Exploring the True Woman Manifesto, Ep 5 of 15
Do you feel like a great prayer warrior? If not, you’re in good company. So many of us find this spiritual rhythm challenging! Hear about the powerful purpose of prayer from someone who doesn’t find it easy on Revive Our Hearts with Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth.
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth: Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth says if you don't have an hour to pray, spend the time you do have. Look, it doesn't have to be a sweet hour of prayer. It can be continually sending up to the Lord short bolts of prayer.
Guest (Female): This is the Revive Our Hearts podcast with Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth, author of A Place of Quiet Rest. For July 8th, 2026, I'm Dana Grash.
Do you feel like you're good at prayer? Well, if not, you're in very good company. We're about to hear from a woman who doesn't feel like a great prayer warrior. Her name is Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth. Yes, it's true. Even the Bible teachers we look up to most sometimes struggle with this discipline. So, you most certainly aren't alone.
Although it's a challenge, Nancy knows the importance of talking with God, and she's going to encourage you to press on in prayer today, even as she presses on herself.
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth: A couple came up to me that I had not seen in many years. And the husband said to me, “I have prayed for you every day for the last ten years.” This is not a couple I have ever known well. And he said to me, “When I saw you ten years ago, you were getting ready to start Revive Our Hearts Radio, and you said to me, ‘Would you please pray for me?’”
And he said, “I said yes, and then I left and I realized I told her I would pray for her.” And he says, “Every day for the last ten years, I have prayed for you.” Someone I hardly know. Well, I thank the Lord for people like that man and other men and women, couples that I hear from, some of whom I've never met, who pray for me, who pray for this ministry. And I said to him, “Thank you so much.”
Let me just take this opportunity to say thank you to many of you in this audience, and many of you listening to this program today, who pray for me. You pray for our team, you pray for our ministry. And God hears those prayers and answers them.
And that's why I'm excited about this session we're coming to today as we're walking through the True Woman Manifesto, through the 15 "we will" statements that come at the end of that manifesto. We come to the fourth one today that says, “We will nurture our fellowship and communion with God through prayer.” In praise, thanksgiving, confession, intercession, and supplication.
Now, one might wonder, why include a statement about prayer in the True Woman Manifesto? I mean, men need to pray too. Men and women need to pray, and that's true of a number of statements in the manifesto. But we included that statement in this manifesto because a true woman is a woman who walks with God and who lives in his presence. Her heart beats with his heart.
She lives in union and communion with God. A true woman is a woman who knows that she cannot manage her own life. And so she lives in utter dependence upon God. She longs to see his will done in her life, her family, her church, her community, and in our world. And she realizes that prayer is the provision God has given us to make all these things possible.
A true woman realizes that she cannot do anything of eternal value or significance apart from abiding in Christ. And that who she is as a woman is determined by the source of her life, whether she's connected to abiding in Christ, living in his presence. And so this point of the manifesto says we will nurture our fellowship and communion with God.
That word nurture suggests that we have to give it attention. We have to give it focus. We have to help it grow, tend it. A prayer life doesn't just naturally happen. And in fact, I found that as I've been working on this session, God has used my study and my preparation, my meditation to help nurture my own prayer life, to help encourage it, to help it grow.
Now the purpose for praying is suggested in this point where it says, “We will nurture our fellowship and communion with God through prayer.” The purpose of praying is not to pass information onto God, who knows everything, or to tell him something that maybe he has forgotten. The purpose is to cultivate a deeper, more intimate relationship with our heavenly Father.
Many of you have read Oswald Chambers over the years, *My Utmost for His Highest*, and he says, “We look upon prayer as a means for getting something for ourselves. The Bible idea of prayer is that we may get to know God himself.” And so, I would ask you, what drives your prayers? Is it your grocery list of needs, or is it your desire to know God, to have intimate communion and union with him?
When I lived in Little Rock where we recorded Revive Our Hearts for the first eight years, I had a walking partner. And we enjoyed spending time together. We planned it, we both had different schedules. I'm a single studying for radio recording. She's a mom of several kids. So we had to adjust our schedules to make it possible and plan to fit that time into our day.
