When Your Teenager Won’t Talk to You
Curiosity strengthens relationship; questions confer dignity. If you want your child to talk to you, try asking more and telling less.
Curiosity strengthens relationship; questions confer dignity. If you want your child to talk to you, try asking more and telling less.
Apart from personal relationships which prove to us that we are seen, known, and sought out, it’s hard to believe God sees, cares, and acts for us. We need other people to help us believe.
Whether at school, on a team, or even online, God has placed countless people in the lives of our students, and we should introduce them to the joys of praying for those they love.
The art of interpersonal curiosity—being interested about the lives of other people—serves three amazing purposes: it’s profoundly biblical, it fuels well-being and connection, and it’s the foundation of how to share Christ with our peers.
What you will be encouraged to find is that the most essential and effective practices in making disciples basically remain intact. You can still pursue your mission.
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.
This truth is certain: We will lose the opportunity to speak about the hope of Christ that is in us if we are so preoccupied with promoting our own ideas about racial injustice that we never pause and listen.
Spending time at students’ events helps us remember that we are not simply pastors in offices, but shepherds called to nurture the flock entrusted to our care.
Jesus understands your pain and rejection. And yet, he remained faithful to complete his mission, even while praying on the cross, “Father, forgive them. They do not know what they are doing”.