Book Review: Night Night Devotionals

“Train up a child in the way he should go, Even when he is old he will not depart from it.” Proverbs 22:6

That verse sounds so easy when your kids are little enough that they aren’t influenced by the world around them yet. However, it starts to get a little harder as they grow and become more independent. As a mom of 3 little girls, I am always wondering if I am doing this motherhood thing right. I want nothing more than to see my girls grow up and walk a godly path. I also want them to be able to live in this world without feeling like I need to keep them hidden away from it.This 90 day devotional has so many easy to understand topics to help kids learn Biblical truths in a fun way. Some of the devotionals are set up to cover a topic, such as God’s plans or how he protects us, while others talk about stories from the Bible like Mary or Jesus walking on water.My girls are like sponges right now. I look forward to using this devotional to walk them through Biblical truths in a fun way. My oldest has become a wonderful reader and I think that she will also enjoy reading these quick devotionals when she goes to bed at night.

If you are interested in entering to win your own copy go here  and I hope you are the lucky winner!!!!!

20-20 Vision Through the Rearview Mirror

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The end of August marked 10 full years since I had a major course correction in my life. Looking back now, it seems like an eternity ago. But in that moment, it was the most terrifying thing I had endured up until that point in my life. That moment was when I was laid off from a job I really enjoyed because the company was closing my location.

The whirlwind of emotions I experienced at that time were absolutely overwhelming. The most prevalent, of course, being fear. Fear of my immediate future, fear of the unknown, fear of failure. What was I going to do? Where would I work? What were my husband and my finances going to look like? We had only been married for 2 years at that time, and for a young 20 something who thought she had her life figured out, the thoughts of starting over can be a scary thing.

God is really amazing in the ways that he prepared us for this transition. I found out several months earlier that this was going to happen. At that time, I was even given the opportunity to stay with the company, if I was willing to move. However, we really did not want to move, so I took the option of being laid off. Because of the amount time we had between when I was informed it was going to happen, and when it actually happened, we were able to get some preparations made, mainly with our finances. We were able to make it so that we could live off of 1 paycheck (my husband’s teacher/coach wages) and my severance pay for a short while while I searched for another job.

Although I did have a little bit of notice, nothing could fully prepare me for the flood of emotions I would experience during that time. A sense of loss and, at times, depression, overtook me. The job I lost was one I planned on staying in for the long haul. I truly had to mourn the death of a dream. I also had to dig in deep to find a way to trust God through the process. It wasn’t easy, but that time frame in my life has forever marked me and has made me the person I am today.

Things are often a little more clear when you look back than when you are looking forward. So, what advice could I possibly share 10 years later? Well, it’s advice I still have to remind myself of over and over again; Trust God through the process. It’s easy to trust, in theory, but when you are in the midst of uncertainty, it’s a bit tougher. Even now, I struggle with that. I struggle with change when I’m comfortable, and struggle with waiting for a change when it is something I desire. It can be a double edged sword. One thing that I always hold onto is that God has a plan, whether or not we always see it. And it is a good plan.

Trust in the Lord with all your heart
    and lean not on your own understanding;
in all your ways submit to him,
    and he will make your paths straight.

Proverbs 3:5-6

It’s Different For Girls

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It’s been a while since I wrote a more personal blog specifically about my own experiences with motherhood, but after a conversation I had with my husband a while back, I thought it was time.

This particular conversation happened on a date night that, until about the last six months, has been a pretty rare thing. (When you live a ways away from family and have young children, dates are rare luxuries. Fortunately our girls are finally old enough it’s easier to get away for a few hours now). I was explaining to him some of the struggles I have from time to time with feeling lonely in my role as a mom. Now, this loneliness is not because he doesn’t help or isn’t around. Rather, it is more due to the lack of close, intimate, female friendships that I have at this stage of life. I explained that women, especially once we become mothers, have very different life experiences than our male counterparts when it comes to how we relate to each other and even how friendships look. I thought I would share some of the differences I see, in hopes that other mommas out there might find a little relief knowing we are all in this together. As a disclaimer, this is in no means intended to bash on women or children, but rather to explain some of the differences in hopes of shining light in dark areas of our human experience.

