About the Book:
Bestselling author Holley Gerth feels like your best friend, your supportive sister, and your biggest cheerleader. She understands that you want to be a woman who looks life in the face and says, "You can't beat me." A woman who knows love is a risk and reaches out anyway. A woman who understands kindness takes real courage. Who doesn't fake it or try to hide her scars. Who fights to believe she is who God says she is and helps others do the same.
Strong, Brave, Loved offers 60 short devotions to empower you to be that kind of woman. It's simple, personal, and practical, with room for you to journal your own responses and reflections. With these concise and compassionate devotions, Holley leads you on a journey of discovery as you learn to live in freedom, hope, and holy courage.
My Thoughts:
Holly Gerth is the absolute best at making the reader feel as though she is sitting across the table with you and sharing a cup a coffee with a friend. Her latest book has taken this sense of conversation to a greater level by providing space after each devotion to share your own thoughts, prayers and response to her devotional.
Holly always builds from the firm foundation of God's Word, and very personally and gently leads the reader away from the lies of the enemy and straight toward God's truth. I think what I enjoy most about Holly's writing is that you always feel like you are being talked to as a person of equal worth. After reading her work for so long, I finally know that she truly wants everyone who reads her work to know that she is God's unique masterpiece.
Her books have seen me through many major life events, and given me strength to keep putting one foot in front of the other. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this book to everyone!
About the Author:
Holley Gerth is a best-selling writer, licensed counselor, certified life coach and speaker. She is cofounder of (in)courage, an online destination for women, which received more than one million page views in its first six months. She also reaches out to readers through her popular blog at www.holleygerth.com and a partnership with DaySpring. Holley lives in the South with her husband, Mark.
Thursday, October 24, 2019
Thursday, August 8, 2019
An Interview with Denise Pass, Author of Shame Off You
Shame is an assault
on the core of who we are. It assassinates our character, minimizes our
worth, and dashes our hope. Like Adam and Eve, we often hide shame, but hiding
never heals it. Left unattended, shame can develop into a crippling reality
that paralyzes us. Like an infectious disease, shame impacts everyone . . . but
not all shame is bad.
Shame can
either be an oppressive and powerful tool of worldly condemnation or a source
of conviction that God uses to bring his people back to himself. Having the
discernment to know the difference and recognize shame in its many forms can
change the course of one’s life.
In a transparently
honest style, Denise Pass shares of her experience dealing with shame after
learning that her former husband was a sexual offender. Having lived through
the aftermath, she leads you into God’s Word where you will see for yourself
that God is bigger than your pain, shame, mistakes, and limitations.
Shame Off You (available from Abingdon Press) shares how freedom can be found in
choosing to break the cycle of shame by learning from the past, developing
healthy thinking patterns, silencing lies, and overcoming the traps of vanity
and other people’s opinions.
Q: Can you
start us off by sharing a little bit of your own story?
I did not
realize just how significant of an impact shame had on my life until I started
writing this book. I don’t think I recognized all I was experiencing in my life
as shame. Shame affected me in profound ways—from worrying to the point of
obsession about what others thought of me to shame from my past, present and in
the future. Shame was pervasively impacting all of life: how I related to
others, processed my perception of myself and responded in social situations.
Shame was snuffing out my hope and life, and it felt like I had no way out.
Then in 2007,
God revealed to me my (then) husband was a sex offender and some of our
children were his victims. This revelation crushed us, and the ensuing shame
was crippling. I had waited for marriage and married a Christian man. We were that
homeschool family. It did not seem possible. But it was. Through that
devastating season, my children and I drew nearer to God, reading the Bible
through and clinging to His precious promises. I continued to home educate, and
we put one foot in front of the other. Through a five-year long court battle.
Through tragic new revelations. Through sorrow up on sorrow and financial woes.
God was our God through all of it and the lessons we learned as shame lost its
grip on our souls were priceless.
Now, my four
oldest are all in college and walking with God, and my youngest son who I
adopted from Russia is still home educated by the grace of God. And me? God
brought a precious man into my life who I call my Kinsman Redeemer. There’s
more about him (my “Bo”—short for Boaz) in the book.
