Information Overload: Winning the Battle of Faith Over Facts
Do we trust the world’s answers more than we believe in the ability of God to redeem and work through our confusion?
Do we trust the world’s answers more than we believe in the ability of God to redeem and work through our confusion?
All of us, no matter who we are or how hard we have been hit by the wrecking ball of 2020, can take heart knowing that Jesus comes to meet us at our places of need.
How do we overcome our fears so that we can help our kids overcome their fears? The answer is questions. We can’t give the right answers unless we first ask the right questions.
Christ-focused discipleship simply reminds us of our first love, encouraging us not to look first to public servants to accomplish what Christ has already guaranteed to do.
My prayer is that we are able to step outside of the noise, and see this uncertain moment as an an opportunity to renew our vision of covenant fidelity to God while inviting our students into that hope.
The sooner we admit our vulnerability to ourselves, to our friends, and to our children, the sooner we can stop holding ourselves and our kids hostage to unattainable ideals, and lead them instead into the rest and freedom of life with Christ.
The recognition of my lack of control over my family and the world they live in frees me to give the problem of their security over to the Lord himself.
Normal isn’t going back to the way things were. Normal is growth. Normal is releasing our belief that “the way things were” is the model of what is best.
We speak the truth of God and defend the hope within us as citizens of a greater Kingdom. So, what does this look like in this political age?