Some thoughts on healing

I’ve been ill for a few years now. (Don’t worry: it’s not super serious or debilitating, it’s just also not going anywhere). And creating twenty video lessons for Sunday School kids about healing made me consider what I should learn about healing. So…

  • It’s good to ask for healing.
    There is definitely a part of me that doesn’t want to. Partly because I’m inspired by my friends with chronic illnesses or disabilities visibly grow closer to God through their experiences but also serve others in a way that is because of rather than instead of. Partly because miraculous healing has been concentrated in specific times in the Bible (Elijah and Elisha, Jesus, and the early church) and we’re not living in one of those times and I don’t want to ask and have God say ‘No’. But narrowing down all the healings in the Bible to just twenty took was a hard job that left me in no doubt that God, who understands and experienced suffering and pain, wants to heal us.

  • Healing is not the most important thing.
    Most of the healings recorded in detail in the Bible are there to make a point, about God’s power, his character, his faithfulness. Or that Jesus is the very same God, and that the Spirit is God still at work through other people. If all I want is healing my focus is too narrow and I’ll miss him.

  • Healing is for more than just our bodies.
    The most obvious example is the paralysed man who is lowered through a roof to recieve both healing and forgiveness. But I loved the chance to look at Psalm 22 and see the emotional and mental healing that David reaches out to God for. I picked Psalm 147:3 for a memory verse because God doesn’t merely bind up their wounds but he heals the broken hearted. My sorrow and suffering and mental health matter just as much to God any other parts of my body that don’t work as they should.

  • One day I will be healed.
    At the moment my healing is in a ‘maybe’ state: Maybe the medicine will actually be effective all the time. Maybe we’ll recognise a trigger that I can just avoid. Maybe God will answer my prayers miraculously. Maybe I’ll have the surgery and it’ll be the rare occasion where it doesn’t need to be repeated every few years. Maybe… just maybe. DEFINATELY God is preparing a new heaven and a new earth that will be perfect in every way with no death or pain! DEFINATELY I will be made like Jesus in all ways including a resurrection body that won’t suffer decay. DEFINATELY I will live for all eternity with the God who designed and made me, the God who has healed far bigger and far worse, the perfect God who will have made all things perfect and DEFINATELY the fact that my body works again won’t even be top of the list of wonderful things in that place!

I hope that if you’ve watched the videos that your family will have been encouraged by much more than God’s ability and willingness to heal but that what I’ve learnt will help you talk about the healing side of things. I hope that if you’re disabled, chronically ill, suffering at the moment or wandering what to make of healing in the middle of the Coronavirus pandemic that this will help to remind you of a few helpful truths. And for me on days when it’s particularly painful, hard to be ill or I’m feeling sorry for myself I’ve got somewhere to come and remind myself to take it all to God and leave it in his very capable hands.

A brief thought about reading the Bible

Far too often I assume that I already know what the Bible is going to say. After all, I’ve known these stories since I was a kid, I’ve read them and studied them as an adult, I’ve taught these passages to others. This is particularly true of the gospels.

So imagine my surprise at being surprised on reading John 18:15-16 and seeing that John “was known to the high priest.”

MIND BLOWN!

How was this a detail I had never noticed before?! It’s part of one of the most famous passages in the Bible! I am frequently too confident in my own abilities as a Bible student to actually see what is in the text. Shame on me that I still have this attitude. But also praise God who is still able to surprise me with the glories of his word and his plan!

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For those of you who are interested in this detail I discovered for myself: let’s do a little bit of unpacking.

  • The unnamed disciple is probably John who tends to obscure his involvement in the story (See John 19:26) and also turn up with Peter before all the other disciples (See John 20:3).

  • How was this disciple known to the high priest? Well it’s not 100% clear if the high priest refferred to here is Caiaphas, who was currently serving in the role, or Annas, ex-high-priest and current father-in-law-to-the-high-priest. Either way it’s likely that he’d be known to both, whichever is particularly intended here. It’s unlikely that their lives crossed at work - I can’t see either Annas or Caiaphas buying their own fish - ad they probably weren’t chummy not least because Jesus and John are besties and the high priest is has been trying for a while to kill Jesus. They could be related; there is at least one John in the family (Acts 4:6) and names tended to be passed down. But that would make it strange that Luke doesn’t mention this while John and Peter (together again) are on trial in that chapter. Although it would make it super awkward if they were!

