The Longest Prayer
My developmentally challenged son couldn’t stop praying…
Whether he’s Daddy, Dad, Pop, Papa, or simply a father figure, your father is an influential person in your life, the man who helped give you your life and who has the power to set you on your life’s path.
My developmentally challenged son couldn’t stop praying…
Christian worship singer Matt Redman shares how his father’s suicide strengthened his faith and what it was like recording his new album, Unbroken Praise, at the famous Abbey Road studios in London.
To celebrate Father’s Day, we turned to our readers, asking them to pass on the best pieces of advice their fathers ever shared with them.
As we celebrate Father’s Day, we’re looking back on those fictional TV dad who taught us so much. Here are the 13 Greatest TV dads of all Time.
“Is this heaven?” she wondered, as she found herself stepping into the most elegant room she’d ever seen.
Comedian Jim Breuer talks about the humorous side of being both a dad and a caregiver for his father, and tells the story behind his recent special, Jim Breuer: Comic Frenzy, on the EPIX network.
Rev. Charles Clifford Peale was a physician and pastor who had a major influence on the life and ministry of his son, Guideposts founder Dr. Norman Vincent Peale. Dr. Peale wrote often of his father, and we are pleased to share some of his fondest remembrances.
We loved and honored my Dad, and we were willing to do whatever it took to keep him in the comfort of his own home.
For this popular comedian, fatherhood is the funniest and most inspiring job in the world…and the most humbling.
After a quarter century as a radio traffic reporter in Southern California, Jorge Jarrin joined his father, Hall of Fame Spanish-language play-by-play man for the Los Angeles Dodgers, in the broadcast booth at Dodger Stadium.
Jorge Jarrin honors his father, the “Spanish voice of the Dodgers,” Jamie Jarrin, on Father’s Day.
I feel, as I move through motherhood, that I’m honoring God when I’m most true to who He made me to be. He gave us His Word as a moral perimeter for our well-being. But within that loving fence, there is room to move. To stretch. To be free.