• (Dallas, TX) — According to the International Bulletin of Mission Research, there are over 430,000 missionaries serving full-time around the world. Nearly 50% of all missionaries serve just five years or less on the mission field due to the physical, emotional, and spiritual commitment it requires. But what about the families of missionaries?

    Ann Bowman, author of the new book “I Never Signed Up For This,” shares her journey of watching both her daughters and their families become full-time missionaries. Bowman says she was not prepared for the onslaught of emotional turmoil.

    “As the day of the airport departure neared, I was sad and apprehensive because not only my daughter was leaving but all my grandchildren as well,” said Bowman. “I didn’t expect the overwhelming grief that enveloped me as I drove away from the airport that day and for months afterwards. I felt that I had to hide it from friends and church members in order to be a ‘good Christian parent of missionaries.’ I questioned my spiritual maturity. I felt shame in my prayers, believing God must be disappointed in my grief—shouldn’t I be joyful that my daughters wanted to serve in this way? Wasn’t my deep sorrow a sign of a weak spiritual life?”

    Bowman says most people don’t realize the constant threats of physical harm many missionaries deal with on a regular basis.

    “My grandchildren often heard explosions or fighting in the mountains around their village as people groups and the military fought,” said Bowman. “One such skirmish separated them from their parents when a bridge was blown up. The military arrived in their small town in a long stream of trucks with soldiers and machine guns. My granddaughters had many young friends in their neighborhood who came to a Bible study in their home. One by one the girls began disappearing. My granddaughters, who were just 9 and 12 at the time, learned what it means to be trafficked when the parents of their friends said they had ‘gone to work.’ At one point, my daughter’s family was forced to abruptly leave so most of their belongings were left behind. They learned that their town was bombed, and their home was ransacked and so many things that were dear to them were stolen. These are all frightening instances for adults, let alone children.”

    Bowman credits a local church in the U.S. for helping her and her children during the worst moments.

    “The church set up advocacy teams for each missionary family,” said Bowman. “This group met monthly and did video calls with my missionary family and had a prayer time with them. The women texted my daughter and the guys talked to my son-in-law. I appreciated it when one person on the team was assigned to me as the parent liaison. When war broke out in the country where my daughter was serving, they called to see how I was doing and to let me know they were praying. As I began to honestly seek God and be honest about my grief and even my anger towards Him, He met me at my point of sorrow and taught me much about His heart for mothers and the pain they often bear.”

    With “I Never Signed Up For This,” Bowman hopes she can help other parents of missionaries deal with the struggles that they may not foresee.

    “I had a number of missionary parents read the book as beta readers,” says Bowman. “Several said that they cried while reading the book. I had put into words what they had felt. I had described the departure scene at the airport exactly they said, capturing all of their emotions. There are very few resources for parents of missionaries, and my prayer is this book will help them navigate a very unique onslaught of emotions and allow them to find God’s grace even when they are fearful. From the beginning, I determined I would never get in the way of the Holy Spirit as He directs my children and their ministry calling. I hope the lessons I have learned along the way will give other parents and family members peace and reassurance.”

    About Ann Bowman:

    Ann Bowman has written for several magazines and books including Focus On The Family, Birds and Blooms, and Chicken Soup for the Soul Devotional Stories for Mothers. She hosted a parent devotional blog for many years and has been a MOPS speaker and Women’s Bible Study coordinator and teacher. She received a Certification in TCK Debriefing and has taught English classes for Chinese refugees as well as provided Therapeutic Art for women rescued from human trafficking. She graduated from Texas A&M with a B.S. in education and has been married 44 years. She has four children and five grandchildren. Her book, “I Never Signed Up for This” is her first non-fiction work. Visit https://neversignedupforthis.com/.

  • New Album Tribulation Arrives July 18, Featuring a Powerful Trilogy of End-Time Anthems

    June 24, 2025  Christian metal band Weapons of God is set to make a thunderous return with the release of their brand-new single “Death of Me” on Tuesday, June 24, the first track off their highly anticipated third full-length album Tribulation, set to release on July 18.

    Combining unapologetically heavy southern metal with gospel-rooted themes of redemption and spiritual warfare, Weapons of God delivers music with purpose, grit, and an unmistakable sense of urgency for the world we live in.

     The Single: “Death of Me” Released June 24

    “Death of Me” is more than just a comeback track.

    The song was originally conceived years ago under the title “Death Warmed Over” during Steve’s  time in a secular band. The song went unused, but the intro and chorus riffs stayed buried in his heart. When he revisited them in a new season of life, he knew the music still had a purpose, but the message had to be reborn. Now rewritten and reimagined, “Death of Me” has become a powerful declaration of leaving the old life behind and embracing a new identity in Christ.

    “This song is about dying to who you used to be,” Steve explains. “I was inspired by Romans 6:3-4. If this song was going to be about “out with the old and in with the new”, then even the original title had to die. The message is that in Christ, we are made new.”

    Heavy with groove and conviction, the track blends doom-metal tones with bold southern riffs and an anthemic chorus. It hits hard both musically and spiritually.

