We Choose to Be Joyful: Our 24 Family Ways #17

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Way #17

We choose to be joyful even when we feel like complaining. 

Memory Verse:

"Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice! Let your gentle spirit be known to all men. The Lord is near."

~Phillippians 4:4-5

Many years ago, when Joel was a little boy, he played Legos for hours a day. He would design elaborate cars, towns, houses, roadways, playgrounds--whatever he could imagine. We all admired his skill. When he was about nine years old, he worked for months and months on a town that became an elaborate creation, around 5 feet wide. On top of this he had placed some of his best car designs. We all marveled at each stage of development of his wonderful creation.

One day we hosted a family for lunch. When Joel took the boy his age back to his room to play, the little boy rushed into the room and began hitting and destroying the whole of Joel's creation before we could pull him away. The devastation was complete, and broke the hearts of our whole family as we had been bragging on his enormous Lego city for months.

The little boy's mama said, "Oh well, boys will be boys!"

Joel was heartbroken and seemed to have a cloud around him for several days. Time had taught me he had a very strong sense of justice.  I learned that if I sat down with him, eye to eye, and talked to him about how he was feeling, he would open his heart, reveal what was bothering him, and then he would not whine any more. What he needed was sympathy.

On this particular week, I went into his room and sat down on the carpet next to him. We looked at the demolished Legos, and I held one in my hand. "Joel, I can't even imagine how bad this made you feel. I would be so hurt. What bothered you the most?"

"That boy had no right to be so destructive. I had never done anything to him. It took me almost a year to build all of these pieces. I just thought it was so unfair," Joel ended with a sigh.

"I understand, and I want you to know how very, very sorry I am. It was unkind and unjust."

Then I prayed with him and blessed him. Later he said, "Mama, I think I can be strong now and build a whole new city. I just wanted someone to listen to me and to understand. Thanks, Mama." And off he went outdoors to play with the other kids.

Dealing with Disappointments

Life is a constant challenge, every day, all the time. Things quit working, someone makes a mess, a Christian friend offends us or rejects us, life just isn't fair.

My life the past few months has included one interruption to my life after another and a whole slew of cancellations of planned events replaced by medical issues and reclining lots indoors, quietly alone away from my family with whom I had so many plans. Yet, this particular 24 Family Way has developed deep roots in my heart of learning to be content, choosing to be grateful, even in difficult circumstances. It has protected my heart from despair.

Jesus said, as a warning to us, a glimpse into how the world would be, "In this world, you will have tribulation."

Tribulation can also be translated, "great stress." He forewarned us about what a fallen world would bring.

But what can make it worse is children and adults who whine and complain all the time and never learn to walk within the realities of a fallen world. When we have tribulation of any kind, Jesus admonishes us to "take courage."

Have courage, change your attitude from hurt to brave, from overwhelmed to, "I can move through this with God's grace."

The habit of whining and complaining turns quickly into nagging and an attitude of self-absorption--which destroys hope, light, and beauty. God is so clear about how he felt about the complaining of the Israelites. It led them to disbelief.

They wandered in the desert for 40 years because of their complaining hearts and disbelief. This story is a great warning to our children as we are teaching them this Way. When we choose not to practice trusting God, turning our hearts to faith and thankfulness that we are not alone, we are prone to wander in wilderness in our lives.

It is not wrong to be sad or depressed because of a tragedy, because God is the one who supplied our ability to have emotions. We need and long for people who will sympathize with us. We need to have comfort for pain, brokenness, and injustices in life. God wants to comfort us, and we heal more quickly if we have someone who will help bear our burdens. For my sweet boy, this demolishing of his work was a tragedy.

But for Joel to become emotionally healthy and strong, I had to help him learn not to stay in the complaining/whining place but to learn to move to an attitude of gratitude. "God will comfort me. God will help me grow stronger. God is just. He understands. He is with me."

The past couple of  years, I have watched my oldest children seeking scripture over and over again to become peacemakers, to choose to be gentle, to choose to forgive, to actively trust God when unfair circumstances came along. I have been amazed as they have chosen to be faithful because scripture and training was the foundation of their hearts. And of course the result of their chosen pathway of obedience has been greater peace.

