To the Parent Who Was Weary Before the New Year Started
Micah 6:8 tells us that the Lord’s requirements rarely include self-improvement unless they help us “act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with our God.”
Micah 6:8 tells us that the Lord’s requirements rarely include self-improvement unless they help us “act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with our God.”
By his wounds and blood spilled, by the perfect life he lived, Jesus secured for us the only acceptance that ever mattered – yours.
This year, we asked each of our hosts to pick their favorite episodes from the past twelve months.
This Christmas, let’s remember that all our giving and doing are simply heartfelt responses to God for what he has already done.
For those who believe in Jesus, there is hope that God is bringing an everlasting kingdom.
Mary’s faith as she raised Jesus provides us guidance as we parent our children in the known, not-so-known, and unknown.
Unlike Santa, who gives only gifts to nice boys and girls, the real story is that God gave us his only son while we were yet sinners.
Lord, forgive me when I place my identity and my child’s identity in her GPA and grades instead of in who you have made her to be in Christ.
It is only through identity in Christ that the “do not cheat” can be an act of loving God, not just a Christianized metric of performance and approval.