    The verse that means the most:
    “Farewell / To the blood and the flesh / This rotting carcass is laid to rest / I’m rising up from the darkness / Like a Phoenix on fire / In Christ, I’m made new / Yeah, I’m flying higher!”

    Fans can expect a gritty, faith-driven metal track that’s equally headbanging and heart-changing.

    The Album: Tribulation — Coming July 18

    The upcoming 12-track album Tribulation dives deep into spiritual warfare, and the hope found only in Jesus Christ. With its title carrying layered meaning, the album represents:

    • TRI – It’s the band’s third studio album
    • Tribulation – A reference to Revelation’s End Times
    • Tribes – A reminder that every tribe on Earth will face judgment and see the return of Christ.

    Tribulation tackles modern chaos and biblical prophecy head-on. The album begins with the sound of a radio being tuned through news channels, echoing real-world events — war, violence, moral decay — before launching into a musical journey that explores everything from personal transformation to global spiritual awakening.

    “We see what’s happening in the world and believe we’re living in the end of days,” says the band. “This album is our response — our way of sounding the alarm. We pray that whoever hears it will feel the call of Christ and step into the light.”

    The Tribulation Trilogy

    The final three tracks form the Tribulation Trilogy, an intense closing arc that sonically and lyrically represents the end of days:

    1. Ten Crowns – A reference to the crowns of kings and worldly power being judged
    2. Damnation Riders – Imagery of apocalyptic judgment riding through the earth
    3. Salvation Is Here – A victorious proclamation that Jesus Christ is returning for His people.

    This trilogy doesn’t just end the album — it completes the message: destruction leads to redemption. Damnation is real, but salvation is here.

    Listen/Pre-Save Here: https://lnk.to/DeathOfMe_WaponsOfGod

    Follow Resurrection Records Here: https://bio.to/ResurrectionRecords 

  • Is it possible to embrace suffering as a privilege, rather than a punishment? Beloved authors Katherine and Jay Wolf offer listeners the bold invitation to trust a known God with an unknown future, as well as practical insights into surviving anything by redefining how we think about everything.

    After miraculously surviving a near-fatal brainstem stroke at age 26, as told in their memoir, Hope Heals, life for Katherine and Jay Wolf changed forever – and so did the way they viewed God, the world, and themselves in it. There was no going back to normal after such a tragedy. Yet Katherine and Jay learned that suffering is not the end, but rather the beginning of a new story. In Suffer Strong, they invite us into this new story as they share universal lessons and helpful practices that will help us to:

    • Recognize we are being equipped for an uncommon assignment, not cursed by our story.
    • Transform our unmet expectations into brave anticipations.
    • Disrupt the myth that joy can only be found in a pain-free life.
    • Rewrite the narrative of hard circumstances by turning our definitions of suffering into declarations of strength.
    • And, ultimately, thrive even in the lives we never imagined living.

    ©2020 Katherine Wolf, Jay Wolf (P)2020 Zondervan


    Release date: 02-11-20

    Format: Unabridged Audiobook

    Length: 6 hrs and 55 mins

    Publisher: Thomas Nelson

    Listen on Audible or Spotify

  • The town of Rain in the Rearview had gone silent. Not a whistle, not a hum—just the occasional sad sigh of the wind and the clink of empty boots echoing off Main Street. Ever since the Bummer Bandit had swept through and stolen every guitar from The Cross Strings Music Shop, music had vanished like a song no one remembered the words to.

    But one day, a figure appeared on the horizon, riding a dust-kissed stallion named Glory Boots. Draped in denim, eyes set like flint, and a weather-worn guitar strapped to her back, Anne Wilson had arrived. And she wasn’t about to let silence win.

    She stepped into the town square, planted her boots, and unslung her six-string—Redemption—with a reverence that made the clouds hold their breath. Then she strummed the first chord of “Strong.”

    It was like thunder and sunlight wrapped in harmony. The streets trembled. Doors flew open. A tumbleweed did a cartwheel. And the townsfolk came rushing, hearts thudding in tempo they hadn’t felt in years.

    One by one, Anne passed out guitars. Old Miss Mabel strummed a chord and burst into tears. Sheriff Buck tuned his guitar with a badge in one hand and wonder in the other.

    Then, from behind a dusty barrel, the Bummer Bandit emerged—guilt painting his face like ash.

    “I didn’t steal to be mean,” he muttered. “I just didn’t know how to play.”

    Anne handed him the last guitar and said, “Then it’s about time you learned.”

    And just like that, music returned to Rain in the Rearview. As the sun dipped low, Anne mounted Glory Boots once more and rode off into the pink-gold dusk, her silhouette framed by the strum of a thousand strings.

    Every person and creature—young, old, lawman, bandit, and even a goat with impressive fingerstyle technique—played guitar as one town found its song again.

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  • For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us. Romans 8:18

    Romans 8:18

    Romans 8:18

  • New Ellie Holcomb album “Far Country” drops September 12, 2025. Pre-save on Spotify here.

  • The King of Kings is now available to stream on the Angel app. See the trailer here.