Pushing Children into Hell

Similar Posts

  • A Life-Long Challenge

    When I was in high school, I had a friend who never let me finish a sentence.  Now my mother had taught me not to interrupt, and it took me years to internalize that lesson.  And by high school, I had learned that lesson well.  So when Lynn interrupted me, I stopped talking and let her say what she wanted.  Once she was through, I continued, but the moment I…

  • Instructions That Last for Eternity

    As many of you know, I wasn’t raised in a Christian home.  My parents weren’t atheists or involved in a cult or religious in any way.  They were good (by worldly standards), honest, caring, hard-working people who did the very best that they knew how to raise their seven children.  I am the third oldest. When I was about eight-years-old, I remember a neighbor who used to take my younger…

  • When God Makes a Promise

    Mark 11:24 says, “Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.” When I first accepted the Lord as my Savior, my friend, Lynn, was trying to disciple me in the things of the Lord.  Lynn knew a few things and I didn’t know anything.  At the time, we were both in high school. Lynn said…

  • Keep Your Eye on the Dot

    My eyesight is not real good.  Even with glasses, it’s not corrected to 20/20.  I’m near-sighted.  I have an astigmatism.  I have no depth perception.  To make matters worse, I grew up with double vision.  Of course, I didn’t know that wasn’t normal.  So I didn’t ask about it until I was almost an adult.  At age 17, I asked my mother about it. “Mom, is it normal to see…

  • A Semi Empty-Nester

    I’m a semi empty-nester.   An empty-nester because my three children are grown and gone.  Even Michelle, my special needs daughter, no longer lives at home.  However, I’m a semi empty-nester because I’ve practically raised my grandsons, Jay and Luke, ages 12 and 10 respectively.  They belong to my daughter, Jamie, who lives only ten minutes away and has had to work full time since the coming of her firstborn.  Grandma…

  • The Heart of Gratitude

    My heart goes out to the Filipino people since the typhoon that devastated their island.  I cannot begin to understand their heartache and sorrow at the loss of life and the destruction of everything precious to them.  Not to mention, their struggle just to survive; to provide their families with the most basic of necessities – food, water, shelter, and safety. And then I thought about those still recovering from…