Q: At its root,
what is shame, and why is it so detrimental to us?
There are many
roots underlying what we call shame.
Shame is the broad term used, but there are so many things interwoven in
our culture that we accept as “normal.” Shame is an accusation on our soul that
says we are not enough. News flash—we are not enough—but God is. He is our
righteousness and removes all of our sin and shame. Shame is peer pressure and
the fear of man—we would not have shame if we did not have an audience. Shame
is a label or box that imprisons our souls and steals our joy. Shame is
detrimental because it gives us a false identity and keeps us from living the
abundant life Jesus promises, distracting us from the mission we have been
called to.
Q: What are some of the most common underlying sources of shame? Is
shame always caused by a sin a person commits him/herself?
Shame is a head
game that we do to ourselves most of the time, but there is also plenty of
social shaming that goes on—shunning and people condemning one another. While
sin invites shame into our lives as a natural consequence, shame is prevalent
within our culture. We come by it naturally and so we don’t question it.
Expectations cause shame to rise when we don’t meet them. Comparison. Pride.
These are huge contributors to the game of shame. The presence of shame in our
lives is ultimately a spiritual matter. We feel the truth behind the statement
that we are not enough. We accept this condemnation, but it can become our
vindication. We are not enough. That’s ok, because Christ is our Righteousness.
The enemy of our souls is always accusing us, but our Savior is always
interceding for us.
Q: Shame
typically surrounds a situation the public is aware of, at least in the mind of
the person walking through it. How can the church community be more supportive
of a member suffering with shame?
Great question.
We would not have shame if we did not have an audience. It is this fear of man
and focus on self that makes us feel so very exposed as we seek acceptance and
to snuff out rejection. In my situation, I felt like the church did not know
how to handle sex abuse situations, so they didn’t. I was told to be silent.
The shame culture thrives in silence. However, being able to talk about it in a
God-honoring way and having support instead of isolation would take the sting
out of shame and turn it on its head. When we protect the violator and silence
the victims, we are propagating and promoting shame.
Q: In what ways
do we intentionally or unintentionally heap shame on others?
We live in a
society of labels. People try to define one another by false identities based
on their performance—good or bad, or their status in this life. When we move
away from our identity being in Christ, we find that our identity falls short.
Shame was introduced to man in the garden of Eden. We left perfection and chose
an insecure, shame-filled culture, instead. Discontent with our lot, comparison
and the fear or man have robbed us confidence and plagued us with shame in all
of life. Shame is also used as a tool of power by people who seek to subject
others, shaming them into submission. And again, shame is in our culture, so it
is fairly invisible. We just accept it as part of life, which can cause us to
unintentionally continue in the shame culture.
Q: How is Shame
Off You set up and designed to be used?
Shame Off You is the story of a girl who shrunk her shame. It is a guide for
recognizing the shame all around us and how to rid ourselves of shame
biblically. There is a biblical lens of Truth, Humility and Grace that we view
shame through, as well as Cycles of Shame and Redemption, a Shame Spectrum and
Shame Quiz so we can evaluate how shame is impacting our lives. There is also a
resource guide in the back of the book that covers 40 different common shames
we might encounter along with Scriptures to combat that shame.
Shame Off You systematically covers everything from feeling shunned and rejected,
to being shy, to worrying about what others thought or said about me to
traumatic shame that paralyzes us.
Q: What are the
steps to overcoming shame?
Shame distracts
us from the mission of God and keeps us from living on mission for Christ. It
causes us to focus on self and limits our worth. It hurts our relationship with
God and others and causes us to live defeated, discouraged lives. It has to be
dealt with. Recognizing shame’s presence is necessary to be able to deal with
it effectively.
From
recognition, we need to discern whether we are dealing with condemnation or
conviction. Condemnation is based on works whereas Conviction is based on
relationship. Once we know what we are dealing with, we need to consult God’s
word and use a biblical filter to evaluate our shame and then let it go. We
defeat shame not by mere words. And hiding shame does not heal it. We have to
face shame and deal with it biblically to be set free. We don’t get rid of
shame because it humbles us—but because it prevents us from living the abundant
life Christ promises, reaching those around us.
