Answering Our Teenagers’ Hard Questions About Culture
Most of us were not fortunate enough to go to seminary; how is a regular mom or dad going to learn to speak biblically about the pressing issues of our time?
Most of us were not fortunate enough to go to seminary; how is a regular mom or dad going to learn to speak biblically about the pressing issues of our time?
Once teenagers discover who they are praying to, we will see it shape how they are praying.
Now is the time to teach our children about the terrible realities of sin and the glorious realities of the gospel.
Your life is hidden in Christ—and that has absolutely nothing to do with your performance. It has everything to do with His love and grace.
Our teens need to know that playing a sport isn’t who they are; it’s just one of the many ways they glorify God with their lives.
Looking Jesus as our example of how to engage the world with his message of hope and love, then we must consider our place, proximity, and posture.
We are unique and set apart because we are united fully and completely to our Savior, not because we are on center stage.
While the fruit of gospel formation may not been seen until a child is grown, it is in the soil of childhood that the seeds are planted.
There is a temptation among youth workers to be all things to all students. We need to resist that temptation and keep pointing our students toward Christ and his church.