And most of the time we looked forward to walking together. I will say that there were days for both of us, I would say that there were days when we did not look forward to it, when we did not want to get out of bed, we didn't want to move or we didn't feel like getting out or didn't feel like talking to anyone. But we did it anyway because we knew it was good for us. We knew we needed it.
And we needed that walking not just for physical exercise, though that certainly is one of the benefits. But we needed it for the purpose of staying connected and engaged in each other's lives and sharing what was going on in our lives, building our friendship. We shared our blessings, we shared our burdens. We walked a lot of miles in Little Rock over those years. Just two or three miles several times a week, but that adds up over a period of years.
We shared things we were concerned about on that particular day or that season of life. We shared failures with each other. We shared things with each other that we did not share with many other people. Now, when we started walking, I think there were probably for both of us those times when the thought was, what are we going to talk about? But over time, as we talked, as we walked, we developed a close friendship.
And we talked on the phone last week, and we said to each other how much we both miss those times. How much we realize we needed them, what how valuable they were. And I think of that season of walking with that walking partner as a picture of what God wants in his relationship with us. If I could say it within any without meaning any disrespect at all, God wants to be our walking partner.
He wants to walk with us, to talk with us, to share his life with us, to have us share our life with him. Days when we feel like getting up and walking and talking with him and on days when we don't feel like getting up and walking and talking with him. Sharing our blessings, sharing our burdens, sharing our failures, over time developing a close friendship.
And just like with my walking friend in Little Rock, in those early days, we didn't know each other real well, and we'd kind of have to think of things to talk about. But the more we talked, the more we got to enjoy each other, and the more things we found we had in common, or we developed mutual interests, the more things we found we had to talk about. It just got easier over time.
And I think with prayer as we get to know God, and we talk and we commune with him, we'll find that that friendship grows. That's a picture you see in Genesis chapter 3 where Adam after he had sinned, heard God walking in the garden in the cool of the day. Verse 9 says, “The Lord God called to the man and said to him, ‘Where are you?’” Aren't you glad that God is the one who initiates our walking together?
He says, “I want to walk with you. I want to know you.” I think of my friend who often would call me or email me and say, “Are we going to walk tomorrow? You want to walk?” “Yeah, I got a lot to do, but I need to walk, we need to talk, let's do it.” God is the one who initiates relationship, and remember when that verse took place? After Adam and Eve had sinned.
When they were hiding, when they were ashamed, when they were guilty, and God called Adam and he said, “Where are you?” It's time for our walk. Let's walk, let's talk. Through the shed blood of Christ, the sacrifice that he made for us, we can come back into God's presence even when we have sinned because the sacrifice for our sins has been paid and God says, “I want to walk with you. I want to talk with you. I want to know you.”
And yet, truth be told, many of us find it difficult to pray. I hear this from some of our listeners. I got an email recently from one listener who said, “I find that my prayer life is so dry and lacking life. It seems routine and stale. I know that it's the most important activity I can do, but prayer has always been the most difficult thing for me to do in my Christian life.” She said, “Give me a good Bible study to do or teach or a good book to read or good Christian music to listen to, but spend time in prayer, it's a real effort. I know I'm not alone in this.”
How many of you would say she is not alone in this? I can relate to what she just said. Many hands, maybe most of the hands in the room. And I would have to raise my hand and say that woman is not alone. In fact, it's really tough for me to speak on the subject of prayer because I have always loved to read and study and meditate on the Word, but prayer has always been so tough for me.
I find it hard to get a quiet heart. I find it hard to get still enough, long enough to really commune with the Lord in prayer. In fact, recently I was asked to pray at an event that our local pregnancy care center was having, and the woman who emailed me to ask if I would come and open this event with prayer, she said, “I know that you are such a great prayer warrior.” And I had to email her back and say, “I am not a great prayer warrior, believe me. I will be glad to come and pray at your event because I believe in prayer, but I'm so much in the learning and early stages of growth in what it means to be a woman of prayer.”