I wish I could give them and myself a "G"-rated life where everything was fair and all people were healthy and loving. But that is not reality in a broken world. Teaching them how to love, how to be joyful as a choice, often by modeling those qualities ourselves, will evidence the reality of God's spirit in our own lives and give our children tools that will help them to be strong when they encounter inevitable trials as adults.

Do you have your copy of Our 24 Family Ways? Find it here!

Our 24 Family Ways (2010)
By Clay Clarkson

Books That Changed Our Lives Forever

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To learn to read is to light a fire; every syllable that is spelled out is a spark. —Victor Hugo

Sally, why do you write so many books? Can’t you say what you want to say in one or two books?”

When I look back on my life, I realize that I came into motherhood, marriage, life with a pretty empty blank slate. I was subject to the many voices I found in culture while searching for wisdom in living out a meaningful, purposeful life as a woman, mother, wife.

Once I found biblical truths that gave me wisdom and guidance, roadways for going forward, I wanted to share the ideas with others who longed for direction along God’s paths.

As I look back over the years, I have learned more every year, every season. I cannot not think about philosophy or ideas. It bubbles up in my mind when I am taking a shower, driving in the car, washing dishes.

What you think, the ideas you believe, the truth you cherish determines what you become, it determines the trajectory of your life. If you think truly, you will live truly. If you think falsely, you will live falsely.

As a writer, I hope that the books I write will give guidance, wisdom, truth, strength for those who read my books to better understand the way God designed us to live, to think, to behave.

What you feed your mind determines what thoughts will direct your life. Today, my wonderful team and I are reviewing some of the books I have written and how they have transformed our lives.

It is my prayer that the books Clay and I have written will be a treasure of ideas that will give you hope, guidance and peace in your profoundly important role as a parent, marriage partner and woman serving Christ.

Be inspired today as my friends and I talk about how these books have changed our lives forever.

Educating the Wholehearted Child
By Clarkson, Clay, Clarkson, Sally
Buy on Amazon






Civilization of Nations Begins at Home

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I have a deep love and reverence for women. I wanted my girls to be able to live into their intellectual strength, their skill in creating beauty, their love in relationships. In short, I wanted them to fully access their amazing design crafted by God to be excellent in every way. When fully filled with the vision for who they were made to be, they have the power, the nobility of l heart, the reverence for excellence to bring all that is good, light, lovely, right into the world to flourish.

Whenever I have time with one of my girls, I am enriched in every area of my life. In spite of my own imperfections, my girls have become fully actualized as influential women.

 The vision I see is this: if women rise to be the gatekeepers, making their homes places of excellence, cultivating love for each other as well as reverence and worship of God, spending personal time teaching and discipling their children, neighbors, friends, keeping them from worshiping the idol of television and serving them through this training and nurture and giving up of her own time, there will be hope.

 Then a civilization will be born where the whole culture will be populated with adults who have great souls, a call to the Kingdom of God, a passion to do what is right, a desire to protect the weak, and an honest moral character that is the foundation of right decisions made in politics, medicine, government, media and the arts.

 Yes, it requires great personal sacrifice. But in the battle between evil and good, the allegiance between our commitment to our God or our bowing to Satan has always required sacrifice. Evil is never passive and never takes a break–and neither can God’s chosen ones cease to work tirelessly to be about His business.

 When women abandon this great and important responsibility, there is a greater tendency for children to become the kind of adults who can be self-centered and self-serving; under-developed and ineffective without intentional training, --Those who can overlook unrighteousness without any pang of conscience—because that conscience has never been developed. They become the kind of adults who can passively let others take responsibility for our government and country--to accept and validate those who would promise the moon even though the moon isn’t available in reality. When a person has no convictions, he cannot operate his life in God’s strength. It is moms who help to develop foundations of righteousness in their children’s souls.

 For this gatekeeping to occur there must be hundreds—thousands—of dinners made, laundry loads run, backs scratched and cookies baked. There must be watercolor projects and messes, hikes and games of hide and seek, money spent on wonderful life-giving books and concerts and the theatre. It will not happen in the absence of a cost.

 Time spent ministering to our people is time well spent because that investment grants us the door to their hearts. When they are soft to us because we have ministered to their needs, their minds and hearts will be soft to hear our values, our convictions, and our guidance.

