Teaching Our Kids Missional Hospitality
Our family and our home are Spirit-empowered outposts of the kingdom of God that invite neighbors to hear and experience the good news of Jesus Christ.
Our family and our home are Spirit-empowered outposts of the kingdom of God that invite neighbors to hear and experience the good news of Jesus Christ.
Our students matter—not because of their personality, popularity, or performance, but because the King of the stars loved them enough to die for them.
I can release my white-knuckled grip on life and stop trying to be the savior of my family. Jesus is our only Savior.
As you continue leading teenagers to love Jesus and love his Church faithfully, remember that we are the Church. We are sinners saved by grace.
Teaching the Bible stories to our children is an important place to start, but we also want them to understand the Bible’s larger story of gospel redemption.
The longings the film taps into—identity, belonging, purpose—are exactly the places where the gospel speaks most powerfully and eternally.
As we walk with our students through their hurts and disappointments, Psalm 33 shows how the Lord’s unfailing love comforts and heals their broken hearts.
We want our teenagers—and our children—to know that they are not merely the younger tag-alongs at their parents’ church; it’s their church too.
The malaise and darkness we see consuming so many young people in the world can only be overturned if more of them embrace Christ’s exhortation to be the light.