Some of you are familiar with the name Andrew Bonar, who was one of the great 19th-century Scottish evangelicals. And one of the recurring themes in his life and diary was the fact that he struggled greatly in prayer, and he felt many times like he was a total failure in prayer. As a pastor in our area named Brian Hedges, who has written an article on some of the strategies that Bonar developed to strengthen his prayer life.
And Brian summarizes those lessons in this way. He says that Bonar learned first to pray while traveling. Bonar's diary says, “God has been impressing upon me the way of redeeming time for prayer by learning to pray while walking or going from place to place.” And then he learned to give prayer first place every day. His diary says, “By the grace of God and the strength of his Holy Spirit, I desire to lay down the rule not to speak to man until I have spoken with God. Not to do anything with my hand till I have been on my knees. Not to read letters or papers until I have read something of the Holy Scriptures.”
And when I read that excerpt from Bonar's journal, I thought of my dad, Art DeMoss. The rule for his life was no Bible reading, no breakfast. And no reading of other materials before reading the Bible. You say, “That sounds so legalistic.” Well, I'll tell you it wasn't legalistic for my dad. It could be maybe for somebody else, but for him, it was a joy. It was the delight, it was his necessary food, more necessary to him than breakfast, and he was a man who found breakfast pretty necessary. But he found God's Word even more necessary.
So, pray while traveling, give prayer first place every day. The third lesson from Bonar's diary is to take advantage of short but frequent prayer. His diary said, “Led to think today that my way of praying is chiefly to be by bolts upward, not by very long prayers at one time.” And for some of you, you love praying for very long periods of time, but for some of you maybe that will take the pressure, some pressure off your prayer life as you think, “Look, it doesn't have to be a sweet hour of prayer. It can be continually sending up to the Lord short bolts of prayer,” as Bonar called them.
And then the fourth lesson that was pulled out of his diary is to pray every hour of the day. His diary said, “I've been endeavoring to keep at prayer at this season every hour of the day, stopping my occupation whatever it is to pray a little, seeking thus to keep my soul within the shadow of the throne of grace and him that sits thereon.” In other words, never get very far from prayer. Just consciously take time through the course of the day, whatever you're doing, to stop and pray.
Prayer expresses an attitude of dependence upon God. There's a pastor who has a wonderful blog. His name is Kevin DeYoung, and I follow that blog. It's something that would be of benefit to you if you're looking for a really biblically grounded blog to follow. And he had a great post on prayer not too long ago. Let me just read some portions of that post. He said, “The simple act of getting on our knees, or faces, or feet, or whatever for five or 50 minutes every day is the surest sign of our humility and dependence on our Father in heaven.”
“There may be many reasons for our prayerlessness, time management, business, lack of concentration, but most fundamentally,” Pastor DeYoung says, “we ask not because we think we need not, or we think God can give not. Deep down we feel secure when we have money in the bank, a healthy report from the doctor, and powerful people on our side. We do not trust in God alone.” “Prayerlessness,” he says, “is an expression of our meager confidence in God's ability to provide and of our strong confidence in our ability to take care of ourselves without God's help.”
So, why don't we pray more? Why don't I pray more? Well, one key reason is because we're not really desperate. We're not really conscious of our need for God. And you think about it, most of us have never had to wonder where our next meal is coming from. So, why would we pray desperately, ‘Give us this day our daily bread?’ From a human standpoint, the fact is we can survive without God's help. Now, we really can't. We can't take another breath without God's help, but from the human vantage point of things, it looks like we can operate on our own efforts, our own resources, apart from God's grace and intervention.
Which is why I have often said, anything that makes us need God is a blessing. That's why your lost job may be a blessing if it makes you need God. That's why your husband's lost job is a blessing if it makes you need God. That's why a bad report from the doctor is a blessing if it makes you conscious of your need for God.