Freedom

As a mom, especially when children are very little, we often find ourselves not having freedom to just pick up and do whatever we want. When you have a newborn and are nursing a baby, you can’t be away from the baby (or the pump) for more than a couple of hours at a time. You are tethered to that child and no matter how helpful dad is, it isn’t the same as what you as a mom experience. Even after nursing ends, kids have a special bond with their mom, that can make it difficult to have the freedom to get time to yourself or get time to spend with friends. When my girls were really little I couldn’t do anything, including hauling trash outside, without someone tagging along, or having a meltdown if they couldn’t. I have actually had to sneak out of my own house on occasion when I did have to leave the house without my girls. My husband, on the other hand, can come and go as he pleases without inciting a major meltdown.

It’s different for girls.

Having a night out

My husband is really good about being willing to take care of the girls so that I can do what I need to do. During the conversation I mentioned earlier, he even told me that anytime I need a girls’ night with friends, to go for it. However, I explained to him that the problem isn’t so much the freedom to go as it is having people to go with. At this phase of life we are all either in the same boat of chaotic schedules with kids and it’s impossible to get our schedules to line up, or they don’t have kids and are in a completely different realm of life where needing to be home at a decent time doesn’t yet exist. It’s funny watching all the movies with the moms going on a girls’ night out because I know so few moms that actually ever do that. Especially moms like me who moved into town after all the friendship groups were already created.

It’s different for girls.

Walls

Beyond any logistical issues that may arise with friendships in the throws of motherhood, is probably the most difficult barrier to overcome; the walls that we as females put up, and often tend to live behind. I remember when my husband was coaching football and how all the men formed a brotherhood. They were a tight group that could poke at each other and still be best friends. They were all pretty confident guys who, for the most part, never felt the need to impress anyone. They were real with each other. As a coach’s wife, all of us women were together an awful lot as well. Although I always got along with everyone, the dynamics among the women were completely different.

Women are so much more guarded with each other than men are. It is often so hard to get to know another woman on anything more than surface level without years of relationship to slowly tear down those walls. We also tend to feel a sense of competition among each other. As a coach’s wife I often felt like I was looked at as less than when my husband coached at the junior high level, but was more of the group when he moved up to the high school. I know that it was never intentional, but women can be cruel without ever realizing it. We as women also feel like we need to show only our best selves, which hinders real, authentic relationships. Social media has only amplified that problem over the last 10 years. Women like to hide their flaws, while men often make fun of themselves for their flaws

It’s different for girls.

So what can we do? Honestly, I really don’t have an answer for that. I don’t think there is an easy solution. However, I really want to challenge women like me (and including me) to try to let your guard down a little. I know that so many of us have been wounded by friends in the past when we got too real and vulnerable (myself included). Yet, we will never have an authentic relationship if we ourselves can’t be authentic. Get to know those other mommas! Be vulnerable about your struggles and shortcomings. And, for crying out loud, quit competing and comparing and lets start encouraging each other. Motherhood is the hardest, sweetest, most frustrating, rewarding thing I have ever experienced. Find someone to share your experiences with.

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Prepare the Soil

I love my garden. Each year, throughout the summer, I plant a decent size garden and this year was no exception. I absolutely love seeing my hard work come to fruition…literally. My 3 girls love eating the carrots, cucumbers, watermelons, and cantaloupes that they helped to plant. That being said, this has been an off year for my garden.  Not all of my seeds germinated, I had to re-seed some of what I planted, and a few of my plants even died. There are several reasons that this year’s garden has struggled, but I think the main reason was a bad decision we made in the process of preparing to plant. Of course, at the time we thought it was a right decision, boy were we wrong.

In preparation for our garden last year, we put a massive amount of fertilizer in with our soil in the tilling process. Because of how much we put in last year, my garden was a producing machine. I could hardly keep up with the amount of jalapenos, squash, and carrots. I actually wound up freezing or canning a lot of it because we couldn’t consume it fast enough. Fast forward to this year. While we were preparing we decided that we had added so much fertilizer last year that we were going to skip that this year, assuming that the soil was still pretty well fertilized. Big mistake. Now, don’t get me wrong, it has not been a complete failure, but it has definitely not lived up to the plan I had when I was preparing to plant.  It’s amazing how vitally important properly preparing soil is before you plant. Ask any farmer, they never just toss seeds out hoping they will grow an abundant crop.

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This picture was from earlier this summer. Unfortunately, not all my seeds came up this year.

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We did get some pretty delicious melons!

