Launch Day Special Podcast from Friends in the UK & Joel and Joy

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Because it is launch day and Clay and I are in Oxford, England, we will not be in the right time zone to do our normal facebook launch party. So we recorded a special launch day podcast for you from Scotland. 

Joel and Joy, my wonderful two who live in Scotland, joined us. This podcast is quite inspiring and it encouraged me so much to hear from so many women in this area and to see what my precious children most remember impacted them in our parenting, 

Hope you enjoy this podcast. it is our gift to you, 

Sending love to all of you who have encouraged us so much, Bless you!

Launch Day! Lifegiving Parent Podcast Series: Sarah Mackenzie

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Launch Day!

Today is the day Clay and I launch our newest book, The Lifegiving Parent. We hope that moms and dads, groups of friends, classes at church will grab a copy and go through it together. After 34 years of parenting, we know that parenting matters. The most fulfilling work of our lives has been to watch our 4 children embrace their walk with God and then to decide to invest their lives for his kingdom. 

If you haven't grabbed your copy yet, be sure to get yours today so you can join Clay and me on our 4 week podcast series starting Monday, May 7. We will guide you through the foundational principles from scripture that we followed in our own home. 

I am thrilled to have wonderful Sarah Mackenzie on a podcast with me today. I love her writing, her spirit, her wisdom and her story. She is a mama to six, a writer, has a wonderful podcast and speaks and encourages women all over the world.

I know you will be so very encouraged to listen to our interview together today. Most of all, I am so fortunate to call her my sweet, generous hearted friend. You will love listening to her wisdom today.

Sarah has generously offered to give away 3 of her newest books, The Read Aloud Family. 

I wish I had owned this book when I was a younger mom. So inspiring, 

I wish I had owned this book when I was a younger mom. So inspiring, 

We will also give away 3 sets of our books, along with Sarah, to 3 winners. Follow us on instagram--find Sarah there as readaloudrevival, and her website (click here!) Read Aloud Revival --or subscribe to our podcasts (Sally: https://www.instagram.com/sally.clarkson/ or Sarah: https://www.instagram.com/readaloudrevival/ and tell us about it below in a comment or on instagram and you will be entered to win the 2 sets of books. 

Be sure to join me for a very special launch day webcast later today to celebrate our new book, The Lifegiving Parent. Thanks to all who have helped us spread the word. We are most grateful. 

Lifegiving Parent Podcast Series: Lara Casey & Launch Week!!!

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Launch week is finally here. You will have our new book in your hands any time now if you have pre-ordered it. Clay and I will do a special podcast series starting next Monday, May 7, following the book, that you won't want to miss. You still have time to order the book.

What a great couple of weeks we have had interviewing parents of all ages of children to hear their thoughts on the secrets to parenting to reach our children's hearts. I am so excited for you to hear my podcast today with Lara Casey. You will be inspired.

Lara inspires me. Clay and I were great planners. We would meet every 6 months for a half day to plan goals for ourselves, for our children, to assess how we were doing with previous goals and to dream about what we wanted our home and family to grow in. 

I wish I had had Lara's beautiful powersheets to use for our days away. She says she is "passionate about helping women get unstuck, unrushed and living on purpose instead of by accident." Through her books, her blog, and her store you can find wonderful ideas and planning tools to help cultivate a flourishing and sustainable life. 

Find Lara's blog, books, powersheets and everything about her at laracasey.com

Lara and I have decided to give away some gifts to help you flourish as a parent. She will give away her wonderful Write the Word for Kids Journal and Powersheets intentional goal planner along with the gift of our new book, The Lifegiving Parent, and companion guide, The Lifegiving Parent Experience. 

To enter the giveaway, follow both of us on instagram and leave a comment on either of our profiles to share how you want to cultivate life or flourish as a parent this summer. Leave a comment in both places and you will have more opportunity to win. 

Remember, follow us both on Instagram: 

Follow me @ https://www.instagram.com/sally.clarkson/

Follow Lara @ https://www.instagram.com/laracasey/

This is what you will win:

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Be sure to order your book soon and share this fun week with your friends. We will have fun giveaways every day. i realize that many of you do not have instagram, so if you leave a comment below where you have shared about this giveaway, i will include you in the giveaway.

Enjoy this podcast! Hope you win!

Thanks so much for sharing about our new  book with your friends.

