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For Those Who Belong to God, Joy and Sorrow Make Sense

blog joy amid sorrow

As I write this, the people of Florida face the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Ian. The damage was relatively mild in Orlando, where I live, with some flooding, wind damage, and power outages. In other parts of Florida, though, the damage was horrendous. So many have lost everything they owned, to say nothing about injuries and the loss of lives. It is a time of great lament and sorrow. Along...

Five Simple Ways to Teach Anyone about Jesus

blog anyone can learn

My husband Paul and I are both teachers, and we tried to teach all six of our kids the Bible. Kim is the fourth of our six kids. She has multiple disabilities, which kept her from going to Christian school along with the others. It was difficult for Kim to learn, even at church. She was able to keep up in Sunday School up to first grade, and then got frustrated with all the scissors, play groups...

Breaking the Settled Power of an Old Affection

blog escape

Two hundred years ago, Thomas Chalmers (1780–1847) wrote an essay explaining how the old, settled ways of our hearts can change. He titled the article, “The Expulsive Power of a New Affection,” and discussed how to dislodge sinful desires or love of the wrong things. Can you read between the lines of this title to see the great problem we all face? If change requires the force of an expulsive...

Helping Your Child with Feelings of Guilt

blog Henry Big MIstake

We can feel guilty for different reasons. Sometimes we feel guilty about accidents. For example, you’re running the bases playing softball and collide with another player who falls and breaks their arm. Though you feel guilty and the person might be unhappy with you, you have not sinned. When children have accidents, a parent can explain how whatever it was that happened wasn’t the child’s fault...

Talking to Your Children About Race

blog talking kids race 1

Talking about race in any setting can be both frustrating and frightening. Add children to the conversation, and you have an entire new set of challenges. Often we don’t know what to say or how to say it and it’s just more appealing to avoid a perplexing subject, but your children are hearing and gaining perspectives on race whether you believe it or not. Honest conversations about race...

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