Psalm 88- A Psalm For the Hopeless
In a world that tells students to grin and bear it, put on a happy face, and veg out until you can’t name your feelings, Scripture sings a different song.
In a world that tells students to grin and bear it, put on a happy face, and veg out until you can’t name your feelings, Scripture sings a different song.
Psalm 8 paints a stirring picture of the God who is worthy of our worship …Overflow of the heart manifests in words of adulation and praise to our great God. This is worship.
Psalm 19 shows us the beauty of an honest, joyful obedience that will sustain us and our teenagers over the long-haul.
In justification, the God of love is pursuing his lost children, reconciling us to himself.
The more we remind our students of God’s faithfulness in the past, the easier our students will navigate their uncertain present.
Our goal as youth pastors is to help students ground that love for God in knowledge, which will ultimately help them grow in their faith.
Instead of standing as one option among many viable paths to purpose, the cross serves as the axis around which the entire cosmos revolves.
The more you push your interns to behold Christ in his Word and in the life of their minds, the more like him they’ll look (2 Cor. 3:18).
Any theology that does not transform our hearts or make us look more like Jesus is really just vain philosophy and empty deceit.