Dear Bi-vocational Youth Minister, Your Labor is Not in Vain
If you are a bi-vocational youth minister, you are nothing close to a part-time kingdom servant. Your bi-vocational reality is a glorious gift.
If you are a bi-vocational youth minister, you are nothing close to a part-time kingdom servant. Your bi-vocational reality is a glorious gift.
God graciously provides a remedy for our God-blindness. This means of grace is simple and mundane: gathering for Sunday morning worship.
If you are a man serving in ministry alongside women, your brotherhood has the potential to be far more redemptive than you may realize.
There is nothing more you or I can do in service to the Lord or the church that would change the way God sees us or feels about you and me.
When we remember the gospel of grace, we are free to see our work in the church as an expression of our love for Christ and his people.
Jesus meets our hurting students in their pain to show his long-suffering compassion and great love as they live in a world corrupted by sin.
Whether you are similarly serving in a cultural heritage church setting as someone not from that culture, or you’re serving cross-culturally in a different context, I pray these three exhortations will be helpful in your ministry.
In this live webinar, host Clark Fobes sits down with 3 experienced practitioners in youth ministry: Dorothy Lau, Brian Ryu, and Kevin Yi, to discuss how Asian American Christianity intersects with Asian American cultural heritage.
Rather than only pointing out tech’s pitfalls and limiting its use, we can point our kids to a gospel-centered lifestyle in which healthy tech use is but a part.