Why the Gospel Must Always Have the Last Word in Youth Curriculum
Teenagers need to hear the perfect requirements of the law, and then they need to be brought to life with the message of the gospel—that those requirements have been met by Jesus.
Teenagers need to hear the perfect requirements of the law, and then they need to be brought to life with the message of the gospel—that those requirements have been met by Jesus.
Hope connects tasted grace with promised grace, motivating us for holiness.
By God’s grace, may we be disciple-makers who invest deeply in the lives of teenagers, always doing so with an eye to their highest good.
If you’re a youth pastor or small group leader, here are four ways to talk about Jesus in the book of Jonah.
A loving community of believers can hold different perspectives as long as we are in agreement about the gospel and the authority of God’s Word.
The Spirit gently reminds me of my own wayward heart. It’s as though he holds up a mirror through my children and I see myself in them.
God is not calling you to be what only he can be- he is calling you to lay your head on the pillow of his sovereignty and rest in knowing that he is God, and you are not.
He calls us to teach his Word to students in such a way that they are brought to faith and built up in faith, by his grace and for his glory.
Jesus didn’t just tell people how to live, but invited them to walk with him in the way of sacrificial love.