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A Heavenly Party [Excerpt]

Joni Eareckson Tada’s vision of heaven vibrates with joy, and C.S. Lewis asks what we really want, in this devotion from the NIV Voices of Faith Devotional Bible: Voices from the Past and Present.  

My favorite part about Joni’s view is seeing the saints come together from across time: “There’s Moses toasting Martin Luther.” What Christians from history would you most like to meet, and what would you ask them?

-Adam Forrest, Zondervan

Joni Eareckson Tada

Visit Joni's Blog
Joni Eareckson Tada

Before we realize it … we shall find ourselves in the embrace of our Savior at the Wedding Supper of the Lamb. Heaven will have arrived. The Lord’s overcoming of the world will be a lifting of the curtain of our five senses…

Now, enjoy an unseen divine reality. Rev up your heart and picture yourself taking a seat at the Wedding Supper. As you pull up a chair to the banquet table, take a look at what’s on the menu from Isaiah 25:6: “On this mountain the Lord Almighty will prepare a feast of rich food for all peoples, a banquet of aged wine — the best of meats and the finest of wines” …

I get a charge just thinking about it! I wonder who will sit next to me, or across from me. I glance down the table and there’s my friend, Verna Estes, mother of seven, swapping baby stories with Susanna Wesley, mother of seventeen. There’s Moses toasting Martin Luther. St. Augustine giving a bear hug to that jungle missionary …

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Celebrating Easter with Kids: Recommended Books, Activities, and Sweepstakes

The Easter story can be heavy stuff to teach our young ones! That’s why Ruthie Spaans, a member of our Zonderkidz team, shares these recommendations for Easter books and free activities for kids, plus a limited-time sweepstakes. (Enter the Beginner’s Bible Easter Sweepstakes by March 26, 2012.)

For Christians around the world, the Easter season marks the foundation of our faith. Easter is when we celebrates the death and resurrection of our Savior Jesus — heavy stuff to teach to little ones!

That’s why our Zonderkidz team is always searching for new ways to teach Christ’s message to your kids. Our goal is simple: to encourage you to spend time with your child, and with God. We pore through parenting blogs, investigate the latest trends, and hang on every word when others share how they’re teaching matters beyond ABC’s and etiquette, delving into the deeper things of our faith.

Fun Books that Go Deep

Learn more about the Beginner's Bible Deluxe Edition

If you are looking to teach your preschoolers the deeper messages of the resurrection in fun yet inspirational ways, we recommend the Beginner’s Bible resources. The Very First Easter, The Beginner’s Bible Book of Prayers, Jesus Saves the World (an I Can Read book), and The Beginner’s Bible Deluxe Edition are wonderful tools to help you introduce the Easter story, with traditional art, fun characters, and even audio narration!

Inspirational & Fun Activities

Some parents like to use food or crafts as the theme. Others look for the latest technology, such as apps, to tell the Easter story in a way that today’s generation of kids accept without question. Still others combine traditional holiday activities with a theological twist to illustrate the story.

I encourage you to visit TheBeginnersBible.com and The Beginner’s Bible Facebook page for weekly devotions, coloring pages, stickers, and other teaching resources. We even have an animated Easter video on YouTube for you to enjoy!

As a special treat, we encourage you to enter The Beginner’s Bible Easter Sweepstakes on Facebook, for your chance to win a set of some of the newest products in The Beginner’s Bible lineup.

Enter the Beginner’s Bible Easter Sweepstakes

Enter the Beginner's Bible Easter Sweepstakes

 

 

We wish you a blessed Easter season, and pray each day for our parents and children’s ministries that work hard to bring Christ’s message to kids!

- Ruthie Spaans, Zonderkidz

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer’s personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Looking for Your Life’s Purpose? [Excerpt on Ecclesiastes from "How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens"]

 

Can Ecclesiastes, written by the Teacher who said "Everything is meaningless!" tell us anything about Jesus? See Dr. Paul Williams's answer in this excerpt from How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens.