Today on my podcast, Joy and I speak of other brilliant and outstanding women throughout history who have made a difference in their world, their time in history. You will want to participate in her course where she teaches about excellent women from past history.

Let’s be those kind of women.

Community is Necessary — Gather with Friends!

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"And when you pour yourself out upon us, you do not sink to the lowest level, but you raise us up; you are not dispersed, but rather you gather us together."  -Augustine

It is so easy as mothers to get swept away doing a million tasks, investing in numerous projects at the same time until we are absolutely drained. Much like a teapot, we can continue pouring into all our various cups ... our children, husbands, friends, homes, meals, jobs, and so much more. We aren't always aware that our hearts, minds, and souls are almost empty until suddenly, we have nothing left to give.

There have been times in my life when my soul felt much like the empty gas tank of a beat-up car. Flashing red light, running on "E", knowing that at any moment, I may not be able to take another step. Once we allow ourselves to get all the way down to completely empty, we are no longer able to be good stewards of the things which God has entrusted to us. If you have only been spilling out and had no filling up, you will become impatient, frustrated, and drained.

In order to be a mother who is loving, gracious, and patient with her little ones, we must have our cup abundantly filled on a regular basis. The same goes for our marriages, as well. If you find yourself irritable, easily agitated, and unloving toward your husband, you may need to reevaluate where those feelings are stemming from. If your entire week has been so incredibly hectic that you never had a moment to yourself, never had a cup of coffee with a friend, and never spent time in scripture, your emptiness will drive you to irritation toward your family.

Scripture often talks about God pouring out for us (Joel 2:28-29, Acts 2:17-18), and just as Augustine said, God has the ability to gather us together. Community is one of the most incredible tools God has given us, to allow the opportunity for someone else to pour into our cups! In Life Together by Dietrich Bonhoeffer, he reminds us that fellowship with other Christians brings incomparable joy and restoration to the believer.

No matter how busy your schedule may be this week, regardless of how many tasks you have on your to-do list, make time to at least talk to a friend on the phone. The enemy wants to get you alone and make you feel isolated, because he knows there is great power and strength in numbers (Matthew 18:20). Make sure that you always have godly women of wisdom pouring into your life and speaking words of encouragement over you. Without this, you will continue running on empty, and you won't be able to build up your family, friends, or God's kingdom. If you lack friends right now, pray the Lord brings some your way! Then look around; who in your neighborhood, at work, or at church looks like they may need a friend, too?

We Take Personal Responsibility: Our 24 Family Ways #16

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Way # 16 We take personal responsibility to keep our home neat and clean at all times.

Memory Verse:

“The hand of the diligent will rule, but the slack hand will be put to forced labor. “

Proverbs 12:24

Time changes from much travel left me so exhausted, I thought I would fall asleep standing up. An unusual season of many weeks of traveling had found me coming and going constantly. Walking out to our meeting place at the airport, Joel whisked my bags from me, placed them in the car and then drove me the hour home from the airport.

"We packed you some cherries, Mom, ‘cause we thought you might be hungry," Joel informed me.

Home sweet home called my name as we drove into the driveway. Candles had been lit, music was wafting softly, and the table was set with a warm bowl of soup and crusty herb bread. Fresh flowers and a “welcome home “ sign greeted me in the sweep of entering the front door.

"Welcome home, mama. I bet you are ready to sleep in your own bed for a long while," Sarah commented as she put the last bowl of soup on the table.

I waited many years to know if all of my training and providing had gone into their hearts and minds. May I be the first one to say how glad I am to be in this place? Finally, the fruit of my labor has come to fruition. My children have "caught" it!

They take initiative, when they are home, to make our own home inviting, a prepared sanctuary, a solace to my soul, a place that says welcome when I get home from necessary trips.  The values that I had in mind when I prepared my home this way, year after year, month after month, day after day, have become their own standard of what a home should "speak" to people when they come here. They do the same things in their own homes around the world. And they do it without being told, because of all of the years of me training them and making them help me daily, straightening up, lighting candles, putting on music, making a meal, setting the table, over and over again. Training takes lots and lots of practice and patience.

