific goals, church members will more involved and be able to see the result of their giving.

Create A Timeline

 You should know that cultivating committed volunteers does not happen overnight. Ask a first-time volunteer to contribute to a project, not be the project leader.  Once a person has been involved for a while, then you can ask them to take more responsibilities.

This approach will keep volunteers from getting overwhelmed with demands or requests. Asking too much, too soon, might drive them away from taking future volunteer assignment.

If a church member offers to help, make an effort to make their first volunteer experience positive and not overwhelming. If the volunteer has a good impression of your ministry, he or she may take responsibility as your ministry grows.

 Be Patient 

It takes time to build a strong volunteer base. Many ministers make the mistake trying to rush newly involved members into a time-consuming commitment. When someone raises a hand to help or suggest a new way of doing things, don’t pounce.

Find out how much that person is willing to do and be grateful for the contribution. Make the experience positive and then ask for a bit more from that person to help.

 Say Thank You

If you want parents and church members to volunteer a second time, show your appreciation. This is a simple but critical step in cultivating your team.

Thank you

Taking the time to say thank you can motivate volunteers to do even more great work for your church and children. Just as important, refrain from showing displeasure at tasks not done to your exact liking.

For example, if a volunteer is very thorough in cleanup efforts and holds you up from going home after an event, be sure keep any impatience in check and simply say thank you for a job well done.

If a job is not up to your standards or ability, but is adequate for the task at hand, don’t be too critical. The last couple years, my young daughters have started doing balloon animals with us.

Their earliest attempts were very disproportional, but rather than just discard them, we would say, let’s put them on the table and see who would like them. They always got chosen by someone.

By keeping the learning and helping experience positive, it has encouraged them to help more and more and get better and better. Encourage, don’t discourage helpers.

Most volunteers are not looking for public recognition, but they do need to know that their efforts matter. I think appreciation is probably one of the most important aspects of cultivating volunteer having a positive experience with a volunteer situation makes a huge difference.

Avoid Burnout

It is easy when you get an eager new volunteer to give them more and more to do. Then all of a sudden, the volunteer stops coming to events, starts avoiding phone calls, or is just too busy to help again. It is a classic case of volunteer burnout. But it can be avoided.

Most burnout is either self-induced or the result of a bad experience. Try to layer your volunteers who work on major activities each year. You may have two co-leaders for each event initiative and the event itself.

Divide an event into separate tasks. One leader and team for decorating, another for treats and a third for clean-up.

It helps catch the burnout factor earlier rather than later.

Also, it may seem counterintuitive, but reducing a regular volunteer’s commitments can be a smart long-term strategy. If a volunteer is overcommitted, scale back his or her duties before they burn-out. Make them take a break or get them help.

Also help prevent burnout by making it clear to volunteers that they can decline when they are asked to take on new tasks, so that they will not commit to more than they can manage. Some well-meaning volunteers may take on more than they have time for because they believe in the work you are doing.

Remember, people volunteer for a reason, they want to be able to make a difference. Keep that in mind and they will keep coming back.

Kids and Puppets: Puppets In The Classroom


My child built this lion

Puppets can be a valuable tool in the classroom. There are wonderful ways you can incorporate puppetry in the class, whether in a formal school or in homeschooling.

As a professional educational consultant to public and private schools, and as a homeschooling parent, I have found five ways puppetry can be used to help and motivate students.

  • Develop teamworking skills
  • Develop public speaking skills and confidence
  • Build students’ confidence through new activities such as designing and building puppets and props.
  • Encourage creative writing
  • As a teaching tool to grab students’ attention and present material in an engaging and memorable manner.

Puppetry has so much to offer people of any age. From writing scripts to singing, and dancing, to building sets and props.
Creating your own puppet production is a great way to flex your creative muscles. It’s also a wonderful social activity.

Develop teamworking skills

Whether you’re making costumes or paying the lead character, you must have respect for all the members of the cast and crew who are working hard for the same vision. In other words, puppetry can build teamwork among students as each exercises their own skills and develop new ones.

Students can learn to appreciate those with different abilities than their own and see where each individual has something to bring to the project.

This is an important life lesson, too. We need to see one another in light of their abilities and contributions as opposed to their limitations.

And nothing is better than the applause from the audience when the production is over. We all enjoy a little praise and appreciation.

I believe there are many great benefits to using puppets with kids. The creative journey a child’s mind must take when making a puppet is a mental exercise that has powerful developmental rewards.