It’s the same with us.  God will never put us in a position we are not properly prepared for. There are so many instances throughout the Bible where men or women were called to do something, but it took years for it to come to fruition. David was told as a teenager that he would be king, but it took decades to come to pass (see 1 Samuel 16). Joseph had dreamed of his future as a leader, and he had to go through the prison to get there (see Genesis 37). Or, like Esther, we may be positioned somewhere without even knowing God placed us there for “just such a time as this” (see Esther 4:14).  It is often puzzling to us how we may feel called somewhere, but a door either won’t open, or perhaps what seems like a strange door does open and we are too fearful to step inside. Little do we know that during these slow, uncomfortable, or scary times, we are being prepared. We are learning during the wait. Just like it takes time to get from a seed to the harvest, we won’t typically be called to something one day, and functioning in that calling the next. Actually, if we make that jump to soon, it likely won’t work out. Just like how some of my plants died for lack of proper fertilizer.

My husband often says, “sometimes you have to pay your dues”, meaning you need to serve at a lower capacity before getting promoted or that you need to experience difficult or frustrating times before you get to the good times. Boy, do I get that. Honestly, I actually appreciate that more now that I have paid some of those dues through life experiences. I am so much more thankful for what I have today because of the things I have experienced and as tough as it is, I am going to trust God during those times when he is “preparing the soil” for the next season in my life!

Book Review: Covenant Kids: Book 1 The Law

As you know, I typically don’t review kid’s books on my blog. However, every once in a while I find one that peaks my interest. Covenant Kids is designed in comic book fashion and is a fun book that talks about the Bible from a unique perspective.

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The story starts with a decoded letter to a girl named Naomi who is going to become a member of an underground Christian organization, in a world where Christians meeting publically is illegal.  A group of kids, called the Covenant Keepers, are learning about the stories from creation through the exodus. All the while, they must meet in secret to avoid getting in trouble and put in jail.

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This is a great book written in such a fun way. If you would like to enter to win your own copy visit this site. You can also watch this video to learn more.

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App Review: Courage For Life Bible App

It has finally been done! The very first female voiced audio Bible app has been released! It’s called Courage For Life Bible and it is available for free in both the itunes and google play stores.

appGrab.jpgThis app has been created by author, speaker, and Bible Teacher, Ann White to reach women in a new way. You can learn more about her story by watching this video. Right now the audio Bible is New Testament only, each book also recorded with an introduction. However, there is also a ton of resources on their website (which is linked in the app). There are devotions, blog posts, and Bible studies, to name a few of the resources. This app is free, but you are able to donate to the ministry if you decide to do that. I hope you will check it out!!

The creators of the app will also be giving away a copy of Ann White’s Devotional, She is Strong and Courageous. Click here to enter for your chance!

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Precise Placement

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So you feel stuck in a miserable job with a bunch of gossiping coworkers? Maybe the work you are doing is completely unfulfilling and you dread Monday every single week. Possibly you love your job, but know it really isn’t what you are called to do, and you long to do something bigger with your life. No matter where in the spectrum you may fall, God has placed you precisely where you need to be.

There are times when I love my job as a math teacher at a public high school. However, there are also days where I wonder if I took the right path. If you know anything about my story, being a teacher was absolutely the furthest thing in my mind. I even remember walking the halls of my high school, as a high school student wondering why anyone would ever want to be a teacher. Life is funny like that. I have learned though, that no matter where you are in life, God has a plan exactly where you are.

This week I have been helping with our church’s VBS and we have been doing the story of the Israelites; their escape from slavery, some of the time spent in the wilderness, and crossing over into the promised land. As you well know, this story means a great deal to me (see my book Finding God in the Wilderness). Honestly, after the extensive time I spent pouring through this story during my time of writing that book, I thought I had probably exhausted that particular story of any new revelations, but God always finds a way to reveal something new.

As I have been thinking about Moses throughout the week, I thought a little further back in the story. I thought back to the fact that Moses had grown up in that very palace. He knew the ins and outs of royalty, the pharaoh, and leadership. He was specifically put in that place, I believe to help equip him for his future role as leader of an entire nation of Israelites. When he first found out that he was not an Egyptian, I am sure he was confused. He probably wondered why was he not serving as a slave like his relatives? I believe he felt guilty about it. You can tell because in the story he suddenly jumps to the defense of the Israelites and even ends up killing an Egyptian (see Exodus 2). Talk about an identity crisis. God knew the greater plan though.

