Teenagers Need the Church When Leaders Fail
There is a temptation among youth workers to be all things to all students. We need to resist that temptation and keep pointing our students toward Christ and his church.
There is a temptation among youth workers to be all things to all students. We need to resist that temptation and keep pointing our students toward Christ and his church.
From what I’ve observed, the two sustaining factors in kids continuing in church are the centrality of the gospel preached and a love for the full body of the church.
We should fight for community. Our students are dying for it. The Church is built on it. Our mission is driven by it.
May we never cease to lead our students to the only one who is able to truly meet their deepest needs with transformative grace.
Jesus moves from solitude to community to ministry. He teaches his disciples to do likewise.
We must pray to stop seeing boys and girls as “other people’s kids,” and start extending our love and care to them as if they are “ours,” and as valuable as our own.
The twenties hit a sweet spot for connecting with students: we still have (most!) of the youthful energy we had as teenagers, yet, we also have walked with the Lord longer and can offer a bit more perspective beyond the high school years.
I pulled into a parking space outside the high school gym and grabbed my purse. I didn’t want to be late for the first varsity football parents meeting. My son had sweated through years of football to get…
A classic youth group game is ‘tug of war.’ I’m sure you know it. There is one large rope, and two teams who line up next to the rope, facing each other like jousting warriors. The aim is…