  • Why does it matter? It’s not a big deal in the story but it does shed light on why John would include different details in his account. For instance it is only John who knows that Peter cuts off Malchus’ ear, no-one else knows his name but they do know that he’s a servant of the high priest. It also might explain why no-one challenges John as being a disciple of Jesus in the way that they do Peter. He’s known to them in a different context and might even enjoy some privilege there - after all they let a stranger in on his word.

I love the little details in the Bible, and I’m so glad that the Spirit included them. They humble me, allow me to see the reality of te events and people in the Bible and they glorify the God who pays attention to every little detail of our world.

Telling your testimony

People have, correctly, been saying for years that social media is no substitute for meaningful connection with people, and now due to a global pandemic and various degrees of quarentine the internet is the only connection we have.

One way in which we as Christians can use the phone or the internet to build relationships within our churches, Bible studies and youth groups is by sharing our testimonies - what has God been doing in our lives? This is always useful but might be especially encouraging at a time like this where getting to know someone better by casual chit-chat has been sunk by the nature and awkwardness of conference calls.

There is real power in hearing what God has been and is doing in people’s lives. When carefully told our stories counter a tendency to explain theology without being relatable; put paid to the idea that we’re somehow better than others and diminish the image of being ‘sorted’ when we still struggle. It emphasises and gives rise to questions about the gospel – forgiveness, adoption, salvation, sanctification, revelation. We can say why we believe what we believe, and shake people out of their current worldview. We can encourage, instruct and edify each other. There is power in our stories because God is powerful.

On this how to… page are some articles I found useful as well as some tips for sharing your testimony either with anyone or for getting your youth group or Bible study to think about sharing theirs.

Thoughts on bridging the gaps

It is a weird and unusual time at the moment…

First, there was the global pandemic and lockdown. Churches shut their doors, we couldn’t visit friends or family, going outside was discouraged. For me personally this hit in a strange place - we’d moved to a new country only a couple of months before (and had only briefly visited home from a different continent) so talking to family and friends solely by video call was not a new experience. I’m also an introvert who doesn’t like people touching me, so a limited social calendar and a reason not to hug made it seem like the world had been recreated to my own personal preferences. However, we’d only been here for two months and were just starting to feel like people from our church, our building and our language course were becoming friends rather than ‘people we knew’ and that was tough to navigate as our opportunities for bumping into people or getting to know them better vanished.

Then there is the belated and necessary uptake of interest in the Black Lives Matter movement. It’s meant that many of us are finally questioning the systems in which we live, how they need changing and what we can do to help, particularly in regards to race. It has probably made us all way more aware of our bubbles, our tendency to listen to people who are closer to us on any spectrum: racial, policitcal, age, even denominational.

There’s nothing new in what I’ve said here: any thoughtful commentary on our times is expressing the same things, and often doing that better.

But I was uploading a Sunday School lesson today that spoke to me particularly at this moment. John 4:1-42, Jesus talks to a Samaritan Woman at the Well.

It struck me anew how far out of his way Jesus goes to reach past the barriers that separate them from each other. He didn’t even need to be in Samaria in the first place! If I’m becoming more like Jesus, as I want to, I have to do all that I can to understand and to reach out to those who are different from me.

One of the ways I’ve looked at changing how I think, especially in seeking to understand, is by consuming content from people who are not like me. I’ve deliberately begun to seek out youtube channels, books, blogs and music from POC’s and not just those in the West. Not just on the topic of race or age or ability but on things I enjoy and have in common with them. I’ve also been educating myself on how systemic racism manifests in Britain in particular as that’s where I’m from. And thinking about where the money we donate goes in terms of supporting worldwide mission and aid agencies but also looking out for a tendancy to white saviourism.

I’m not going to make specific recommendations here as what you and I enjoy and are interested in will not be the same. But do check out my previous blog posts 5 Black Christians You Should Know and 5 Organisations Every Christian Should Know if you would like a place to start.