No one becomes excellent of character automatically from lectures, but rather from practicing skills, responsibilities, and chores together with contented spirits. This is the way we  build values they will learn to cherish. Wisdom and skill require time, instruction and practice.--modeling combined with gentle and patient instruction.

And so, one of the most important ways of training into our children is, "This is not just my house, it is your house. We take care of it by keeping it a place of life and beauty together. How do you want others to see your home? What do we do to make it a place of refreshment for all who come here?" And then, you, the mom, make the standards every day, and you show them how to do all the tasks, and you give them responsibility.

Our 24 Family Ways is a wonderful, simple-to-use guide to family devotions. Find it here—there’s a coloring book, too!

Our 24 Family Ways (2010)
By Clay Clarkson

Don't Mom Alone with Heather MacFayden

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Not long ago, I was feeling quite alone and invisible in my life. I was carrying several serious burdens of my children and friends, was weary from loads of work, and felt so alone.

A very loyal and trustworthy friend texted me, “I am going to be gone for a month. I need some Sally time.”

As we sipped the strong black tea we both loved from England, I poured out my heart’s issues. Out of compassion, tears came to her eyes. “I don’t know if you realize it, but I am praying for you diligently almost every day. All the things that are piling up in your life are indeed heavy to carry, but my life is similarly burdened, and I want to tell you how I have been seeing God’s goodness amidst my own personal circumstances.”

When my friend left, nothing in my circumstances had changed, yet I felt hope in my heart because of her words. Our friendship carried me to peace because she helped to shoulder my burdens and sympathize.

God created us for companionship with real people. We were born for community, love, help, encouragement, and the blessing and intimacy that comes from close friendship with others. Consequently, fellowship with like-minded women and men is essential to our spiritual health, and to our well-being in the Christian life.

A woman alone in her home, giving and being emptied on a regular basis, and dealing with her limitations -- plus those of the sinful people who dwell in her home -- is a target for discouragement, feelings of inadequacy, confusion and a sense of failure.

Having support systems is essential to our spiritual life, growth, health and pleasure. God intended us to live in a greater sense of family—to have aunts, grandmas, sisters, cousins, and friends who would surround us and give help and instruction to us as we learn to live life as moms, wives, ministry leaders, and friends.

In an isolationist society, we have falsely accepted the premise that we can “do it alone.” That belief brings so much pressure on one person to be all and do all!

Cultivating fellowship, friendship, and community may require you to take initiative, since isolation is the norm in this culture at this time.

Keep looking until you find someone more mature than you who can draw you forward in your walk with God. Find someone who is right where you are to share similar issues, ideas, and help, and also find someone younger in the Lord or at a younger stage to whom you can bring encouragement.

ECCLESIASTES 4:9-10 Two are better than one because they have a good return for their

labor. For if either of them falls, the one will lift up his companion. But woe to the one

who falls when there is not another to lift him up.

HEBREWS 3:13 (NIV) But encourage one another daily, as long as it is called “Today,”

so that none of you may be hardened by sin's deceitfulness.

GALATIANS 6:10 (NLT) Therefore, whenever we have the opportunity, we should do good

to everyone--especially to those in the family of faith.

In light of these verses, what action steps do you need to move on to create a less isolated life for you and for your family?

Today on my podcast, I am talking with Heather MacFayden who is launching her wonderful book, Don’t Mom Alone.

Books Referenced in this Podcast:

 

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Some Things Are As Good As You Hoped They'd Be by Sarah Clarkson

Every Wednesday night since I have been home this summer, I have ground my fresh wheat berries, whipped up my pancake recipe, crisped some turkey bacon, (Clay’s preference), filled my cakes with roasted walnuts or pecans, and we have feasted out by our little fireplace on our deck. It truly couldn’t be any better. It is a perfected recipe and so wonderful, you feel at one with the world and life—at least for a few moments.

I read some thoughts from my Sarah and thought they were worthy of sharing again—because when we have a grid that says, “I will indeed look for the beauty, the good moments, the ways in which I see the faint hint of a perfect life created by God, and waiting for us to experience in eternity.

Some things are just as good as you hope they'll be.

I walked through an English village near our home yesterday, delighted by the medieval houses and the delicate opulence of the late summer gardens. We had tea and cake in a 16th century cottage, and picked blackberries from the hedge as we walked to a Saxon church whose silence is so rich with ancient hush I almost cry upon entering it.

