Where Else Would We Go?
I found out about FaithWriters.com while doing my course last semester.
It offers monthly blogging contests which promote their program to
Biblically based websites and ministries who
have a need for Christian content. In return, the ministries agree to
hire the winners of the contest for paid writing assignments they
need for their site and ministry.
One of my goals for 2013 is to participate in the monthly contests. I figure it will give me great practice, and a reason to write regularly :)
February's contest highlights crossexamined.org, a apologetic ministry which goes to high schools, universities, ect to address the question of why 75%of our students leave the faith after high school. The assignment is to write a promotional piece for the solution, equipping our kids and us
One of my goals for 2013 is to participate in the monthly contests. I figure it will give me great practice, and a reason to write regularly :)
February's contest highlights crossexamined.org, a apologetic ministry which goes to high schools, universities, ect to address the question of why 75%of our students leave the faith after high school. The assignment is to write a promotional piece for the solution, equipping our kids and us
In the gospels we see Jesus’ rising popularity, everywhere
he went there was a crowd of adoring fans. But Jesus wasn’t impressed by the
quantity of their response but rather the quality of their response. His call
is to love Him for whom He is, not for who we think He should be and for what
we can get from Him. I love the way Mr. Beaver says it from Narnia, “Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good. He’s the King, I tell
you.” We will never have all the answers to all the questions and arguments
against Jesus, but we can plead with God that each of
us will have enough confidence in the goodness of God to run to Him to find
answers and hope.
The statistics say that 75% of our current students
attending our churches will fall away from the faith, and as I consider how to
help prepare our students for university life and beyond where their faith will
meet much opposition, a few key issues press upon my heart.
If it’s true that God’s kindness is what leads us to
repentance, let’s show our students how far His kindness really does extend.
Often when we see people asking for healing in the gospels, Jesus deals with their
spiritual healing first. We are dead in our sin but Christ can make us alive.
We deserve God’s full wrath because we have sinned against an infinite God; but
because He is an infinite God we can receive unending love, forgiveness and
mercy from Him. The more we see Jesus for He really is, His
beauty and His worth, the more sin and the things of this world will become
less attractive.
Let’s model for our students an
ever-increasing dependence God’s word. His word isn’t just good morals, it is
the truth and is what leads us to salvation. It is so important to provide our
students with safe environments to ask the hard questions before they have to
deal with them alone in tough environments. Apologetic ministries like crossexamined.org, can play an enormous part in preparing each one of us to be able to
defend our faith with gentleness and respect. We were never meant to live out our
faith alone, we need each other’s help to stay strong in what we believe.
Above everything else, let’s just point our
students to Jesus, the author and perfector of our faith. Following Jesus does not guarantee a safe and
easy life. It’s quite the opposite, considering that 11 out of 12 disciples
died for what they believed. Many people, then and now, leave Jesus in the
midst of adversity. By God’s grace alone, may our confession and
confidence be like Peter’s, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You
have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the
Holy One of God.”
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