Kids’ Questions
Rather than protecting our kids’ faith from the world or conforming it to the world, we need to prepare it for the world.
As Easter approaches, we think through how to answer perhaps the most important question our kids could ask.
The messages secular entertainment promotes to our kids are more powerful and pervasive than we may realize, but the gospel message is stronger still. How do we ensure the gospel is what shapes their hearts?
A widely recognized fatherhood crisis plagues our nation. Not only have too many fathers abandoned their children, too many have abandoned the loving authority to which God calls them.
Our words should reflect the truth of reality as God has created it and lovingly guide others to do the same.
How do we help our kids think through apparent biblical contradictions and the deeper ethical conundrums they reflect?
Gender is a gift we receive from God and live out for his glory and our good.
When you reflect on what prayer is—an opportunity to bring our needs before a heavenly Father who loves us and is willing and able to give us all we need—the better question is why don’t we pray more!
Both our identities and our kids’ are constantly being shaped; how can we ensure that they are being shaped by the gospel and not the world’s ideals?
We live in an epidemic of loneliness, but the gospel offers the hope of enjoying the relationships with God and others we were created to enjoy.
Christians can neither flee into narrow enclaves or conform to the broader culture but must be ambassadors for Christ.
Christians are called to preserve life and defend truth while loving unborn children AND their mothers.
Going to church is not about us…and it’s the best thing we can do for ourselves and our families.
God calls Christians to do justice (Micah 6:8), but justice is distorted when equality is replaced with equity.