What King Ahab can teach us about navigating the emotional disruptions that are necessary parts of the process of change.
Confronting the moments when we think, act, respond, and make decisions as if God were not real and present in our lives.
As parents, we can help our teenagers to love others—no matter how entitled they may be—by inspiring them to follow Jesus's example.
As long as our hearts have the entitlement mentality, personal growth in our relationship with God and with others will cease.
Looking at two key areas in my life that stop me from being motivated to build relationships: pride and insecurity.
Learning how to deal with frustration Biblically is key to taming the anxiety that often accompanies anger.
Not getting what we want may be one of the biggest challenges to our faith. God wants to parent us by giving us what we need.
We need to make sure our convictions about God are strong so that we keep our relationship with him our top priority, no matter what we go through in life.
Focus is giving a lot of attention, time, energy, etc. to one particular person, group, or activity. It’s having the ability to do one thing at a time, well done.
When we experience testing, pain and failure in our lives, it is easy to give into fear and doubt. “Flipping the Switch” is about learning to let God use our personal passion, ambition, dreams, pain, and setbacks for his greater purpose of saving lives.
What would it be like if you weren't bitter? Would you be positive and hopeful, more pleasant to be around? What hurts, regrets, or disappointments have you been unable to move past?