Pilgrim’s Progress: Mission Adventure

By emily | October 6, 2011

  A REFORMATION CELEBRATION Reformation Day has been celebrated in Germany, Slovenia, and in many Protestant and Lutheran churches around the world for centuries.  Though admittedly a minor holiday within those church calendars, it falls on the anniversary of Martin Luther’s nailing of his 95 theses to the door of the cathedral of Wittenberg, Germany…

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Living With Autism

By Janie Cheaney | October 4, 2011

Nobody knows yet exactly what causes it, or why it occurs more in certain income levels, or even quite what defines it, but autism becomes more of an issue with each passing year. It may be in your family or church or neighborhood, and your children have questions. Two well-received novels and one picture book…

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LIGHT YOUR LIBRARY Finale!

By emily | September 30, 2011

We started our LIGHT YOUR LIBRARY campaign nearly two weeks ago, but Janie and I had been planning it since at least the summer.  So much to say and so little time!  It’s been fun if challenging, and we’re happy to have been able to think along with our readers about how Christians can support…

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Author Interview: Simonetta Carr on Athanasius

By emily | September 28, 2011

Athanasius.  By Simonetta Carr.  Reformation Heritage Press, sale 2011.  66 pp.  Ages 9-12. What makes a good children’s book?  We’ve talked a lot the past few days about what doesn’t make them.  But last week, I had the opportunity to interview author Simonetta Carr about her experience as a Christian writer as well as her…

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Podcast 6: Janie and Emily, and a Prayer for Banned Books Week

By emily | September 26, 2011

Over at BannedBooksWeek.org, the celebration has begun.  And while Janie and I made our objections to Banned Books Week clear last week, we are happy to join with our fellow book and library lovers in celebrating the freedom of the press we DO have in this country.   We don’t believe that YA Saves, but we…

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Interview With Meghan Cox Gurdon

By Janie Cheaney | September 21, 2011

Early last June, the YA publishing world was rocked by a column in the Wall Street Journal by Meg Cox Gurdon, who reviews children’s books for the paper.  Titled “Darkness Too Visible,” the short piece related the experience of Amy Freeman, mother of three, who visited the local Barnes & Noble to buy a book…

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Banned Books Week: Live It, Love It, Get the T-Shirt!

By Janie Cheaney | September 20, 2011

Back in 1984, that fateful year when we first decided to teach our kids at home, very little curriculum was available—strange as it may seem to those moms and dads who wander the apparently endless curriculum halls of homeschooling conventions today.  You can pore over catalogues and websites until your eyes glaze over, and still…

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LIGHT YOUR LIBRARY! Win Stuff, Love People, and Think Deeply

By emily | September 19, 2011

ME & MY LIBRARY I am not ashamed to say I love my local library.  As a conservative, I wish that it could be funded some other way than government plunder, but it’s not a perfect world, is it?  And as a classical homeschooler, the books we get there play a huge role in our…

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Rabbit Ears Audiobooks for Kids

By emily | September 12, 2011

A while back, I recommended to you The Jesus Storybook Bible in audiobook format.  Today, I would like to add one more Bible story to my short list, and in so doing, introduce you to an audiobook source worthy of note: Rabbit Ears Cherished Bible Stories: Parables that Jesus Told, The Savior is Born.  Read…

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A Prayer on 9/11

By emily | September 11, 2011

Found this prayer/poem, Praying on 9/11, by Mike Cosper tonight on The Gospel Coalition site.  Thought I would share it not only for our adult readers, but for those who might like to share it with their families.

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