 

Learn More about How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens Learn More

It is difficult at times to understand the direction our lives are going, or the direction they should be going. It's as if we're driving in the fog on a curvy road…

 

The Teacher [who wrote Ecclesiastes] concluded that life "under the sun" is without meaning… [What kind of meaning?] Usually, when we or others talk about meaning in life, we mean personal security and significance — something that makes us feel valued, worthwhile, and fulfilled. We want to know that it would have made a difference if we had not been born…

 

The Teacher of Ecclesiastes shows us that on our own we can't figure out the meaning of life. That meaning does not lie in our pleasures or conveniences, in our wisdom or in our foolishness, in our work or in our possessions. The Teacher discovers that life does indeed have meaning, but a meaning that is frequently beyond our ability to grasp when we limit our perspective to the created realm.

 

Teacher

The author of Ecclesiastes, "the Teacher," imagined by Gustave Doré (1832-1883).

To find meaning and purpose in life, we are forced to turn our perspective from the realm "under the sun" to the realm that exists beyond the sun, beyond creation, where God dwells. We must turn to God in humility, acknowledging our creaturely limitations — and, with reverence, acknowledging that he has no such limitations — and submitting ourselves to his care and guidance. Ultimately, the meaning of life does not reside in things that we think will bring us satisfaction, but in things that bring God glory. Our goal in life is to make these the same thing. And there was one human being who has showed us just what that looks like.

 

The Jesus Lens

As we saw in the book of Job, our circumstances can change in a moment. If we look for contentment, significance, security, or meaning in those circumstances, we're going to have a hard time rebooting when our programs crash. It has taken the Teacher a while to arrive at the same conclusion as the book of Psalms: meaning in life is not found "under the sun" — in the human experiences and trappings that are subject to changes beyond our comprehension. Rather, meaning in life is found "above the sun" — in our relationship with our Creator.

 

'Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life."' -John 14:6

It makes sense. Only by reconnecting with the source of life can we expect to know life in its fullest. That is what Jesus tells his disciples as they struggle to understand the suffering and death he would experience. As painful as those things are … they cannot affect our true life if that life is connected to the source of life, who never changes and who always satisfies the deepest cravings of our hearts.

 

In Christ alone is found meaning, purpose, and direction in life. When we, like the Teacher, try to find meaning for our lives in anything else, we also will be forced to conclude, "Meaningless! Meaningless! … Everything is meaningless!" (1:2; 12:8). Only by being reconciled to God through Jesus Christ ("the way") can we finally find what it is we've been looking for ("the life")

 

[What this Means for Us Today]

The Teacher was rummaging around "under the sun," looking under every stone for anything that would supply some explanation for what makes human life worthwhile. He found lots of things that made great promises, but ultimately failed to deliver. He was full of human wisdom and knowledge (1:16), but that wisdom and knowledge couldn't provide answers to the basic questions of life. That wisdom and knowledge are available only through Jesus Christ. That is why the apostle Paul worked so hard to make sure everyone had access to the answer to the meaning of life.

My goal is that they may be encouraged in heart and united in love, so that they may have the full riches of complete understanding, in order that they may know the mystery of God, namely, Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. -Colossians 2:2–3

We may know in our Bible-trained heads how we're supposed to answer questions about life, but do we really believe those answers? We spend hours, days, even years of our lives chasing after things that we believe will make our lives significant, when we could have that significance any time we chose. There is an old joke about someone who is outside, looking in the grass for his lost ring. His friends show up and offer to help. They ask him where he lost it. He tells them he lost it in the house. When they ask him why he is looking for it outside, he tells them, "The light is better out here." How [useless] to look for something where it can't be found! Let's stop looking for the meaning of life where it can't be found. Let's look for life's purpose in the eternal truths that God has revealed to us in Christ.

 

Hook Question

How would you rate the meaningfulness of your life right now? …

 

The Teacher tried just about everything to find meaning in life without any reference to God. Perhaps you have, too. But there isn't any. Only when we return to our Creator in reverence and acknowledge our need for him will the fog start lifting and our path into the future come into focus. We will have life — full, meaningful, energizing life.

-Michael Williams

 

Watch the "Jesus Lens" Web Event

Want to know more about reading the Bible through the Jesus lens? Watch the discussion with author Michael Williams.

 

Learn More about How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens Learn More

Learn more about Dr. Williams's book, How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens.