Lifegiving Parent Podcast Series: Kristen Kill

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Numbering your child’s days may not sound on the surface like a biblical priority of parenting, but think about parenting as though you were Commander Jim Lovell on the ill-fated flight of Apollo 13. On the return leg of their aborted moon mission, as the astronauts fought to control their crippled flight module, Commander Lovell had to make a manual course correction, relying only on a wristwatch and his own handwritten math, engineering skills, and jet-pilot instincts to steer the craft safely back home.

Fortunately, like the commander, you have the opportunity as a parent to steer the craft of your family safely home. Small choices like a family planning time may seem unimportant to you now, but they could be helping to set the trajectory of your children’s lives, sending them on a path to find life in God in your home. My desire is to help you become a lifegiving parent who confidently steers the modules of your children’s hearts into the life of God. The simple course correction of beginning to number your children’s days—of beginning to parent them with the end in mind—could be the one that points you, and them, safely home on this journey of life with God.

I was so thrilled to have this time podcasting with my delightful, dear friend, Kristen. We've known one another for years, and she is a kindred spirit. I hope you will enjoy listening in on our conversation.

I was so thrilled to have this time podcasting with my delightful, dear friend, Kristen. We've known one another for years, and she is a kindred spirit. I hope you will enjoy listening in on our conversation.

Kristen Kill is a woman transformed by the delight of God. She is passionate about encouraging women who feel stretched thin with the truth that, even in the tension, God is singing over them with love. After spending the last seven years in the hustle of New York City, Kristen and her husband, Josh, are learning to go slow as they raise their five kids in the Pacific Northwest. Her days are filled with homeschooling, walking her slightly anxious hound dog, and putting off the cleaning for one more day. Find Kristen writing at kristenkill.com and follow her on Instagram @kristenkill.

Lifegiving Parent Podcast Series: Holly and Glenn Packiam

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Comments about the life of God permeate all of Scripture. It is, after all, the “living and active” Word of God (Hebrews 4:12), given life by the living God who gave it to us. In Genesis, “the Lord God formed man of dust from the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being” (2:7). David wrote, “For with You is the fountain of life; in Your light we see light” (Psalm 36:9). In the first words of his Gospel, mirroring the first words of Genesis, John says of Jesus, who is God incarnate, “In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men” (John 1:4). Paul says that Jesus “abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel” (2 Timothy 1:10).

As you can see, in many passages throughout Scripture about the life of God, the light of God also shines. The first words of God are “Let there be light” (Genesis 1:3), for without light there is no life. David says, “The Lord is my light and my salvation” (Psalm 27:1), the One who saves his life. Jesus, the incarnate Son of God, pro- claimed, “I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life” (John 8:12). In his first epistle, John says, “God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). Paul admonishes believers, “At one time you were darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light” (Ephesians 5:8, ESV).

So when we give our children God’s life, we are also giving them His light. It is the light of God that will shine in our hearts and our homes so that we can be a beacon of hope to the world around us. From a personal perspective as parents who love our children, life- giving parenting must first be about helping them find eternal life in Christ and getting them on God’s path so they can live in a way that’s pleasing to Him.

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We are so happy to share a podcast we did with Glenn and Holly Pakiam. Glenn is one of the pastors of New Life Church and Holly has been a friend and fellow Whole Heart ministry friend for many years. She runs Storyformed for us and does an excellent job writing about the best books and authors. Many people said one of their favorite podcasts was one that Glenn and Holly did a while back. You will love their heart for their 4 children.

 

If you would like to see what Holly is up to, follow her at storyformed.com or find her on Instagram @storyformedhome.

To keep up with Glenn's latest musings, follow him on Twitter at @gpackiam. You can also find links to his resources on glennpackiam.com

Lifegiving Podcast Series: Scott Turansky

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Lifegiving parenting is not about changing the culture we live in but about being a counterculture to it. It’s not about creating a comfortable Christian subculture insulated from the surrounding world; rather, it’s about being the kind of lifegiving home culture that will stand as a testimony of God’s biblical design for family to a lost world whose sandy foundations are washing away. It’s not about being a political or social “culture warrior” for the family but about definitively, and maybe even defiantly, building a home where the living God of Creation is undeniably living through the family within it. Lifegiving parenting is about bringing the life of God into your home and family to create, with Him, an outpost of the Kingdom of Heaven in this world. We can call that place a “Christian home,” but Christians often have very different ideas of what those words mean.

