Kids & Parents: Helping Your Child Overcome Fear: A Faith-Based Parent's Guide
- Boundless Team

- Jun 9
- 19 min read
It usually happens when the house is finally quiet. You’ve just sat down, maybe with a cup of tea, maybe with the first deep breath you’ve taken since early morning, and then you hear it. A small, shaky voice from the hallway. The quick sound of bare feet on hardwood. A whisper at the bedroom door. “Mommy? Daddy? I’m scared.”
That moment reaches right into the heart of Christian parenting. You want to solve it fast. Turn on lights. Check the closet. Smooth the blanket. Explain the science of shadows. But kids and fear rarely disappear because we gave a perfect explanation. Fear is deeper than that. Fear touches imagination, safety, identity, trust, and the deep need to know someone stronger is near.
That’s why this moment matters so much for family discipleship. Fear is not only a problem to fix. It is also an opportunity to disciple a child at home. It is one of those sacred intersections where everyday parenting becomes faith at home. This is where a child learns what to do with a pounding heart, a worried mind, and a world that sometimes feels too big.
Helping your child overcome fear is not mainly about making the world smaller. It is about making God’s presence bigger. It is about teaching your son or daughter that fear may knock, but Jesus is Lord over the door. It is about moving from “Don’t be scared” to “Let’s bring this to Jesus together.”
Here’s the quick answer: help your child overcome fear by validating their feelings, staying physically and emotionally present, leading them to Scripture, and teaching them how to talk to Jesus in the moment they feel afraid. Use simple biblical rhythms like naming the fear, praying honestly, speaking truth out loud, and practicing peace again and again. That kind of Christian parenting does more than calm one hard night. It builds a lifelong pattern of trust.
Scripture gives us language for this. Psalm 56:3 says, “When I am afraid, I put my trust in you.” That verse is honest. It does not pretend fear never comes. It teaches children and adults what to do when it does.
If you’re in a season where bedtime feels heavy, stormy weather leads to tears, or your child is asking hard questions about safety, this guide will help. We’re going to walk through Bible stories for fear, practical routines, developmental wisdom, the Armor of God for little hearts, and the beautiful truth that the Holy Spirit is still the Comforter. That matters because Boundless Online Church is here for real life, real families, and real discipleship in the middle of ordinary moments. This is 24/7 Church When Life Doesn’t Pause.
Why Fear is a Spiritual Opportunity
We often see fear as an interruption. It ruins bedtime. It delays the routine. It drains our energy. But when we slow down, we can see that fear is often one of the earliest doorways into spiritual formation. A frightened child is asking big questions with a small voice. Am I safe? Is someone with me? What if something bad happens? Can anyone help me?
Those are not small questions. Those are faith questions. And that means fear is not just a parenting issue. It is a discipleship moment.
In Christian parenting, especially in a Spirit-filled home shaped by Assemblies of God doctrine, we do not simply offer coping techniques. We welcome the presence of God. We believe the Holy Spirit is not an abstract force or a distant idea. He is the Comforter, the One Jesus promised in John 14:16-17. He helps, reminds, strengthens, and brings peace. So when a parent sits on the edge of a child’s bed, lays a gentle hand on their shoulder, and whispers a prayer, that moment is not empty. The Holy Spirit is present.
Think about that. The same Spirit who hovered over creation, who filled believers with power, who comforts the Church, also meets a five-year-old in a dark room and a ten-year-old during a panic spiral before school. That truth changes how we respond. We are not alone in the room. Jesus saves, the Word is true, the Father loves, and the Holy Spirit helps.
Fear also gives children repeated chances to practice trust. Every time they choose to pray instead of panic, every time they speak Scripture instead of letting imagination run wild, their faith grows a little stronger. That does not mean they become fearless overnight. It means they become practiced in bringing fear to God. That is a beautiful goal for family discipleship.

Understanding Fear Across the Developmental Stages
Fear does not look the same at every age. What frightens a preschooler is often very different from what keeps a pre-teen awake at night. The more you understand how children grow, the more gently and wisely you can respond. Instead of assuming your child is “being dramatic” or “just stalling,” pause and ask what kind of fear this might be and what kind of response would help.
