Awana Explained

Type:501(c)(3) non-profit religious
Key People:Matt Markins, President/CEO; Kevin White, COO; Michael Handler, Chief Innovation/Communications Officer; Brian Rhodes, Chief Revenue Officer/Global Ministries; Art Rorheim, Co-Founder; Valerie Bell, CEO Emeritus
Awana
Founded Date:1950
Founders:Lance Latham, Art Rorheim
Location:St. Charles, Illinois, U.S.
Area Served:U.S. and International (133 countries)

Awana is an international evangelical Christian nonprofit organization in child and youth discipleship. The headquarters is in St. Charles, Illinois, United States.

History

In 1941, the children's program at the North Side Gospel Center in Chicago laid the foundation for the principles of Awana.[1] Lance Latham, North Side's senior pastor, collaborated with the church's youth director, Art Rorheim, to develop weekly clubs that they believed would appeal to all children. Rorheim served as the CoFounder/President Emeritus until he died on January 5, 2018.[2] Other churches became interested in the program and inquired about its availability. In 1950, Latham and Rorheim founded Awana as a parachurch organization.[3] The name is derived from the first letters of "Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" as taken from 2 Timothy 2:15., Awana claims to work with over 61,000 churches in 122 countries.[4]

Programs

Awana offers resources and Bible-based training programs for children ages 2 to 18 in churches. Children are encouraged, but not required, to memorize Bible verses for credit or to redeem for small prizes.[5]

Each Awana program is arranged into different groups that are separated by the ages and grades of the children attending. These groups include Puggles (ages 2 to 3), Cubbies (preschoolers, ages 4 to 5), Sparks (Kindergarten to 2nd Grade), Truth and Training, or T&T (Grades 3 to 6), Trek (Middle School), and Journey (High School).[6] [7] Although Awana offers programs for ages 2 to 18, churches that run an Awana program are not required to run a club for every age group.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Timothy J. . Demy . Paul R. . Shockley . Evangelical America: An Encyclopedia of Contemporary American Religious Culture. ABC-CLIO . 2017 . 13.
  2. News: Maureen . O'Donnell . Art Rorheim, who co-founded global Awana youth ministry in Chicago, dead at 99 . chicago.suntimes.com . January 12, 2018.
  3. Encyclopedia: Awana . Randall Herbert . Balmer . Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism. Revised and expanded. Baylor University Press. 2004 . 45.
  4. Smith, Samuel. Evangelical youth ministry leader Awana to release first-ever Sunday school curriculum, christianpost.com, November 17, 2019.
  5. Awana, About, awana.org, USA, retrieved January 25, 2023
  6. Web site: Awana Curriculum . January 26, 2023 . Awana . en-US.
  7. Web site: Northcliffe Baptist offers Awana fellowship for youngsters of all ages . January 26, 2023 . Tampa Bay Times . en.