5 Books Every Sunday School Teacher Should Read

What do we want for the kids in our classes? For them to become children of God and to grow in their love for him and in the likness of his son. That’s thankfully not a burden we have to bear alone but it’s also no small task. Here are 5 books that helped me to aim for that goal when it was hard:

  1. The Jesus Storybook Bible
    There are so many good children’s Bibles out there but this one is my favourite because of how it puts Jesus at the centre of evey story. Jago’s pictures are gorgeous and it’s easy to read with a small child but I find it so useful for myself, it demonstrates and inspires me to look for the Gospel in whatever passage I’m teaching and Sally Lloyd-Jones has done a fantastic job of explaining complicated yet necessary theology in a beautifully simple way. She says: “I couldn't rely on jargon. A little child has no concept of what sin is, for instance. I had to find other ways to describe it. I wrote that: sin is not just about breaking the rules, it's breaking God's heart; it's like poison that makes your heart sick and stops it from working properly; it's like running away from God and hiding in the shadows.” And that’s inspiring too; how can I tell them the gospel in a way they’ll really understand?

  2. Digging Deeper into the Gospels
    There is actually a mini series of Dig Deeper books co-authored by Andrew Sach all of which aim to eqiup you with the right tool kit for understanding the Bible and those tools are super useful! The most obvious application is in reading those passages that you’ve never really understood why they’re there but’s it’s also so helpful with those passages you teach repeatedly, is there a depth to them you’ve been missing and have you been teaching them correctly? Dig Deeper with Nigel Beynon has a chapter dedicated to each tool and is a useful reference, my actual preference is seeing Exodus explored with these tools in Dig Even Deeper, with Richard Alldritt, and Mark’s gospel (which to my shame I had always considered the least interesting Gospel!) in Dig Deeper into the Gospels with Tim Hiorns.

  3. The Chronicles of Narnia
    So this is a cheat because it’s actually 7 books but it’s also really a place holder for any children’s fiction with a Christian perspective. I would encourage any children’s worker to read or re-read a book which does for them what Narnia does for me. It helps me to feel like a child re-encountering the wonderof Jesus in the same way that the children discover Aslan. I never read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe without remembering when my best friend said “I think Aslan is sort of like Jesus” and thinking why had I never seen that before. Books that take us back to being a child (even if that book wasn’t part of our childhood) and that help us to experience aspects of God’s character differently to normal are brilliant for helping us understand, and plan for, the children we serve. CS Lewis himself wrote: “No book is really worth reading at the age of ten which is not equally -and often far more-worth reading at the age of 50 and beyond.” What more of a recommendation do you need…

  4. Basic Christianity
    John Stott’s introduction to the Christian faith is excellent, it’s deep but simple, short but comprehensive and very readible. It makes a great example of the kind of books that help to remind us of why we’re writing lessons on Judges or cutting out crafts on a Saturday night - this is what we want them to know, this is the gospel they need. It’s a great tool for re-centering our teaching and our lives around him. Other books that would fall into this category are Timothy Keller’s The Reason for God, CS Lewis’ Mere Christianity and the Case for Christ by Lee Strobel, which are all great. I realised that this list was very white-western-male centric and so looked around for some similar books from different perspectives; if you know of any please leave them in the comments - I would love to add them to my reading list.

  5. Serving Without Sinking
    The previous books have all been about helping you become better at teaching Sunday School. This one is for you as a Sunday School teacher who is doing the best they can to serve Jesus and his church in this way. When it’s hard, when you don’t have the time, when expectations are too high, when it’s only hard work and not any fun, then this book is for you. John Hindley explores some of the reasons why service might have become a burden and how to find the joy again. I have found it so helpful in giving me a better perspective on what I’m doing and why. And you definitely don’t have to wait until it feels hard to read this.

I hope these five books encourage you; there are so many more I want to recommend and even more that I want to read. Please share books you’ve found helpful in the comments.

5 Organisations every Christian should know

In 2008 journalist Matthew Parris wrote this after visiting the work of Pump Aid in Malawi:

“Now a confirmed atheist, I’ve become convinced of the enormous contribution that Christian evangelism makes in Africa: sharply distinct from the work of secular NGOs, government projects and international aid efforts. These alone will not do. Education and training alone will not do. In Africa Christianity changes people’s hearts. It brings a spiritual transformation. The rebirth is real. The change is good.”