Develop public speaking skills and confidence

When they work on a puppet with me that I am going to sell, they learn what it is to earn a dollar and they are part of it.

In the classroom, teachers can use puppetry to draw shy students out of their shells. Often those who are not confident enough to speak in front of others will find freedom in “hiding behind a puppet stage” and speaking through a puppet.

This confidence can transfer over to their everyday interactions with others.

Students who may struggle with bookwork can find new self-confidence when they work with their hands to build a stage or make a puppet.

Ellie sings with her puppets. She taught herself ventriloquism and it gives her confidence in front of people.

Build students’ confidence through new activities such as designing and building puppets and props.

Puppetry influences artistic abilities and social skills and can break mental barriers.

It’s a chance for kids to experiment and discover skills and talents in themselves they didn’t know they had.

This can instill a higher level of self-worth and instill a child with moral accountability for their actions.

Joelle sewed this puppet on a machine and designed its unique look.
Joelle did this 100% by herself, including sewing it on the machine.

I feel that I have been positively affected by my puppetry. I have learned new skills, such as sewing, sculpting and latex casting. Skills applicable to far much more than just puppetry.

Teaching my children to design and create their own puppets has been a great way for us to spend time together. It compliments their homeschooling as well as providing a creative outlet for them.

Their sense of accomplishment when they finish a puppet reinforces their willingness and desire to try other new things.

paperbag puppet
A paper bag owl puppet

Encourage creative writing

Creative writing can be so much more fun when you are writing a puppet script or creating a character.

When a child opens their imagination to what a character can be, young, old, sweet, mean, etc., they now have something unique to write.

As they develop that character through a script, the creative writing process can become easy and fun as ideas flow from their head to their pen. This is a skill they will be able to use throughout their school career as they write reports and essays.

As a teaching tool to grab students’ attention and present material in an engaging and memorable manner.

Lastly, a teacher can use puppets themselves to introduce ideas to their classroom.
A puppet can be a teacher or a reluctant student in the hands of a teacher. Picture Charlie McCarthy and Edgar Bergen and their conversations and think how that sort of interaction with a puppet could become a memorable teaching moment for your students.

A teacher does not need to be a ventriloquist or have a stage to use a puppet in the classroom. As puppetry skills are developed, the presentation can be so interesting that students don’t care that you are holding the puppet and your lips are moving.

Here is a video of me teaching a Bible verse to students with a puppet at a Vacation Bible School program. Notice my lips are moving, yet the children are laughing and internalizing the lesson.

A puppet can sing (lip-sync) a teaching song. Play the music and have your puppet “sing along.”

If your puppet has an arm rod, or is a live arm style puppet, you can attach a pointer to its hand and let it point to a blackboard as he speaks. A puppet can recite poetry, or answer questions.

Be creative. A puppet is a great visual tool.

Here is a video teaching basic puppetry techniques that can help you to learn to control your puppet or to teach your classroom. My daughters help me in the video, operating the puppets, and they were 9 at the time.

Even recycling can be part of the lessons learned as what would normally be discarded becomes puppets. Learning to repurpose materials is great for the student, as they use their imagination to integrate various items into their puppet, and it’s good for the environment, too.
All -in- all, puppetry opens up a wide variety of ways teachers and parents can teach, influence and motivate their children.

Be sure to check out the rest of the blog for ideas on creating and using puppets. Puppet Building World Home

How To Make Teeth For A Foam Head Puppet


Craft foam puppet teeth
Craft Foam Teeth

How To Make Craft Foam Puppet Teeth

For most of the teeth I make for puppets, I use craft foam. I use three layers, which give a nice, wide base for gluing to the puppet mouth.

Puppet teeth made from 3 layers of craft foam.
Puppet teeth made from 3 layers of craft foam.
  • cut three rectangles of craft foam slightly larger than the size you want your teeth. One should be white and two should be red, black or pink.
  • Glue the three pieces together in a stack with the white piece on top
  • Cut into your basic tooth shape.
  • Using a razor blade, cut into the foam to separate the teeth. ONLY cut through the top, white layer of foam.
  • It only takes one thin slice for the separation. The gap opens nicely when the teeth are curved.
  • Curve the teeth slightly to expose the color underneath and attach to your puppet’s mouth.
  • The slight curve provides a separation between the teeth and makes for a great one-piece set of teeth.
Basic pattern for teeth. Round and taper the bottom edge. Cut through top layer only of foam with razor blade.

