There are positive steps you can take to get started on your recovery from job loss. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they share the actions and attitudes you can pursue to successfully weather the storm of job loss.
Does God know and care about your job-loss situation? Learn how you can use this time to grow closer to the God who loves you. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they describe the normal feelings that people of faith can experience when journeying through a time of job loss.
Experiencing a job-loss situation can cause you to feel a confusing mix of emotions. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they discuss the importance of acknowledging and working through the emotions you are feeling.
It’s normal to experience a variety of emotions when journeying through a job-loss situation. It’s not what you feel, but how you express what you feel to your family, friends, and network of relationships that can either help or hurt your situation. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they describe some appropriate and helpful ways of handling job loss.
Part of the anxiety involved in a job-loss situation can come from the need to break the news to your friends and family. Join Bill Crowder as he shares helpful insights and advice on how to share the news with your loved ones.
Once people get past the initial wave of emotions, they often walk through a season of acceptance of the job-loss situation. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they share critical first steps you can take to begin moving through your journey of job loss.
There are many key factors that can affect a person’s reaction to job loss. These key factors can range from your current financial status to your support system to your overall attitude about life. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they describe the variety of factors that can influence your reaction and recovery from job loss.
The responses to a job-loss situation can vary from person to person. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they describe some of the normal reactions that people experience as they journey through a time of unemployment.
Your initial reactions to a job-loss situation can be confusing and overwhelming. Join Bill Crowder and Chuck Fridsma as they describe some of the normal initial reactions that people have when they are told they are losing their employment.
Forgiving someone who has harmed you is a challenging process. So how do you know when you've truly forgiven? Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes the experience of a heart that has truly forgiven and is released to enjoy reconciliation.
Forgiveness is not an obligation. We are called to forgive because we love reconciliation. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender unpacks some of the key elements involved in the complex process of forgiveness from a biblical perspective.
Would that forgiveness was a once-and-done event. But it's not. It's ongoing. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes a true heart of forgiveness as one that continually invites those who offend you to a deepening level of repentance and reconciliation.
When we're wounded, anger and pain can feel overwhelming. Having a heart to do good is a battle. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes the process of forgiving an offense as more like watching a movie unfold than observing a snapshot.
All relationships are fraught with a level of brokenness that requires ongoing forgiveness. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes how forgiveness is an ongoing process that invites deepening restoration in relationships marred by our failures at loving well.
Often people think that to forgive requires that you must forget what happened. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender explains how the Bible requires the opposite: that we remember the offense in order for forgiveness to be most effective.
There's a misconception that forgiveness relieves my feelings of anger and pain. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes how God uses our pain and anger over injustices to cultivate an empathy for others who hurt and a zeal for justice against evil.
Repentance has fruit. It's not simply saying, I'm sorry. Listen in as Dr. Dan Allender describes the grief, sorrow, and commitment to restoration that reveals the genuine fruit of repentance
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