 

More Posts You May Like

Esther, Mordecai & Jesus via Michael Williams

 

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan


(Images & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of How to Read the Bible through the Jesus Lens. Image attribution: Gustave Doré [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

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Mothers: How You Could Get Published in the New NIV Mom’s Devotional Bible

 

Are you a mom? Love to write? A devotion about parenting or mothering written by YOU could be published in Zondervan's newly updated NIV Mom's Devotional Bible, due in stores spring 2013. We're excited to see your submissions! (Enter the contest by March 14, 2012)

 

What We're Looking For

Your devotional entry should be encouraging or inspirational in tone, and written from the perspective of a mother.

Your entry should be original, 250-300 words in length, and focusing on ONE of the following passages from the Bible:

  1. Deuteronomy 6:6–9
  2. Proverbs 22:6
  3. Proverbs 31:10–31
  4. 1 Corinthians 13:4–8
  5. Ephesians 2:8–9

The Lawyers Made Us Say This Part: Your entry must be in English, previously unpublished, and not submitted or accepted anywhere else at the time of this contest. And don't forget, your entry should be original to you and only about one of the five Bible passages listed above!

 

If Your Entry Is Selected…

Authors of the winning submissions will have their devotion and a short author's bio printed in the upcoming NIV Mom's Devotional Bible. Winners will also receive a free copy of the Bible.

So what are you waiting for?
Enter the contest at Facebook.com/MomsDevotionalBible.

 

Sample Devotionals

If you would like to see an example of what we're looking for, here are two:

Passage:
Genesis 1:26–31

A mother tends to define herself most easily in terms of externals: I am a mom. I am a wife. I am a daughter. I am a graduate. I am a teacher. I am a volunteer. I am what I do. I am what others need me to be. I am what I accomplish.

While these descriptions may be true, they are incomplete. They overlook the vital fact that we are made, inside and out, by God. We are created in his image and for his purposes.

When we gaze into the mirror of God's Word, we find that God has stamped on our being a reflection of his character, his essence, his being. That is not to say we are mini-gods in any sense. But just as children reflect the physical, mental and personality traits of their parents and even adopted children share the mannerisms and habits of their adopted families, so we who are fashioned by God manifest elements of his character in our beings.

Who are you, Mom? Genesis 1 and 2 spells it out. You are God's image-bearer (see Genesis 1:26–27). God expresses his being through both genders, male and female. You are a co-laborer with all of God's people in his world (see Genesis 1:28– 31).

When you live in the fullness of who you are, you show your children, your family and your world a full and accurate picture of your God.

So there, Mom. Take the definition for who you are from how God made you. You are a unique being fashioned after the God of the universe — inside and out!

Think about this: How often do you define yourself by the negatives? Who you aren't, what you haven't accomplished, what you aren't doing. How might this negative definition of yourself affect your mood as well as your daily choices? How might it impact others around you? Switch your sight to God's view of you and get ready for great changes!

 

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Small Group Videos Galore: Watch Over 50 Full Bible Study Sessions for Free

 

Have you ever watched a trailer for a movie, then watched the movie, only to realize the trailer collected all the best parts, or it told you nothing about the movie's real plot? While curriculum trailers aren't exactly like that, sometimes watching a two-minute trailer just won't tell you if you want to spend 4-12 weeks with the topic, or study, or author.

Watching the complete first session of the curriculum is a great indicator of what the rest of the sessions will be like. That's why we're making the first sessions of our video-based curriculum available for free on YouTube.

View the curriculum videos playlist

 

Today we have 50-plus full video sessions loaded on the playlist (zndr.vn/curriculumvideos). We will continue to add more until there's video available from every group study that Zondervan publishes.

Now you can watch full curriculum sessions from bestselling authors like…

 

 

If you like what you see, you can visit Amazon, CBD.com, BN.com or your local retailer and get the DVD and Participant's Guides for yourself and your small group.

 

Tips for Small Group Members

  1. Share the videos with your small group via Facebook to discuss what you might want to study.
  2. Subscribe to the YouTube playlist (http://zndr.vn/curriculumvideos) because more videos are coming soon.
  3. Most of all, enjoy!

