Reflections of a Youth Pastor in a Battleground State
Precisely because we are a people who believe in God’s sovereign control and unchanging mission, we can’t dismiss the personal pain of others.
Precisely because we are a people who believe in God’s sovereign control and unchanging mission, we can’t dismiss the personal pain of others.
“First of all then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way.”
Today on Rooted we are praying for our country and ourselves.
In this fraught and anxious season, when we are wearied by coronavirus, racial injustice, political division, and the rage and sadness of it all, we bear witness to the love of God when we obey the most difficult command of all.
God is so much better than we could carve him up to be. He is holy.
Facing the unknown can be terrifying. As parents and disciplers of youth, we often wonder if anything we do will bear fruit.
In the absence of my father, on whom I had always depended for my spiritual, physical, and even emotional needs, I learned what it meant to find refuge in my Savior who loves me better than my earthly father ever could.
The steadfast Jesus who was then – lover, healer, provider, savior – is the same King Jesus who is now; he has not left his throne.
But our hope is not in a leader on Capitol Hill; it’s in the One who will rule from David’s throne.