Throughout the quarter century of what I call our Christian home and parenting ministry, we’ve met and seen many families with life- affirming and life-infused Christian homes, where the presence of God was unmistakable in the parents’ vision for their biblical roles and in the spiritual homelife they were cultivating for their children. However, we’ve also observed many American Christian families where the parents, though unquestionably believers, seemed minimally engaged in the spiritual life of the home or their children. If asked to give a reason why theirs was a Christian home, they might answer by focusing mostly on what their children were doing—“My kids go to church, Sunday School, Bible club, youth group, and camp; have all the best Christian music, videos, books, and apps; attend a Christian school; go to VBS and Christian activities; and have great Christian friends. Of course they’re being raised in a Christian home.”

There’s no question that exposing children to so many good and godly Christian influences can be a positive thing. However, it can also become a negative thing if Christian consumerism becomes either an unintentional or preferred substitute for the life of God in a family. We need to distinguish between a home that is considered Christian primarily because cultural Christianity happens there and a home that is Christian because Christ is alive and present in percep- tible ways. Here’s the reality that needs to be affirmed: A distinctively Christian home can never be defined only by what the children are doing; it must be defined by what the parents are doing.

Excerpt from The Lifegiving Parent, Get your copy today and join us for the podcast series starting soon. You will be so refreshed and inspired.

Today, we have wonderful Scott Turansky from The National Center for Biblical Parenting

He has so much experience and wisdom for the parenting journey. Enjoy our podcast toddy. He is an author, a pastor and conference speaker who has so much to share. 

Find Scott Here: 

Lifegiving Podcast Series: Susie Davis, A Seasoned Parent

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Clay and I are so very excited to launch our newest book, The Lifegiving Parent, one week from now. Parenting is one of the most profound legacies you will leave in your lifetime. We hope that as you read our new book and listen to the podcasts, you will feel that you are supported, encouraged and guided with new ideas in your journey as a parent.

Be sure to order your copy and the study guide soon because Clay and I have a podcast series starting Monday, May 8, for you to listen to with friends, your husband or alone that will follow the 8 parenting principles to guide your journey. We had so much fun doing this series together. 

We have had such a great time interviewing different parents asking them to share some of their best ideas and advice about being a parent who raises their children for Christ. Today is our first such podcast. We hope you will enjoy this series and glean from the many ideas shared in the next two weeks.

You will love Susie Davis. She is a seasoned mom, an author and loves to encourage those in her ministry. You will be refreshed by our time shared on this podcast, Thanks, Susie.

I had already written The Lifegiving Home (with our daughter Sarah) and The Lifegiving Table, so when Clay suggested the idea of The Lifegiving Parent, I was thrilled. It would not only complete a “Lifegiving” trilogy but would also finally provide the book that all those moms for so many years had been asking for—and not just for their husbands but for themselves as well. It pulls together many of the messages we’ve taught through the years into a book that couples can read together to shape a philosophy of how to give their children the life of God in their homes. It’s not just about giving your children a Christian life but also about giving them the life of Christ. That’s what it means to be a lifegiving parent.

If you want to feel that cool breeze of God’s life blowing through your home and family, I pray this book will show you how to make that happen. It’s not a formula but simply a way of life and faith—it’s a lifegiving heart and mind-set. I’m excited for you as you read this book, not just because of what it will do for your family today but also because God’s life coming alive in your home can shape genera- tions to come through your children and their children. Lifegiving parenting will help you and your children to find yourselves in God’s epic story—and to live the story He is writing through and for you.

Be sure to listen to her podcast and look at her books and blog. You can find everything Susie @ :  Susiedavis.org

Own Your Legacy of Motherhood OYL 16

This is US! :) Joel, 31, front (studying in St. Andrews Masters & PHD), Sarah,33, lower corner, (Oxford), Joy, 22, red coat, (St. Andrews for her PHD), Thomas, above Joel, (Sarah's wonderful husband), Nathan,29, top, (Hollywood, producing film a…

This is US! :) Joel, 31, front (studying in St. Andrews Masters & PHD), Sarah,33, lower corner, (Oxford), Joy, 22, red coat, (St. Andrews for her PHD), Thomas, above Joel, (Sarah's wonderful husband), Nathan,29, top, (Hollywood, producing film and acting), Clay and me, older!,  keeping up with them all.

Sweet Friends,

With my current state of eye issues, I am not able to do a fresh podcast for today because Clay and I are recording some PODCASTS at At Home With Sally for the month of May series & with friends for launch week that will be wonderful. I am more passionate about motherhood than ever before. I am speaking this weekend, (with sunglasses on for my first time) to a precious groups of women from many places here in the UK, so storing up my energy. May God bless you with these messages.

