Holy In The Daily
Blog posts to help women over 50 face their challenges with clarity, confidence, and resilience.
Topics
- Adult children
- Advent
- Age gracefully
- Aging Parents
- At work
- Breakfast
- Camp Grandma or Cousin...
- Celtic Christianity
- Communion
- Create your legacy
- Crock Pot
- Daily
- Daily chores
- Death, grief, and heaven
- Desserts
- Difficult people
- Don't forget to laugh
- Easter
- Emotional overload
- Empty nest
- Experiencing Jesus
- Fall
- Fasting
- Friendships
- God's Promises
- Grandchildren
- Healing prayers
- Holidays
- How to change unhealth...
- Job
- Lent
- Mission
- Monday's Moment Videos
- My-village
- News
- Overwhelm
- Personal Growth
- Personal affirmation
- Prayer
- Quiet Moments
- Raising grandchildren
- Recipes
- Recommended reading
- Relationship Challenges
- Relationships
- Sabbath
- Seasons
- Side Dishes
- Soul Breaks
- Soul Care
How to Pray a Celtic Christian Circle Prayer
Have you ever prayed an encircling prayer like the Celtic Christians prayed? Learn about a caim prayer—where action and words combine to give voice to your heart.
Unexpected Encounters With the Holy
Finding the Holy in the daily often comes when we least expect it. Here is one of my stories of an unexpected encounter with the Lord.
6 Humorous Killer Prayer Tips
Need a little laughter to start your day? Igniter Media has some killer prayer tips that wrap up our last two weeks of exploring different avenues of prayer.
Body Prayer--Part 6 in Exploring Different Avenues of Prayer
“This is the body like no other that my life has shaped. I live here. This is my soul’s address,” says Barbara Brown Taylor in An Altar in the World.
Other People's Prayers--Part 5 in Exploring Different Avenues of Prayer
Do you ever feel your prayers could use a little upgrading as far as their content and expression? Are you ever too tired to think through what you want to express in prayer?
Contemplative Prayer--Part 4 in Exploring Different Avenues of Prayer
Do you long for a deeper, more intimate relationship with the Lord? If so, you might consider practicing contemplative prayer, a type of prayer that calls you to “be still and know that I am God.”