This is my favorite sermon of all time! I’ve probably listened to it 100 times by now because it opened my eyes to the beauty of Jesus. Matthew 8 still amazes me.
https://t.co/d4tNAFzbfi
🍂📚 Is your fall bookclub looking for a new pick? Give Amelia B. Jones and the Lost Lady a try! A cozy mystery filled with small-town charm, fun characters, and a quirky cat.🐾✨
https://t.co/eAgTsIGWrp
👉 Tag your bookclub besties and see who’s in for the adventure!
This collection of poetry holds little pieces of my heart as I’ve learned to laugh and lament.
“Whimsical, winsome, wistful, and wise.
These beautiful poems will open your eyes.”
— Leslie Collins
Head of School, Covenant Academy
Grab your copy here 👉🏼https://t.co/nreT4eEjjI
I want to be like Samwise Gamgee— a wise and faithful friend.
We may not be able to fix all the problems, but we can be the friend that walks with them through it.
***
Frodo: Go back, Sam! I’m going to Mordor alone.
Sam: Of course you are, and I’m coming with you! —Tolkien
🌻COVER REVEAL🌻
I’m so excited to share my FIRST collection of poetry.
Th(ink) Well contains glimpses of my heart. It explores laughter and the gift of lament. Metaphors are a gift in times of suffering and joy.
Preorders available https://t.co/EfaOjYbF83
Releases January 8
SURPRISE!! It’s release day!!! The Tolerance Law is now available in my shop, on amazon, and kindle.
I’m so excited to share the story with you!
https://t.co/ViuufHAeKX
1 Peter: Hopeful Exiles (Risen Bible Studies) https://t.co/szn6Z5022Z #Amazon 1 Peter Bible Study guide is now live on Amazon. I am so excited to launch these studies this fall at Risen! @risenchurchtx
Exciting news booklovers! The Inkwell Bookshop has a website. 🎉 I just added a ton of new books— Beautiful classics, Agatha Christie, and some recent popular fiction) and I restocked the (rifle paper co) book parcels for the June drop.
https://t.co/sp0iZhFILp
“Don’t be discouraged if you read slowly. Thoughtfully engaging with a text takes time. The slowest readers are often the best readers, the ones who get the most meaning out of a work and are affected most deeply by literature.”
"Seventeenth-century Puritan divine Richard Baxter writes, 'It is not the reading of many books which is necessary to make a man wise or good; but the well reading of a few, could he be sure to have the best.'” @KSPrior https://t.co/3FHpm1ar0Y
COVER REVEAL ✨
My first novel has a cover!!!! Many thanks to Arete Graphix.
Synopsis: (dystopia)
Two young lovers forbidden to marry under The Tolerance Law make the dangerous decision to elope even though the Matriarchy prohibits marriage in The Fractal City of Eliora.