Psalm 33: Medicine for Disappointed Teenagers
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.
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.
As ministers of the gospel, we can recenter our students’ confidence by pointing them to the Savior who will not disappoint.
When there are many different levels of understanding in the room, the struggle to teach with theological depth is real. But I am more prepared for it than I used to be. Here’s how I’m getting there.
The overall goal of theological depth is not a new education program…It’s about allowing the gospel to saturate their inner-being.
For our students to think miracles are unlikely, they are making deeper assumptions about the world.
Jesus is the one who comes looking for you and for each of your students saying, “I love you. Trust me.”
Human performance cannot earn us forgiveness; we need a perfect substitutionary sacrifice who dies in our place (Lev. 17:11; Heb. 9:22).
We can shepherd our students through their sin by pointing them to the forgiveness offered by the death of Jesus on the cross.