Denise Pass, author of Shame Off You, is an award-winning CCM
recording artist and singer-songwriter, accomplished writer/blogger, speaker
and worship leader at women’s conferences as well as a worship leader on staff
at her home church. After a crushing discovery of her former husband’s hidden
life and surviving a painful divorce, she now shares an inspirational message
through her ministry, Seeing Deep Ministries, about seeing the deeper truth in
God’s word when life hurts.
Denise also founded and directed a home educational co-op for 12 years
and engaged in many educational pursuits, including forming and directing a
classical children’s choir. A graduate from the University of Maryland, Denise
now resides in Virginia, with her “Kinsman Redeemer” husband and five children.
Learn more about Shame Off You at https://shameoffyou.life/the-book. You can also
find out more about Denise Pass at DenisePass.com. She can also be found on Facebook (Denise Pass – Author/Speaker/
Worship Leader) and Twitter
(@TheDenisePass).
Tuesday, August 6, 2019
Shame Off you by Denise Pass
About the Book:
Learn
to recognize and process feelings of shame in a biblical way to restore
God-ordained self-worth and hope.
“There is therefore now no
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” — Romans 8:1
Shame is an assault on the core
of who we are. It assassinates our character, minimizes our worth, and dashes
our hope. Like Adam and Eve, we often hide shame, but hiding never heals it.
Left unattended, shame can develop into a crippling reality that paralyzes us.
Like an infectious disease, shame impacts everyone . . . but not all shame is
bad.
Shame can either be an
oppressive and powerful tool of worldly condemnation or a source of conviction
that God uses to bring his people back to himself. Having the discernment to
know the difference and recognize shame in its many forms can change the course
of one’s life.
In a transparently honest style,
Pass shares of her experience dealing with shame after learning that her former
husband was a sexual offender. Having lived through the aftermath, she leads
you into God’s Word where you will see for yourself that God is bigger than
your pain, shame, mistakes, and limitations.
Shame Off You shares how freedom can be
found in choosing to break the cycle of shame by learning from the past,
developing healthy thinking patterns, silencing lies, and overcoming the traps
of vanity and other people's opinions.
Learn more at https://shameoffyou.life/the-book.
Learn more at https://shameoffyou.life/the-book.
About the author:
Denise Pass, author of Shame
Off You, is an award-winning CCM recording artist and singer-songwriter,
accomplished writer/blogger, speaker and worship leader at women’s conferences
as well as a worship leader on staff at her home church. After a crushing
discovery of her former husband’s hidden life as a repetitive sex offender, and
surviving a painful divorce, she now shares an inspirational message through
her ministry, Seeing Deep Ministries, about seeing the deeper truth in God’s
word when life hurts. Denise also founded and directed a home educational co-op
for 12 years and engaged in many educational pursuits, including forming and
directing a classical children’s choir. A graduate from the University of
Maryland, Denise now resides in Virginia, with her “Kinsman Redeemer” husband
and five children.
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
The Missing Money: Money Monsters by Okeoma Moronu Schreiner Illustrated by Sandhya Prabhat
About the Book:
Kai Akana is your typical little boy. He is thoughtful and brave in his own way. He has big dreams and an even bigger imagination. In THE MISSING MONEY Kai receives a cash gift (YAY!) from his grandmother but soon "loses" his money to what he believes is a Money Monster. Kai musters up all his courage and creates a plan to save his money. Luckily, before Kai commits a potential crime, his mother sits him down to explain what happened to his money. Through this adventure Kai learns some important money basics the basics of banking, saving and modern banking technology.
My Thoughts:
It has been several years since I've had young children in my home, but I am thrilled when I can support someone who taps into a child's imagination and explores things from that perspective. Kai's experience with an ATM machine is fun and amazing all at once! What is an almost daily experience in the life of the adult's in his life becomes a rather scary concept for a child who doesn't have the fainest idea of how the banking process takes place.
