Find strength in your faith as you navigate motherhood with this daily Bible study for women
Being a mom is no easy feat, but turning to God can help you feel motivated, inspired, and ready for anything. This 12-week Bible study for moms helps you reconnect with His Word every day, with advice and teachings that support you through raising your family.
The busy mom's Bible study —Each week focuses on a new theme like gratitude or perspective, with relevant passages from Scripture, focused prayers, and questions for reflection.
Easy to use every day —This Bible workbook for women explores readings that offer deep insight but only take about 15 minutes, so you can always find time for them in your busy life.
Start today —All you need to use this Bible study guide is your Bible and something to write with. You'll even find a section of discussion topics to help you use this guide in a group!
Practice parenting from a place of love and faith with this women's Bible workbook.
I wasn't getting much from the study. I felt like it tried to remove humanity from your thoughts and shame you into being more godly and it just wasn't for me.
Just okay. Lots of the devotions draw off random stories of her own children. This book is obviously for moms, but some of her stories seemed braggy like "look at what good faith my kid has." There was also very little practical advice on how to be a more patient and graceful mom, just be it? The questions at the end were always in line with "how can you be more ____ (kind, patient, etc) to your children?" There was never any devotional about how to take care of yourself so you could in fact be whatever attribute she mentions. There also wasn't anything about marriage. I know being a mom doesn't require being or staying married, but as a Christian book, I would've liked to see more thought put into it about how to be a good parent alongside a partner. Overall, this got boring and did not excite me. The pages are so short, the actual scripture could be included in the book instead of having to look it up.
Unrelatable. The daily devotional often had little to do with the provided scripture. The week on love was poorly done despite the Bible having a lot of scripture on the subject. Many of the questions were repetitive, and most seemed to be aimed at new Christians.
I started this with a group of moms. We collectively stopped at what should have been the end of week four but discovered most were struggling to relate and had not made it that far. The chief complaint was inability to relate, making it daily task rather than something to look forward to in a moment of downtime.