John’s Long Christmas Story
This year, our students have seen so much with their physical eyes…But the gospel message John offers here is a call to see something beautiful, powerful, and compelling.
This year, our students have seen so much with their physical eyes…But the gospel message John offers here is a call to see something beautiful, powerful, and compelling.
When Mary is faced with an opportunity to glorify herself, she rejoices only in the unearned mercy God has shown her.
If you are a youth worker without a plan for ministry to students questioning their gender, don’t put it off any longer.
Each month we compile a Top Ten list for youth workers. This list represents ten articles from various sources that we believe will encourage you in your ministry to students and their families.
As we teach Luke’s birth narratives, we can proclaim the lovingkindness of our God, who welcomes those who are often held at a distance.
For students grappling with increased awareness of the brokenness of the world, an always-Christmas-never-Advent Christianity can seem like a childish solution to an irrelevant problem.
As if things weren’t complicated enough in a normal December, this year we have rising COVID numbers, shorter days, and falling temperatures to add hurdles to our usual Christmas parties.
Youth need to learn that while they were still sinners, Christ died for them. They need to hear that God so loved them that he gave his Son—who died voluntarily in their place to cancel the debt of their sins.
Christmas isn’t the Hallmark movie of the Bible. The triumph of God and his Messiah over evil is a story we are involved in.