Why Teenagers Need a Theology of Suffering
Teens and young adults want to know: if God is so loving, why does he allow his people, whom he saved through faith in Jesus Christ, to suffer?
Teens and young adults want to know: if God is so loving, why does he allow his people, whom he saved through faith in Jesus Christ, to suffer?
The commitment to return to in-person church activities is an investment that will cost us some of the freedoms we might have enjoyed during the lockdown.
In the spirit of early Christmas shopping that seems to sweeping our nation, we thought we’d help parents get an early start with their gift-giving in 2021.
With the release of Shang-Chi on Disney+, here is a discussion guide for families and student ministries that might be interested in watching the film together.
When we participate in the church, we are living out vows we made to God on behalf of all the church’s children – including our own- when they were baptized.
When our students articulate confusion about relating to God, we have an opportunity to engage with them personally and to walk with them in discipleship.
Rather than food leading to prayer and love, God’s love, with prayer, enables us to eat restoratively, day after day, meal after meal.
We show our children how to seek God and his truth, and how to measure secondhand information with the standards the Bible provides.
Church is a place of refuge, the only place I know of where who I am is not determined by what I do.