No book has affected the world more deeply. How can we raise Bible soaked and saturated children?
No book has affected the world more deeply. How can we raise Bible soaked and saturated children?
Listen to Jani’s breakout session talk from the Revive ’13 conference.
My forty-two-year-old single friend never thought her miracle would come driving from the west in a white suburban filled with children who would change her life in such dramatic ways. But in holiness and purity she was ready to welcome this miracle from the hand of God.
"I had no feeling, no hope—none. I blamed my husband. Before marriage I had high expectations and then total disappointment. I gave more condemnation than love. But now I realize I had put all my hope in my husband."
We must cultivate in our sphere of influence—our homes, neighborhoods, workplaces, churches—spiritual daughters who in turn can pass the Truth on. The younger women among us are our sacred trust from our Heavenly Father. Making disciples is not just a nifty idea someone thought up. It is a biblical mandate.
Discipleship isn’t about first-class Christians trying to bring second-class Christians up to their level. The most important way you can disciple others is by enjoying Christ yourself in such an irresistible way that your enjoyment becomes contagious.
Each home has its own distinct atmosphere. What does yours feel like? Jani Ortlund encourages you to build an environment where God’s love and care will be real to all who live there.
Has your home become little more than a place for everyone to shower and sleep? Jani encourages us to rediscover the rewards of daily connecting as a family over a home-cooked meal.
When Proverbs tells us "the wise woman builds her home," it obviously doesn’t mean we must get hammer and nails and actually construct it, though I do have friends who have been tempted to help the construction workers move at a more timely pace! A godly home is built with relationships.
After being married for nineteen years, I had to go back to work. I was torn because I couldn’t give 100 percent to both callings, and both our home and my career suffered to some extent. I experienced what many of you working mothers have agonized over—the secret, silent bleeding of a working mother’s heart, with all the accompanying guilt and exhaustion and divided loyalties.
Do you know a pastor’s wife? Would you like to bless her? After forty-one years in a ministry marriage, here are some ways our people have blessed me.
What little Isaiah Daniel Ortlund can teach us about our forever home…