Thursday, November 28, 2019

2019 – Advent Bible Companion Journaling Plan: Holding the Story: A Journaling Journey Through Luke’s Nativity

View all the Reading Plans for Advent: From Promise to Fulfillment


The journaling companion, Pondering the Manger: Daily Reflections Through Luke, mirrors the plan verse by verse. Every day offers a reflective focus and a guided question to help you trace God’s movement, notice His nearness, and hold space for the truths He is whispering during this sacred season.

Whether you use this journey for morning devotion, evening stillness, or quiet moments throughout the day, the aim is simple: to help you draw closer to Christ by slowing down, paying attention, and walking verse by verse toward the night when hope slipped quietly into the world.


Get the Bible Reading Plan, Luke’s Christmas Story: One Verse a Day to the Manger


Memory Verse


Journaling Plan






2019 – Advent Bible Reading Plan: Luke’s Christmas Story: One Verse a Day to the Manger

View all the Reading Plans for Advent: From Promise to Fulfillment


Luke’s Christmas Story: One Verse a Day to the Manger is a quiet, steady Advent journey designed to help you walk slowly, intentionally, and reverently through the biblical story of Jesus’s birth. Instead of rushing through long passages, this plan invites you to pause—one verse at a time—and sit with the wonder of how God prepared the world for the arrival of His Son.

The first four days focus on the most significant moments leading up to Jesus’s birth: Gabriel’s announcement, Mary’s calling, her surrender, and God’s assurance that His promise would unfold through her life. After that, the plan moves gently into the full nativity narrative of Luke 2:1–20, offering twenty-one uninterrupted days that follow the journey from decree… to Bethlehem… to the stable… to the angelic proclamation… and finally to the shepherds’ encounter with the newborn Christ.


Get the journaling companion, Pondering the Manger: Daily Reflections Through Luke


Memory Verse


Reading Plan





Monday, October 28, 2019

Gratitude 2019 - Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise Companion Journaling Plan


View all the Reading Plans for the Gratitude, Thanksgiving, and Praise Plans.


The Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise Companion Journaling Plan is designed to help you move beyond reading the daily Scripture and into personal reflection, spiritual awareness, and intentional response. Each day pairs a single verse with a guided prompt that invites you to slow down, look inward, and consider how the truth of the passage meets your real life. These prompts are crafted to help you remember God’s faithfulness, recognize His presence, and cultivate a heart that responds with gratitude and praise.

This plan creates space for you to engage with God through writing, allowing your thoughts, memories, and prayers to take shape on the page. Journaling becomes both a spiritual practice and a testimony—a record of how God has worked in your story. Over thirty days, you will reflect on God’s goodness, confront areas where trust is needed, acknowledge moments of rescue and restoration, and recognize the signs of His care that often go unnoticed.

Each prompt is simple enough to begin immediately, but deep enough to guide meaningful reflection. Whether you write a few sentences or several pages each day, this journaling plan will help you develop a steady rhythm of remembering, giving thanks, and honoring the Lord with your words and your heart.


Get the Bible Reading Plan, Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise


Memory Verse



Journaling Plan





 

Gratitude 2019 - Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise Bible Reading Plan


View all the Reading Plans for the Gratitude, Thanksgiving, and Praise Plans.


Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise is a thirty-day guide shaped by the spirit of 1 Chronicles 16 and Psalm 116. These passages call the believer to remember God’s goodness, give thanks with intention, and lift praise that flows from a grateful heart. Throughout this journey, you will pause each day to read a verse that highlights God’s works, His presence, His mercy, or His saving power. You will then respond through reflection, allowing Scripture to stir your memory, renew your gratitude, and strengthen your praise.

This plan is not meant to rush you from day to day, but to guide you into a steady rhythm of worship. The journaling prompts are crafted to help you look back on what God has done, look around at how He is moving now, and look forward with renewed trust in His faithfulness. As you move through these thirty days, you will practice the spiritual discipline of remembering, cultivate a spirit of gratitude, and grow in the daily habit of praising the Lord with your life.

This journey honors God by shaping the heart to see His goodness more clearly, respond to His love more intentionally, and give Him the praise that belongs to Him alone.


Get the journaling companion, Honor the Lord: A Journey of Remembering, Gratitude, and Praise Companion Journaling Plan


Memory Verse



Reading Plan





 

Friday, June 28, 2019

Psalm Plan 2019 Journaling Companion


View all the Reading the Psalms Plans.


