This article argues that Isaiah’s Advent prophecies help children see the breadth of God’s saving work in Christ by holding together what we often separate—spiritual and physical realities, Old Testament promise and Messiah, judgment and mercy, weakness and strength.
How to Help Children Grasp What Advent Means →
This article helps parents explain Advent to children by framing it as the long-awaited arrival of the Messiah and recommending simple, read-aloud family devotions from Isaiah that make that hope concrete and memorable.
Why Cohabitation Isn't Good Preparation for Marriage →
This article argues that cohabitation is a poor rehearsal for marriage because it mimics some outward features of married life without the covenant commitment that actually makes marriage what it is, and therefore trains couples in performance and exit rather than lifelong faithfulness.
3 Ways to Help Teenagers Bring Relationships Into Focus →
This article offers three practical ways to help teenagers think more clearly and faithfully about their relationships by using biblical wisdom as a guide for decision-making.
How to Teach Our Kids Faithfulness in Today's Culture →
This article argues that parents teach faithfulness in today’s culture not mainly by panic or withdrawal, but by helping their children remember God’s past provision and victory so they can resist both fearful retreat and compromising surrender.
Why I Write for Kids →
This article explains that I write for kids because I want the next generation to live in God-shaped reality, grow curious about truth, develop lifelong Bible habits, and be prepared to influence the world faithfully for Christ.
How to Teach the Reformation to the Next Generation →
This article argues that teaching the Reformation to children requires more than passing along its doctrines; parents and leaders must also embody the five solas in the habits, priorities, and culture of everyday life so that the next generation both learns and catches the gospel.
What Should Biblical Equipping Look Like →
This article argues that truly “equipping” Christians is less about elaborate programs and more about helping ordinary believers, through the gospel, speak biblical truth to one another in everyday, word-centered ministry.