Early Childhood (Ages 3–6)
Children in this stage live close to wonder and close to fear. Their imaginations are vivid. A coat on a chair can look like a person. A ceiling fan can feel spooky in the dark. A loud toilet flush, a barking dog, thunder outside, or a parent leaving the room can feel enormous. They need warmth, repetition, simple language, and physical reassurance.
The Faith Response: Focus on God’s nearness. Use short, concrete phrases a child can hold onto. “Jesus is with you.” “God made this room.” “You are safe.” “Mommy is near, and God is even nearer.”
Real-Life Scenario: Your four-year-old starts crying at bedtime because the hallway looks dark and “something is watching.”
Parent Script: “I believe that feels scary to you. Let’s look together. See the chair? See your blanket? The room is okay. Now let’s tell Jesus exactly how you feel. Say, ‘Jesus, I feel scared.’ Good job. Now say, ‘Jesus, stay with me.’ He will. Let’s put our hand on our heart and say, ‘Jesus is here. Jesus is here. Jesus is here.’”
Another Parent Script: “You do not have to be a big grown-up right now. You just have to let Jesus love you. I’m here with you, and we are going to rest together.”
Early Elementary (Ages 7–9)
At this age, kids begin to understand cause and effect. They can imagine real-life danger more clearly. They may worry about robbers, storms, sickness, school embarrassment, or being left out by friends. Their world grows, and so do the stories they tell themselves about what might happen. They still need comfort, but they can also start learning how to answer fear with truth.
The Faith Response: Focus on God’s strength and care. Use Bible stories for fear that show God’s power in real situations. Connect courage to trust, not personality. Courage is not “I’m never scared.” Courage is “I bring my fear to God.”
Real-Life Scenario: Your eight-year-old hears thunder, runs into the living room, and asks if the house is going to blow away.
Parent Script: “Storms are loud, and loud things can make our bodies jump. But let’s slow down. We are inside, we are safe, and God is with us. Do you remember when Jesus was on the boat and the storm was wild? The storm was loud, but Jesus was not afraid. Let’s sit together and say, ‘Jesus, speak peace to our hearts.’”
Another Parent Script: “Tell me the scariest part. Is it the sound? Is it what you think might happen? Let’s name the fear so we can pray about the real thing.”
Pre-Teen (Ages 10–12)
By this stage, fear often shifts inward. Pre-teens think more deeply. They notice social dynamics, world events, injustice, and uncertainty. They may worry about identity, friendships, the future, family finances, death, world conflict, or whether they truly belong. They are old enough to ask deeper questions and young enough to feel overwhelmed by them.
The Faith Response: Focus on identity in Christ, God’s sovereignty, and honest prayer. Respect their intelligence. Don’t talk down to them. Let them ask hard questions. Help them process feelings with Scripture rather than shutting them down with quick clichés.
Real-Life Scenario: Your eleven-year-old says, “What if something bad happens to you? What if the world keeps getting worse?”
Parent Script: “That’s a real question, and I’m glad you asked it. We do live in a broken world, and sometimes life feels uncertain. But uncertainty does not mean God is absent. Jesus is still Lord. The Bible is still true. The Holy Spirit still helps us. And whatever we face, we will face it with God, not without Him.”
Another Parent Script: “Let’s separate what we know from what we fear. What do we know? God loves us. Christ has saved us. The Holy Spirit is with believers. We are not abandoned. Now let’s talk honestly about what you’re feeling.”
When you parent this way, you teach your children that fear does not disqualify them from faith. It becomes the place where faith gets practiced.
Scripture as a Shield: The Power of the Word
When fear takes hold, the mind starts producing endless what-ifs. What if someone breaks in? What if I get sick? What if nobody likes me? What if the dark hides something? Children do this, and adults do too. The way to interrupt the spiral is not with shame. It is with truth.
That is why Scripture matters so much in Christian parenting. We are not training kids to repeat Bible verses like a classroom exercise only. We are teaching them to carry God’s Word into real moments of fear. Scripture becomes a shield because it gives the mind and heart something stronger than panic.
Psalm 56:3 is one of the clearest verses a child can learn: “When I am afraid, I put my trust in you.” Notice the honesty. The verse does not deny fear. It gives direction in the middle of it. Fear may be real, but it does not get the final word.
Try explaining it this way: “Fear is like a noisy visitor knocking on the front door of your mind. You don’t have to invite it in and let it stay for dinner. You can bring Jesus to the door.” That is simple enough for a child, but true enough for a grown-up too.