Let me read just a little bit more of Kevin DeYoung's blog post. He said, “Almost all of us want to pray more frequently, and yet our lives seem too disordered. But in God's mind, our messy, chaotic lives are an impetus to prayer instead of an obstacle to prayer.” “You don't need an ordered life to enable prayer. You need a messy life to drive you to prayer.” I'm going, “Yes! Then I can do this!”
He says, “You don't need to have everything in order before you can pray. You need to know you're disordered, so you will pray. You need to think to yourself, ‘Tomorrow is another day that I need God. I need to know him. I need forgiveness, I need help, I need protection, I need deliverance, I need patience, I need courage.’ Therefore, I need prayer. If you know you are needy and believe that God helps the needy, you will pray.”
“The heart that never talks to God,” he says, “is the heart that trusts in itself and not in the power of God.” You say, “Well, I want to pray. How do I become more a woman of prayer?” Well, let me just make three real simple suggestions. First, ask the Lord to teach you to pray. That's what the disciples did. When they saw Jesus' prayer life, they were moved to say, “Lord, teach us to pray.” And he did. So say, “Lord, teach me to pray.”
And then ask the Holy Spirit to help you pray. The Apostle Paul, you think of him as a great prayer warrior, he said, “The Spirit helps us in our weakness.” This is Romans chapter 8, beginning in verse 26. “We do not know what we ought to pray for.” Even the Apostle Paul, we don't know what to pray. “But the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit because the Spirit intercedes for the saints in accordance with God's will.” So, ask God to teach you to pray, and then ask the Holy Spirit to help you pray.
And then number three, pray the Word of God back to God. Listen, you may not know what the will of God is for someone that you're praying for or for a certain situation in your life, but you can be sure that when you pray the Word of God, you are praying the will of God. We have one man on our staff who invariably if we have staff prayer time, which we do often spontaneously and planned, he invariably has an open Bible before him as he's praying. And often he's praying through the Scripture, praying the Scripture back to God. You can do that alone, you can do it with others.
In the book of Esther, there's a scene that gives a beautiful insight into prayer. You remember how Mordecai discovered the plot to annihilate the Jews, and he appealed to his cousin, Queen Esther, to use her position to intercede with King Artaxerxes on behalf of her people. Now, Esther knew that no one dared to approach the king without being invited. If you did so, you were to you risked death unless the king was to have mercy and extend his golden scepter.
But finally, after three days of fasting, Esther put on her royal robes and she went into the inner court of the palace where the king sat on his throne. And I love these next two verses, Esther chapter 5 verses 2 and 3. “When the king saw Esther the queen standing in the court, she obtained favor in his sight. And the king extended to Esther the golden scepter which was in his hand. So Esther came near and touched the top of the scepter.” “Then the king said to her, ‘What is troubling you, Queen Esther, and what is your request? Even to half of the kingdom, it shall be given to you.’”
And I think, what a picture this is of the relationship between an all-powerful God who sits on his throne in heaven and desperate, helpless, needy believers on earth, who approach his throne, and at his invitation come near to share their needs and to intercede on behalf of others. Now, of course, the analogy fails because Artaxerxes being a pagan king cannot possibly represent God accurately. But I still think there's a glimpse here of how we can approach God and obtain favor because we come in the name of Christ, clothed in the righteousness of Christ.
Like Esther, we may be reluctant to approach the King of the universe with our puny needs and burdens. But we forget that this is a King who loves us, who has chosen us, who delights in us. And amazingly, he is determined to accomplish his purposes here on earth in union with the prayers of his people. In fact, he is waiting for us to come and ask.
And sometimes, especially when we know that we've blown it, we can be fearful to approach one who is so powerful and who could destroy us with a flicker of his eyelids if he chose to do so. But when we approach his throne, clothed in the righteousness of Christ, even as Esther prepared by putting on her royal robes, wonder of wonders, we obtain favor in his sight.
He extends his golden scepter toward us, and he invites us to draw near and touch the top of that scepter. And then having granted us access into his presence, as if that's not enough, this amazing King of the universe says to us, “What's troubling you? What's on your heart, my beloved one? What's your request? Ask and it will be given to you.”