In our own life, God also knows. I truly believe that He knows our exact circumstances. He places us with people who will help us grow, even if it is in unconventional ways. Sometimes our growth comes from a super supportive friend who walks the same path as us. More often, at least in my life, that growth comes from being around people who don’t think like me. I have had to grow through hurt feelings, frustrating circumstances, and let downs. Although I almost hate to admit it, that kind of growth sticks more. When I have had my feelings hurt or have been let down, it gives me a greater compassion for others going through similar situations. The idea of the golden rule (treating others how you want to be treated) becomes a higher priority when you have experienced not being treated well.

So, my challenge to all of us boils back down to trust. Can we trust that God really is in control? Can we trust that no matter how we feel, there is a greater plan? Can we also look to the people around us and find the the good, and overlook some of the bad? Can we believe, just like Moses, that we are specifically placed for a greater calling (even if that calling may not happen for another 40 years)? I am sure gonna try!

 “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.

Jeremiah 29:11

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Then vs. Now

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Every single one of us is guilty of it. We have all made comments or remarks thinking we know what we are talking about when, really, we don’t have a clue. Let me give you some examples.

When I was the ripe old age of 20 straight out of college, I had an interview with a company and they were going to pay around $24,000/yr starting out. As someone who had not experienced too much “real life” yet, that sounded like a lot of money and a great starting salary. I mean, it should be easy to live off $2000 per month, right? Ha! I remember standing in my parent’s kitchen and my mom trying to help me understand that by the time I payed for insurance (no, I was not one of those kids who stayed on my parent’s insurance until I was 50) and taxes there wouldn’t be a whole lot to live on. You know, I actually tried to argue with her about that (sorry about that Mom). Boy was I ignorant to how life works. Thank goodness that job didn’t work out and I got a different one that paid a little better.  Sometimes you don’t know what you don’t know until you experience a little bit of life.

Rewind a little further. Before I graduated college and my older sister had her first kid, and then a while later her second kid. As a teenager with all the freedom in the world and no kids, I sure became an expert in my own mind on being a parent. I remember little things that I would think how differently I would do them. I would see other people who maybe had a kid having a meltdown in a grocery store, and would think to myself “get your kid under control” or “if that was my kid I’d……”. Oh boy, was I naive! What a humbling experience having three kids of my own has been.

Now fast forward to my first teaching job: substitute teacher. It’s amazing how much of an amazing teacher you can be in your own mind when you have absolutely no lesson planning or accountability. Oh, and not to mention all the opinions you can form in a teachers’ lounge about how the administrators do their jobs. When you are a person of low information like I was (simply meaning I had not experienced much of what goes into being a full time teacher yet) , you can easily think you know it all. My how life changed when I got a little experience and eventually became a lead teacher myself. Oh, and being married to a principal has vastly changed my view of administration, there are so many things that go on behind the scenes that even the most experienced teachers don’t know goes on (many of which I even have no clue about).

It is so easy to make opinions and pass judgements. As a matter of fact, that can often be easier than getting the real information and having compassion for others. As the saying goes; Ignorance is bliss. But is it really? In my opinion, Ignorance is Ignorance. When someone who is not knowledgeable about something, tries to input their thoughts, they really just end up sounding unintelligent (and let’s just get real for a second, we ALL do this from time to time). I think we could all learn from that. Especially when it comes to our opinions of others. We don’t know the backstory of most of the people we encounter. All we know is often only what we see, which is easy to misinterpret. I love how The Living Bible translation puts 1 Corinthians 13:7, “If you love someone, you will be loyal to him no matter what the cost. You will always believe in him, always expect the best of him, and always stand your ground in defending him.” The older I get the more this verse means to me. I see the value of loyalty. I see it in my marriage. I see it in my relationships. And I see it in my job. I even see it in my role as a mom. I want so desperately for others, especially those closest to me, to believe the best about my intentions, why would I not do the same for them? The world could use a little more of that. Imagine how different our lives would be if we all extended the same grace to other people that we expect and demand from them?

“Then we will no longer be immature like children. We won’t be tossed and blown about by every wind of new teaching. We will not be influenced when people try to trick us with lies so clever they sound like the truth. 15 Instead, we will speak the truth in love, growing in every way more and more like Christ, who is the head of his body, the church.16 He makes the whole body fit together perfectly. As each part does its own special work, it helps the other parts grow, so that the whole body is healthy and growing and full of love.”

