Jason Lamb
3.9K posts

Jason Lamb
@jasonglamb
Jesus follower! Husband & Father. President at Dare 2 Share Ministries.
Arvada, CO Katılım Kasım 2008
583 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler

@jt_english @lukedsimmons kinder’s is good for sure. Have you tried @KosmosQ rubs? They are my favorite
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"Energize is more than a conference, it's a catalyst for revival in youth ministry," says Jason Lamb, President of... prn.to/4pMHomz
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This kid is living his dream!! Thanks for giving my boy a moment of your time for that pregame interview @tylershough2!! @espn and at @NFL - future sideline reporter getting it done for the @oregonfootball ducks
youtube.com/shorts/Y7MKAbo…
#lambystakes
@Saints

YouTube
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Jason Lamb retweetledi

“I am sure my excitement is selling me out. The Day of Global Youth Evangelism is here!”
Want to see more people excited of the Day of Global Youth Evangelism? Head over to the Impact page!
d2shr.co/4hGQEWs
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Jason Lamb retweetledi
Jason Lamb retweetledi

Today at church ask your youth leader to do The Day of Global Youth Evangelism on November 8th.
It is free.
It is powerful.
It effectively trains and mobilizes teenagers to share the Gospel.
It can be done with 5 teenagers or 500.
dare2share.org/day-of-global-…
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Jason Lamb retweetledi

I truly believe that 90% of the anxiety and mental health challenges that teenagers battle with today could be alleviated by a true and deep understanding of the Gospel of grace. I may be off in my percentages, but, after working with teenagers for almost 40 years, that’s my non-scientific guess.
According to Dr Kara Powell the 3 big questions teens struggle with center around their identity, belonging and purpose.
All three of these questions are powerfully answered in the Gospel.
When we place our faith in Christ we find our identity as a child of God, our belonging with the people of God and our purpose in the mission of God.
The final “10%” of challenges teens face can be dealt with through Biblical counseling and therapy, but the Gospel message itself is often VASTLY underestimated when it comes to bringing deep healing to young, broken souls.
I know firsthand.
Growing up in a poor, violent, fatherless and extremely dangerous family, I was a prime candidate for trauma therapy.
By the age of ten, I witnessed and experienced unthinkable trauma that most people don’t experience over the course of their entire lives (if you don’t believe me read my book Unlikely Fighter.)
The Gospel was my trauma therapy. I don’t say this lightly, tritely or glibly. It truly was.
Learning that I was unconditionally loved by my Heavenly Father helped heal my father wounds at the deepest level. Discovering that my new Father would never leave me or forsake me gave me unspeakable joy and confidence to face both my traumatic past and my uncertain future. The promises in God’s Word became the new voices in my head, speaking truths over the many lies I had believed beforehand.
The simple and pure gospel, that declares that we are saved by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, was shockingly assuring to my young traumatized soul. The fact that, once I put my faith in Jesus and was adopted into his family, I couldn’t do anything to make him love me less or love me more, did more to heal my soul than a thousand hours of therapy ever could.
Having said this, I’m not anti-counseling or anti-therapy (I could have used some them and probably need some now!) But the Gospel of grace must be the centerpiece of all effective therapy. If not, it’s merely putting a bandaid on a gaping wound.
Pastors, therapists, counselors, youth leaders, teachers and parents of teens, preach the Gospel of grace, teach the Gospel of grace, explain the Gospel of grace. Do so until young people accept, believe and walk in the Gospel of grace.
“But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and forever! Amen.” 2 Peter 3:18
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@AshFarms God created you to be with Him.
Our sins separate us from God.
Sins cannot be removed by good deeds.
PAYING THE PRICE FOR SIN, JESUS CHIST the Son of God DIED AND ROSE AGAIN.
Everyone who trusts in Him and Him alone has eternal life.
Life with Jesus starts now and lasts forever.
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I remain Jesus-Curious, but I want to be real for a minute and say some things:
- I was shocked by the music before it began, it was so beautiful. I didn't know that people looked like that when they sang along; like so connected to something. I cried a lot during the music and don't know why.
- I knew that Charlie was a Christian, but I didn't know that he did all of this for Jesus. I knew he loved Jesus, but I thought more about his drive for social change and real leaders. I didn't know he like literally did it all for Jesus.
- If @bennyjohnson was a pastor, I would go to that church every week.
- I realize a big thing I am afraid of with it is having to change. I would have to change. What Erika said about the answer is love and always love... I'd have to change.
I don't know. But I do know that I came to X to complain about the USDA and now I'm writing my feelings about Jesus on the internet. I have met so many amazing people here who believe in Jesus and I never expected that.
This was long.

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Jason Lamb retweetledi

In light of #CharlieKirk’s horrifying assassination last week I address Christian teenagers directly in this video about how to respond at a time like this.
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Jason Lamb retweetledi
Jason Lamb retweetledi

IN A WORLD GONE MAD WHAT DO WE TELL OUR YOUNG PEOPLE?
From Charlie Kirk’s assassination to the school shooting in Evergreen, Colorado to the shooting down of Russian drones over Poland to the growing conflict in Israel and Gaza, the last 24 hour news cycle has been a shot to the solar plexus of the world….and specifically to the next generation.
My 20 year old daughter, Kailey, just called me minutes ago and, with a quivering voice, asked me, “What do I tell my discipleship group in light of what happened in the news today?”
Kailey asked out loud what many young people are whispering in the secret sanctuary of their nervous hearts.
So, what do we say?
In one sense there’s not a lot we can say. Sometimes silence is the best sermon.
But in another sense, there’s a lot we can say.
We must remind our Christian young people that we live in a fallen world, pointing them to the words of Jesus in John 16:33 that “in this world you will have trouble.”
But we must also remind them that there will be a day where death itself will die. I’m reminded of the words of the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:55-57,
“Where, O death, is your victory?Where, O death, is your sting?”The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Those young people who know Jesus as their Savior must be reminded that they need not fear death. Speaking of Jesus the writer of Hebrews put it this way,
“…he too shared in their humanity so that by his death he might break the power of him who holds the power of death—that is, the devil— and free those who all their lives were held in slavery by their fear of death.” Hebrews 2:14,15
Through the death of Jesus on the cross and his resurrection from the dead the power of Satan has been crushed once and for all. We who believe that Jesus died in our place for our sin have had our fear of death destroyed once and for all.
As I reminded my daughter, for those of us who are believers, the worst thing that could happen to us is the best thing that could happen to us. For us “to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord” 2 Corinthians 5:8.
Thank God for our hope of heaven through Jesus Christ!
We need to help our Christian young people live in holy, humble boldness, not afraid to die, not afraid to live, not afraid of anything….because of Jesus.
For those young people who are not yet Christians, this is a perfect (although painful) time to point them to the hope that is only found in Jesus.
Challenge your young people to take this opportunity to point their peers to Jesus.
In a world gone mad there is hope in Christ.
Now, in the midst of the madness, is the time to share it with everyone.
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Jason Lamb retweetledi
Jason Lamb retweetledi
Jason Lamb retweetledi

Words utterly escape me. I am heartbroken. Praying for his kids and family. God have mercy. This is not democracy. Lord help us. I urge you to pray with me, “We don’t know what to do, but our eyes are on you.”foxnews.com
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