Prayer on the Syllabus: Faith and Education Can Work Together
Let the kids learn. They’ll find faith. God has a way of showing up in the curriculum.
Let the kids learn. They’ll find faith. God has a way of showing up in the curriculum.
Pick a time and place everyday when you can get prayerful. For me it happens to be my morning commute on the New York subway.
Faith can move mountains, but only if you lay down the shovel and stop trying to do it yourself.
The book shows that God will help us in our deepest, most personal and private struggle and need for healing. Our faith will help us move on.
Sometimes a discovery I make in my general reading will find itself moved to my devotional shelf and become part of my formal devotions.
This book has brought hope and faith to so many readers. I have my own theory about this, but I’m just one person. I’d like to hear what you think.
Maybe I should call these “on-the-go” prayers. Print ‘em out. Cut ‘em out. Put ‘em in your pocket. Pray them on the fly.
Here at Guideposts, when we talk about a devotional, we usually mean a short, first-person story, with a Bible verse and a prayer, designed to be read in about five minutes.
I’m not sure how much advice I can give but reassurance I gladly offer, and that’s because I got so much of it.
Do you hold hands in your family during grace? It warms my spirit when we do.
My own take on all this is that you can’t really have the one without the other. Can you?
Looking for some hope and faith in your summer reading? Try these three spiritual memoirs.
You have no billing addresses.