Leading Our Youth Ministries at the End of COVID
If God pursued us and died for us when we were his enemies, we can trust him to sustain us and lead us in love and wisdom now that we are his beloved sons and daughters.
If God pursued us and died for us when we were his enemies, we can trust him to sustain us and lead us in love and wisdom now that we are his beloved sons and daughters.
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.
Apart from the biblical narrative, we would often lose heart–but those who know and worship King Jesus have a hope that is not of this world.
What if we could reframe the discussion around numbers? What if instead of asking, “how many students came?” we asked, “who came?”
As we welcome our youth group alumni home this Christmas season, I pray our conversations will be “always full of grace.”
The word church in the New Testament literally means “the gathering,“ which tells us something about what he intended it to look like.
We don’t have to get God to like us or love us through our prayers. God is already favorably disposed toward us because of Jesus.
When our students articulate confusion about relating to God, we have an opportunity to engage with them personally and to walk with them in discipleship.
Jesus’ whole life was really about modeling the Greatest commandment, so loving God and our neighbor is our purpose, just as it was Christ’s.