I love these idyllic moments. England is many things and I know its foibles and failures well; but it's just as beautiful, just as steeped in story and tea and gardens as I always thought it would be. There are many things about England that are painfully foreign and I live in the suburbs, not a village, but the good things here are every bit as good as my idealist of a dreamy-eyed self imagined they'd be.

Things are sometimes, you know.

I was thinking as I walked yesterday that there's a jaded spirit abroad in our age that wants to belittle ideals, that meets excitement or exuberant dreams with reductive weariness. Nothing is really as good as you think, it says. There's always a catch. You can't expect to have your hopes met in a world like this. Don't be naive, whispers that knowing voice.

But you know what? Marriage is just as good as I hoped it would be. So was getting to study at Oxford. So is having sweet babies and living with them in a little house near the Sussex downs. The fact that these things are imperfect and also hellishly hard at times or disappointing or lonely in no way reduces the real, bone deep goodness I taste in their presence.

We need to be able to say that things are shockingly good precisely because we are fallen people living in a broken world who are fighting to believe that redemption is possible. Flattening everything doesn't make things better; it steals our capacity for hope, it bankrupts our ability to imagine something beyond our brokenness. We need to yearn and mourn. To dream wildly and find that some dreams really do come true is to taste the goodness that began us and the grace that aids us and the kindness that draws us on toward the healing of all things.

Because that really will be better than we could ever have hoped.

FOR MORE

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  • Leave an iTunes Review These are so important as they help our podcast reach more women with messages of encouragement.

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  • Share with others. My prayer is that this podcast brings encouragement to women and families, and I would be honored for you to tell others about it.

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A Romantic Heart Has Its Benefits

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From The Mom Walk

"I am a deeply romantic woman, always yearning for a picture-perfect home--fires on the hearth with feasts and laughter nearby, pleasant and gracious conversations, an ambience of beauty and peace. I write about my ideals. I breathe my ideals in the secret moments of my life. I want a picture-perfect marriage where I am adored and appreciated. I want my children to be healthy, happy, and harmonious. I want strong friendships and a stable community with friends. I want an extended family to be close to us and to provide my children with love and support and lots of godly input. I want there to be money for all the bills, a home that isn't always exploding with messes, and time to sit and read a good book and ponder life.

These longings are not wrong. Ideals and the desire for beauty are simply the echoes of God's design in our hearts. He was the one who designed the world to be a masterpiece of wonder and life. The yearning for peace, health, and comfort is natural to our souls and comes from the depths of our hearts where we can still feel and imagine what God created life to be before the fall."

I think God is the biggest Idealist of all. He created everything in a perfect state, and someday He will "restore all things." (Acts 3:21.) I think He understands my heart's longing for a beautiful life and fulfilling relationships.

I think He feels just the same way I do. When I long for life to line up with His ideals, I reflect His own heart. When I create pleasing settings, soothe ruffled feelings, play beautifully crafted music, offer grace to a tired and cranky child, or prepare a hearty meal that fills stomachs and enriches souls as we share ideas around the table, I remind those who share in the moments with me that we are, indeed, sons and daughters of a King, meant for more than workaday life in this broken world.

Though I still wish for an "Anne of Green Gables" neighborhood, where friends come by and sit on my porch over a cup of tea to talk, and my children have only a g-rated world in which to live, I can still craft my own home to be such a sanctuary. And when my children store these pictures of moments shared in the treasure chest of their hearts, they are more likely to always remember what they were made for and how to hold fast to His ideals their whole life.

How can you remind those around you, today?

We Work With a Cooperative Spirit: Our 24 Family Ways #15

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Way #15

We work with a cooperative spirit, freely giving and receiving help.

Memory verse:

"Two are better than one, because they have good return for their labor. For if either of them falls, the one will lift up his companion.But woe to the one who falls when there is not another to lift him up.”

Ecclesiastes 4:9

“We are a family. We stick together. We work together. We celebrate life together. We belong to one another and we will always help one another.”

These are some of the messages I gave to our children over and over again. To build a sense of belonging and a sense of community takes time and repition. Yet, we worked so hard to build this family loyalty because we knew that God had created family as the first community in Genesis and we knew we would be a stability for one another in the upheavals of life in a secular world. To understand you belong and have a calling as a family gives vision, extends a sense of purpose, and give camaraderie.