 

- Chris Fann, Zondervan Curriculum Marketing

 

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's opinions are their own, and are shared for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Does Fiction Lie? Thoughts on Truth and Christian Storytelling

 

“Is it wrong for Christians to … write, read or even watch fictitious material?” asked a commenter named Mukwemba on Zondervan’s Facebook page today.

Mukwemba (who permitted the use of her name here) adds some important context: some of her Christian friends do not approve of fiction, arguing this:

Fiction is wrong because it’s not true… As Christians we should hold fast to the truth and not saturate our minds with falsehoods regardless of what “good” they seem to bring about.

I’m sure Mukwemba’s friends are well-meaning, but I believe they are mistaken. I will show you why writing fiction can be an excellent calling.

 

An Editor Speaks

I sent Mukwemba’s question to my coworker Sue Brower, who is an Executive Editor here at Zondervan. Sue says:

When Jesus wanted to teach something to his disciples, he used story—Parables.  Fiction is truth in story form.  It makes concepts more accessible to the reader because the reader relates to the characters and sees themselves in the story.

I agree wholeheartedly with Sue. Let’s look more closely at the biblical basis behind these points.

 

3 Biblical Observations about Fiction

1. Fiction can help us understand, love, and serve others.

A writer (whom I can’t recall) said stories help us “extend our sympathies” toward others who are different from us. In other words, stories can open our eyes to suffering we didn’t see before. With this new awareness, we can choose to better love and serve others.

I can think of two examples where fiction is even linked to changes in public policy. Arthur Miller’s play, Death of a Salesman, portrayed the struggle of older workers so well that Miller’s story was invoked during a 1968 Senate hearing (The Adequacy of Services for Older Workers) as a sketch of the obstacles that face older Americans. Also, a novel by Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, actually influenced the passing of new health legislation for the meatpacking industry in the city of Chicago!

2. Fiction can show you truth about yourself.

Sometimes a story is a mirror. Let’s look at an example from the Bible: after King David hides his sin with Bathsheba, remember how Nathan gets through to David? Nathan goes to David and says,

‘There were two men in a certain town, one rich and the other poor. The rich man had a very large number of sheep and cattle, but the poor man had nothing except one little ewe lamb he had bought. He raised it, and it grew up with him and his children. It shared his food, drank from his cup and even slept in his arms. It was like a daughter to him.

‘Now a traveler came to the rich man, but the rich man refrained from taking one of his own sheep or cattle to prepare a meal for the traveler who had come to him. Instead, he took the ewe lamb that belonged to the poor man and prepared it for the one who had come to him.’

David burned with anger against the man and said to Nathan, ‘As surely as the LORD lives, the man who did this must die! He must pay for that lamb four times over, because he did such a thing and had no pity.’

Then Nathan said to David, ‘You are the man! This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: “I anointed you king over Israel, and I delivered you from the hand of Saul… Why did you despise the word of the LORD by doing what is evil in his eyes? You struck down Uriah the Hittite with the sword and took his wife to be your own. You killed him with the sword of the Ammonites…”‘

Then David said to Nathan, “I have sinned against the LORD.” [-From 2 Samuel 12:1-18, NIV]

So if you’re reading a story and think, “I can relate to this character,” keep your eyes peeled. You may find some some fresh insight into your own motivations, maybe even sins. I’ve been given a few such “eureka” moments through fiction, most memorably from reading Douglas Coupland’s story collection, Life After God, and a short story by Flannery O’Connor called “Everything That Rises Must Converge.” These stories revealed some of my attitudes that needed to change.

 

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Mysterious Christmas Poem Discovered in a 190-Year-Old eReader

 

Update 1/3/12: The "Load Your eReader" Sale is now closed. Thank you for your interest!

Experts are befuddled by the discovery of an antique eReading device and its bizarre contents, a poem that appears to be the original version of the classic "Twas the Night Before Christmas" written in 1823 by Clement Clarke Moore. Oddities in this alleged version of Moore's poem include "reincamels" instead of reindeer, and surprisingly accurate details on a "Load Your eReader Sale" from Zondervan.

