What Our Children Can Teach Us About Love
Here’s what we can learn from little children to build better relationships with our brothers and sisters in Christ.
Here’s what we can learn from little children to build better relationships with our brothers and sisters in Christ.
Sometimes God’s love is most strong in the messiest places in our lives.
What a precious reassurance as I took my son to kindergarten for his first day—and all the days since. I’m so grateful for a God who is always there.
Our children are desperate for words of affirmation from parents. Never miss an opportunity to speak a blessing over them.
Michelle Cox’s twin grandchildren are reminders that God can answer your prayers beyond what you’ve asked and double your blessings
In times of uncertainty, don’t shut down, reach out to others.
Whether you grew up with a stern dad who never said he loved you, an abusive father who only hurt you, or you’ve never even met your father, I have good news for you. Your Heavenly Father adores you, and He longs to have a close relationship with you.
A mother celebrates small moments, the joy of sitting with her young sons in the family driveway, drawing with chalk. “When gratitude swells,” she says, “my worries shrink.”
Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa says, “You don’t choose your family. They are God’s gift to you, as you are to them.”
Is it just a “small world,” or is someone working overtime to put broken families back together? What do you think? Have you found someone through extraordinary circumstances—mysterious ways?
A mother’s request to have her ashes fired up into the sky on Independence Day is met by her family with skepticism, then sheer love.
My grandfather celebrated his 98th birthday with the angels in heaven this June, so I’ve been thinking a lot about him, especially at work. He was super proud of my job at Guideposts and Angels on Earth.