Encourage Blog2025-01-02T17:47:56+00:00

Encourage-[en-kur-ij] to inspire with courage, spirit, or confidence.

The enCourage Blog is weekly dose of encouragement in a world that is often filled with bad news. We offer life-giving entries each Monday and Thursday written by gifted women from across our denomination, the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA). You can subscribe below to have them delivered to your inbox. With hundreds of blog pieces, you can search on a variety of topics in the search bar above to read and share with friends. Christina Fox, a gifted author, serves as our enCourage General Editor. If you are interested in submitting a piece, you can contact her at cfox@pcanet.org.

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Our Shepherd in the Desert

KC JONES | GUEST Growing up in the arid Rockies of Colorado, I did not need anyone to tell me how important it was to drink water and lots of it. I applied lotion twice a day, morning and night, so that my feet and palms would not crack and bleed. I knew better than to go on any excursion alone without taking necessary precautions such as informing loved ones of where I was going, how long it should take, and securing plenty of snacks and water. Lots of water.  One does not typically search for water in the desert. It is hard to imagine anyone might find refreshment and restoration in a place consisting of the most extreme elements– scarce in human resources. Yet, for those who see with their spiritual eyes, the desert is precisely the place God uses as a refuge for His own. Perhaps it seems odd that the desert is often used by the Lord to protect His people, provide for them, and to prepare them for what He has for them. If we examine the significance of the desert experience, it might be easier to comprehend God’s purpose for our lives... 

Transforming Our Thinking on Body Image

MARGARET AUSTIN | GUEST A New Year. The resolutions are scrolling across your news feed. Wellness influencers and “coaches” will scare you into buying their products and eating plans that promise to make you thinner! Younger! More energetic! Just cut sugar, gluten, dairy, carbs, and nightshades out of your diet and you’ll be detoxed! Your gut will be healed to perfection! But what does God say about your body? You probably already know that Psalm 139 says “you are fearfully and wonderfully made,” but what does that mean when you look in the mirror and don’t love what you see? When you see a photo of yourself from the holidays that you don’t like? How often do you bemoan sugar or carbs in front of your children, husband, or someone you mentor?  The Impact of Negative Body Messages This past spring, I had the opportunity to write and lead a Bible study on body image with a local dietician. When I asked women if they could remember the first negative body image message they received, the answers made me weep. Many could immediately point to the first message, often from childhood, and often from the lips of a close family member. Proverbs 18:21 says “the tongue has the power of LIFE and DEATH” (emphasis mine). The messaging runs deep. In 2026, do we want to learn to speak LIFE or DEATH over ourselves and our loved ones when it comes to the physical body?...

A Practical Way to Support Life

KRISTI MCCOWN | GUEST On January 22, 1984, President Ronald Reagan issued a presidential proclamation. He declared the third Sunday of January as National Sanctity of Human Life Day. This date marked the 11th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the ruling that legalized abortion nationally. Much has changed around abortion over the past four decades. In 2022, Roe v. Wade was overturned. For the pro-life movement, this was a major victory and a step in providing legal protection for unborn children. Today, abortion is limited or prohibited in 26 states; however, it is still protected in 25 states. However, the need to pray and advocate for life in our community and nation remains important. Pastors, churches, and life organizations use this day to bring awareness to daily assaults on human life by the abortion industry. One way to protect unborn lives is to expose the darkness of abortion and support local Pregnancy Help Organizations, which daily reach women and families with hope and life. Making an Impact on Life I work at one of these ministries as a counselor. When I began at the Pregnancy and Family Resource Center in my small Mississippi town, I was overwhelmed. This ministry is hard and heavy, yet miraculous and healing. One of my first clients I met there was a 13-year-old girl and her mother. The pain on this mother's face was heartbreaking; her child was about to have a child. We walked with this mother and her daughter through the birth of her baby with compassion and care... 

The Beauty of Life

MORGAN FIKKERT|GUEST The “sidewalk” in front of an abortion clinic is a dark place—I’ve been there. When I worked for a pro-life organization, part of my job was to stand there as the last line of defense to change a mother or father’s mind. Many days, it felt hopeless. Most cars—especially those seeking an abortion—rolled past us without stopping to talk. Watching them park and walk into the clinic felt like watching someone walk into their grave without a fight. Still, we saw glimpses of light whenever we were able to talk to someone, change their mind, or offer the help they were looking for.        Life in the Womb During this recent Christmas season, I was reminded of my experiences on that sidewalk as I reflected on the visit between Mary and Elizabeth in Luke 1:39-45. Two women, decades apart in age, with unexpected pregnancies, find joy and encouragement together, culminating in Mary’s incredible song of praise to God (vv. 46-55). One amazing part of this story is when the baby John in Elizabeth’s womb, probably 6 months old, responds to what should have been an unfamiliar voice to him. We know that babies start to recognize familiar voices in the womb, but John could not have known Mary’s voice yet. Possibly even more miraculous is the fact that he doesn’t leap with joy in the womb simply because of Mary, but also because he recognizes the tiny life of our Lord Jesus who was growing inside of her. This story is a powerful testament to the truth that babies in the womb are fully human, even capable of being filled with the Holy Spirit....

Windshields, Rearview Mirrors, and a Sunroof in 2026

KAREN HODGE | CONTRIBUTOR Navigating a Costco parking lot a week before Christmas will make you a prayerful person. We eagerly scan the windshield for the perfect parking spot near the door while checking our rearview mirror to make sure we do not hit an innocent woman with a cart full of toilet paper. As we circle a parking row one more time, we may be tempted to give up and go home without ever praying at all. As a follower of Christ, there is a value in looking backwards, forward, and upward to gain perspective. The reality is, we often get stuck with a singular view. The New Year provides the perfect crossroads to examine all three viewpoints. We can glance in the rearview mirror with gratitude and thanksgiving for God’s protection and provision. These blessings fuel our faith to believe God will continue in His Fatherly care. As we step into a new year, we can gaze through the windshield with hopeful anticipation mixed with hazy uncertainty. Forward momentum requires walking by faith and not by sight, a kind of Christ-confidence. Looking backward and forward quickly leads us to recognize the gift of our finite limitations. We take no credit for where we have been and need His grace to move forward. This gap compels us to look up. (Bonus blessings if you have a sunroof or convertible!) We feel our need of God, lift our eyes and heart, and pray like Jehoshaphat, “We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you” (2 Chron. 20:12)....

On Resolutions and the Work of the Spirit

JAMYE DOERFLER | CONTRIBUTOR Around New Year’s Day, there are two camps of people: those who make resolutions and those who don’t. According to a study on Forbes, most people feel “pressured” to make a New Year’s resolution, with women (64%) feeling more pressured than men (60%). Making resolutions is far from a new phenomenon; we have at least one example of a famous Christian who was doing so before the founding of our country—Jonathan Edwards, Congregational revivalist preacher and theologian. Edwards’ resolutions weren’t tied to a new year. Instead, he kept an ongoing list of ways he wanted to grow in self-control, charity, worship, and other topics. There were 70 in total. Here a few: Resolved, never to do anything, which I should be afraid to do, if it were the last hour of my life. Resolved, to study the Scriptures so steadily, constantly and frequently, as that I may find, and plainly perceive myself to grow in the knowledge of the same....

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