 

"The poem is a hoax," claims the foremost historian of eReading, Dr. Heim Pullenure-Legg. "How in blue blazes could Moore have known about eReaders, let alone a specific sale on eBooks from Zondervan, nearly two hundred years before the eBook's advent? Someone alive today must have faked the poem and the eReader!"

The eReader in question was discovered within this antique sugar plums box
The eReader was discovered inside this antique sugar plums box.

Dr. Pullenure-Legg's logic is strong, but forensic evidence is stacking up against him. "This eReading device is certainly over 185 years old," says forensics specialist Imogene Aryfriend. "What's more, we've found DNA from Clement Clarke Moore on the touchscreen." The touchscreen in question is made of stained glass, while the body of the device is carved from an extinct species of cherry tree that was last seen in Moore's day. These facts and more have persuaded some that the eReader and the poem are authentic. But there's a loose end…

"You see how the poem's references to "reindeer" are replaced by "reincamels"? That's a dead giveaway," observes historical zoologist I. M. Knottreel. "Raincamels weren't introduced to the New World until their debut in the Ringling Bros. Circus in 1907. That's about 40 years after Moore's death, so there is no chance Moore wrote this poem."

Other explanations abound. "It was time travel!" says the speculative philosopher known as Bo Gus. "Moore predicted the future," asserts philosopher Jacque Fraidso. "Moore's not special, it's all just coincidence," says a philosopher who is also named Jacque Fraidso.

Who can we believe? Is the eReader authentic, but the poem a hoax? Or vice versa? Or are both phony? The scholars may never reach consensus, but they all agree on this point: Zondervan's "Load Your eReader Sale" is quite real, and you can see for yourself at http://zndr.vn/s8klMl. [Update: Sale ended on 1/2/2012.]

 

An Excerpt from the Poem in Question, "Twas Christmas Vaction" 

Twas Christmas vacation and all through the edifice,
Ev'ry creature was enjoying their eReading-device.
I e'en placed a Kindle Fire in the chimney with care,
And we all shared a good laugh at the visual pun there!

Later the kids nestled all snug in their places,
iPhone and iPad screens alighting their faces.
And Mamma with her Kindle and I with my Nook,
Were settling our brains in our favorite eBooks.

When up on the roof there arose such a clatter,
I sprang from the bed to see what was the matter…

[Several of the next stanzas are identical to the version we all know. Major changes begin again with the appearance of St. Nick:]

No bundle of Toys had St. Nick on his back,
He just browsed on a tablet, clicking this, clicking that.
Without speaking a word he visited zndr.vn/s8klMl
And purchased eBooks and Bibles for his reincamels,
Plus several kids' books for the children in my family,
And nonfiction for Mamma, and some novels for me.

From the roof we heard reincamels twinkling their toes,
And St. Nick laid his finger aside of his nose,
He gave me a nod, and up the chimney he rose!
But I heard him exclaim, 'ere he flew out of view,
"Happy Christmas to all, and good reading to you!"

 

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan Internet Team

 

Visit the eBook and Bible Sale
Visit the "Load Your eReader" eBook and Bible Sale

 

About Clement Clarke Moore

Clement Clarke Moore

Clement Clarke Moore (1779-1863) was an American college and seminary professor who allegedly composed the poem "'Twas the Night Before Christmas." Moore may or may not have invented primitive eReaders, traveled through time, or witnessed the rare reincamel. If you possess any information on these matters, please leave a comment on this post. 

(Hey, is this post true? The "Load Your eReader Sale" was a valid sale available through January 2, 2012. Everything else in this post should be taken as a work of fiction, as satire for entertainment only. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives; the writer's opinions are his own. Pictures are used at the courtesy of Wikemedia Commons and its creative commons license. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Zonderkidz Heads to National Bible Bee + Top Resources for Kids’ Bible Learning

 

The Zonderkidz team is excited to attend National Bible Bee, which kicks off tomorrow in Nashville, Tennessee! We wish all the contestants their best in the event. You can learn more about the Bible Bee at www.biblebee.org, including how you can host a local Bible Bee.

Zonderkidz are actually sponsors of the Family Fun area at the Bee, and many of our titles will be available throughout the event. Before we hit the road, we'd like to share some games and resources that help young people get excited about learning the Bible.

