Getting Them to Talk: Engaging Your Students with the Creativity of Christ
Love Incarnate follows the Spirit’s lead in every scenario, refusing to apply a one-size-fits-all approach to relational engagement.
Love Incarnate follows the Spirit’s lead in every scenario, refusing to apply a one-size-fits-all approach to relational engagement.
What are some ways a male youth pastor can personally and wisely disciple girls in the youth group?
When your teenager expresses doubt about Jesus or contradicts Biblical teaching, recognize that your child is wrestling with the God who laid down his life to save him.
Curiosity strengthens relationship; questions confer dignity. If you want your child to talk to you, try asking more and telling less.
Youth group meetings outside of regular Sunday morning worship reinforce gospel truths so that our kids will begin to know God’s love for them.
When we share with our children what God is doing in our lives, we show them that God is at work not because of who we are but because of who he is.
Sometimes we parents have to get creative (dare I say, a little sneaky, sometimes?) to find ways to talk to our kids about God.
The art of interpersonal curiosity—being interested about the lives of other people—serves three amazing purposes: it’s profoundly biblical, it fuels well-being and connection, and it’s the foundation of how to share Christ with our peers.
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.