Self-actualization is a term  that has come up in conversation a lot this week. All of my children have talked about how they grew into believing they could bring light to their dark world because of the way we trained them and talked to them, over and over again. We spoke forward into their lives--into the adults they would become and that they would companion one another as they grew through life.

"I believe God has a special work for you to do in the world. You are my right hand helper and you have learned to work so responsibly. "

"I love seeing your heart of compassion. Bringing all your friends from your drama club was a gift. You are such a good influence in their lives. Thanks for helping me clean up all the dishes from their time here. I know you will be a leader of women."

"Maybe you will write great works like Lewis and Tolkien did. You have such a grasp of truth and beauty and such a great way of expressing it. I know it took a lot of hard work to write your essay. Great job. "

"There is no limit to what God might do with a heart that is completely His. He would love to bless your ideas and dreams if your heart is His. Your diligence will pave the way. "

This week's Way, number 15, is all about giving your child a sense of being a servant leader as a part of their self-image. Part of perceiving oneself as a leader is understanding that God has created them to serve, and that it is the glory of a person to serve well. But another aspect is building a strong family sense of community.

Each morning, after breakfast, I would put on lively music and have all of the kids do necessary chores to restore our house to order before we began the day. We would all rock out together while one put the dishes in the dishwasher, another swept, another straightened the room where we would be reading, etc.

Before we had guests, each of us would have an area to manage: picking up, setting the table, writing a personal welcome sign on the ever-present chalkboard, or lighting candles. I would tell them how much I appreciated them making our home so beautiful.

At our ministry conferences, each had a task. Little ones would welcome moms with a basket of chocolate. Older kids would run the book tables. Each year, all of them had to give a short talk, greeting, song or prayer at the conferences. Truly, having our children serve together for many, many years is one of the key components of their current perception that God has called them to impact their worlds for God's kingdom.

As you learn the truth of this way, have a grid to encourage your children that family is always to help each other, and that they are so very precious to be willing to serve others. Giving your child a self-image of perceiving that God wants to use them in their world, will shape their work and service the rest of their lives. Giving them practice to serve each other will build strong relationships between siblings when they grow up.

Find Our 24 Family Ways here!

Our 24 Family Ways (2010)
By Clay Clarkson

Engage in the Possibilities of Life & Giveaway

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"It is not the critic who counts. ... The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena; whose face is marred by the dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly ... who, at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly; so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory or defeat." Theodore Roosevelt

As I look back over life, I am most grateful for the many opportunities I have had to step out in faith and to pursue ideals. So many times, we are stopped by fear of failure, or criticism, or just lack of a work ethic. But even as God is excellent, so we who are made to be like Him and to exhibit His light into a dark world, must determine to engage in the possibilities, to give our best, to take risks.

Much to my surprise, though life has muddied me a bit and I have been drawn into the muck of the world at times, the end result was that I grew In character, wisdom, learned to really love and appreciate God more and also found out what it really looked like to be gentle, sympathetic and kinder to others. Following Him down the path of faith provided many treasures for my heart and soul along the way.

It’s like following a secret pathway forward through the woods of life and finding hidden treasure along the way.

A heart-felt but short podcast today. I hope you will love the story that touched my heart.

And today, we are giving away 25 audio downloads of my book, Help, I’m Drowning. To enter, follow me on Instagram and tag at least one friend and we will pick 25 people to win. We just wanted to celebrate this launch one more time with you our wonderful friends. We will be giving them to others throughout the week who have in some way supported our ministry, our books, our messages. Stay tuned.

And Have a wonderful week.

Books Referenced in this Podcast:

More Resources:

FOR MORE

  • Subscribe to this podcast on iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app.

  • Leave an iTunes Review These are so important as they help our podcast reach more women with messages of encouragement.

  • Follow on Facebook and Instagram for the latest news and updates.

  • Share with others. My prayer is that this podcast brings encouragement to women and families, and I would be honored for you to tell others about it.

  • Join my friends and me in membership at Life with Sally, a place for me to share more teaching from the Bible and messages on education, motherhood, discipleship, and more!