Here are a few foundational verses to build into your family discipleship rhythm:
Psalm 56:3: “When I am afraid, I put my trust in you.”
Isaiah 41:10: “So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God.”
2 Timothy 1:7: “For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.”
1 Peter 5:7: “Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.”
Psalm 23:4: “Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.”
Now, here’s what matters: don’t only quote verses at children. Practice them with children. Say them when everyone is calm. Write them on cards. Whisper them at bedtime. Sing them in the car. Put them in the language of your home until they become part of the family’s reflex.

Telling the Right Stories: From Milo to David to Jesus
Children think in pictures, feelings, and stories. That means fear often enters their hearts through story. A shadow becomes a monster story. A storm becomes a danger story. A bad day at school becomes an “I don’t belong” story. One of the best things a parent can do is replace fear stories with God stories.
At Boundless Online Church, we believe storytelling is one of the strongest tools for faith at home. Story reaches the imagination without flattening the heart. It helps children see courage, not as a lecture, but as something lived.
Milo and the Hallway at Night
Picture a little boy named Milo standing just outside his bedroom. The hallway light is off. The house sounds different at night. The hum of the air conditioner feels louder. The refrigerator clicks in the distance. Tree branches tap the window with a soft scratch-scratch-scratch. Milo grips the edge of the wall and whispers, “Mom?”
His mother comes quickly but gently. She does not laugh. She kneels so her eyes meet his. “What feels scary, buddy?”
Milo points down the hall. “It’s too dark. I think something is there.”
His mother picks him up and lets him tuck his face into her shoulder for a moment. “Thank you for telling me. Let’s go look together.” They walk slowly into the hallway. The dark shape by the chair turns out to be a hoodie hanging over the back. She smiles softly. “Sometimes our eyes guess before they know.”
Milo leans against her. “But what if I still feel scared?”
“Then we tell Jesus the truth,” she says. “We don’t have to pretend.” She sets him down, puts one hand on the wall and one hand on his little chest. “Can you feel your heartbeat?” He nods. “Let’s give that fast heartbeat to Jesus.”
Together they pray, “Jesus, Milo feels scared. Please help his heart be peaceful. Thank You for being with him in the hallway, in his room, and all night long.” Then she says, “Let’s use our brave verse.” Milo says it slowly with her: “When I am afraid, I put my trust in You.”
That is what Christian parenting looks like in real time. Not rushing. Not shaming. Not pretending fear is silly. Naming the fear. Checking the facts. Welcoming the presence of God. Repeating truth until peace settles in.
David and the Shepherd’s Courage
When we tell the story of David, we often jump straight to Goliath. But David’s courage started long before the giant. It started in hidden places. Out in the fields. Under a wide night sky. With sheep rustling nearby and the sound of wind moving through tall grass. David learned God’s faithfulness in ordinary quiet before he ever faced public danger.
Imagine telling it to your child like this: “David knew what it felt like to be alone outside at night. He knew what it felt like to hear strange sounds in the dark. He knew what it felt like to protect something precious when danger was real. But every time God helped him before, David remembered. So when Goliath shouted and everyone else trembled, David did not think, ‘I am the biggest.’ He thought, ‘My God has been with me before.’”
That’s the part children need. David’s bravery was not loud ego. It was practiced trust.
Try this parent-child dialogue:
Child: “What if I can’t be brave?”
Parent: “Brave doesn’t mean your knees never shake. David probably felt a lot in his body too. Brave means you remember who is with you.”
Child: “So I can be scared and still trust God?”
Parent: “Yes. That is exactly it.”
Tell your child, “Your giant might be a dark room, a hard test, a bully, a thunderstorm, or a scary thought. But the same God who helped David is with you too.”
Jesus on the Boat in the Storm
This story reaches right into the experience of anxiety. The disciples were not beginners. Some of them were fishermen. They knew what a normal night on the water felt like. So when they panicked, it tells us the storm was truly intense. The wind howled. The boat pitched hard. Water slapped the sides. Spray hit their faces. The sky must have looked wild and black. Their hands were busy, but their hearts were terrified.
And Jesus was asleep.
