Why the Gospel Must Always Have the Last Word in Youth Curriculum
Teenagers need to hear the perfect requirements of the law, and then they need to be brought to life with the message of the gospel—that those requirements have been met by Jesus.
Teenagers need to hear the perfect requirements of the law, and then they need to be brought to life with the message of the gospel—that those requirements have been met by Jesus.
Like Daniel, we want a specific timeline telling us when we will stop suffering, when evil kings will get their due, and when God will finally rescue his people.
When we have an eternal outlook, it keeps us from exasperating our children by pushing too hard toward earthly goals.
There are many reasons to be afraid in this world. But the message of Daniel and of Jesus is the same.
Welcome to this month’s Rooted Parent Top 10 – a list of parenting articles from across the web for the Rooted community.
If God pursued us and died for us when we were his enemies, we can trust him to sustain us and lead us in love and wisdom now that we are his beloved sons and daughters.
Teenagers want to see adults unafraid to engage any subject or idea, and to be able to share why the Gospel matters in all of it.
Even as I preach the gospel of rest and acceptance to myself, those ugly performance idols keep rearing up, beckoning me to worship achievement above Jesus.
The Maker of my soul is also the Lover of my soul. Truly, this is the God who cares to number the hairs on our heads.