I thought it was brilliant that Kai waited until he thought his parents were calm before he presented his fears about the Money Monster! His parents responded in a way that was both respectful and empowering by explaining the deposit process, and giving him an ATM card to access his money. Parents can take a learning queue from the author and be careful not to diminish a child's fear of a concept that is difficult to grasp from their perspective.
This book is going to provide endless hours of conversation and teachable moments between children and their parents. Bravo!
About the Author:
Okeoma Moronu is a corporate finance attorney, mother of two and former teacher. She is a graduated from Columbia Law School in 2011 with over $200,000 in student loans and has paid off those loans. In the process of becoming debt free she became quite the personal finance nerd.
Her hope is that the Money Monsters series will create opportunities for parents, teachers, and educators to have money conversations with children that will spark an interest and develop a curiosity, comfort and confidence that will last a lifetime.
Sandhya Prahbat, is the illustrator of the Money Monsters world. She hand painted and digitally rendered a series of dynamic, fun and interesting images that bring Kai's adventure to life for your little one's reading pleasure. You can learn more about Sandhya at http://www.sandhyaprabhat.com/
Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Q&A with Cark and Leah Burbidge - Living in the Family Blender
When did
you first realize you wanted to be a writer? Or
what first inspired you to write? Leah: I never really intended to write a book. But over the years of
Clark’s writing I became familiar with the process. We discussed many times
the lack of practical ‘How To’ instruction for Blended Families. These
discussions evolved into a ‘Let’s write a book on the subject’ decision. So,
we kind of fell into this book together out of a desire to pass on our
insights and learning. We worked on the stories, examples and the principles
extensively and reviewed and edited in general. Although most of the actual
writing was done by Clark the development, review and editing were definitely
a team effort.
Clark: I have always been a storyteller and enjoyed making up stories, poems
and tall tales for my children growing up. I especially liked the bedtime
stories I’d make up on the fly because it really challenged me to produce
something that would keep a child’s attention. I had different ones for each
child. I thought a lot about various stories for years and always had ideas.
But it wasn’t until 2010 when I was in between jobs that I decided to try my
hand at getting something published. The first year I completed a non-fiction
book for 20 and 30 somethings and a Christmas/Holiday book. I also had a
fictional fantasy short story prepared that has since become a three-book
trilogy. One never knows when you step on the path, as Bilbo Baggins once
said, where that will lead. I have had a wonderful experience writing and have
loved doing a book together with my sweetheart, Leah. Our collaborative effort
turned out to be way beyond our expectations. We are so excited to have this
book available for blended families, those thinking about jumping into the
blender and single parents. Even though it is focused on these types of
families, every family will benefit from attempting to apply the principles we
included in our book. This book with Leah marks my 9th book and the
last 8 have all been Gold Medal award winners as best in their category.
Leah: Our children and our real-life experiences. We recognized that there
wasn’t a lot of information out there to help Blended Families and felt a need
to provide a practical guide to fill the void.
Clark: This story is a true one which was forged in the furnace of
experience over our combined 68 years of Blended Family experiences and
especially our 14 years together. When we started this process, we found a
near absence of hands-on experience that provided practical ‘How To’ advice
for regular people. The souls of individuals and entire families are dying out
there every day because they can’t find simple answers and guidance. Many of
the family train wrecks we see break our hearts because they are so easily
avoided by consistently applying a few simple standards and rules. If
implemented from the beginning it works. But if delayed the burdens can spin
quickly out of control into serious individual and family strife that tear at
the seams of what might have been an otherwise beautiful story. Our burning
desire to help others find peace, joy and true love in blended family life and
our own experience with such beauty in the midst of a messy world both
inspired and motivated us to write this combination autobiographical and ‘How To’
guide.
Is there
a message/theme in your book that you want readers to grasp?
Leah & Clark:
Absolutely. It is that single parents, blended
families and any family are good enough to be successful. You have the
knowledge and skills if you choose to use them. Anybody can create a happy and
fulfilling environment of love, selflessness and compassion. Of course, it
takes work and an absence of selfish pursuits, it takes firm commitment as a
couple, standards and values and a consistent example to prove that what you
are teaching your children works for everyone. You can do it. You really can
What was
your greatest challenge in writing this book?
