Count the Cost: Advice for Parents of Athletes
Knowing Christ should be the highest aim in our parenting, not our children’s’ athletic success.
Sarah Eekhoff Zylstra’s recent long-form reporting for The Gospel Coalition, “Youth Sports, Healthy Families, and the Future of the Church,” caught our team’s eye as an important read (or listen) for youth ministers and parents.
Knowing Christ should be the highest aim in our parenting, not our children’s’ athletic success.
Youth minister, on those discouraging nights when many of your regular kids are missing, don’t forget to preach the gospel to yourself.
I don’t know about you, but where I live, sports are a big deal to students and their families. It isn’t uncommon for sports, not the church, to hold a higher priority in the life of a student….
At the close of a back-to-school event our youth ministry hosted, a student wandered up to thank me for the work the youth staff had invested in that night. He thanked me for the fun. He thanked me…
In this three-part series of articles, John Perritt addresses the pervasive problem of American youth sports culture. Read the first article in the series here. How to jeopardize your job in student ministry, Step 1: Talk Negatively About…
If youth ministry has revealed anything to me about the current state of our students and families, it is the fact that the soul of a student often comes in second to their swing…or pitch…or shot…or performance. I know…