The Bible is full of people who have learned from God how to be friends that understand, connect with, admire, challenge, and love each other.
This parable will help us understand what it feels like to be lost and how God responds to that feeling by always trying to bring us home.
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.
Selfishness can make parenting more difficult, while love makes life easier for ourselves and our children.
Asking God for self-discipline won’t amount to much if your motive is not to love others.
Three humanistic myths and three spiritual truths about the importance of family in our lives.
By digging down deep, we start the process toward having a faith in God that is not easily shaken. However, depth takes work. It is not a personality trait or a natural talent, but rather a skill that must be worked at and developed over time.
Even when we make mistakes and hurt God, he still sticks with us because he loves us. Nothing we do can drive him away.
God’s forgiveness and love can soften even our most ungrateful hearts and motivate us to treat others around us with love and compassion.
With insecurity, God never responds with criticism. He responds with a purpose to live for something beyond themselves.
It is easy to try to rely on something as tangible as money for security. What are times in your life when you have faced guilt or regret, and relied on wealth or money, rather than turning to God for forgiveness?