First hour of the show Kerby continues to look at the top stories in the news and in the second hour he welcomes author and speaker, Terence Chatmon to the show. Chatmon tells us about his book, Do Your Children Believe?: Becoming Intentional About Your Family’s Faith and Spiritual Legacy.
Terence is now a family legacy champion, and his family discipleship workshop, Charting Your Family’s Spiritual Course, has reached more than twenty thousand participating families and continues to grow. He is the president and CEO of Fellowship of Companies for Christ International (FCCI.org), a network of executive leaders spanning more than one hundred countries. FCCI uses training conferences, personal relationships, and a rich library of resources to equip and encourage business leaders to see their companies and careers as powerful tools for transformational change.
A Chicago native and graduate of the University of Illinois, Terence brings drive and ingenuity to every role he plays in life, as an elder at a prominent eight-thousand-member mega-church, a Bible study teacher, and most importantly a husband and father.
Most parents who value Christian faith want their children to enjoy a vibrant, growing relationship with God, both now and throughout their lives. But few of those parents ever attach this hope to an ongoing plan; therefore, they fail to lay a reliable spiritual track in front of the fast-moving train of family life. This book is a junction point where deep parental desire meets workable design and where timid inadequacy meets Christ’s sufficiency. It’s where individual families become multiplication factories, exerting a lasting impact not only on their coming generations but even on the culture at large.
Please tell him: “Sign the ENTIRE Religious Freedom Order.”
Use this recommended message or create your own (you can copy and paste it into the “What would you like to say” section):
“SIGN the ENTIRE EXECUTIVE ORDER protecting religious freedom. Don’t sign a watered-down version. Please keep your campaign promise to protect religious freedom.”