Pastors and church groups in particular will love and benefit from this relevant guide regarding the message of Proverbs for today’s world.
All in Discipleship
Pastors and church groups in particular will love and benefit from this relevant guide regarding the message of Proverbs for today’s world.
To take something in one state and transform it into something new: that, to me, is an amazing thing.
Is it good or bad to be mad? It’s bad, right? Anger is bad. Always. Paul says, “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice” (Eph 4:31).
God has a history of using the most unlikely of suspects. Maybe it is because by using such people God’s action is more clearly recognized as just that: God’s action.
Actually trying these things lets you in on a new reality buried right here in the midst of this one. Jesus called it the kingdom of heaven.
Dealing with conflict is no picnic. But the damage caused by refusing to talk to each other is wreaking havoc and I can’t stay silent.
Sometimes you have grown so used to the problems that you don’t see them anymore: that squeaky door, the quirky light switch that just won’t seem to work right, the overgrown yard.
I equally love and hate surprises. If I sense somewhere in my gut that somebody is withholding a fun secret from me, it nearly drives me crazy.
The very people who have the greatest possibility of being close to us are the ones we are most likely to envy.
In most of our consumption, whether food, Netflix, media, or people, we quickly ingest without taking the time to appreciate the experience.
The greatest gift a parent can give a child is permission to become the person God created him or her to be.
We shouldn’t be judgmental, right? Saturday morning cartoons and countless sitcoms have taught us as much.
There was no food, no money, and no more time. She had enough supplies for one last meal with her son before she would to take their fate into her own hands.
Our lives are not just sustained, they are infused with God’s love that overflows from need to sheer luxuriance.
When the storm hits the disciples’ boat as it crosses the Sea of Galilee, Jesus’s apathy is noted. Could there be anything more apathetic than sleeping?
John is saying that Jesus has always been the plan. Jesus has always been what God is saying.
The time has come for my family and I to finally move out of Texas and into the city of brotherly love.
What we see when we look in the mirror isn’t just a reflection of reality; we often see a construct of our own making, created from the thoughts, opinions, and self-evaluations in our heads.
It seems to be true that when you work for a church, the ups and downs and gains and losses have a deeper significance than in other industries.