top of page

REVOLUTION 25-26: What God Did This Year

  • Writer: Eric Summers
    Eric Summers
  • 6 days ago
  • 2 min read

We asked students one word to describe Revolution this year. Here's what they said: impactful. challenging. growth. helpful. over-flowing.

That's AWESOME!

We tried something new this year, we took a step back and listened. We asked our students what they learned, what they loved, and what they wanted more of. And every answer encouraged us.


This year, they leaned into the hard stuff. Passover. The Holy Spirit. Apologetics. Big Questions. Series that asked something of them — and they showed up for it. They didn't just want the easy version of faith. They wanted something real.


The moments they remembered most weren't just the big events — though Silent Disco and Snowbird and Mission Trip made the list. What stuck with them was when faith felt tangible. A Seder Meal around a table. A service project where they got their hands dirty. Family dinners where community felt like something you could actually touch.


And here's what they said God taught them this year: prayer matters. Boldness in sharing faith. Kindness even when it isn't returned. Getting outside comfort zones. Sharing struggles with other believers. Building bridges.

That's not a curriculum talking. That's discipleship happening.


None of this happens without the leaders who show up week after week — every Wednesday night, every bus ride, every prayer in a hallway before things got started. They helped create a place where students encountered Jesus and found community. That's the whole thing, right there.


We're not done. Next season, the students are already asking for more — more service, more depth, more spaces where they can wrestle with what they believe. We're going to keep building something worth showing up for.

Thanks for being part of it. See you in August!

 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
The Holy Spirit: Closer Than You Think

When most people think about their relationship with God, they tend to picture something distant—prayers sent upward, guidance coming from afar. But Scripture paints a very different picture. Through

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page