Ephesians 4:14-16 NLT

Let’s Get Real

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I have heard that motherhood is the hardest job a woman will ever have. A little over seven years in, I would have to agree. Being a mom is one of the most incredible, exhausting, and often frustrating jobs I have ever had. Parenthood as a whole can be challenging at times. I tend to be a pretty independent person, however, the old saying that it takes a village to raise a child is more true than I ever realized it would be.
My husband and I don’t have family in the town where we live. Because of that, we know firsthand how excessively important having a community around us can be. We are so incredibly thankful for the people in our church and the friends we have made locally and in the surrounding communities.
Even though this message speaks to me as a female, I want to write not just to the women, but to the church as a whole about the vital importance of being a community. I specifically want to talk about being an authentic community. I am at an odd age right now. Over the last several months it has really hit me how much life changes when you move away, get married, and have kids. All of the sudden you become an adult. The funny thing about adults, is that we suddenly feel like we have to have our act together, even when we don’t.
Growing up, so many in the church learn to show themselves in the best light at all times. Appearances and what others perceived about us, or us about them for that matter, are of the utmost importance. Or so we think. What a tough way to live life! Being seen as the “good Christian” and trying to live up to that persona is not only impossible, but also doesn’t allow for the humanness of making mistakes. Judging others for every little action also does not allow for grace and love.
Jesus did not live his life like that. Not even a little bit. He loved people from every walk of life. Everyone from women caught in the act of adultery, to prostitutes, and even a Roman Centurion. Actually, the only group that he seemed to have issue with, were the religious Pharisees. He had a lot of issues with legalism, judgmentalness, and the way those religious people condemned others. In Luke 18:9-14 (NIV) Jesus tells a parable about a pharisee with that exact problem.

9 To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: 10 “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 11 The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. 12 I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’

13 “But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’

14 “I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”
Wow. If that doesn’t make you feel a little bit convicted, you must not have the issues I do.
Jesus chose to do life with people. So much of His ministry recorded in scripture was done around the meal table. Everyone who was willing was welcome at His table. There were even occasions where Jesus would invite himself over for a meal. In Luke 19 (NLT) we find the story of Zacchaeus.

1Jesus entered Jericho and made his way through the town. 2There was a man there named Zacchaeus. He was the chief tax collector in the region, and he had become very rich. 3He tried to get a look at Jesus, but he was too short to see over the crowd. 4So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore-fig tree beside the road, for Jesus was going to pass that way.

5When Jesus came by, he looked up at Zacchaeus and called him by name. “Zacchaeus!” he said. “Quick, come down! I must be a guest in your home today.”

6Zacchaeus quickly climbed down and took Jesus to his house in great excitement and joy. 7But the people were displeased. “He has gone to be the guest of a notorious sinner,” they grumbled.

8Meanwhile, Zacchaeus stood before the Lord and said, “I will give half my wealth to the poor, Lord, and if I have cheated people on their taxes, I will give them back four times as much!”

9Jesus responded, “Salvation has come to this home today, for this man has shown himself to be a true son of Abraham. 10 For the Son of Man came to seek and save those who are lost.”
There is a common thread in these stories; grace and mercy don’t go to the deserving. They go to the humble and the ones who genuinely seek God. The ones who are authentic. Jesus sought those kinds of people out. He hung out with a bunch of guys who were far from perfect. He had genuine conversations with his disciples and followers, and wasn’t angered when they didn’t act like good little Christians all the time.
Recently, the term Authentic Community has been at the forefront of my mind. We all crave that. We all want to be known on a deep and authentic way. We desperately need it in our marriages, and crave it in our friendships.
I am so thankful for the people of my church, specifically the small group we have been involved in for the past 12 years. They have seen the good and bad. When I received the news of being laid off, I cried on the shoulders of the people in that group and they prayed for our future. When we found out our family was expanding (all three times) they rejoiced with us. When we have good days and bad days we have people to laugh and cry with. I miss it on the weeks that we are unable to meet. Everyone needs that. We need to all be that person for someone else.
Now, don’t get me wrong, I don’t by any stretch of the imagination think that we should air our dirty laundry with everyone. But we need to be able to with someone. Just to address the women specifically, we can be the worst about putting up walls that don’t allow for truly vulnerable relationships, especially when we are busy with family responsibilities. At the beginning of creation, God said it is not good for man, or woman for that matter, to be alone.
In Ecclesiastes 4 (NLT) starting in verse 9 it says 9Two people are better off than one, for they can help each other succeed. 10If one person falls, the other can reach out and help. But someone who falls alone is in real trouble. 11Likewise, two people lying close together can keep each other warm. But how can one be warm alone? 12A person standing alone can be attacked and defeated, but two can stand back-to-back and conquer. Three are even better, for a triple-braided cord is not easily broken.
We are built to need each other. We are built to be authentic with each other. One definition for authentic is not false or copied; genuine; real: representing one’s true nature or beliefs; true to oneself or to the person identified. So the question is, how true to ourselves are we in the church community? Do we take the attitude of the Pharisee praying about the tax collector I referenced earlier? Or, do we take the attitude of Jesus himself and love those who aren’t like us and stay true to our beliefs regardless of what crowd we happen to be running in. That can be a real challenge. We want to look put together. We want to be perceived as “on it”. But let’s get real, we are all broken. We are all sinners who desperately need the very grace that we often don’t extend to others. God Himself demands nothing less.
Psalm 51:16-17 (NLT)