Other Materials For Puppet Teeth

You can make puppet teeth out of fleece.

Fleece teeth
  • Cut two or more of your basic teeth shape out of fleece
  • Stitch them together to make one thick piece
  • Run vertical stitches with your sewing machine where you want the teeth to be separated.
  • You could also draw the separations with a marker instead of sewing.

Crayola has a product called Model Magic. It’s a light-weight material that you mold like clay, and let it dry. It feels like fun-foam, but you can shape it however you want. It comes in lots of colors, including white. Once it dies, it can be painted.
If you use Model Magic, make sure you paint it with a few layers of glues first. it’ll keep it from breaking apart on you.

Check out the current price for Model Magic on Amazon HERE.
Sponge Makeup applicators can make great puppet teeth.
Sponge Makeup applicators can make great puppet teeth.

Sponge makeup applicators are a firm foam and make some great looking teeth. It just takes a little snip with the scissors to shape them.

Items mentioned in this article:

Pumpkin Teeth

Pumpkin teeth make great puppet teeth.

Pumpkin teeth come in a variety and of shapes and can be used for great puppet teeth. Cut off the sharp top piece, sand smooth, if desired, and glue in place.

Hot Glue For Teeth For really scary teeth, you can take a hot glue stick and cut it into small pieces.

  • Put the pieces in a bowl of warm water and microwave it for a few seconds.
  • Take the bowl out and carefully fish out the hot glues with a spoon and what you got is hot glue the soft enough to shape but not hot enough to burn.
  • You simply pinch one end so it looks jagged.
  • Paint with acrylic paint or nail polish
  • Heat up your hot glue applicator melt the non-jagged edge and stick it right to your puppet. The effect is pretty awesome.
Hot glue teeth
Hot glue teeth

Another way to make teeth with hot glue is to make long drips with your hot glue gun, let harden and then trim and paint. This video will explain this process.

Which Is the Best Contact Cement For Gluing Foam To Foam?


Barge vs weldwoon contact cement

Weldwood or Barge contact cement? Which is the best contact cement for builders of puppets and cosplay?

When attaching foam to foam, I have discovered Barge Cement provides a stronger bond, and it dries quicker than Weldwood or other adhesives I have tried, for faster work.

Every puppet building shop needs contact cement.

Although Weldwood dries slower, I have found I can speed up the drying with a hairdryer. Set the hairdryer on low and blow it across the cement after it is applied to the foam. It will become tacky much quicker, and ready to attach to other pieces.

The one advantage Weldwood has is that it is considerably less expensive than Barge.

I surveyed other puppet makers and these were the responses I received:

  • “I’ve used both. No preference, but always use a breathing protection/respirator mask.
  • “It really depends on the application and what you are using it for.
  • “I use Weldwood because the new formula of Barge has no Toluene. If you can find the old stuff I believe they are practically the same.”
    Cement with Toluene is way quicker (you can glue it together in a couple of minutes) but it comes at the cost of your health if used in a nonventilated area.”
  • “If you want another alternative, latex-based and pretty safe to use indoors (only a slight ammonia smell/fumes, same as with latex) I recommend DR. Puppetstein Foam and Latex contact adhesive. As with newer formulations, you have to wait between 15 and 30 min until it’s ready to glue, but a really cool feature is that the level of stickiness is dependent on how hard you push it, so if you just lightly put it together and you are not happy, you can separate it and put it together again. Once you are happy, just push it together harder and it will stay strongly bonded.”
  • “I use toluene-based contact cement when I want to power through something or I don’t care as much about precision/looks (like and inside armature) and the latex-based one for visible seams or parts that I don’t mind if they take longer while I work on other parts.”
  • “Barge is more flexible when cured than Weldwood. This has never been an issue for me so I use whichever is handy.”
  • “Barge. Just keeps getting stronger with age.”
  • “I use Weldwood because I can walk into any hardware store and buy more. Barge I’d have to order.”
  • “I’ve found Barge works slightly better but maybe I’m just suffering from expectation bias. I’ll use Weldwood in a pinch.
  • “I was introduced to Barge by the Evil Ted Smith YouTube channel. It instantly became my go-to adhesive. I couldn’t recommend it enough. Not that I’ve had a bad experience with Weldwood.”

The consensus seems to be that Barge is the preferred contact cement among puppet-makers, but neither product gets a bad review.

Another contact cement favored by some builders is Masters Contact Cement. It does have Toulene in it, which means faster drying and toxic fumes. Be sure to use your respirator.