He’s writing specifically about the effect of Christian charities in Africa but I believe that the good that specifically Christian charities do extends beyond one continent. Without making conversion conditional for help they see the value of a person made in the image of God, the beauty and usefulness of the world God made and the desire to share God’s justice and mercy with everyone. So here are 5 Christian charities doing just that.

  1. Wycliffe Bible Translators
    There are so many good Mission organisations out there it was hard to pick just one. I’m giving the shoutout to Wycliffe as they do they crucial job of making sure that every language group gets a Bible in their own heart language to learn about and hear from God in the way they understand best.

  2. Hoveraid
    When was the last time you saw a hovercraft? There not a thing of the past instead they do the job of taking missionaries, Bible translators, school and medical equipment, technical supplies and so much more out to the hardest to reach places, where ther isn’t even enough room for a plane to land (if a plane can land MAF will probably also be there). Hoveraid’s aim is to reach the unreachable.

  3. City to City
    Every Christian needs God’s word, the basic things of life, and the church. City to City is a church planting and resourcing network that aims to help local churches reach urban populations, which in 2050 will be nearly 70% of the world’s population. With their support new and existing churches will be equipped and trained to bring the gospel to workplaces, families, schools and universities in cities across the world.

  4. Youth for Christ
    The scope of YFC is narrow in that they focus on teenagers but wide in that they run youth groups with local churches in juvenile halls, schools, communtiy centres and churches in more than 100 countries bringing the good news that Jesus is for them to millions of teens.

  5. Mercy Ships
    The Africa Mercy is a floating hospital: able to bring highly qualified staff, the latest technology and practices to coastal regions of Africa. The ship is equipped with clean water, reliable electicity and easy communication across departments which isn’t true of many land-based hospitals in poorer communities. Much more than bringing medical help they also bring hope and a future to those rejected and stigmatised by their illness or injury.

Obviously this is only scraping the surface of all the charities who share the love of Jesus in word and action across the globe. In an attempt to capture the scope of the work I chose one from each of these categories: Mission, Aid, Church growth, Youth work and Medical Aid. They’re all worth your support and I’d love to hear about where else God is working, leave a comment and leet me know.

5 Podcasts You Should Listen To

I would not have described myself as a podcast person. My radio channels of choice have always been music based and I rarely listened to the radio. I have tried various e-readers but found they pale in comparison to an actual physical book.

So what converted me to the point where I not only listen to some but have 5 I want to share?
Washing the dishes.

Having something that is more than background but actively engages my mind while I scrub pans has meant I’ve been known to say ‘It’s not your turn to wash up, it’s mine’ just because I have a podcast lined up. So here is what’s been keeping my kitchen clean and my mind active:

  1. The Bible Project
    I was already a fan of their videos when I started listening to this. It’s so good than when an episode outlast the time it takes me to do the dishes - which is often - I will continue to clean the house so that don’t have to press pause. I have a binge-y approach to podcasts so I like to look for a miniseries, on the wisdom books or the tree of life, and listen to all of those over a few weeks then wait a while and find a different theme. Their deep dives into the Biblical Theology that unlies the videos is well worth a listen however fast or slow you consume it.

  2. Knowing Faith
    This is probably my favourite. I arrived late to the party and loved it so much I listened to 2 years worth in about 6 months and was devastated when I caught up and had to wait a week for the next episode to come out! Why is it so great? Well, the hosts (Jen Wilkin, JT English, Kyle Worley) love what they’re talking about, they’re not afraid to disagree with each other and stay friends, they have the best guests, they make big theological ideas accessible without talking down to you: they’re like real people!

  3. 5 Minutes in Church History
    This is a fun one. They literally only take 5 minutes but they pack in all the info. They’re so short I will use them as an oven timer and listen to 5 or 6 while something bakes. There’s a lot of the reformation, so Calvin and Luther, but also the less famous including Lady Jane Gray (she’s just my fave), and Francis Grimké. It’s fascinating.

  4. Pass the Mic
    Is the podcast arm (wing?) of The Witness. They cover a lot of current events, pop-culture and the church all from the perspective of Christians who want to hear Christ first on everything. They also have super interviewees - Leslie Odom Jr and Michael B Jordan so you know this is no lightweight podcast but something you can get your teeth into. They have other podcasts too that I haven’t listened to but I want to, maybe they’ll end up on a future top 5 list.

