Resilience: Facing Your New Reality
Resilience is in our DNA as created beings. We are built to weather storms. The virtue of being able to adapt to stressful life changes and “bounce back” from hardship is essential to our growth and progress.
Resilience is in our DNA as created beings. We are built to weather storms. The virtue of being able to adapt to stressful life changes and “bounce back” from hardship is essential to our growth and progress.
At the time, the Thresher was the fastest and quietest nuclear submarine ever built. She also had the most advanced weapons system to date. But in one tragic event in 1963, Thresher sank during deep-diving tests, killing all 129 crew and shipyard personnel aboard.
Malachi’s generation needed to remember that it wasn’t a matter of “if” the Sun of Righteousness would come, but “when” He appeared, all things would be made new.
For those of us living in the U.S., authorities say that the next couple of weeks will be the most critical regarding the Covid-19 pandemic. This will be our “peak.”
In Italy, thousands of families have been devastated by Coronavirus. When infected patients are hospitalized, their loved ones cannot visit them due to the contagion.
For this week’s Abiding In Him devotion, I want to share with you five things we can remember during an unprecedented time of social distancing.
There are over 60 “one another” commands in the New Testament that reveal God’s passion for His children.
Have you ever asked, “If God is with me, then why did this happen?” If so, you are not alone. In ancient Israel there was a man asking the same question.
Robert Robinson wrote the hymn “Come, thou Fount of Every Blessing,” confessing that his heart was “Prone to wander… Prone to leave the God I love.”
Though Israel’s situation looked bleak, God assures them that the coming events, regardless of how they are perceived, are governed by his power and purposes.