Here’s Something Worth Remembering
In his first message of 2020, Chuck reminds us to live out the truth: “I am not in charge.” God alone is “in charge” of us, others, our plans for the future, and our circumstances.
In his first message of 2020, Chuck reminds us to live out the truth: “I am not in charge.” God alone is “in charge” of us, others, our plans for the future, and our circumstances.
On the last Sunday in December, three days before ringing in a new decade, here’s help for adopting the right mind-set for going forward instead of backward.
Keep this familiar story from losing its wonder by pondering the incredulity of the God of the universe arriving on earth as a newborn infant. Oh, what a glorious night!
God chose an upstanding couple to raise His only Son and nurture Him. But what a strain was initially placed on their relationship. You might say their romance was saved by a dream.
Keep this familiar story from losing its wonder by pondering the incredulity of the God of the universe arriving on earth as a newborn infant. Oh, what a glorious night!
On the Sunday before Thanksgiving Chuck Swindoll brings a message on the all-important subject of giving thanks to our God for all He has provided to us in such abundance.
In Job’s final words from the last chapter of his book, his companions have finally stopped talking. Job is able to pause and reflect on all that happened to him, then dialogue with his Lord.
The last two messages in this series will focus on the man who personifies the maximum extreme of human tragedy: Job. In this first message, we’ll witness the anguishing pain he endured.
If your circumstances are extremely trying and not likely to change soon, how do you go on? Find out how Paul lived above his circumstances, not under them. Can we still do that today?
Most testimonies tell of how strength prevailed on the road to greatness. But this story is about the acceptance of weakness, as a man was “cut down to size” by the presence of unrelenting pain.