#1 Mentorship: How to Find One and Be One

By Beau Hughes

Introduction

Having served as a pastor of a church filled with college students for the better part of the last twenty years, one of the most frequent questions I receive is, “How can I find a mentor?” The question is typically asked by a student or recent graduate who, surrounded by peers their age, is aching for wisdom, counsel, and relationship with someone who’s older and further down life’s road. Even if they’re not exactly sure what it means, they want a mentor. Many even assume it is a sort of birthright of the Christian life.

Inevitably, this desire and hunt for mentors from the younger women and men in our congregation provoked the question from the other side, “How do I mentor someone?” Though being older or in another stage of life may make you an automatic candidate, when someone asks you to mentor them, what does that mean? What are they really asking? What does mentoring someone entail? How do you do it?

Over the years, we’ve seen this dance play itself out hundreds of times in our church. People are eager to find a mentor. Others are eager to mentor. Yet neither group knows quite where to begin. More fundamentally, they’re not sure what mentoring even is. The hope of this field guide is to provide a foundation for what it means to find and be a mentor.

Audio Guide

Audio Audio
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#1 Mentorship: How to Find One and Be One

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