articles
« Previous Entries Next Entries »The Call to Open Source Ministry
Thursday, March 4th, 2010The call to Open Source ministry training originally posted here two weeks ago is reverberating on cyberspace. UrbanFaith.com republished it today, one week after Youth Specialties featured it as well. The Information Age has changed the cultural landscape, and our models for ministry must change along with it to stay relevant — and raise more [...]
On Starburst Nipple Rings and Super Bowl Memories
Sunday, February 7th, 2010Anticipating a great game — and half-time snoozefest — for Super Bowl XLIV, and remembering the controversy that precipitated the recent wave of half-time retreads? Originally posted in 2004. ___________________ Let’s Talk about Sex A sixteen year old boy ogles internet porn on his bedroom PC. His fourteen year old sister listens to Jessica Simpson’s [...]
Judah’s “Exciting Day with the Assistant Principal”
Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010My heart’s all aflutter seeing Judah’s interest and affinity for writing. Today his first published article went live, courtesy of the Journalism Stars club at PS 102. I reprint it in full here (for my own archival purposes) but enjoy it at the club’s Virtual Journal site as well. Feature: My Exciting Day with the [...]
Humbling: Sojo and UrbanFaith in One Day
Thursday, October 1st, 2009October 1, 2009, feels like a milestone. I found out this morning that UrbanFaith.com published “
My first Twitview for Entrepreneur Enclave
Wednesday, September 30th, 2009Friend and business guru Harry Tucker recommended me (via Twitter) for a “Twitview” with Entrepreneur Enclave — an interview consisting of nine questions and answers constrained only by Twitter’s 140 character limit. Participation was an exercise in self-editing, but fun. Turns out the Twitviewer and I have at least one mutual friend in California. Here’s [...]
Back to School with 20/20 in the News
Wednesday, September 16th, 2009This month, two local newspapers and a national magazine profiled 20/20 Vision for Schools as part of their back-to-school coverage. In New York, both city-wide Christian monthlies published “Why Public Schools Matter to God (and Should Matter to You Too),” a column that makes the case to pastors and faith leaders why literacy and education [...]
Going Public
Wednesday, September 16th, 2009The comment below was published as a Sidebar to a feature article called “Going Public” in the Sept/Oct 2009 issue of Outreach magazine, and challenges churches and youth groups to think differently about Campus ministry. How is your youth ministry engaging the public middle and high schools nearest your church this year? Download the article [...]
Love from My Favorite New Kind of Christian
Monday, September 14th, 2009Brian McLaren shouted out Pastor Louis Carlo and me from his blog last week. Worship and Justice … Jeremy del Rio and Louis Carlo get it right Jeremy Del Rio and Louis Carlo have a beautiful and needed article on worship and justice available here. Thank you, Brian, for your encouragement! PS… Brian’s next book, [...]
Why Public Schools Matter to God (and Should Matter to You Too)
Sunday, August 30th, 2009My latest article was published in the September issues of Tri-State Voice and Love Express. Here’s an excerpt. How many eighth grade Bible studies lead with Lamentations? Or Leviticus? Yet last I checked, Lamentations and Leviticus are part of the Biblical canon, along with Romans and Revelation and lots of other heady reading material. Should [...]
Singing and Praying Justice: My New Article at UrbanFaith.com
Monday, August 24th, 2009My latest article, co-written with Pastor Louis Carlo of Abounding Grace Ministries, was published today at UrbanFaith.com. Here’s an excerpt. … At its core, the Gospel is a story about a loving God who reconciles humanity into loving relationships with Himself, themselves, and each other. Justice fits into the story as Christ rights the wrongs [...]
« Previous Entries Next Entries »











Welcome to the professional website and personal weblog of Jeremy Del Rio. Whether you're a client, friend, or curious onlooker, please don't stay a spectator. Engage the conversation. Your contributions matter here.







