Heartfelt Advice to Women in Youth Ministry
There is nothing more you or I can do in service to the Lord or the church that would change the way God sees us or feels about you and me.
There is nothing more you or I can do in service to the Lord or the church that would change the way God sees us or feels about you and me.
Jesus, like Boaz and Ruth, did not concern himself with power dynamics but with loving his Father and serving his people.
Jesus can bring rest, even in the busiest and most wearying seasons.
When we remember the gospel of grace, we are free to see our work in the church as an expression of our love for Christ and his people.
By God’s sovereign grace, we are both called and necessary for the fullness of his plans to come to fruition.
Jesus meets our hurting students in their pain to show his long-suffering compassion and great love as they live in a world corrupted by sin.
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.
Whether you are similarly serving in a cultural heritage church setting as someone not from that culture, or you’re serving cross-culturally in a different context, I pray these three exhortations will be helpful in your ministry.
In this live webinar, host Clark Fobes sits down with 3 experienced practitioners in youth ministry: Dorothy Lau, Brian Ryu, and Kevin Yi, to discuss how Asian American Christianity intersects with Asian American cultural heritage.