16You do not desire a sacrifice, or I would offer one.
You do not want a burnt offering.

17The sacrifice you desire is a broken spirit.
You will not reject a broken and repentant heart, O God.
This particular Psalm is a very interesting one because it was written after the Prophet Nathan confronted King David about his sin with Bathsheba. David was truly broken hearted. It couldn’t be more plain than this verse right here. God desires true repentance. I was curious what exactly was meant by a broken spirit.
According to Charles Spurgeon, it is “an expression implying deep sorrow, embittering the very life; it carries in it the idea of all but killing anguish in that region which is so vital as to be the very source of life.” It is beyond sorry. That kind of repentance is the only kind of sacrifice that is acceptable to God. That tells me that us being authentic, even with God, trumps every religious act we could perform. Authenticity should bleed into every part of our lives.
My prayer is that the church would be the safest place for authenticity. Let’s humble ourselves and not be afraid to let our walk be like Jesus, reaching out to people in every walk of life, not out of a sense of duty, but rather because we genuinely care about them. Let us never forget what it says in James 4:6 “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.” It is my sincere prayer that that we would all learn to humble ourselves just as Jesus did when he washed the feet of the man who would betray him. That we would become a community like the men and women who received the first baptism of the Holy Spirit and loved each other unconditionally. That we would fight for the best interests of each other and pray unceasingly for each other. That we would lay down judgments and perceptions, and really get to know and love each other. And finally, that we would be able to pray for those who persecute us, and perhaps, wash the very feet of our enemies.

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Video Series Review: Healing the Healers

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Tragedies strike communities far too often in the world that we live in. When they happen, everyone in the community is impacted in some way. So often, people turn to their pastors, bishops, or other faith leaders for comfort and answers. Pastors often wear many hats; counselor, teacher, and hospital visitation, just to name a few. Not to mention that many ministers also work full time jobs to supplement their incomes. It can’t be easy always pouring yourself into others. So who pours into the ministers? Who can they turn to if they need support or counseling? What can a church congregation do to help support their ministers?

Healing the Healers hopes to answer some of those questions. This series focuses on ministers who were impacted by the Sandy Hook School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut that happened in 2012. They address some of the hard questions faced by ministers of communities who deal with intense tragedies. They also talk about how the ministers themselves are affected by these tragedies.

This is a very interesting video series that deals with a subject that many people, myself included, often don’t think about. When tragedy does strike we tend to think about how evil the person who performed the act is, how sad we are for the families impacted, and how angry we are at the situation. However, we sometimes forget about the ministers who work with and counsel the people and how much they carry on their shoulders. You can check out this trailer of the video.

I want to start out with the one Con I saw in the series. They focused a lot on gun violence. One of the ministers talked about how he used to think he needed to learn how to shoot a gun before he could speak out against them, however he decided that he didn’t need to touch a gun to learn all he needed to know about them. If you know me, you know that shooting guns is a big part of my life. I know first hand the good side of guns, and have competed with them over the years. The anti-gun message bothered me simply because they talked about guns without bringing in the heart of the men who committed these acts.

Now to the Pros. First, I think that speaking out about what pastors experience is extremely healthy for the church as a whole. Ministers are often forgotten and just expected to be there no matter what. People often don’t think about what the ministers need. I also think that hearing from ministers themselves gives us good insight to know what they need from us.

I hope you will check out Healing the Healers for yourself. You can find more information about the series here. You can also enter to win a $50 Fandango gift card here.

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