But I must say, that living in close friendships with each of my children and engaging with them almost daily convinces me more that your hard work as a mama, drawing them to love Christ by modeling your own love for Him every day will make a difference in the legacy you leave in your life time, My children don't just go to church or give a tithe, they are all passionate about living for the Kingdom, writing messages about Him, influencing their world for Christ. You are passing on the baton of faith to the next generation. And hopefully they will to theirs, It is the way of Christ for one generation to pass on their story, their faith, their integrity to the next one until he comes again.

My Influence on My Children

I’ve learned that my influence on my children is limited only by the smallness of my dreams and my lack of commitment to the Lord and his purposes.

-SALLY CLARKSON (THE MISSION OF MOTHERHOOD)

Sipping coffee from a mug on a snowy Colorado day brought pleasure to my weary soul. As the mother of two children under three years old, I was in need of a break. Clay volunteered to take Sarah, almost three, and Joel, just shy of six months, for a couple of hours so that I could visit with a friend of mine I had met as a young missionary in Eastern Europe.

She was eight years older than me, and much further along the path of motherhood with her children approaching teen years at the time. I deeply valued her wisdom and had always looked forward to our times together in the past. And yet today, something she said to me did not sit well with my spirit. Always I had longed for encouragement in my role as a mom, but her words made my heart feel uneasy.

“Sally, you are so talented in ministry and such a great speaker. You and Clay should just decide not to have any more children. You have your daughter and now a son, so you don’t need any more kids. It would be a waste of your ministry skills and training to further distract yourself with the burden of more children.”

Our time ended shortly after her unsolicited and unexpected counsel, but I couldn’t shake the dark feeling her words had brought. The next morning, I rose early, before the two little ones called for me, and began to look up scripture about motherhood and children. “God blessed them; and God said to them, ‘Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth ...’” (Genesis 1:28).

Eve’s nature as the first woman, and as the “mother of all the living,” was established before the fall. Motherhood was an important part of God’s design for man and woman before sin ever came into the world. God’s original intent for motherhood was not changed by the fall. This seemed to elevate motherhood biblically.

Since I had been trained to disciple adults as a missionary, I began to realize that God had created me as a mother to disciple my children, the future adults in my own home. The more I have studied this topic in thirty-6 years of motherhood, the more I have become convinced of the importance of a mother as a disciple maker. That has inspired me to write six books on motherhood, and I am not sure I am finished yet! I have come to believe that mothers have the power to civilize nations by taking seriously the opportunity they have to disciple their children and to raise them to be godly leaders.

Though my friend had good intentions in giving her advice, I instinctively knew that childbearing was imbued with eternal significance—raising children, building a home, and passing on a legacy of righteousness was part of God’s eternal design for the family.

My investment in my children as a strategic ministry of faith was no less important than the ministry and work I had outside of my home. That encounter, and the study that followed, paved the way for us to decide to have more children, and for me to put aside the demands of public ministry in order to focus on the new personal ministry in my home.

Now, as a mother who has raised four children from birth into adulthood, I can affirm that engaging my life and faith in the lives of my children has been the most fulfilling and fruitful work I have ever pursued. I have never regretted the decision to do less ministry, have more children, and give myself fully to the ministry of raising them. It was a challenge every day, but giving up my life to serve my precious children formed my character and faith as God’s child. 

There are many seasons in our lives to raise children and also to be able to work. It is all about keeping centered in eternal values one year at a time.

My investment in my children was about more than all the routine work of motherhood, and even more than my spiritual influence as a discipler. In the bigger picture of my life at home, I was civilizing my children, and shaping their hearts and lives. I was cooperating with God to mold them into well-rounded adults.

To “civilize” means “to create a high level of culture” and “to teach somebody to behave in a more socially, morally and culturally acceptable way” (Merriam-Webster Dictionary). I believe home, by God’s design, is the fountain of civilization, and the incubator of mental, moral, and spiritual character, appetites, habits, and values.

“Mothers, you are the divinely-appointed teachers and guides of your children; and any attempt to free yourselves of this duty is in direct opposition to the will of God. If you neglect them, the consequences are swift and sure. … Spend most of your time with your children. Sleep near them, attend and dress and wash them; let them eat with their mother and father; be their companion and friend in all things and at all times.”

The above quotation was gleaned from a wonderful book a friend gave to me called Golden Thoughts on Mother, Home, and Heaven, published in 1878.

The words still resonate, especially in today’s culture where the imagination for how mothers can affect the overall well-being of the soul of the next generation has been lost.

