đ Reading: Video Transcript: Sample Men's Retreat - Real Men
Lecture 10: Menâs Retreats
All right, lecture 10âmenâs retreats.
In this lecture, and in the next one, I want to give you sample menâs retreats. These are options you can use if you already have a menâs group, or even if youâre just thinking about starting one. Sometimes a retreat can be the way you startâby inviting men to spend time together, reflecting and sharing.
What Iâll share with you are all retreats I actually led myself. I know they work. They worked really, really well.
For this retreat, hereâs the overview: weâll look at the best practices for:
- A man and his work.
- A man and his walk with God.
- A man and his wife.
- A man and his fun.
- A man and his children or family.
This retreat is high on participation. It follows the principle I shared earlier about Bible study: start at the surface, get everyone talking, then gradually go deeper.
Structure: Small Groups and Pods
Hereâs how it works:
- If you have, say, 30 men, you break them into groups of five or six.
- I call these groups pods.
- Each pod is given discussion questions.
- Men first jot down a few notes so theyâre ready to share.
This helps men succeed because theyâre starting with things they already knowâstories, experiencesâand theyâre doing it in a small group setting before reporting back to the larger group.
Session 1: A Real Man and His Work
Questions for small groups:
- What did your dad do for work?
- How are you the same or different from your dad?
- What do you enjoy about work and why?
- What frustrations do you face in your work?
- How might you do your work and at the same time serve Godâs kingdom?
- Where do you feel like a failure as a Christian man in the workplace?
- What are some Bible verses about work?
- What are some best practices to overcome failures and frustrations?
Groups discuss, then come back to the big group to share. Together, you collect best practices for a man and his work.
Session 2: A Real Manâs Walk with God
Questions for small groups:
- How do you personally relate to God?
- What do you like about reading the Bible? What frustrates you?
- What do you like about prayer? What frustrates you?
- What kind of personal walk with God would you like to have?
- What might help you grow in your walk with God?
- What Bible verses encourage you in this area?
Again, groups discuss, then report back. Together, you identify best practices for a real manâs walk with God.
Session 3: A Real Manâs Marriage
Questions for small groups:
- How did you meet your wife? Why did you want to marry her?
- Why is it sometimes hard to have devotions with your wife?
- What does a marriage walk with God look like?
- What Bible verses speak to a manâs marriage?
- What are the obstacles?
- What are the best practices for overcoming those obstacles?
Men share their stories. Itâs easy because theyâre telling memories, not abstract concepts. Then, together, you gather best practices for a real manâs marriage.
Session 4: A Real Manâs Fun
Fun is important. Questions for small groups:
- What did your dad do for fun?
- How are you the same or different?
- What things do you enjoy doing for fun and why?
- How might you enjoy fun while also serving Godâs kingdom?
- Where do you feel like a failure as a Christian man in this area?
- What Bible verses speak about joy, celebration, or rest?
- What are the best practices for overcoming frustrations in this area?
Groups talk, share in the big group, and identify best practices for a real manâs fun.
Session 5: A Real Manâs Family
Questions for small groups:
- What kind of family did you grow up in spiritually?
- What kind of family did you grow up in regarding discipline, encouragement, work, or fun?
- What were the best things about your family that youâd like to repeat?
- What would you do differently from your family?
- Where have you failed most in your family life?
- What frustrations do you face with your family?
- What Bible verses guide a manâs role in the family?
- What are the best practices for overcoming frustrations and failures in family life?
The discussion allows men to go deeper, step by step. At first, they talk about their background, then about their current family life, and eventually they share struggles. This builds trust and leads to genuine growth.
Conclusion
By the end of the retreat, youâve created five sets of best practices:
- Work.
- Walk with God.
- Marriage.
- Fun.
- Family.
The genius of this retreat format is that it moves from surface-level sharing (stories, memories) into deeper waters (failures, frustrations, practices). Everyone participates. Everyone succeeds. And together, the men create a shared set of practices they can take home and live out.
So, if you already have a menâs group, try a retreat like this. Or, if you donât yet have a group, consider using this as the way to launch one.
Iâll see you next time.