Tag: marriage
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When the Church Uses a Lot of Words but Says Very Little

Y’all. Corporate America and church should not sound this similar. Big words. Big vision. No explanation. I’m craving substance over slogans, and I think a lot of us are.
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Finding Hope in the Fire: Lessons from Scripture and Camping

A camping trip and a roasted marshmallow inspired a powerful reminder: God meets us in the fire and uses hard seasons to refine and strengthen us.
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Marriage Lessons from a Flat Tire and a Smart Washer

After a flat tire fiasco and a laundry disaster, I realized that God didn’t design marriage to be a competition. It’s about partnership—each bringing our strengths, laughing through the chaos, and serving together just like Priscilla and Aquila.
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Out of Tune and Still Loved

A $25 piano, a love story, and a reminder that God makes us new—dents, scratches, and all. His grace tunes our hearts when we can’t fix ourselves.
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When to shut your mouth (biblically speaking)

Tired moms, ever snap at your spouse? Discover biblically based advice on speaking less, listening more, and managing frustration with grace.
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Trunk, Treat, or Trick? Why Your Halloween Conviction Is Between You and Jesus

Maybe the real spiritual battle isn’t over Halloween — it’s over whether we can still love each other when we disagree. ❤️
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When You Don’t Feel “Mom” Enough

For the mom who feels like she’s failing before 9 a.m. You don’t have to be enough today—God already is.
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Forging God’s Name on Things He Never Signed

Because sometimes, taking God’s name in vain sounds less like swearing… and more like speaking for Him when He never asked you to.
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When God Changes Your Menu: Lessons From a Church Potluck and the Feeding of the 5,000

I planned to bring soup to a simple church potluck—but God had tacos in mind. Here’s how one unexpected fiesta taught me to trust His plan over mine.
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When Everything’s About Me (and Somehow Still Not About Me)

Ever catch yourself thinking everyone’s out to ruin your day? This funny, faith-based mom devotional reminds us that life isn’t all about us — and that letting go of the spotlight might just let God shine through.