Knowing What We Don’t Know: How Our Spiritual Limits Bring Us Closer to God
Jesus’s death and resurrection frees us from the fears that our inability to know and understand can produce.
Jesus’s death and resurrection frees us from the fears that our inability to know and understand can produce.
We become what we give our attention to.
Welcome to Rooted’s Top Ten, a curated reading list for youth ministers. Each month we find ten articles, and sometimes videos or podcasts, from various sources that we believe will encourage you in your ministry to teenagers and their families.
Welcome to the Rooted Parent Top Ten, a curated list of resources from across the web that we believe will be helpful to parents raising teenagers. Here you’ll find articles, podcasts, and videos to support you in gospel- centered discipleship and interpreting youth culture.
Just as God sent Moses to deliver the people of Israel, he also sent Jesus to deliver the people of the world—only Jesus was a better Moses.
No matter what we are presently facing, God wants us to know that he sees us, he loves us, and he’s got the whole world in his hands.
The theological hope that arises from the spirituals is that King Jesus not only understands our troubles, but has journeyed through them.
Similar to the way the rituals and memories of birthdays and holiday traditions strengthen family bonds, our teenagers’ embrace of the sacraments has deepened the fellowship of our church family.
Satan loves to use the good things we desire to push us beyond our God-given limits and into sin.