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Nehemiah Explained: Leadership, Prayer, and Rebuilding What’s Broken

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Leadership, prayer, and the slow, holy work of rebuilding what's broken. The book of Nehemiah is about a man who wept over a ruined wall and then prayed, planned, and rebuilt it in fifty-two days — and what his story teaches us about God-shaped leadership. Why Nehemiah Still Matters Somewhere in the palace of Susa, a man whose job was to keep the king cheerful received a report that broke his heart. The city of his fathers — Jerusalem — was a ruin. Its wall was rubble. Its gates were ash. And the people who lived there were defenseless, ashamed, and demoralized. He could have sighed, said a prayer of sympathy, and gone back to work. He was, after all, a thousand miles away and comfortable. Instead, Nehemiah did something quietly extraordinary. He sat down and wept. Then he fasted. Then he prayed for months. And then he risked everything to go fix it. That is the heartbeat of this book. Nehemiah is not primarily a manual on construction or even on management, though leaders have min...

Family Devotions For Teens: Bible Studies that Stick

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Family Devotions for Teens: Bible Studies That Stick Why the dinner table might be the most important classroom your teenager ever sits in — and how to lead it without winging it. Family devotions that actually hold a teenager's attention. Discover gospel-centered Bible studies built for grades 6–12 — open the guide, gather everyone, and talk. You already know you're supposed to do it. Somewhere in the back of your mind lives a small, persistent conviction that your family should be opening the Bible together — not just on Sunday, not just when the church schedules it, but at home, in the ordinary middle of the week. And if you have teenagers, you also know how quickly that conviction runs into reality. You sit down with good intentions. You read a few verses. You ask a question. And your fourteen-year-old gives you a one-word answer while glancing at the phone you asked him to put away. Somebody's got homework. Somebody's got practice. The moment fizzles, and you tell ...

Ezra Explained: Rebuilding Faith After Spiritual Collapse

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A people came home to ruins. The book of Ezra is the story of how God rebuilt them; stone by stone, and then heart by heart. Ezra tells how God rebuilt a broken people after exile — first a temple, then a faith. Discover how the book traces restoration from collapse to covenant renewal. When the Story Picks Up: Israel After the Collapse To understand the book of Ezra, you have to feel the silence that came before it. For most of a lifetime, there had been no temple in Jerusalem. The walls were rubble. The altar was cold. The people of Judah had been carried off to Babylon, and the questions they carried with them were heavier than any baggage: Had God abandoned His promises? Was the covenant over? Had the darkness simply won? The exile was not a random tragedy. It was the long-threatened consequence of covenant unfaithfulness — generations of idolatry, injustice, and ignored prophets. When Jerusalem fell in 586 B.C., it looked like the end of the story. The line of David seemed extingu...