Digital Logos Edition
Genuine peace and joy come when women follow God in every area of their lives-and become women after His heart. With warmth and grace, Elizabeth George shares practical, scriptural insights on how you can pursue God's priorities concerning:
Let God fulfill His greatest desire for you. Allow Him to transform you by preparing your heart and mind to embrace His incredible work. You'll find lasting joy and peace in a life of prayer, a life of priorities, a life as A Woman After God's Own Heart.
“Yes, she, too, served. She, too, fulfilled her God-given responsibilities. But there was one choice that Mary continually made, a decision to do the one thing that mattered most: she chose to spend time worshiping God. She had learned that nothing can take the place of time in God’s presence. Indeed, time spent sitting at His feet fuels and focuses all acts of service.” (Page 15)
“To be cold-hearted means to be decidedly below normal; to be unemotional, unaware, unconscious of God! Imagine being unemotional about the things of God! And then there’s the lukewarm heart. It’s only moderately warm; it’s indifferent! Imagine being indifferent toward God! Hot—the third option—is where we want to be. Having a high temperature; characterized by violent activity, emotion, or passion; fiery; excited—now that’s the heart of someone committed to God!” (Page 20)
“Give God your life, your body (such as it is), your health (or lack of it), your husband, each child (one by one), your home, your possessions. Nurture the habit of placing these blessings in God’s loving hands to do with them what He will. After all, they are not ours—they are His! A daily prayer of commitment helps us to release what we think are our rights to these gifts.” (Page 19)
“Roots make all the difference in the health of a plant, and their presence or absence ultimately becomes known to all. The plant either flourishes or fails, thrives or dies, blossoms or withers. The health of anything—whether a garden plant or a heart devoted to God—reflects what is going on (or not going on!) underground.” (Page 24)