 

Games and Activies for Bible Learning

A great way for kids to memorize Scripture and learn the books of the Bible is the Adventure Bible Memory Game App. Here's a video about the memory game.

 

You can find more online games, activities and resources at the NIV Adventure Bible website: www.adventurebible.com.

Visit the Adventure Bible Website

 

Two Great Study Bibles

Two study Bibles we're not bringing to the Bee (but we recommend them, anyway) are the Adventure Bible and the Teen Study Bible. Both contain a lot of study features to help young people better understand God's Word and apply it to their lives.

 

Learn more about Adventure Bible
Learn More
Learn more about Teen Study Bible
Learn More

 

If you're attending the National Bible Bee, we look forward to connecting with you!

 

Find Zonderkidz on Facebook

For book giveaways, fun activities, daily devotional messages, and more, find us on Facebook:

  

- The Zonderkidz Team

(This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's opinions are their own, and are shared for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

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Color Shots from the New NIV Study Bible

We’re excited to announce the brand new NIV Study Bible, and it’s better than ever. The updated study notes and new book introductions bring deeper clarity to God’s Word, but what we find most exciting are all the full-color maps, charts, and diagrams. It’s one thing to read about the sacred objects in the tabernacle, and another thing to zoom in on what they would look like:

 

The Tabernacle Furnishings

The Tabernacle Furnishings

 

The charts and maps help us zoom out to see the bigger picture:

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Gift Idea for Grandma: The Grandmother’s Bible eBook

Did you know last Sunday was National Grandparents Day? In honor of Grandmothers, this week The Grandmother's Bible eBook is just $3.99.

The Grandmother's Bible is about "nourishing grandmothers to nurture grandchildren," so the Bible includes special features like Bible Stories to Share with grandchildren; Talking Points, which are tips on discussing issues like friendship and salvation; and Praying the Scriptures for Your Grandchild. Grandmother-blogger Lynda Freeman reviews some of these special features in her post about how The Grandmother's Bible helps her grow as a grandmother.

This Bible also includes 365 Devotional Readings. Here's a sample:

"Made in God's Image" by Lori Copeland
Read | Genesis 1:1-31

I was a very young grandmother. This was not all that surprising since I had been a young bride and a young mother, but when Randy, our firstborn son, married and gave us our first grandchild, I was completely unprepared. I was especially unprepared for the love I would feel for this baby. I was amazed that the love I had felt so strongly for my sons—a love I was positive would never be duplicated—tripled when my first grandson’s newborn eyes slowly opened to meet mine. Oh, those eyes, so trusting and innocent. I gave my heart so completely, so swiftly to this new little one named James that the bonding left me breathless.

When I left the hospital, I was filled with joy, with songs of joy. I recalled the words of the psalmist, “Our mouths were filled with laughter, our tongues with songs of joy” (Psalm 126:2), as I enjoyed my ecstatic state. Little did I know that this child was not only a precious gift to me (though he was), but also he was God’s special gift to the world. God in his miraculous grace was enlarging his Kingdom through this tiny scrap of humanity created in his image.

James is a grown man now, a youth minister. Twice a year he ministers to the Kagora tribe in Africa, and through God’s unending grace, he leads lost souls to Christ. As a thirty-nine-year-old grandmother, I had no idea what God had placed in my life the day my first grandson was born; but now, many years later, I stand astounded at his marvelous workings.

Thank you, God, for placing this child in our life, in our grandparental care. As we watch him grow, lead him in the ways of righteous that his days may be long and fruitful on this earth. Amen.


Find the Grandmother's Bible eBook for $3.99 – This Week Only

The regular price is $16.99, so if deals excite your grandmother as much as they excite mine, tell her you found it for 77% off.  :-)

Amazon Kindle: http://zndr.vn/mTcK6w
Apple iPhone & iPad: http://zndr.vn/mW2oPO
Barnes & Noble Nook: http://zndr.vn/qV63qA

You can also find the eBook on Christianbook.com: http://zndr.vn/mPtu0w

(-Adam Forrest, Zondervan Internet Team)

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