  5. The Bible Recap
    This podcast is designed to accompany your daily Bible reading, they have a plan in their show notes. So, I’m not actually following it at the moment - it’s waiting until I’ve finished my current reading plan. At the moment I’m listening to the odd episode that covers whatever book I’m psyching myself up to write a study on. The episodes are short (about 8 minutes) which is the perfect length for when you’ve finished reading the Bible passage, but also means that when you just dip in and out you haven’t had the study prepared for you but you’ve got enough to give you momentum to look deeper into the passage. There are some intro episodes you should listen to before you start - a kind of top tips and enthusiasm builder for the not undaunting task ahead. And a high mark of quality is the acknowlegement that you need to find your best fit - which is what you get here.

These are my top 5 and, since I’m now a podcast person, what else should I be adding to my list? Let me know in the comments below

5 Helpful Apps for Christian Living

I have a love/hate relationship with my smartphone.
It doesn’t fit in any of my pockets but Whatsapp is by far the easiest way to contact my friends and family (we live in different countries so tradional calling is expensive). It is far too easy for me to waste time on fb or youtube, but its addictive nature and Duolingo have definitely helped me to learn German. None of these things are sponsored; simply things I personally have found helpful.
So here are 5 apps that have helped me embrace the blessings of the smartphone.

  1. Read Scripture
    There are many Bible Reading apps out there: I like this one as you can choose your plan and if you’d like to read everyday or go at your own pace, choose what time you want to be reminded and select a font size. I love it because at the beginnin of each book they have the relevant Bible overview video from the Bible Project and for the longer books they’ve also included some of the theme videos. This is super helpful for me as it helps me to not just read (most days) but to engage with the passage and the God behind it as well. Check it out for yourself here.

  2. Prayermate
    As the name suggests this app is here to help you pray. I find it an easy way to organise, when I tell someone I’ll pray for them I can add them to a list of my choosing and set how often I want them to come up in my rotation. I don’t use it every day but on the days where we don’t have somthing specific on our hearts it’s really helpful. You can also add prayer requests from organisations like Open Doors and Christians in Sport; individual churches can even share their prayer lists via this app.

  3. Verse Locker
    One of my failures in children’s ministery is that I put less effort into learning memory verses than the kids teaching do. Verse Locker helps with this by somewhat gamifying the process: I can unlock badges for when I have memorised >10 or >50 verses or five verses from the Pentateuch or Wisdom books or the Gospels. And I love me an app that can put my overly competative spirit to good use.

  4. Logos
    Even on the free version they have a ridiculously large numer of books available, modern releases from NT Wright, classic christian lit like Augustine’s Confessions, numerous translations of the Bible, RC Sproul’s Crucial Questions booklets, making this a super useful teaching-preparation tool. A mobile phone is a little small for this amount of reading so downloading the app on a tablet or laptop is probably easier (either that or I’m showing my age).

  5. A Podcast App
    I don’t have a strong preference for which one you use. I use Podbean which gives me access to my top 5 Podcasts every Christian should listen to… The subject of my next top 5 list.

5 Black Christians You Should Know

One of the joys of being part of God’s family is that our brothers and sisters come from all over the world and from all throughout time. Hearing from those that are from a variety of cultures enriches how we see them, see ourselves and see God too!
As I write people all over the world are marching in support of the Black Lives Matter movement so, I’ve chosen to highlight 5 Black Christians whose lives, voices and theology matter to God and should matter to us too.

  1. The Witness
    In their own words they’re a ‘Black Christian collective that engages issues of religion, race, justice and culture from a biblical perspective.’ Because there are many contributors, its perspective is as wide as it is deep and you can read about current events, the arts, church leadership and the family. If you’re on the lookout for excellent Christian blogs then you need to subscribe here: https://thewitnessbcc.com

  2. Augustine of Hippo
    Augustine probably makes it on to most lists of Christians you should know, and he absolutely should; he’s so formative to how the church has discussed theology and Christian living. I wanted him on this list because we tend to look back on church history and only see white men. Augustine is a reminder that North Africa and the Middle East were the cultures where the creeds were formed and where the earliest matyrs and theologians lived. (And yes, despite what most paintings of him would have you believe, he’s from Algeria, of Berber ancestry and was certainly black.) Even if you can’t face the entirety of his Confessions it’s long been public domain and is worth dipping into. Or grab a biography - there are literally tons!

