faith in motion https://remnantfellowshipatlanta.com Remnant Fellowship of Atlanta Thu, 28 Aug 2025 22:03:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://remnantfellowshipatlanta.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/cropped-LogoR-01-994x768-1-32x32.webp faith in motion https://remnantfellowshipatlanta.com 32 32 Faith in Motion: Helping Young Adults Live Out the Gospel https://remnantfellowshipatlanta.com/faith-in-motion-helping-young-adults-live-out-the-gospel/ Thu, 28 Aug 2025 22:02:53 +0000 https://remnantfellowshipatlanta.com/?p=1572 Read more ›]]> Faith is not static. It’s not simply a belief tucked away in the heart or a statement spoken on Sunday. Faith is active, vibrant, and visible—it moves. For young adults, this truth is especially important. In a world filled with distractions and competing voices, young adults are not just looking for words about God; they are looking for ways to live for God.

The church’s role is to help them turn faith into action—transforming belief into lifestyle, conviction into courage, and discipleship into daily obedience.

Why Faith in Motion Matters for Young Adults

Moving from Words to Works

James reminds us: “Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead” (James 2:17). Belief without action is incomplete. For young adults, living faith means stepping out of comfort zones, embracing opportunities to serve, and showing the gospel in practical ways.

Authenticity in a Watching World

Our culture is full of skepticism, especially toward religious institutions. Young adults want authenticity—they want to see faith that makes a difference. And so does the world. It isn’t convinced by religious talk but by consistent, visible action: compassion for the hurting, integrity in the workplace, generosity with resources, and love that breaks barriers.

Barriers Young Adults Face in Living Out the Gospel

Cultural Pressures

Social media, career ambition, and societal expectations often pull young adults away from visibly practicing their faith. The fear of standing out—or being labeled—can silence witness.

Fear of Rejection

Many hesitate to share faith because they fear being ridiculed or excluded. This can make living boldly for Christ difficult in classrooms, workplaces, or even among friends.

Lack of Opportunity

Too often, churches unintentionally sideline young adults, waiting until they’re “older” before trusting them with responsibility. This delays their growth and hinders their ability to put faith into practice.

How the Church Can Help Young Adults Put Faith in Motion

Empower Them to Serve

Young adults thrive when given real opportunities. Invite them to lead worship, mentor younger youth, join mission teams, serve in outreach, or use their creativity in media and technology. Responsibility fosters ownership.

Teach Practical Discipleship

Faith in motion means more than Sunday service. Equip young adults to apply Scripture in their workplaces, friendships, dating relationships, and even online presence. Show them how discipleship touches every part of life.

Model Faith in Action

Older believers have the privilege of showing what living faith looks like. When young adults see their mentors serving the poor, speaking truth with love, or practicing forgiveness, they learn by example.

Build Accountability and Encouragement

Faith grows in community. Create spaces—small groups, mentoring pairs, prayer circles—where young adults can share how they’re living out faith, celebrate victories, and receive encouragement during struggles.

The Impact of Faith in Motion

Personal Transformation

When faith becomes active, it deepens. Young adults who serve and lead discover resilience, courage, and a stronger relationship with God.

Community Impact

A church full of engaged young adults is alive with energy, vision, and hope. Their presence revitalizes ministries and strengthens the whole body of Christ.

Kingdom Growth

Faith in motion doesn’t stop at the church door. Young adults living the gospel bring Christ to campuses, workplaces, neighborhoods, and even across nations. A generation in motion can change the world.

Conclusion

Faith in motion is more than an idea—it’s the call of the gospel. Young adults are not just the church of tomorrow; they are the church of today. And when they put faith into action, they don’t just talk about Jesus—they show Jesus.

Let us, as the body of Christ, commit to guiding, equipping, and encouraging young adults to live out the gospel boldly. When they do, the Kingdom advances—not in theory, but in reality.

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