Three Reasons to Study Romans With Your Youth Group
Coming to grips with our radical need before God puts all of the struggles our teenagers have (and our struggles, for that matter) in proper perspective.
Coming to grips with our radical need before God puts all of the struggles our teenagers have (and our struggles, for that matter) in proper perspective.
The good news is that our wandering doesn’t sever us from Christ.
Here are just a few of our favorite articles and podcasts about theological depth in Bible teaching to teenagers.
So much of teenage culture today is about getting even; Peter urges that we take the insult, forgive, and pray for our oppressor rather than “canceling” that person.
The Ephesian believers, just like many of our students today, were still finding their identity in what they did, or who their family was. Paul reminded them that their identity was now in Jesus Christ alone.
If you’re willing to teach it, some of your students will hear and accept Jude’s warning.
Instead of standing as one option among many viable paths to purpose, the cross serves as the axis around which the entire cosmos revolves.
If teenagers can handle the Pythagorean theorem, they can handle theology.
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).