Do you struggle to take meaningful notes on your church's weekly sermons? Do you feel lost when it comes time to apply the message to your life? This notebook is designed to keep you accountable in your note-taking journey. Each page includes lines to jot down your thoughts as you listen to the Sunday sermon. After the sermon, use the reflection questions, at the bottom of each page, to find insight into the message and how it applies to your life! Each page has a unique reflection question so that each week will have you growing in your Christian walk in fresh ways! Examples of reflection questions "Where did this message highlight God’s love for you?" "How will you exit the church doors differently compared to how you entered?" "Which qualities of Christ were exemplified or symbolized in this message?" This notebook contains 52 reflection questions, with one page dedicated to each week's sermon. You'll have enough space to take notes on a full year of weekly sermons!
Michelle Wang is the author of an award-winning series of picture books about a fun-loving family discovering the beauty of the changing seasons: It Must Be Autumn (winner of the 2021 Royal Dragonfly Book Award and the Southern California Book Festival Award), It Must Be Winter (2021 Wishing Shelf Book Awards finalist), It Must Be Spring (2023 Educators Choice Awards finalist), and It Must Be Summer (available December 2023).
Michelle lives in Toronto, Ontario, where she was born and raised on Saturday mornings at the library with her two sisters, borrowing ten books each. The rest of the week, she lived in the worlds of heroes whose names were spelled with an e and wore paper bags and ate alligator pies at Macdonald Hall, alongside chums aged two plus two plus two who owned the wrong hockey sweater and told tales of strange things done.
When Michelle grew up and got married, her mother-in-law came to stay one day. Things went missing, and the events that ensued inspired Michelle to write Oma’s Bag as a love letter to her husband and their four children, as well as for all those families who have loved ones living with dementia.
Unlike Oma, Michelle doesn’t usually carry around a purse or a bag, but please don’t ask to look in her pockets.