It's not to say that women can't work or do other kinds of ministry. But a culture who has lost the imagination of the importance of motherhood, leaves children at risk. Children  are the next generation of adults who will make decisions from the foundations of their souls. If wisdom, righteousness, faith, education has not been a priority of shaping for them,  they will be deplete of wisdom, and they will go into adulthood with sawdust souls.

So, each mom has a different puzzle, but she has to keep what is a priority to God at the center of her decisions in life, and when she seeks the heart of God, her legacy will be one of faith and faithfulness and will have implications for eternity.

Write down two specific things you can do to cultivate a more meaningful spiritual impact on your children--or in the lives of children you know. 

An excerpt from Own Your Life.

Be sure to get your copy soon. We will have a 4 week podcast series you won't want to miss. Clay and I have been recording and it has been grand. 

Obedience is a Pathway of Love informed by Training & Wisdom & podcast

The sky was more and more beautiful as it progressed into the full day, just like our lives.

The sky was more and more beautiful as it progressed into the full day, just like our lives.

The path of the righteous is like the light of dawn which shines brighter and brighter until the full day. Proverbs 4:18

Obedience--first time or eventual?

Now, the secret is out--I do believe in obedience for me, for children, for all who want to love and serve God--because He cares about obedience. But, I see now that the goal for my obedience is not behavioralism--performance--doing a task that I want done this instant because of fear of punishment. I do not measure my success as a parent by whether or not my children instantly obey, though often they did and that was the pattern we aimed for little by little.

I think that the goal is to teach our children to obey quickly, but search as I may, I cannot find that as a standard in scripture. And so I may find relief in the grace I have found in scripture.

Jesus said, "If you love me, you will obey me." 

His desire was that we want to obey him because we have come to love him so deeply. Mature love takes time. I studied Christ to learn how to disciple my children--

He served, I serve

He told them of his love over and over, I told them of my love over and over

He instructed, I instructed

He comforted, lived with, ate with, cried with them and so did I

Greater love has no one than this that  man lay down his life for his friend, He said to his disciples as he prepared to die on the cross. So He became my model of sacrificial love, always His eyes to redeem us, so I turned my heart to serve Him by always seeking to train and win my children's hearts as His Holy Spirit drew them.

My children and I love one another so much, some times people can't understand it. We are each other's best friends, we choose to spend time together, we talk often, we are the best and finest of companions. Once one of my kids said, "Mama, one of the many reasons I want to choose faith and choose to walk with God is that I would hate to ever break your heart. You mean so much to me I want you to see my love through the faith I have grown into because you loved us to Jesus."

There will be prodigal moments, doubts, imperfections. But love is what won Jesus's disciples and loe is what will win our children's obedience, not legalism.

The Pharisees were so concerned about fulfilling every jot and tittle of the law. And so the familiar language when they came to Jesus was, "What is the greatest commandment? What is the most important rule to follow, to obey?"

Jesus' answer was all about love-loving God, loving people. Love it he energy that provides us with the ability to obey when it is from our heart. 

Our children's proper obedience comes from learning to love us, learning to trust us, learnig to do what we ask then to do over time. 

I have loved the book by Eugene Peterson, "A Long Obedience in the Same Direction." ( Not a book about parenting, but a book on discipleship for adults) Even the title itself is about the process of discipleship--creating lives dedicated to the service and love of God by a life time of learning to make mature choices. Wisdom is little by little.

Instead, I want my children to learn to love God, to desire to serve Him out of their hearts of respect, awe, reverence, love. I look for growth, not perfection. Maturity, not instant holiness.

Now, it is in the process of having them learn to do my will, that they learn obedience. I must go against their wills to teach them to obey. But it is little by little, season by season. Personality and gender and exhaustion and wellness and life all go into the process.

Sometimes it is first time and sometimes it isn't. But the tension created from a false standard would make me wear a mantle of guilt for somehow failing that God never intended. But, I am trying to train their hearts to learn and to value and honor Christ out of their love which moves the to obedience.

For me, this was best done over years and years of training, correcting, modeling, loving and doing it all again the next day.

God's Ways

The older I get, the more I reflect on Christianity from a long term perspective. It seems that God is a long-term process Father. He doesn't do things all at once. He is rarely on my timetable. I almost always have to wait much longer than I want to to see my prayers answered. He does not make my life easy or take away the difficult things, but teaches me in the midst. I am very grateful, though, that he is not pernicious or unnecessarily harsh. He is patient, compassionate, understanding, loving through the whole process.