That detail matters. Jesus was not asleep because He did not care. He was asleep because He was not threatened by what threatened them. When they woke Him crying out, He stood and spoke to the storm: “Peace, be still.” And creation obeyed.
For kids and fear, this story gives a powerful picture. Sometimes the storm around us is loud. Sometimes the storm inside us is louder. Either way, Jesus has authority over both.
Try this script when your child is overwhelmed:
Parent: “What does your storm feel like right now?”
Child: “My heart feels jumpy.”
Parent: “Okay. Let’s imagine Jesus in the boat with you. Is He afraid?”
Child: “No.”
Parent: “What do you think He says to your heart?”
Child: “Peace, be still?”
Parent: “Yes. Let’s say it together.”
Daniel and the Lion’s Den
Daniel’s fear was not imaginary. The danger around him was real. The lions were real. The risk was real. But Daniel prayed anyway. He kept his life turned toward God. That matters for older children especially, because some fears are not pretend. Some fears come from grief, conflict, change, or a hard situation at school. Daniel reminds children that courage is possible even when life is honestly difficult.
You can say, “Daniel was not brave because the lions disappeared first. He was brave because God stayed with him in the middle of danger.”

The Armor of God for Little Hearts
One of the richest Bible passages for children dealing with fear is Ephesians 6. The Armor of God can sound big and dramatic, but when you bring it into simple language, it becomes deeply practical for faith at home. This is not about making children paranoid or teaching fear-based spirituality. It is about helping them understand that God does not leave them unprotected. In Christ, they are loved, guided, and strengthened.
Here’s a simple way to teach each piece of armor to little hearts.
The Helmet of Salvation: The helmet protects the head. Tell your child, “This helps us remember who saves us. Jesus is our Savior. When scary thoughts hit your mind, you can remember, ‘I belong to Jesus.’” For younger children, say, “Jesus holds my thoughts.” For older kids, explain that salvation means we are rescued by grace through Christ, not by our own strength.
Parent Script: “When your brain starts telling you, ‘You are all alone,’ put on the helmet and answer, ‘No, I belong to Jesus.’”
The Breastplate of Righteousness: The breastplate protects the heart. Tell your child, “Jesus makes our hearts clean and helps us live the right way.” This is important because fearful kids can also feel shame. They may think, “Why am I so scared?” The breastplate reminds them they stand loved before God because of Christ.
Parent Script: “Your heart matters to God. Jesus covers your heart with His love and helps you choose what is right.”
The Belt of Truth: The belt holds everything together. Tell your child, “Truth keeps us from falling apart.” Fear often grows through lies: “God left me.” “I can’t do this.” “Something bad is definitely going to happen.” The belt of truth teaches children to ask, “What is true?”
Parent Script: “Let’s buckle up with truth. What do we know is true right now? God is with us. We are not alone. The Bible is true.”
Shoes of the Gospel of Peace: Shoes help us stand and walk. Tell your child, “Jesus helps our feet walk in peace.” This is beautiful for children who dread school, social situations, or new places. They can imagine putting on peace before stepping into the day.
Parent Script: “Before you go to school, let’s put on peace shoes. Jesus, help my child walk in Your peace today.”
The Shield of Faith: A shield blocks what comes flying at you. Tell your child, “Faith helps us trust God when fear flies at us.” For younger children, you might say, “When scary thoughts come, lift up trust.” For older children, explain that faith is not pretending. It is choosing to rely on God’s character.
Parent Script: “What arrow is coming at you right now? Is it fear? Embarrassment? Worry? Let’s lift the shield and say, ‘God is with me, and I trust Him.’”
The Sword of the Spirit: This is the Word of God. Tell your child, “When Jesus was tempted, He answered with Scripture. We can too.” The sword is not for hurting people. It is for cutting through lies with truth.
Parent Script: “What verse can we use right now? Let’s say, ‘When I am afraid, I put my trust in You.’ That is your sword.”
Now, here’s a simple morning routine you can use:
Helmet: “Jesus, help my thoughts.”
Breastplate: “Jesus, guard my heart.”
Belt: “Help me believe what is true.”
Shoes: “Help me walk in peace.”
Shield: “Help me trust You when I feel afraid.”
Sword: “Help me remember Your Word.”
That takes less than two minutes, but it plants the language of spiritual confidence in your home.