And so as we seek to become true women of God, we commit ourselves to nurture our fellowship and communion with God through prayer. And I have on my desk a carved piece. I'm I brought it for show and tell today, but for those who can't see me, it's it's just the letters P R A Y carved out of a piece of wood. This piece sits on my desk, and it's just a constant reminder as I'm dealing with challenges of the ministry, with preparing for recording days, with dealing with family issues and concerns, relational issues and concerns, my own personal struggles with temptation and sin. It's just a simple reminder to pray.
Pray. Have you prayed about it? We talk about it, we worry about it, we stew about it. We ask others for counsel. The question is, have you prayed about it? The Scripture says, “The Lord is near to all who call upon him, to all who call on him in truth.” There's an old hymn we hardly ever sing it anymore. It was written in the 1800s, written by Joseph Scriven, but I think the words are just such an important reminder. “What a friend we have in Jesus.” Not just a king. He is that, but also a friend.
“What a friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear. What a privilege to carry everything to God in prayer. O what peace we often forfeit. O what needless pain we bear. All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer.” Lord, I'm mindful of the words of the Apostle Paul in Philippians chapter 4 where he says, “Pray about everything. Don't worry about anything.” Tell God your needs. Don't forget to thank him for his answers.
And if you do this, the peace of God will garrison, surround, protect, safeguard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Lord, I pray that you would make us women of prayer, women who link arms with your omnipotence, to believe your will to be done on this earth as it is in heaven, to see your kingdom come in this world. And Lord, I just think of the the the power of my great grandmother's prayers. I never knew her. But I am here today as a a long-term result of prayers that she prayed for a wayward grandson, Art DeMoss, who you saved and brought into your kingdom, my dad. And now my life is the fulfillment of her prayers that she prayed, prayers that my dad prayed for me. He's been in heaven for more than 30 years, but I'm living out the answer to his prayers.
And Lord, I pray that my prayers and our prayers would be such that generations from now, there would be those on this earth who would say, “I'm here today and walking with the Lord and serving him because of a praying mom, a praying grandma.” Lord, would you please teach us to pray? I ask in Jesus' name. Amen.
Guest (Female): Yes, Lord. Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth has been reminding us how important prayer is to the life of a true woman. Not because prayer earns us any favor with God, but because it's how we get to know him. It's how we become friends with him. Prayer? It's ultimately for our joy.
We're big fans of prayer over here at Revive Our Hearts, so much so that we have some team members who dedicate themselves to praying for you. Yeah, if you have a particular request you'd like to share with us, you can visit reviveourhearts.com/prayer and fill out the prayer form. When you do, our prayer team will join you in bringing that request to the Lord. I hope you'll give us the joy of coming alongside you in this way.
Again, that's reviveourhearts.com/prayer. As we continue to champion True Womanhood all month long, we're also celebrating the release of Mary Kassian's newest book, *What Is a Woman? The Question Our World Is Afraid to Answer*. This is a Revive Our Hearts exclusive, and it's so timely. Culture may shy away from defining womanhood, but God doesn't. His design for us in Scripture is stunningly beautiful. You'll explore it in depth when you get your copy of Mary's book. And all month long, when you make a donation of any amount, we're sending that book straight to you. To give, visit reviveourhearts.com or call us at 1-800-569-5999.
Tomorrow, Mary Kassian will help us look at that question our world is afraid to ask. What is a woman? I hope you'll be back for Revive Our Hearts.
This program is a listener-supported production of Revive Our Hearts in Niles, Michigan, calling women to freedom, fullness, and fruitfulness in Christ.
Featured Offer
New book from Mary Kassian. With your donation of any amount.
