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C. University of York Catholic Students' Society; Castlerigg Manor; Catholic Boy Scouts of Ireland; Catholic campus ministry; Catholic Christian Outreach
Young people at Castlerigg Manor. The phrase Catholic youth work covers a wide range of activities carried out with young people, usually in the name of the Catholic Church and with the intention of imparting the Catholic faith to them and inviting them to practice and live out the faith in their lives.
NET's roots go back to the St. Paul Catholic Youth Center (CYC), [1] which offered a variety of programs from 1939 to 1989. In 1980, NET's founder Mark Berchem, through CYC, organized eighteen high school youth retreats around southern Minnesota. Young adults traveled in a van giving these retreats over a three-week period in January.
Young Democrats of America (US) Young European Federalists (Europe) Young European Leadership (Europe) Young Judaea; Young Left (Austria) Young Life (US) Young Marines (US) Young Muslims Canada; Young People's Socialist League (1907) (US) Young People's Socialist League (Socialist Party USA) (US) Young Religious Unitarian Universalists (US/Canada)
Youth ministry, also commonly referred to as youth group, is an age-specific religious ministry of faith groups or other religious organizations, usually from ages 12 to 30, whose mission is to involve and engage with young people who attend their places of worship, or who live in their community.
Catholic youth organizations (6 C, ... Young people and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (5 C, 32 P) ... A Christian Ministry in the National Parks;
FIMCAP argues that this is necessarily a part of their work, as FIMCAP is an international association of youth organizations for children, adolescents and young adults throughout the world and that as young people, youth organizations and youth work are confronted with different challenges.
Catholic Youth Organization (CYO) is an international Catholic youth movement founded by Bishop Bernard Sheil in Chicago in 1930. It became a major factor in the development of race relations in the US Catholic Church following World War II .