Guiding Principles for Talking With Teenagers About Science and Faith
We want to provide teaching about science that will give students confidence in the Scriptures—without causing them to think they must disengage from scientific enquiry.
We want to provide teaching about science that will give students confidence in the Scriptures—without causing them to think they must disengage from scientific enquiry.
Many young Christians have their faith shattered when academic authorities propound Darwinian evolution as established science and ridicule those who advance God as Creator.
Jesus doesn’t shut the mouth of Thomas or others who doubt, but allows them to share their questions.
The only sure thing you have in this life is God Himself: You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.
Joe Gibbes, Rector of the Episcopal Church of Our Saviour, offers seven meditations for Holy Week.
Addressing students’ personal concerns communicates that we want them to experience a beautiful, deep, and true faith in every corner of their lives.
If we hope to capture our students’ longing for a more gracious vision of sex, we need the Holy Spirit to breathe life into our teaching.
The Gospel teaches parents that we are to encourage certain childlike qualities in our teenagers even as we lead them into spiritual maturity.
We build up teenagers only when the God of the Bible, not the student, is at the center of our ministries.