God created marriage and the family. Home education is a lifestyle of learning where parents and children do life together. Working, eating, reading books aloud, watching movies, all contribute to creating the unique chemistry of family.
How do you learn to trust God when your prayers go unanswered? Why is He sometimes silent? Is there ever a time to stop praying? Can a prayer request become an idol? Glenda Durano shares lessons from her personal prayer journey and how she discovered that prayer isn’t primarily about answers. It’s about access to God.
$6.00Original price was: $6.00.$5.00Current price is: $5.00.
Twenty-six hundred years ago, three teenagers stood in defiance to a powerful king. In our world of entertainment-minded youth, are we doing enough to prepare them for the possibility of challenging days ahead?
While there are many, many things I could have done better as a homeschool father, there are three distinct things that I did try to do – as consistently as possible during our years of homeschooling, which, according to my wife, were the most helpful.
When you think about your children, where is the ideal place for them to learn, mature, and develop healthy life habits? Where is the safest place to have some discussions about difficult life issues? And where on earth can they find good examples of what it means to love God with all their heart? Academic instruction? A love for learning? I bet you know the answer.
Teaching a child with special needs requires flexibility and patience. When parents understand their child’s learning strengths and struggles, they can modify their lessons to create an environment of learning.
Parents of children of all ages (yes, this is great for those high school years, too) will be encouraged when they learn how to relate to each child the way God designed them.
$6.00Original price was: $6.00.$5.00Current price is: $5.00.
We might begin the homeschool journey for various reasons, but sooner or later, we all have to decide what will keep us going when the days get difficult, the budget gets tightened, a rebellious child tests our patience, or the world, and often the church, asks why we are keeping them “isolated.”