The Raised for This: The Journaling Companion is a 30-day journaling plan that walks you through Psalm 18 one verse at a time, giving you space to slow down and respond personally to what God is revealing in the passage. Each day includes a single focused reflection prompt that helps you look inward, listen deeply, and recognize how God is moving in your life.

Psalm 18 is a chapter filled with rescue, strength, guidance, and purpose. By journaling through it verse by verse, you are invited to notice how God has supported you, shaped you, redirected you, and strengthened you. The prompts encourage honest reflection, gentle self-examination, and a growing awareness of the ways God is making your path clear.

This journaling plan is designed to help you build a meaningful, sustainable practice. One verse and one reflection a day give you room to breathe, hear, and write without pressure. Over the course of thirty days, you will create a written record of how God lights your lamp, steadies your steps, and leads you into the purpose He has prepared for you.


Get the Bible reading Plan, Raised for This: Thirty Days in Psalm 18


Memory Verse


Journaling Plan


Psalms Reading Plan 2019


View all the Reading the Psalms Plans.


The Raised for This Bible Reading Plan is a 30-day Bible reading plan that takes you through Psalm 18 one verse at a time, allowing you to slow down, reflect, and absorb the depth of God’s strength, protection, guidance, and purpose for your life. Each day highlights a single verse from the first thirty verses of the psalm, offering a simple and steady rhythm that supports focused meditation and intentional spiritual growth.

Psalm 18 is a powerful testimony of how God rescues, equips, strengthens, and establishes His people. By moving through the chapter gradually, this plan invites you to notice the details of God’s character and His involvement in your journey. The verses unfold a story of deliverance, support, correction, and calling—perfect for a season where you want to live with clarity, direction, and purpose.

This plan is designed to help you build a daily habit of reflection and Scripture engagement without feeling overwhelmed. One verse a day is enough to center your heart, ground your steps, and remind you that God’s way is perfect, His word is proven, and He is a shield to all who take refuge in Him.


Get the journaling companion, Raised for This: The Journaling Companion


Memory Verse


Reading Plan



Friday, February 22, 2019

Burdened With Glorious PURPOSE (My Word of the Year 2019)

Repost from: GracefulWriter (A Writing Journey Blog by d. d. Boone)

This was written on February 8, 2019 for myprofessor blog.

I’ve adopted the vision boarding technique of choosing a word for the year and making it the focal point of my endeavors, activities, and thought process for the entire year.  I discovered this online in a Facebook group for Planning.  It hit me like a ton of bricks… “This could work for me!”  I embraced it and went full force with the idea.

My word for the year is PURPOSE.  Google.com dictionary defines the word as “the reason for which something is done or created or for which something exists.”  It also means, “have as one's intention or objective.” 


Dictionary.com defines the word like this, “the reason for which something exists or is done, made, used, etc.”  Another definition is “an intended or desired result; end; aim; goal.”  One last definition, “to intend; design.”

All of the definitions about fit.  But the one that best suits my purpose is…

“an intended or desired result; end; aim; goal.”

That’s what I’m focused on this year… an intended or desired result.  I chose the word PURPOSE specifically for that reason.  I want to act on purpose to accomplish several goals.  If I accomplish these goals, it will help me have a sense of accomplishment and will help me be better because I will have grown, matured, and changed some habits and my thinking.

I have some things I want to accomplish, and to accomplish them, I will need to be PURPOSEFUL with my actions, thinking, and planning.  There are four areas in my life where I have a specific purpose.



In regards to my faith, I want to find, join, attend, and get active in a church, making it my home.  I haven’t had a church home in over a year, so I need to find one and get busy.  I have gifts and talents that I need to use.

As a professor, I want to change the hearts, lives, and minds of students, specifically about writing, but in thinking about college success, too.

One other thing I want to do is to inspire a writer like my creative writing teacher from high school, Mrs. Spightner, did me.  She helped me discover my best writing gift, and I want to do that for someone else.

I want to read more this year.  Here’s what I want to do… read as many books on my calling and gifts as I can.  Write down what I learn and apply it.  I have to remember to apply.  My purpose won’t be fulfilled if I don’t apply it.

Lastly, as a writer, I want to finish all my unfinished NOVELS!  This is where the idea of purpose came from.  I have too many novels that I haven’t finished, and I need to finish them on PURPOSE and with PURPOSE.  I have tried in the past to finish them, but I wasn’t successful.  I feel that this year is filled with purpose, so I’ll be able to do it.