His focus for me as a child is that I move from immaturity towards maturity. From self-absorption to self-sacrifice. His discipline for me is daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, training my appetites of life to His ways. Teaching me to love righteousness and to be sensitive to His heart. Learning in my real paths of life how to life my life his way, with His wisdom. It has taken me a whole lifetime to learn the ways of righteousness. And so it is with our children.

God's Fathering of me

When I was a young, single missionary in Eastern Europe, I thought I was so spiritual--and I probably was for my age. I had given my life to Christ and wanted to be "His girl", following Him to the ends of the earth and bringing His love and grace to bear. But, because I was young and I had not failed enough or come to my own limits, I did not even know how much I needed to depend on God. I did not know how very capable I was of sin. I did not clearly see my own immaturity. I was not humble. All of these areas were not because I did not want to please God, but because I was young, inexperienced and didn't know better.

But then when I got married and had children, I began to realize just how selfish I was and how little I had learned to work. For a while, I thought my problem was my children and marriage,  and then I realized that my children were God's gift to me, but also His way of bringing training of righteousness into my own life, by teaching me what it really meant to serve Him, to give up my rights, to be humble.

The real giving of my life to Him was every day, every minute to the constant demands of my family and Clay. Parenting was for me His pathway of teaching me to obey, to love, to serve. Family life was His training grounds to build holiness into my life.

I am so very grateful that He did not show me all of my sinful, selfish ways at once. He gently took my hand and through the process of caring for my family, little by little I became aware of my need to mature, to love more, to give grace, to be loyal, to work harder,  to serve, as He had done with His disciples.

He disciplines us that we may share in his holiness. Holiness is a long term process of development in our hearts, training our wills to want to obey out of a developed love and awe of God.

Path of Life Parenting

There are so many verses that speak of this. Clay calls it, "The Path of Life" parenting model.

The path of the righteous is like the light of dawn--it shines brighter and brighter, a little at a time.

Proverbs also tells us, "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it. It is a process--a little here, a little there, a little again. Giving our children the appetite for obedience, wisdom, love, and holiness.

I am so grateful in my own life, that God did not overwhelm me with all of my sin and selfishness at once. I would have quit if He had treated me harshly. I wanted to please God and I wanted to be righteous, but didn't even know that I was so very immature. My heart was right in my own eyes and was seeking to please Him, but my character and behavior lacked so much. it has taken me a life-time to understand just what it really means to be sacrificially loving, loyal in my faith, righteous and generous in my behavior. If God has treated me in such a way, shouldn't that be the way I treat my children.

Wish I could write more but not allowed. Having my amazing assistants try to piece together my messages and my heart I am sharing with them. I hope you can enjoy the podast.

Why I Now Read Fiction

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By Glenn Packiam

I have always been a reader, but I haven't really been much of a fiction reader. At the risk of revealing my snobbery, I must confess that I used to think of fiction as a waste of time. I read for information. I want to learn! Who has time for silly stories?

Over the last few years, I've realized what a fool I've been for ignoring great stories. Here are just a few of the things I'm reminded of when I read good fiction:

The power of storytelling is not just in the story but in the telling. Not all fiction is created equal. Many stories rely on gimmicks and tricks, with more plot twists than a bubble gum blockbuster. No doubt, these stories are entertaining, but they will never be great. They acheive an emotional response by manipulating the reader not be truly letting him enter the story.

Take Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea, which I only recently read. There's not much of a plot per se. An old man goes too far out to catch a fish too big and struggles with sharks and fatigue as he tries to make it home. But that's not it. The way Hemingway tells us the story makes us feel the cracking rope burn against our hands, taste the salty breeze on our parched lips, and rise up with the deterimination to conquer age and nature and all the criticisms of society.

Solzhenitsyn's One Day In The Life of Ivan Denisovich is, as you would guess a story of one day. Yet, that one day captures so beautifully all the agony and disappointment and hope of living in a Siberian concentration camp-- ordered by the country he had once fought for.

The lesson is simple: how we say something is every bit as important as what we are trying to say. How we do something matters as much as what it is we are trying to accomplish. This foolish pragmatism of having to learn something efficiently or communicate something directly robs us of the joy of life. And God's way of teaching us is usually not as direct as we'd like. Sometimes it takes 40 years of wandering to test our hearts and make us humble.

Every scene matters.  Telling a story well means treating every scene with equal delicacy. Tolstoy in Anna Karenina transports us to elegant parties in Moscow and peasant farms in the countryside with equal deftness. Each scene is described in detail, making them believable and "feel-able".

To read more on the Stoyformed blog, click HERE.