Leah & Clark: Whittling nearly endless principles and learnings to
a manageable list of ten. We listed numerous qualities, teachings and
learnings. Then we grouped them in a way we felt that we could include related
ones together. In doing this we arrived at ten principles, plus a couple of
bonus ones, that provide a 360 degree look at the ‘How To’ guide for each one.
This is what allows average everyday people like us and you to successfully
apply the principles and tailor them to each family and individual.
What do
you like to do when you are not writing?
Leah: I love gardening, exercise, reading, baking and doing things to bring
a smile to the faces and lighten the burdens of others. We both enjoy time with
family and service in the community and in our church.
Clark: I enjoy bicycling both on roads and mountain biking. I also enjoy
gardening and hiking and a variety of outdoor activities. We have enjoyed
working with youth and neighborhood, church and community service.
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
Blended Family Insiders: Six Things No One Tells You About Blended Family Life
Living in the Family Blender by Clark Rich Burbidge and Leah Dee Burbidge
About the Book:
Blended family issues impact the vast majority of Americans. Yet, society often side-steps the topic while literature leaves a bleak landscape nearly void of practical advice from those who have lived in the trenches.
With over 68 combined years of direct blended family experience, including 14 years with their own family of 10 children, authors Clark and Leah Burbidge are uniquely qualified to fill the void. Their combined autobiographical/how-to guidebook weaves a humorous, tender, uplifting, and critically insightful fabric of 10 foundational principles upon which any family may confidently build. Every blended family can have happier, more fulfilling lives where teamwork, progress, and overcoming-oriented achievement replace disruption, disorientation, and contention.
Living in the Family Blender provides practical guidance upon which any family may build better relationships and a life filled with joy and purpose. Join them in their personal journey and discover glorious possibilities in your own lives. Everyone lives in a blended family.
About the Authors:
Clark and Leah live in the high mountain valleys of the Rockies where they enjoy their ever-expanding blended family of ten children and six grandchildren. They enjoy travel, hiking, road and mountain biking, and serving in their community and church. Clark received a BS in Finance from the University of Utah and an MBA from the University of Southern California and spent 35 years traveling the world as an investment banker, bankernd Chief Financial Officer. Leah earned an Associate Degree from Ricks College and what arguably could be considered a doctoral-level experience in blended families. Clark and Leah treasure their blended wild ride of 14 years together, firmly believing that any challenge is manageable when you have someone you love to walk beside.
Friday, June 21, 2019
The Long Goodbye REVIEWED
I read and reviewed Kara Tippett’s book The Hardest Peace in October of 2014. To see this documentary become a reality is
both transformational in its power, and profoundly sad in the loss it
represents. But the sadness, although I
know the Tippett’s family will walk in a measure of this all of their days, I know
the reality of what God can and does do for families impacted by illness and
chronic disease.
I am a member of a family that was born out of this type of loss. My Dad buried his first wife at the tender
age of 25 – a melanoma metastasized to the brain – and was a single Dad to two
very young children before he was 30 years old.
Now, my parents have celebrated more than 55 years of marriage, and I’m
the first of two children from that marriage – a blended family that now
overflows with grandchildren and great grandchildren.
I have seen my Mom put flowers on the grave of Dad’s first wife as
recently as this past Christmas. I can’t
fully fathom this type of love. I know
this is the legacy that Kara Tippetts left behind for her family and
friends. Her books bear testament of
God’s power, grace and faithfulness through some of life’s darkest
moments. The bravery to be so
transparent though this entire journey amazes me, but I’m so incredibly
grateful for the Tippetts family for sharing this with us.
For the believer, death is still a sad, dark valley to walk through,
and yet the hope that we have through Christ does, indeed, take away the
crippling pain of eternal separation. To
view this film encourages me not to waste a moment of life – to live every day
to its fullest – and love those who share my life better and more
transparently. This film left me feeling
hopeful instead of sad, and I think that is what Kara would want.
This is a great testimony of God’s power and grace found in the moments
they are needed most. He is
faithful! So incredibly faithful!!
