We don’t have many youths in the church, and I have been looking for ways to engage them more. My wife, Tracy, had been teaching the youth Sunday School class, but she needed a break, so I took over. Anyway, on the Thursday before Palm Sunday, I shaved off my beard for a sleep study that my doctor ordered. When my youngest son, Ben, saw me without the beard he said, “Dad, if you shaved off the hair on your head, it would look like an egg!” I responded, “Yeah, and I suppose you’d want to decorate it for Easter!” His enthusiastic response birthed the idea. On Palm Sunday, I took the idea to the Youth Sunday School class. All four of them jumped at the idea of shaving off my hair and decorating my head like an Easter Egg! The original challenge was that they would each have to memorize the first five chapters of the book of Acts by Easter Sunday morning. We were beginning a study on the book of Acts. Apparently, that bar was set too high, and none of them thought they could learn that much in a week. So then – after setting them up – I issued my counter offer. I suggested that they could memorize the book of Philippians together since we had just finished a study on Philippians. It didn’t take them long to figure out that there are four chapters in the book and four of them, so each could memorize a single chapter in a week. As they had been invited by our Laymen’s Association to help make the breakfast that we serve after the Easter Sunrise Service, I suggested that they could recite their verses to me after serving the breakfast, and then they could use the rest of the time between the breakfast and the 10:30 a.m. service to cut my hair and paint my head! They jumped at the idea, and soon fell to discussing who would memorize which chapter, thus firmly committing themselves to trying to memorize Scripture AND serving the breakfast! In the announcements during the service on Palm Sunday, I informed the congregation about the youths’ decision and warned them that I might have a painted head on Easter Sunday. The adults began to encourage the kids enthusiastically, and I knew I was in trouble when several youth could already recite 4 or 5 verses after that morning’s worship service!
The following Sunday, one of the young people was sick and couldn’t attend, but the other three all arrived at 5:30 a.m. to begin preparing for the Easter morning breakfast. After breakfast, I met with them to see how they did on their memorization. One had memorized six verses, another five verses, but not their whole chapter. My younger son, Ben, went last. He recited all of Philippians 4 by memory and only missed one word! Because of his extraordinary effort, and because all three had learned something, I told them they could paint my head! We went to the parsonage where they proceeded to shave my head with the electric clippers. Then I shaved my head with the razor. Then we went to the kitchen where they spent the next hour creating their masterpiece! Their masterpiece was then unveiled at the 10:30 a.m. Easter Sunday service, to their delight, a little ribbing by the adults, and a lot of good-natured laughter. It was more than a little distracting as I lead worship and preached, but, in its way, it helped some to focus on what is vital in life – Jesus Christ, His Word, and His Kingdom!

Thanks to social media, my painted head has now been seen by many in the community, in many places in the U.S. and several countries. As I wait for my hair and beard to grow back, I have been asked many times, would you do it again. My answer is always the same: “To get more of the Word of God into young peoples’ minds and hearts, I certainly would!”