I feel like Loki of Asgard… 



Saturday, January 12, 2019

How I Got Here

Before Bible journaling ever entered my life, writing had already been a part of me for years. I have been a journaler since I was about nine years old. Writing in notebooks, on loose paper, in diaries with little locks—I always found comfort in putting words on a page. It helped me think. It helped me breathe. It helped me grow.

But my faith journaling journey—the path that eventually led to this blog—started much later.

In November 2018, I was walking through Michael’s when I came across a Christian planner by Happy Planner. It had space for sermon notes, reflections, and faith-focused pages. I picked it up out of curiosity, but something in me felt drawn to it. Then I saw the stickers, the washi tape, and all the colorful pens. It felt like a new world had opened up.

Creative planning was different, but it matched what I had already loved for years: writing things down and making sense of life through words. Bible journaling grew naturally from that. The more I wrote, the more I listened. The more I reflected, the more I noticed God’s presence in the everyday moments of my life.

As I kept going, one verse began shaping the foundation of this journey:

“Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him.” (Colossians 2:7, NLT)

Those words became a steady reminder that growth is not sudden and does not have to be dramatic. Growth is rooted. Growth is steady. Growth is daily. And growth happens when I stay grounded in Christ.

This blog is simply a place to honor that process. A place where the girl who loved journaling at nine meets the woman who is learning how to build her life on Him now. A space for reflection, small steps, lessons, and grace—always grace.

I am grateful for every moment that brought me here. And I pray that as I write, my roots will continue to grow deeper, and my life will continue to be built on Him.

Friday, January 4, 2019

What S.O.A.P. Really Does for the Heart

I have created a S.O.A.P. sheet.

This particular S.O.A.P. sheet adds one more gentle, powerful step: Commitment — a short line that begins with “Today I Will…”
It is the moment you name a single, intentional step you are willing to take. Not perfection. Not a promise you cannot keep. Just one small act of obedience flowing from what God showed you.

Used faithfully, this little page becomes more than a worksheet — it becomes a spiritual habit of slowing down, listening well, and walking out the Word with purpose. Each line holds space for truth to settle into your heart… and for your heart to respond.


A gentle guide to using the S.O.A.P. sheet in your daily time with God

There is something powerful about slowing down, opening Scripture, and allowing God’s Word to speak with clarity and purpose. The S.O.A.P. method has become one of my favorite ways to make that happen. It does not rush me. It does not overwhelm me. It invites me to sit with the text… to listen… and to respond with intention.

S.O.A.P. stands for Scripture, Observation, Application, and Prayer—a simple but deeply transformative rhythm for personal Bible study. It gives you enough structure to stay focused, but enough freedom to let the Holy Spirit guide you in whatever way you need for that day.

The sheet itself is beautifully straightforward. At the top, you begin with your Scripture—the verse or passage you are studying. Writing it out helps anchor it in your mind and slows your reading long enough for meaning to rise to the surface.

Next is Observation—what you notice, what stands out, what God seems to highlight. This is where you pay attention to repetition, tone, promises, commands, or unexpected details. It is simply noticing before rushing into meaning.

Then comes Application, the place where the text touches your actual life. Here you ask, “What does this look like for me today? What shifts in perspective or practice is God inviting me to make?”

Your Prayer follows—honest, simple, and rooted in what you just learned. It might be a request for wisdom, a confession, a praise, or a plea for strength. This prayer turns the Scripture from information into conversation.


Thursday, January 3, 2019

Welcome to I Am Growing in Grace

Thank you for stopping by. I created this little corner of the internet because I wanted a place to grow, reflect, and share what I am learning about faith, purpose, and becoming better one day at a time. For years I have written in journals, notebooks, and even on scraps of paper, but now I want to gather my thoughts in one space where I can look back and actually see my growth.

One of the verses shaping the heart of this blog is Colossians 2:7 (NLT): “Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him.” That is what I want this space to represent—steady, rooted, intentional growth. Not rushed. Not forced. Just learning to build my life on Christ a little more each day.

This blog is part of my journey to live with more intention. 2018 taught me a lot, and it prepared me to step into 2019 with a clearer sense of purpose. I want to learn from my life, apply what God is teaching me, and document it along the way. My hope is that writing here will help me stay focused and accountable as I grow in every area of my life.

Nothing fancy. Nothing complicated. Just a simple place for me to write, learn, and grow in grace. If you decide to walk with me on this journey, I am grateful. I pray something here encourages you to keep moving forward in your own purpose and growth.

Here is to learning, changing, and growing in grace—day by day.