Best-selling Documentary THE LONG GOODBYE: THE KARA TIPPETTS STORY Launches on Netflix June 23rd
“The impact of her life was huge. I’m blessed to know her.” - Joanna Gaines
|
Los Angeles, CA - THE LONG GOODBYE: The Kara Tippetts Story, a heartfelt story a woman thrust into the national spotlight through a terminal cancer diagnosis, will be available on Netflix Sunday, June 23. The film spent time at the #1 spot on the Amazon Documentaries chart, and remained in the Top 10 for over 6 weeks after it’s release.
Kara Tippetts was a pastor’s wife, mother of four young children, and creator of a popular mommy-blog focused on parenting with kindness. Kara already had a loyal following when, at just 38 years old, she began facing and processing a cancer diagnosis on the site. Her blog and subsequent best-selling books became hallowed ground as people around the world were touched by her faith, honesty, and candor.
With this incredibly raw documentary, Kara allowed the world to walk with her as she chronicled first what it meant to be a young wife and mother battling a disease, and then ultimately what it meant to live and die with love and dignity.
Shot in real-time and featuring Kara’s own vlogs and cell phone videos, this film offers an intimate, vulnerable look into a dying woman’s last days. The film also features Kara’s friends-including Ann Voskamp, Joanna Gaines, Ellie Holcomb, President of Focus on the FamilyJim Daly, Dianne Derby from KKTV, and bonus features with Joni Eareckson Tada.
During her journey with cancer, Kara wrote and published three books, includin
g Just Show Up: The Dance of Walking Through Suffering Together, And It was Beautiful: Celebrating Life in the Midst of the Long Good-Bye and The Hardest Peace: Expecting Grace in the Midst of Life’s Hard, which won the 2015 ECPA Inspirational Book of the Year award.
Additionally, Kara was thrust into the spotlight when a letter she penned to Brittany Maynard went viral. In the letter, Kara asked Brittany to reconsider her choice to move to Oregon to participate in an assisted suicide. Kara’s was a gentle, hope-filled message that could only be shared between two young women whose lives would end too soon.
Kara’s vulnerability had an incredible impact on tens of thousands of people and grew that community of support in surprising ways. Faith influencers from around the globe began to find ways to assist Kara by sharing her posts, sending personal messages, serving the family’s needs, as well as just becoming her friend.
This included filmmakers Jay and Sofia Lyons, who discovered Kara’s story through a facebook note from a friend. The couple simply felt led to do something for her. Sofia states how God led them down a path to create the film by a series of ‘breadcrumbs’, “First, we just wanted to do something special for Kara and her family. This evolved into creating a 7-minute video about her life, which ultimately opened up a conversation about fully documenting her last few months on earth.”
THE LONG GOODBYE also showcases footage from a house concert performed by Ellie Holcomb, a new arrangement of one of Kara’s favorite hymns by Selah, and an original song by Travis Cottrell. Additionally, one of the filmmakers, Sofia J., contributes 2 original songs written for the film including “I’ll See You Again.”
In association with Freely, THE LONG GOODBYE: The Kara Tippetts Story was created by Jay Lyons Productions and is distributed through Ocean Avenue Entertainment. THE LONG GOODBYE will be available June 23 on Netflix. http://karatippettsdocumentary.com/
About Ocean Avenue Entertainment:
Ocean Avenue Entertainment, Inc. is the destination for productions that offer hope to audiences looking for inspiration in entertainment. Ocean Avenue is committed to releasing inspiring and redemptive films and television programming. Its distribution strategy optimizes each release platform to find the widest possible audience theatrically on VOD, DVD and ultimately on streaming sites like Netflix and Amazon Prime. For more information, please visitwww.oceanave.tv.
About Freely:
Freely specializes in projects that touch the human spirit. Freely is building content across all platforms including film, TV, live events, digital media, and has recently launched a talent management division. www.freely.com
About Jay Lyons Productions:
Jay Lyons Productions is a boutique production company specializing in creating soul-stirring content for television, film, and digital media. JLP has produced for most major networks, including MTV, CBS, TLC, NBC, Spotify, and Discovery. www.jaylyonsproductions.com
|
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)