Serving Teenagers from Immigrant Families
Our Savior calls us to love all our neighbors, whatever their culture and wherever their native home.
Our Savior calls us to love all our neighbors, whatever their culture and wherever their native home.
In light of the gospel, there’s no shame or condemnation for those in Christ (Rom. 8:1), and the Lord opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble (James 4:6).
It’s hard to provide spiritual nourishment to teenagers if you haven’t nourished yourself.
If we don’t see “evidence” of God’s promises at work in the way we want them to be, then we doubt God’s goodness.
Jesus stepped into our broken world and endured unimaginable suffering, not so we would never face hardship, but so we could know that he is with us in the midst of it.
Christ himself, not content to let you wallow in the muck of your sin, traded places with you, became for you the branch that does not break.
Of course, in one sense you aren’t the mountain leader, university professor, or party host. These roles are God’s—it’s his Spirit alone who can teach us the truth.
The formation of Christian identity in our children is a journey that requires both intentional guidance and profound trust.
Our faithful, caring, and kind Shepherd protects his weary, weak, and worn-out sheep.