When using any contact cement that has Toulene, be sure to have a well-ventilated work area or wear a respirator.

To Use Contact Cement:

Contact cement is applied to both pieces to be attached. It is then allowed to dry until tacky. At that point, the pieces are joined together and a permanent bond is formed.

A hair dryer can be used to dry the adhesive quicker before joining.

To separate pieces joined with contact cement, heat the piece with your hair dryer set on high heat. If it is a relatively fresh bond (a couple hours or less), the pieces should be easily separated with no damage.

Please be sure to subscribe to our newsletter for updates and new articles. Thank you.

How To Make Eyelashes For A Puppet


Eyelashes are used to add character to a puppet. They make a girl puppet more feminine. Long lashes can make a woman puppet look flirty, especially if you have blinking eyes.

A wide variety of materials can be used for puppet eyelashes including:

  • False eyelashes sold for women.
  • Craft foam.
  • Felt.
  • Sewing thread.
  • Pipe Cleaners
  • Teddy Bear and Doll Eyelashes From Craft Stores.
  • Clown Eyelashes.
  • Paper
  • Feathers

How To Attach Eyelashes To Your Puppet

Using false eyelashes available online or at your local store, you can make realistic lashes for your puppet. For a thicker lash, use two eyelashes on each eye.

Fleece eyelids with false eyelashes.
  • Cut your eyelid out of your material
  • Cut a thin, 1/8″ strip of black felt or velvet. I like self-adhesive velvet for this.
  • Place the false eyelash on the black strip Use fabric adhesive. The top of the lash should cover 1/2 the strip.
  • Place the eyelid on the other 1/2 of the strip.
  • Attach eyelid to the puppet eye.

Eyelashes can also be attached directly above the eye with no eyelid if desired. Glue the eyelash to the back of the eye before attaching the eye to the puppet.

Craft Foam or Felt Eyelashes

You can cut eyelashes out of foam or felt. Draw your eyelash design and cut out. Using tweezers or a small dowel, curl the lashes, if desired. Then attach to the puppet.

How To Make Craft Foam Eyelashes For Your Puppet

  • Cut a rectangle from black craft foam. 
  • Snip along the length of the foam creating a “comb” shape. 
  • Clip each “tooth” in the comb at an angle
  • Roll the combs between warm fingers to curl and shape.
Craft Foam Eyelashes

Lashes from foam or felt will have a much wider lash. They will be less realistic than false eyelashes but can add greatly to the appearance of your puppet.

Realistic puppets will look better with false eyelashes, but a more cartoony or kid-friendly puppet will actually look better with the foam or felt.

Sewing Thread

Sewing thread can be used to make lashes. Use a stout thread.

One long piece of black thread with a bunch of cow hitch knots all trimmed to the same length make excellent lashes. Can be shaped easily with Elmer’s glue or starch.

Eyelashes made from thread.

The cow hitch is a hitch knot used to attach a rope to an object. The cow hitch comprises a pair of half-hitches tied in opposing directions, as compared to the clove hitch in which the half-hitches are tied in the same direction. It has several variations and is known under a variety of names. Wikipedia


Cow’s Hitch Knot
From kispng.com

Pipe Cleaners

Pipe Cleaners make wonderful eyelashes. Glue a strip of pipe cleaner to the bottom of your eyelid and VOILA you have an eyelash.

A single strip of pipe cleaner makes a subdued eyelash, perfect for a man puppet. For a female puppet, twist a few lengths of pipe cleaner together and you will get a thicker lash.

For a simple and good looking eyebrow, fold a pipe cleaner over itself four times, then twist it all together. Glue it where you want it with hot glue.

Plastic Teddy Bear Lashes

Plastic Teddy Bear Lashes make great eyelashes for puppets. They are 5″ long and can be cut to the length you need. You can find them HERE.

Clown Eyelashes

Clown eyelashes are available online at Amazon and at party stores. They are long lashes and very colorful. A great way to make you puppet bright and fun.

Paper Eyelashes

Paper makes for quick, inexpensive eyelashes for your puppet. You can use craft paper for a wide variety of color choices or use markers to color white paper as desired.

Feathers For Eyelashes

Feather Eyelashes

Feathers can make beautiful eyelashes. Rather than going for a realistic eyelash look, the feather can be used to highlight the eye.

Be sure to subscribe to our newsletter to be notified of new articles and videos. Thank you.