Teaching Biblical Community In Youth Group
The reality is that our students do not simply want community; they need it. Yet they don’t need our manufactured versions. Our students need the community of the church the way God created it.
If you work with children, youth, or families long enough, you will encounter tragedy, and you will necessarily have to rise in leadership in those moments.

The reality is that our students do not simply want community; they need it. Yet they don’t need our manufactured versions. Our students need the community of the church the way God created it.
Teaching the Bible is a sacred calling that should not be taken lightly, yet we can engage with God’s Word without fear by humbly relying on the Spirit (1 Pet. 3:23-25).
Our students matter—not because of their personality, popularity, or performance, but because the King of the stars loved them enough to die for them.
As we walk with our students through their hurts and disappointments, Psalm 33 shows how the Lord’s unfailing love comforts and heals their broken hearts.
We are not putting ourselves up as perfect Christians who always look like Jesus. Instead, we recognize that the same gospel that brought us our salvation is the very gospel we need to live out our faith.
Worship isn’t a solo hike—it’s a shared pilgrimage, shaped by the voices and presence of others who are walking with God.