Past Episodes
- 3 Doctrines that Fuel Endurance
- 3 Ingredients of a Revived Heart
- 3 Life-Changing Lessons for Young Women
- 3 Marks of an Unshakable Woman
- 3 Reasons to Join the 2026 Bible Reading Challenge
- 3 Ways to Love Your Friend When It’s Hard
- 3 Women Who Were Grateful for God’s Word
- A Cry for Revival: Isaiah 63-64
- A Great Awakening, with Kim and Katie Miller
- A Harvest of Joy
- A Heart Grounded in the Word of God, with Chris Brooks
- A Mighty Fortress Is Our God (Psalm 46)
- A Song for Weary Pilgrims (Psalm 137)
- A Woman Adorned and Adorning
- Advent for Exiles, with Caroline Cobb and Erin Davis
- Always Grateful: Ciara's Story
- Always Thankful (Psalm 66)
- An Unhurried Holiday Season
- And the Bride Wore White, with Dannah Gresh
- Anticipating Advent
- Be the Warmth: Cultivating Hospitable Character
- Becoming a Fruitful Woman
- Begin at My Sanctuary
- Behold the Big Story of the Bible, with Kevin DeYoung
- Behold the Daily Mercy of the Word, with Dannah Gresh
- Behold the Living Word, with Jackie Hill Perry
- Behold the Power of the Word to Save, with Kelly Needham
- Behold the Wonder of the Word
- Behold the Word Recovered by God’s People, with Mary Kassian
- Behold, Hearts on Fire with the Word
- Beholding the Wonder: True Woman '25
- Beyond Cliches: Real Encouragement for Single Sisters
- Blessed by a Godly Mother
- Blessing for the Year End & the New Year (2 Cor. 13:11-13)
- Blessings and Curses: A Look at the Life of Balaam
- Brokenness: The Heart God Revives
- Celebrating God’s Abundance
- Celebrating the Gift of Grandparents
- Choosing Grace over Gossip
- Choosing Servanthood Over Celebrity
- Choosing to Stay in a Difficult Marriage
- Come Adore: The Gospel in Carols
- Crossing the Finish Line: Remembering Robert Wolgemuth
- Ease Into the Bible, with Jean Wilund
- Enlarging Your Heart for Eternity, with Colleen Chao
- Exploring the True Woman Manifesto
- Faithful, Not Famous with Laura Gonzalez de Chávez
- Finding Freedom from Fear, with Judy Dunagan
- Finding My Father Father: How the Gospel Heals the Pain of Fatherlessness, with Blair Linne
- Finding Soul-Deep Satisfaction in Jesus
- Food Is Not the Enemy: Discover Freedom from Food Fixation, with Asheritah Ciuciu
- Free to Be Real
- Freedom in Christ
- From Death to Life: Hope After Abortion
- From Desperation to Deliverance: The Promise of Psalm 107
- Fruitful in Christ
- Fullness in Christ
- God’s Grace for Weary Moms
- God's Power to Revive a Heart, with Andrea Griffith
- Grace for the Depressed
- Hallelujah! A Praise Celebration (Psalm 113)
- Helping Kids Think Biblically, with Elizabeth Urbanowicz
- His Healing Touch
- Holy Week Heart Prep: The Wonderful Names of Jesus
- Hope in the Midst of the Hard
- How God’s Love for Women is Displayed in the Old Testament, with Dr. Katie McCoy
- How Less Scrolling Could Change Your Life, with Lara d’Entremont
- How Long, O Lord? Learning to Pray Through Pain
- How Remembering Eternity Transforms Today (Psalm 90)
- How to Have a Happy New Year (Psalm 1)
- How to Have a Marriage that Magnifies God
- How to Have a Quiet Heart
- How We Got Our English Bible
- Indispensable Ingredients for Life
- Instruments of Grace
- Intimacy with God
- It’s Possible! Learn to Control Your Mind and Emotions
- Leading Children to Love the Word
- Learning to Love the Old Testament, with Jennifer Smith
- Living Out the Beauty of the Gospel
- Living Well, Finishing Well, with Mark DeMoss
- Loving and Living God’s Word, with Kelly Needham
- Persecution, Perseverance, and the Key to Sustaining Faith, with Dr. Karen Ellis
- Persevering Love for the Local Church
- Pleading the Cause of the Unborn
- Practical Bible Study Tips
- Practicing Thankfulness, with Sam Crabtree
- Precepts, Parkinson’s, and the Truth That Sets Us Free, with Kay Arthur
- Psalm 23: Our Good Shepherd
- Putting God's Word First, with Gretchen Saffles and Janine Nelson
- Read Your Bible!