  3. Thabiti Anyabwile
    From theologians of long ago to those of today: Anyabwile caught my attention as a writer on the Gospel Coalition. I find his blogs very easy to read without being emotionally or spiritually light; which I guess comes from being a pastor and very grounded in the practicalities of theology. While his books are still on my reading list, the titles fill my heart with joy. If you’d like to join the ones on my list are ‘Captivated: Beholding the Mystery of Jesus Death and Resurrection’ and ‘The Life of God in the Soul of the Church

  4. Conrad Mbewe
    We’re returning to Africa now but in the modern day. Mbewe shares his life and experience as a pastor, university director, lecturer, father and birdwatcher in Zambia on his blog: A letter from Kabwata. It’s a great thing to hear the experiences of someone who’s life is so different to mine but also so encouraging that those experiences are soaked in biblical worldview, yes, even the birdwatching.

  5. Rosa Parks
    A list like this wouldn’t be complete if we didn’t mention the US Civil Rights movement. I would recommend King’s ‘Why we can’t wait’ to anyone who wants to understand the historic and current struggles of black people in the US. But Rosa Parks’ book ‘Quiet Strength’ resonnated with me more. It introduced me to someone who was fairly ordinary and yet did extraordinary things, not limited to her involvement with the NAACP but also in her work with young people - something close to my heart.

This is only a short top 5 so there isn’t room for more than an honrable mention for H.B Charles Jr, Desmond Tutu, Harriet Tubman, Kirk Franklin, Sojourner Truth and so many others. Who would have made it into your top five? Let us know in the comments below.

5 free Bible-based resources for kids at home

A ‘normal’ Sunday School probably involves singing, sharing for prayer, a craft, maybe a game and at the very least a Bible Story with a chance to ask questions about what it means for us. Church services have often moved to some kind of streaming which works great for sermons but less well for small group situations.

That all becomes very tricky when you’re stuck at home with kids who might normal be split by age into different groups and with only the crafting implements you would normally have. Leave a comment with any resources you’ve found useful.

So here we have 5 resources that can help you to do Sunday School at home.

Let’s start by blowing my own trumpet: On this very website there’s a series of Digital Sunday School lessons which include a story, questions to link it to our lives today, memory verses, links to youtube videos for singing together and some crafty, and less crafty, activities you can try throughout the day or week.
At the moment there are four available and producing two more a week seems like a sustainable pace to keep up with so you could do a midweek Bible lesson if you wanted. The series will be 20 lessons long and each lesson is based on God healing someone - wonder where I got that idea!

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1. Digital Sunday School

Ages 5-10

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2. Big Picture Bible Crafts

Ages 3-10

If you’re looking for craft resources my friend Gail Schoonmaker, illustrator of the Big Picture Story Bible, has written a book, Big Picture Bible Crafts that takes you through the major plotpoints in craft form. The book is excellent and Crossway Publishers have made it available free on PDF (although I would definitely recommend buying it for the long haul if, like me, you’re a Bible teacher who isn’t strong on the craft side). Each craft comes with a resource list, a Bible passage a memory verse and how you can adjust it for different ages and abilities!

My go-to videos for Bible Stories are Crossroads Kids Club. The God’s Story series are short, thoughtful, with high quality animation and designed to show how this individual story fits in to God’s greater rescue plan. They’ve made loads of them, I’d be surprised if you couldn’t find one that fits in with any other material you are or have been using.

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3. Crossroads Kids Club

Ages 3-12

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4. Olly Knight Worship Music

All ages

If you want some family friendly music Olly Knight and family are producing regular worship sessions live on Facebook (they also post the lyrics) - they’re chatty, they’ll read the comments and praise Jesus. So why not grab whatever instruments you have and your dancing feet and join in.

The Village Church is super committed to Bible Education run by the church and has a massive selction of resources you should check out. Including a podcast for kids! Originally designed to be something you could play on a car journey they’d be great for younger kids at home as well. They are very American so come with a healthy dollop of cheese, but when that dollop is on a serving of easy to understand, well grounded Bible stories form John, then it’s very stomachable. They even include original songs. Search for God’s Big Story wherever you get your podcasts from.

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5. God’s Big Story Podcast

Ages 3-8