In light of Pastor Appreciation Month, H.B. Charles, Chuck Swindoll, and Christine Hoover remind listeners that pastors and their wives are just as human as the people sitting in the pew.
Here are a few ideas that can help you share your faith by using your home as a hub for Christ.
Paul David Tripp talks about the pitfalls unique to pastors and those in vocational ministry.
Christine Hoover, Barbara Neumann, Sue Edwards, and Scott Sauls talk about the value of being intentional in friendships even when it's difficult.
Ken Ham tells of his burden to build a quality museum that teaches the truth about God's creation. After extensive research, a world-class facility was built that allows visitors to walk through the Bible.
Ken Ham talks about growing up in Australia with parents who loved God's Word and His people. Ham describes how his father's love for God motivated all he did.
You love your neighbor when you express hospitality to friends and strangers. Nan McCullough, Amy Lively, and Sara Hagerty share very practical ways you can serve through the expression of hospitality.
Wife and mom Lauren Chandler talks honestly about the chains that often bind us. She reflects on her own chains of a disordered desire and the steps she took to find freedom.
Lauren Chandler, mother to three and wife to Matt Chandler, takes listeners back to Thanksgiving in 2009 when Matt blacked out from a seizure.
Author Lauren Chandler, wife of Pastor Matt Chandler, fondly shares how she and Matt met and married. Chandler tells how she struggled in the shadow of Matt's obvious calling to preach.
God has a transcendent purpose for our work here on earth. Bethany Jenkins and Courtney Reissig explain the purpose for work, and some practical ways we can participate with God in His plan.
Having a heart for God means you'll have a life that matters. Dennis Rainey shares his thoughts on seven decisions you'll never regret.
What kind of decision are you making today? For years Dennis Rainey has been sharing seven principles to live life by. Find out why seeking God is the beginning of it all.
Why believe in Christ? J. Warner Wallace, along with his wife, Susie, explain that forensic faith is having good evidence that something is true and believing it.
J. Warner and Susie Wallace recall how they investigated the Gospels and eventually believed that what the Scriptures said about God and their own condition and needs was true.
J. Warner Wallace, a cold-case homicide detective, and his wife, Susie, tell how he applied his investigative skills to his study of the Bible, sure he could prove it wrong.
The admonishment of Ephesians 4 to put off the old and put on the new applies in unique ways to blended families. Pastor Tim Lundy concludes his message on Ephesians 4.
Ephesians 4 teaches that, for those of us in Christ, we must put off the old way of life and put on who we are in Christ. Tim Lundy shares a message to blended families from this Scripture.
The Bible tells believers to care for widows and orphans. For James and Mona Harper, that didn't leave any room for debate. Over the years, the Harpers have brought more than 30 children into their home.
J.T. Olson knows what it's like to be an orphan, having lost both his parents when he was a child. Olson explains what led him to create his organization.
J.T. Olson was orphaned as a child. Olson shares his family's legacy and explains how a summer job propelled him into a successful career as a salesman and rejuvenated the love he had for God as a child.
At the Weekend to Remember, I got to see how God was at work in the lives of married couples.
TJ and Jenn Menn talk about the benefits and challenges of being foster parents, and remind us that we are close to the heart of God when we care for orphans and widows in their distress.
TJ and Jenn Menn never imagined when they signed on to be foster parents shortly after getting married that they would welcome 22 foster children into their home.
Paul Miller, David Nasser, and Megan Hill encourage listeners to draw close to God our Father through prayer.
Pastor Erwin Lutzer believes many Christians don't witness to others because of a troubled conscience. Lutzer encourages believers to come clean with God and others in order to know peace.
Erwin Lutzer shares what it means to live in the freedom of a clear conscience to others and to God. Lutzer explains what a conscience is, and reminds us that, "A good conscience is a continual feast."
These simple but profound questions changed the way I talk to people about Christ.
Your past is not the final word. Let your invisible accuser drive you toward God and not away from Him.
Hank Parker shares what he's learned from the current season of his life, which includes being a husband to his wife, Martha, and father to his children and stepchildren.