The Theology of Presence: The Holy Spirit as Comforter
For families shaped by Assemblies of God doctrine, the ministry of the Holy Spirit is not a side note. It is central to Christian life. The Holy Spirit convicts, empowers, fills, guides, sanctifies, and comforts believers. When Jesus called Him the Comforter, Helper, or Advocate, He was telling His followers that they would not be abandoned.
That truth is deeply important for children dealing with fear. A child may not understand all the theological vocabulary, but they can understand this: “God is with me, not far away from me.” They can understand, “The Holy Spirit helps me when I feel weak.” They can understand, “Jesus saves me, and His Spirit stays near.”
The theology of presence means God does not only send instructions. He gives Himself. He does not stand at a distance shouting courage toward us. He comes near. The Holy Spirit ministers the presence of Christ to believers in real time. He brings comfort in sorrow, peace in turmoil, conviction when needed, and power to stand firm.
Now, be gentle and clear with children here. Avoid strange language or spooky tones. Do not make the Holy Spirit sound mystical in a way that feels frightening. Speak warmly and biblically. Say, “The Holy Spirit helps us remember Jesus is with us.” Say, “The Holy Spirit gives peace.” Say, “The Holy Spirit helps us pray when we don’t know what to say.”
That is especially important in moments of fear. When your child says, “I don’t know why I feel like this,” you can say, “You are not alone in that feeling. Let’s ask the Holy Spirit to comfort you.” Then pray simply: “Holy Spirit, please bring Your peace to this room. Comfort my child. Remind them that Jesus is near.”
Assemblies of God believers also affirm the ongoing work of the Spirit in empowering Christian life and witness. For children, that means we can teach them they are not only comforted by the Spirit. They are also strengthened by the Spirit to grow, obey, and trust. Fear does not have to lead their life. The Holy Spirit helps form courage, peace, and confidence rooted in Christ.
This is why presence matters so much in Christian parenting. Your calm, prayerful presence becomes a living picture of God’s nearness. You are not replacing God. You are reflecting Him. You are showing your child what it looks like when love stays, truth speaks, and peace enters the room.
5 Practical Steps for the Nighttime Routine
Consistency helps children feel safe. A steady bedtime rhythm lowers anxiety because it reduces surprise and creates emotional predictability. Bedtime does not have to be elaborate. It just needs to be peaceful, intentional, and repeatable.
The Fear Dump: Before lights-out, ask, “Is there anything big or small bothering your heart tonight?” Let them say the weird thing, the embarrassing thing, the exaggerated thing, and the real thing. Don’t rush this.
The Worship Buffer: Play soft worship music or gentle instrumental worship in the room. Music can settle the nervous system while lifting the heart toward God.
The Blessing Script: Speak identity over your child. “You are loved by God. Jesus is with you. The Holy Spirit is your Comforter. You are safe in His care tonight.”
The Verse Card: Keep one simple verse by the bed. Even if the child cannot read yet, point to it and say it together.
The Breath Prayer: Teach three slow breaths. Inhale: “The Lord is my Shepherd.” Exhale: “I have everything I need.”
Here’s an example of how that might sound in a real room:
Parent: “Anything bothering your heart tonight?”
Child: “I keep thinking about bad guys.”
Parent: “Thank you for telling me. Let’s give that fear to Jesus. We are safe in this house, and God is with us.”
Child: “Can we say the verse?”
Parent: “Absolutely. ‘When I am afraid, I put my trust in You.’”
The Parent’s Role as a Safe Harbor
Your child is not only listening to your words. Your child is reading your nervous system. If your tone is frantic, if your face tightens, if your response sounds irritated, they will feel that too. This does not mean you have to be perfect. It means your peace becomes part of the ministry.
So before you correct a child’s fear, slow your own breathing. Before you give an explanation, lower your voice. Before you tell them what is true, let your body communicate safety. Christian parenting often begins with this quiet work of becoming present ourselves.
That also means letting your children see what it looks like for adults to bring fear to God. If you are worried about something, model healthy faith. Say, “I’m feeling nervous about tomorrow, so I’m going to pray and ask Jesus for peace.” That kind of honesty helps children understand that faith is not pretending. Faith is bringing real emotions under God’s care.
Faith-based parenting does not try to control every variable so nothing uncomfortable ever happens. That is impossible. Instead, it trains children to meet life with Christ. We are not simply trying to raise protected kids. We are trying to raise disciples who know how to trust the Lord in the dark, in the unknown, and in the ordinary.

