Stuck But Not Hopeless: Lessons from a Global Pandemic
When we fix our eyes on the unseen promises of God, we can trust that no matter what happens on this earth, He is sovereign and He reigns.
When we fix our eyes on the unseen promises of God, we can trust that no matter what happens on this earth, He is sovereign and He reigns.
Teaching in Matthew 11, Christina encourages parents and youth pastors to remember that Jesus’ work brings us rest.
Longfellow digs beneath his pain to something so engrained in him as a follower of Christ that it has to surface, even in the darkest of times: the Gospel.
If we over-fondly remember pre-pandemic “normal” as some kind of Eden we’ve been kicked out of, we risk sounding like the Israelites yearning for slavery in Egypt as they faced the privations of the desert.
Christ-focused discipleship simply reminds us of our first love, encouraging us not to look first to public servants to accomplish what Christ has already guaranteed to do.
In Jesus, we have been sealed by the Holy Spirit into the love of God poured out to us through Christ (Rom. 5:5). Jesus is our sustaining hope, and the only hope we have to offer teenagers in this present time of suffering.
Our students do not have to continue to feel hopeless in the dark captivity they feel at their school or in this world. Rather, they may rest in the fact that they have a Savior in heaven who stands at the right hand of God and intercedes on their behalf.
When we’re unsure of everything else, we can become certain of Him. We may not know where He wants us to go, how we will get there, or why the answer is sometimes ‘no,’ but in time all that seems wrong will be proven as right.
Any report regarding me before God the Father is “well done my good and faithful servant” (Matthew 25:23). This is not because I am incredibly good and faithful, but because I have been beautifully united to the One who is.