
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send me a Text Message! (I can't directly respond, but I can answer questions and share comments in upcoming episodes!
Summer is a great time to start laying foundational principles through the wisdom of the proverbs that keeps the mind focused on what is true and the hands busy with the Lord's work. And since summer often means more together time, lets grow in being hard to offend and being a productive agent of growth.
New! Get the Ponder Bible Reading Method Free
Sign up for the SPF Newsletter and get a free digital guide to help you go deeper in your daily Bible reading!
She Proves Faithful Newsletter: sheprovesfaithful.com/newsletter
Support the Podcast
Enjoying SPF? Consider leaving a review on iTunes or becoming a supporter on patreon at $5 a month: Join the Team!
Show Notes
Two Proverbs to help you cultivate Christian culture in your home this summer (and help pave the way for the fall):
Grow in being hard to offend (because you are slow to anger through good sense).
Scripture says good sense, or prudence makes a person slow to anger - that means the person is able to be cautious and deliberate the situation instead of being reactionary.
Be a hard worker (in other words be on a trajectory of building something)
This proverb punches hard when you consider what it means: there is no neutrality with work. With your work you are either building or you are tearing down.
“This proverb applies this principle to work. Constructive work is the law of human life and progress. There is an active principle of destruction operating in the history of man; and he who is a slacker at his work, who does not put into it all his strength, is a brother to the man who in wickedness sets himself to the activity of destruction. No living being can be merely a spectator. Each works or wastes. Not to work well, is to aid the process of waste.” G. Campbell Morgan
"We must recognize that from the very creation of mankind, God intended us to be workers, producers, and agents of growth and dominion. He connected our identity to our work. He established our telos-our purpose- as cultivators of creation. He called for a flourishing garden-a productive and beautiful place where our work does important things. God did all this." - David Bahnsen, Full Time
Resources
Pop Up Tent (this is the tent I purchased two years ago - there are less expensive options):
Support the show
Love wellness products for your whole family? Shop Earthley and support SPF!
Get 10% off your first order with code FIRSTSPF : https://earthley.com/?affiliateId=lauren-hlushak
Support SPF $5 a month: patreon.com/sheprovesfaithful
Sign Up for the SPF newsletter: sheprovesfaithful.com/newsletter
If you're enjoying the SPF Podcast, please leave a review on your favorite podcast player! Thank you!
4.8
729729 ratings
Send me a Text Message! (I can't directly respond, but I can answer questions and share comments in upcoming episodes!
Summer is a great time to start laying foundational principles through the wisdom of the proverbs that keeps the mind focused on what is true and the hands busy with the Lord's work. And since summer often means more together time, lets grow in being hard to offend and being a productive agent of growth.
New! Get the Ponder Bible Reading Method Free
Sign up for the SPF Newsletter and get a free digital guide to help you go deeper in your daily Bible reading!
She Proves Faithful Newsletter: sheprovesfaithful.com/newsletter
Support the Podcast
Enjoying SPF? Consider leaving a review on iTunes or becoming a supporter on patreon at $5 a month: Join the Team!
Show Notes
Two Proverbs to help you cultivate Christian culture in your home this summer (and help pave the way for the fall):
Grow in being hard to offend (because you are slow to anger through good sense).
Scripture says good sense, or prudence makes a person slow to anger - that means the person is able to be cautious and deliberate the situation instead of being reactionary.
Be a hard worker (in other words be on a trajectory of building something)
This proverb punches hard when you consider what it means: there is no neutrality with work. With your work you are either building or you are tearing down.
“This proverb applies this principle to work. Constructive work is the law of human life and progress. There is an active principle of destruction operating in the history of man; and he who is a slacker at his work, who does not put into it all his strength, is a brother to the man who in wickedness sets himself to the activity of destruction. No living being can be merely a spectator. Each works or wastes. Not to work well, is to aid the process of waste.” G. Campbell Morgan
"We must recognize that from the very creation of mankind, God intended us to be workers, producers, and agents of growth and dominion. He connected our identity to our work. He established our telos-our purpose- as cultivators of creation. He called for a flourishing garden-a productive and beautiful place where our work does important things. God did all this." - David Bahnsen, Full Time
Resources
Pop Up Tent (this is the tent I purchased two years ago - there are less expensive options):
Support the show
Love wellness products for your whole family? Shop Earthley and support SPF!
Get 10% off your first order with code FIRSTSPF : https://earthley.com/?affiliateId=lauren-hlushak
Support SPF $5 a month: patreon.com/sheprovesfaithful
Sign Up for the SPF newsletter: sheprovesfaithful.com/newsletter
If you're enjoying the SPF Podcast, please leave a review on your favorite podcast player! Thank you!
1,080 Listeners
4,801 Listeners
2,318 Listeners
587 Listeners
1,352 Listeners
1,229 Listeners
4,230 Listeners
1,279 Listeners
20,230 Listeners
3,018 Listeners
2,800 Listeners
1,246 Listeners
587 Listeners
3,848 Listeners
1,174 Listeners