Going to Church When You Think You Might Not Like What You Hear
As long as I approached Scripture deciding what to believe and what to discard, I missed out on so much peace.
As long as I approached Scripture deciding what to believe and what to discard, I missed out on so much peace.
Our students belong to a Good Shepherd who will lead them and guide them exactly where he wants them to go in exactly the way he intends.
It’s not actually up to our children to be masters of their own destinies. And it’s certainly not up to us as their parents.
Gimmicks and games aren’t going to address the grief we’re all collectively feeling, but the gospel can and will.
God takes that which doesn’t make sense, and even seems impossible, and uses it for His glory and our good.
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.
But our hope is not in a leader on Capitol Hill; it’s in the One who will rule from David’s throne.
My prayer is that we are able to step outside of the noise, and see this uncertain moment as an an opportunity to renew our vision of covenant fidelity to God while inviting our students into that hope.
I cannot make a choice for my child’s education that will be problem-free, painless, easy, or simple. This virus has not left that possibility open to us.