Praying for Our Families
Imagine how our culture might change if we as parents and grandparents would spend more time praying for our families.
When a loved one dies, sorrow and grief surround us. But your memories of happy times together survive the sadness, and your belief that death is not the end can comfort you following a loss.
Imagine how our culture might change if we as parents and grandparents would spend more time praying for our families.
A close-knit Amish community and a forgotten old building in Sugarcreek, Ohio, lead to a fresh start for a young widow and her children at the Honey Bee Café.
There are many next steps to consider. And many more prayers to say, and answers to be listened for, and a dog to love for however long we may have her before God gently takes her home.
What can a person say at such times, when words seem so inadequate? What should we pray when we don’t know what to pray? How can we possibly intercede for so many people, for such great need?
Guideposts founder Norman Vincent Peale reminds us that Easter happens every day, in large and in small ways.
How a mother’s passing, a pet hamster and a teapot all come together.
My mother loved St. Patrick’s Day. I dreaded my first one without her.
The sequel to the 2012 film boasts a returning all-star cast and carries an uplifiting message.
Berlin, World War II. She and her mother were surviving on scraps, with seemingly no one to help them…
An invitation to forgive quickly and to live gratefully, humbly and mindfully