Shows teens how living for Jesus makes a genuine difference—even in the midst of personal challenges and global uncertainty.
Being a teenager has always been complicated. And these days, it’s even more so; mental-health struggles, social upheaval, climate issues, the rise of AI, wars and political polarisation all add to the sense of uncertainty.
In the midst of all that, can Jesus really make a positive difference in your life? What about when being a Christian puts you at odds with the values of your friends and with society in general? Is following Jesus worth it?
Chris Morphew wants to show you why it absolutely is. However good you think the good news of Jesus is, it’s better. If you stick with him, he’ll help you navigate all the challenges of our uncertain world in a way that nothing and no one else can. Discover how to follow Jesus in a way that genuinely impacts every area of your life for the better—and the lives of the people you know and love.
This book will encourage any Christian teenager and makes a great gift.
Age range: | 13+ |
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Contributors | Chris Morphew |
ISBN | 9781802542745 |
Format | eBook |
First published | March 2025 |
Language | English |
Publisher | The Good Book Company |
Mix together some psychology, science, culture and a whole bunch of gospel, and you’ve got Worth It. This practical book goes back to the basics of God’s story of love and justice, showing how you can live as a Christian today. This isn’t just theory. This is real.
Jesus promised to give us the fullest life possible. But how can we trust Jesus? What does living with Jesus even look like? Chris Morphew’s Worth It is concise, easy-to-read, and yet comprehensive. There’s a lot here to encourage and equip us to live our best lives in Jesus.
I am happy to say that Chris Morphew’s Worth It is worth it—worth some close reading, worth sharing with a teenager, worth time spent meditating on and talking about the truths he shares. Morphew has a knack for opening the Scripture with straightforward and biblically faithful warmth, engaging rather than patronizing the teenage reader. He does not shy away from hard truths about God’s word or about our world. The happy result is a theological resource for teenagers that they (and the adults who love them) can trust.