- Rediscovering Intimacy With God
- Relationship Refresh: Helping Your Community Thrive in Christ
- Remembering Voddie Baucham, Jr.
- Renewed and Restored (Psalm 23:2-3)
- Renewing Your Mind
- Revival Begins with You
- Revive Us Again (Psalm 85)
- Ruth: The Transforming Power of Redeeming Love
- Safely Home: Honoring Robert Wolgemuth
- Science, Scripture, and a Life Transformed, with Dr. James Tour
- See for Yourself: Get to Know Your Bible, with Kelly Needham
- Showing Kindness, with Kathy Branzell
- Sin, Suffering, and the God Who Restores
- Sorrowful, Yet Always Rejoicing
- Spiritual Disciplines We Forget About
- Spiritual Habits for Little Hearts
- Spiritual Strength for an Evil Day (Ephesians 6)
- Steadfast Faith
- Storm Shelter
- Supporting Your Suffering Friend, with Jani Ortlund
- Surrendering Your Independence
- Tell Yourself What’s True
- Telling the Greatest Story
- Tender Counsel for the Fearful and Grieving, with Paul Tautges
- The Beautiful Process of Repentance
- The Beauty of Living Out the Gospel as a Woman
- The Four Emotions of Christmas
- The Glory of Face-to-Face Fellowship
- The Gospel Is Everything: 25 Years of Pointing Women to Christ
- The Humble Savior Who Came
- The Incomparable, Incarnate Christ
- The Joy of Bible Journaling
- The Joy of Embracing Biblical Womanhood, with Laura Perry Smalts
- The Legacies of Two Godly Fathers
- The Personal Devotional Life
- The Personal Devotional Life: Beyond Quiet Time, with Dr. Henry Blackaby
- The Power of Words
- The Well-Watered Woman, with Gretchen Saffles
- The Wonder App: Transforming Screen Time into Scripture
- Three Gifts Suffering Gives
- To The Woman Who Doesn’t Feel God’s Love
- Treasuring Christ in Our Traditions with Noel Piper
- True Woman '25 Panel Discussion: Behold the Word in Every Season
- True Womanhood for Today
- Truly Strong: Becoming Women Who Depend on the Lord
- Truth Talk for Hurting Hearts, with Dawn Wilson
- Walking Through Life's Deserts
- What Do We Do with Unfulfilled Longings?
- What Freedom, Fullness, and Fruitfulness Really Mean, with Robert Wolgemuth
- What Is a Woman? with Mary Kassian
- What Sisterhood Is (and Isn’t)
- What’s the Point of Praise? 3 Reasons Your Worship Matters
- When Busyness Threatens Intimacy with God
- When Prayer Sparks Revival, with Bob Bakke
- Why Study the Bible?
- Wonder of the Word Made Flesh
- Word Before World, with Gretchen Saffles
Featured Offer
New book from Mary Kassian. With your donation of any amount.
About Revive Our Hearts
Married, single, young or older, you'll want to join us every day for practical, biblical insights on becoming a fruitful woman of God. Best selling author and national radio host, Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth makes the Scriptures come alive. You'll be touched by Nancy's messages and by the passion of her heart.
About Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth
Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth has touched the lives of millions of women through Revive Our Hearts and the True Woman movement, calling them to heart revival and biblical womanhood. Her love for Christ and His Word is infectious and permeates her online outreaches, conference messages, books, and two daily nationally syndicated radio programs—Revive Our Hearts and Seeking Him. Her books have sold more than four million copies and are reaching the hearts of women around the world. Nancy and her husband, Robert, live in Michigan.
Contact Revive Our Hearts with Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth
Mailing Address
Revive Our Hearts
P.O. Box 2000
Niles, MI 49120
Telephone Numbers
1-800-569-5959 (toll-free)