Letter to a Youth Worker Experiencing Burnout
No matter the reason you feel burnt out in this season, may this letter act as a reminder to the faithfulness and steadfast love of the Lord.
No matter the reason you feel burnt out in this season, may this letter act as a reminder to the faithfulness and steadfast love of the Lord.
These words in Malachi bore the weight of hope for the people of God as they prepared for the advent of their savior. To say they are important is probably an understatement.
Because the idol of control hides behind such good things, it quietly advances its way into the deepest corners of our hearts, burrowing deep roots.
Each month we compile a Top Ten list for youth workers. This list represents ten articles from various sources that we believe will encourage you in your ministry to students and their families.
A rich theology of embodiment is particularly important for student ministers, whose focus on caring for others often lends itself to patterns of body-dismissal that are perhaps less God-honoring than we might imagine.
Parents, we know overwhelmed—likely we live it. And living it makes us not entirely different from our teens.
In one way or another, our students will be faced with reconciling suffering and the “good life.” As youth pastors, we need the resources of the gospel to point teenagers to a biblical perspective on suffering.
We’d like to invite the Rooted community to pray together this week. We hope you will join us in lifting each other up to our good God.
Haggai has good news for us and our students as we consider the disordered priorities of our lives: the very Spirit of the Lord is in our midst, empowering us and encouraging us as we press on to know, love, and serve Him more.