The blessing : giving the gift of unconditional love and acceptance

by John Trent

Other authorsGary Smalley
Paper Book, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

Family Life Tre

Collection

Pages

ix; 261

Publication

Nashville, Tenn. : Nelson Books, 2004.

Description

Religion & Spirituality. Nonfiction. HTML: The best-selling classic that helps children thrive today and experience a special future tomorrow. Now revised, updated, and enhanced for a new generation! Children of every age long for the gift of "the blessing"--the unconditional love and approval that come from a healthy relationship with their parents. This life-changing gift, essential for instilling a deep sense of self-worth and unshakable emotional well-being, contains five essential elements: Meaningful touch, a spoken message, attaching high value, picturing a special future, and an active commitment. Offering solid, practical advice and a fresh perspective on making this gift a bigger part of our families, The Blessing powerfully communicates these biblically based elements as necessary to prepare children for positive future relationships, including their relationship with a loving God. But what if we've missed out on the blessing in our own lives? This audio book gives hope for "reversing the curse" and helps listeners find blessing in situations of divorce, death, desertion, adoption, and blended families. New to this updated edition are practical ideas, questions, exercises, and links for online resources--plus practical advice for planning a blessing event for a child, preparing a keepsake blessing, and living out the blessing every day of our lives..… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member BDartnall
Read this long ago and used it in a women's study group as our weekly text. Definitely filled with great insights, linked to the Biblical "blessings" in the Old/New Testament. A classic. Just saw they have republished an updated edition: I'm going to get it and read it again.
LibraryThing member Jerry.Yoakum
I found the idea of movement being part of the Hebrew words for life and death interesting. The death of a marriage is very well represented by the idea of the couple moving away from each other. So, if you are trying to breathe fresh life into something then you should remember this idea of life
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being the movement toward. Want to keep a relationship alive? Then reach out to that person.
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Original publication date

1986
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