đ Video Transcript: Men Like to Do Things
Lecture 4: Men Like to Do Things
Professor Steve Elzinga
All right, weâre back with lecture number four. And the title of lecture number four is: Men Like to Do Things.
So you have to understand that. Hopefully youâve been keeping up on some of the homework. I hope you take it seriously. I mean, Iâm not grading you, so I guess you donât have to do it. But if youâre going to get anything out of this course, you have to put things into practice. You hear things, and then you go out and try them. You try things, and thatâs how youâre going to learn.
Soâmen like to do things.
Men Like to Do Things Physically
Number one: men like to do things physically. Theyâre physically oriented. Theyâre adventure oriented.
So what kinds of things can you do with men that involve physicality?
Sports. Why do men like sports? Because you use your body. Men like to physically do something, whether itâs sports or whether itâs building something. They like to use their hands. They like to use their muscles.
And theyâre very adventure proneâlike attempting something, going out into nature, and trying something. Men like hunting, fishing, and exploration. They like the unknown. They like the uncertain. You know, thatâs what adventure isâtaking a trip where you donât have everything figured out.
So if you want a menâs ministry, you have to do things physically. You have to figure out some kind of adventures that men can do together.
Men Like Problem-Solving
Number two: men like problem solving.
I mean, itâs weird, but we men typically like problems. We donât like problems, but we gravitate toward problems. We like solving things.
A lot of times thatâs what spouses donât understand. A manâs wife brings him a problem, and what she wants him to do is just listen. She wants him to just sympathize with her. But what the man wants to do is solve the problem. She brings the problem, and everything in him wants to solve it.
Men like strategy. They like trying to figure out how we can do things better, how we can do things faster. Thatâs why men like the workplace. Thatâs why men like starting businesses. âHow can we do things quicker? How can we do things more efficiently?â
Men like challenge. They like games. They like the arena where you can win and where you can lose.
So if youâre going to start a menâs ministry, problem solving and strategyâthese kinds of thingsâhave to be a part of it.
Men Like Building and Creating
Number three: men like building and creating.
God made men in His image. You know, He made women in His image too. But one of the image qualities of God is that God created. God created the world out of nothing.
Well, how did God do this? Men are interested in how things work. Men are interested in the construction business, and the construction business is populated mostly by men. Why? Because men gravitate toward building thingsâpounding things together, welding things, taking two pieces of metal that have nothing to do with each other, and then putting them together in an interesting and creative and purposeful way.
Men like building. They like architecture. They like formulas of load bearing. They like how far a beam can span. They like how you frame a window.
My son and I have been working on a house, and we put in 40 different windows. After putting in 40 windows, I know how to put a window in. I know how to frame a window. Itâs really not that difficult. But we gravitate toward these things. We gravitate toward things that we can make with our hands. And then after a little while of hard work, we can look back and we can say, âWe created this. We made this. We built this.â
Men like this.
Like in the Netherlands, for example. Thatâs where my ancestors come from. Men are into the art of flower arranging. In most cultures, flower arranging is something women do. But in the Netherlands, itâs become a sport, and men get into it. Why? Because they like the science of it. They like the competition of it.
Men Like Exploration and Mastery
Number four: men like exploration and mastery.
I remember my two brothers and I would go to my grandmotherâs place. Behind her house were woods, and there was a river. We would go into this river, and every step along the way we would name different parts.
âThis part of the river is called Pipes Up. This part of the river is called something else.â
We explored the river. We named each section. There was one part of the river where you could cross. It must have been a water pipe. I donât know what kind of pipe it was, but it was about this big and went across the river about ten feet high.
And we would walk across this pipe to get to the other side. We were ten, eleven, twelve years old, and if you fell, you would fall ten feet into the river. It was like death.
But that adventure, the danger of it, appealed to us as young boys. We were exploring. We felt like we were Lewis and Clark, going across the continent, exploring unknown rivers.
No one else had ever seen this river. But we were the ones exploring it. We were the first ones who ever walked across this pipe to the other side.
What is on the other side? You canât find out whatâs on the other side unless youâre willing to risk deathâto cross this pipe, and if you fall ten feet, you fall into the water.
Thatâs how we felt as kids, and thatâs what men are attracted to. They want to explore. They want to go into the unknown. They want to have a sense of mastery. They want to work at something and become really good at it, whether itâs welding, or building, or whatever.
Men want a sense of making progress, of trying to do something they donât know how to do. And they like that feeling of improvement.
Men Like Teamwork
Number five: men are oriented toward teamwork.
The reason is because you can build bigger things with a team. Men like making something big happen. But you canât make something big happen on your own. You can only do it with a team.
Thatâs why men gravitate toward sports. Why? Because itâs a team effort. You canât make a sports team work without having a group of guys banded together to make things happen.
Men like that sense of accomplishing something they couldnât do on their own. And when they do it with a band of brothers, it feels like I accomplished thisâeven though it was more than I could ever hope for or imagine.
Spirituality Along the Way
Soâmen like to do things. If youâre going to have a successful menâs ministry, youâve got to have things for men to do.
But what about the spiritual piece?
Well, the spiritual things happen on the way to doing something. The bonding, the closenessâall those things donât happen when you set out to do them directly.
Thatâs the interesting thing about menâs ministry. If you start out saying, âOkay, men, weâre going to sit here and spiritually connect,â theyâre not interested.
But if you say, âWeâre going to do this project, or this adventure, and along the way, weâre going to connect spiritually and emotionally,â then it works.
The spiritual connections, the bonding, all the really good things we want in menâs ministryâthey happen on the side, as youâre doing something.
Think of sports. The team scores a touchdown that seemed impossible. Suddenly, these big, strong, unemotional men are hugging each other in the end zone with all their might. Theyâd never do that in another context. Theyâd never go to a play and hug each other afterward. They wouldnât do it after a Bible study.
But when they accomplish something together, they instinctively do it.
Thatâs how spirituality and bonding work for men. They happen as a byproduct of doing things together.
Practical Applications
So what can men do in your ministry?
- Build something. Rehab a church building. Work on a project together.
- Fix something. Use the varied skills in your groupâplumbing, electrical, carpentryâto help people in the church or community.
- Learn something. Have men with expertise teach practical skillsâplumbing, mechanics, photography, art.
- Mentor somebody. Encourage older men to teach younger men skills or spiritual wisdom.
- Go on an adventure. Camping, sailing, hikingâshared adventure builds connection.
- Integrate ministry. Use a Bible reading plan, theme verse, or guiding question alongside projects.
Men resist sitting in a circle answering questions. But while hammering nails, theyâll talk about their marriages. While driving somewhere, theyâll share honestly about their struggles.
Thatâs the genius of menâs ministry: create non-threatening, hands-on environments where spiritual conversations happen naturally.
Closing Challenge
So hereâs the bottom line: menâs ministry isnât just about Bible studies, singing songs, and praying for one anotherâthough those are good. Itâs about getting men to do things togetherâand then letting the spiritual connections, conversations, and discipleship happen along the way.
So go out and try it. Donât just hear this lecture. Try it with a friend, try it with your family, try it with your coworkers.
When men do things together, God often shows up in powerful, unexpected ways.
All right, I think youâve got it. Go out there and do itâand weâll see you again next time