How to Talk So Parents Will Listen: Building Rapport as a Youth Minister
We are called to support parents in their calling as the first and most important disciplers of their children.
We are called to support parents in their calling as the first and most important disciplers of their children.
Only when students have been welcomed by Christ through the gospel and know who they are in him will they even have the desire to welcome others.
Because Jesus has radically welcomed us into his family, we have the opportunity to remind students that we belong to each other.
While there are many worthwhile activities and communities our families may be involved in, the church should take precedence because it is ordained by God as the vessel through which he brings his kingdom to earth
It should not be surprising when young people leave the church after graduation if we did not expect them be a real part of it before.
For a generation categorized by loneliness, I believe there is great value in discipling students through the building of deep relationships.
“You’ve been alone long enough” is the refrain of the Advent season; Jesus is coming.
The commitment to return to in-person church activities is an investment that will cost us some of the freedoms we might have enjoyed during the lockdown.
Teenagers need us to remind them that true community is found not in seeing themselves tagged in a friend’s Instagram story but in taking part in Christ’s Church.