When to Seek Extra Help: Wisdom and Discernment
Most childhood fears are normal. They come and go as children grow, imagine, and learn. But there are times when fear becomes heavier than a passing phase. If your child’s fear is disrupting sleep for long stretches, causing regular physical symptoms, keeping them from school or social life, or leading to intense panic, it may be time to seek extra support.
That is not a failure of faith. It is wisdom. God often works through counselors, pediatricians, pastors, and trained professionals. Seeking help is part of stewardship. You can pray, use Scripture, and pursue wise care at the same time.
If trauma may be involved, or if your child’s anxiety seems severe, don’t wait too long to reach out. Support early. Stay compassionate. Keep the environment non-shaming. And continue reminding your child that needing help does not mean they are weak. It means they are loved.
For local church support and family discipleship encouragement, visit [First Assembly Memphis](https://www.famemphis.org) and [Boundless Online Church](https://www.boundlessonlinechurch.org).
Common Questions Parents Ask
My child is afraid of the dark. Should I let them sleep in my bed?
Comfort matters, but the goal is not to create permanent dependence on your bed as the only place peace exists. Instead, help them experience God’s peace in their own room. Sit with them. Pray with them. Use a calm routine. Make gradual steps toward confidence.
What do I do if they have recurring nightmares?
Don’t dismiss the fear with “It wasn’t real” and move on. Start with comfort. Then help them reframe the moment with prayer and truth. Say, “That dream felt scary. Let’s ask Jesus to guard your mind and give you peace.” For older kids, invite them to describe the dream and then speak a biblical ending over it.
How do I talk about scary news events?
Stay age-appropriate. Don’t overload children with details they cannot carry. Focus on truth, compassion, prayer, and God’s sovereignty. Remind them that Jesus is still King, evil does not win, and the people of God respond with prayer, wisdom, and hope. Keep your eyes on the Cross.
Practical Takeaways for Your Family
If you want to build stronger rhythms of faith at home around fear, start simple and stay consistent.
Create a Courage Jar: Write down times God answered prayer or helped someone be brave.
Memorize Psalm 56:3 together: Make it your family verse this month.
Limit media before bed: Protect the imagination at night.
Pray the Armor of God each morning: Keep it short and child-friendly.
Use Bible stories for fear regularly: Revisit David, Daniel, and Jesus in the storm.
Practice honest prayer: Teach your child to say what they really feel.
Build peace into the room: Lower lights, lower voices, and lower hurry.

Helping your child overcome fear is rarely one dramatic moment. Usually it is a thousand small ones. A whispered prayer after a nightmare. A verse repeated in the car. A calm conversation after bad news. A hand on a shoulder. A Bible story at breakfast. A faithful routine at bedtime. These ordinary moments become holy ground.
And if you are a tired parent reading this, take heart. You do not have to perform peace perfectly. You just need to stay available to God and available to your child. Jesus is still the Savior. God’s love and grace are still enough. The Bible is still true. The Holy Spirit is still active. Redemption and restoration are still the story God writes.
So keep showing up. Keep praying. Keep telling the better story. Keep leading your child back to Jesus. This is Christian parenting in real life. This is family discipleship in the middle of the hallway, the thunderstorm, the school drop-off, and the late-night tears. This is faith at home. This is 24/7 Church When Life Doesn’t Pause.
For more encouragement, Bible teaching, and resources for Christian parenting, family discipleship, and faith at home, join us at [Boundless Online Church](https://www.boundlessonlinechurch.org) and connect with [First Assembly Memphis](https://www.famemphis.org). If this helped your family, subscribe and share it with another parent who needs hope today.
If you are looking for music that builds faith and brings peace to your home, we invite you to listen to the latest worship and encouraging songs at www.laynemcdonald.com. Let these melodies become part of the atmosphere of your home.
Dr. Layne McDonald is the Pastor for Boundless Online outreach, part of FA Memphis Church. He serves families through digital discipleship, biblical encouragement, and Christ-centered resources designed to help parents lead with confidence, grace, and truth. His passion is helping people encounter Jesus in everyday life and equipping homes to grow stronger in faith through the power of Scripture, the hope of salvation through Christ, and the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit.
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