[Spotlight] Sam and the Sticky Situation by Ginger Hubbard and Al Roland, illustrated by Veronika Kotyk

Link for the book @ Amazon.

Link for the book @ Christian Book.

Link for the book @ New Growth Press.

Sam has figured out a way to get what he wants when he wants it—he whines. In fact, it works so well that he’s started whining more and more to get his way. Not only does Sam’s mother give in to his whining very quickly—he learned how to whine from her. But, Sam finds himself in quite the sticky situation when his whining leads him to being covered with cotton candy and stuck on the top of a Ferris wheel!

All parents want their children to whine less, but few notice that they might have a problem with whining too. Best-selling author Ginger Hubbard, along with Al Roland, help families think about whining with a silly story that will not only make them laugh, but will also encourage them to see how whining stems from a heart that wants things more than God. The parent resource page at the end of Sam and the Sticky Situation: A Book about Whining presents a biblical framework and practical suggestions to help children understand why they whine and how to learn a better way of expressing themselves.

Sam and the Sticky Situation is part of the new Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely series. Children ages 4-7 will love the story with its bright, fun illustrations, and along the way will learn that there are better ways than whining to communicate.
An Interview with Ginger Hubbard,
Coauthor of Sam and the Sticky Situation
Q: Why do you think whining has become such a problem with children in today’s culture?

One of the issues behind whining is a lack of self-control. Children who use demanding forms of communication to express their wants and needs are in bondage to their emotions and a lack of self-control. An enslaving addiction to whining does not make for a happy child or a happy parent.

In Proverbs 25:28, God compares a person who lacks self-control with a city whose walls are broken down. In Galatians 5:22-23, he deems self-control so important that he lists it as a priority virtue. In Titus 2:12, he says that by his grace, we are to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled lives.

God’s commands are for the purpose of his glory and our joy. Honoring God by speaking with a self-controlled voice accomplishes both purposes. When we choose to obey his commands, he puts joy in our hearts, which reflects his own joy of being glorified. It all works together in such a beautiful way.

Q: There are probably a lot of parents out there who are at a loss for how to address whining with their kids, so they find themselves resorting to methods that are ineffective. Can you identify some of those ineffective methods and share why they’re not beneficial?

Parents should avoid scolding.  Scolding is an angry response that will stir anger in the hearts of our children. Proverbs 15:1, says, “A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.” When we train in anger, we are not modeling the self-control that we desire our children to learn.

Parents should avoid ignoring them or giving in to their demands. To ignore a whining child is to shirk our responsibility to train them, and to give in to their demands will reinforce the wrong behavior.

To respond to a whining child using any of these methods is to selfishly place our own interests above the interests and well-being of the child. God has placed parents as the authority over children to teach them, not to ignore them or to get them to “hush” by indulging inappropriate behavior. 

Q: How can parents help children understand the heart issue behind whining and teach them to be better communicators?

I recommend 3 simple steps.

Ask Heart-Probing Questions:

Asking questions helps your child to take ownership for his own behavior. You might ask, “Sweetheart, are you talking with a self-controlled voice?” If he shrugs his shoulders instead of answering, gently speak the truth on his behalf: “No, you were not talking with self-control.”

Reprove Your Child for Whining:

Don’t overdo your reproof. You might simply say, “Honey, God wants you to have self-control, even with your voice (Titus 2:12). Because you need to learn to speak the right way, I will not discuss this while you are whining.” Explain to your child that not only does God command him to have self-control, but that when he asks God for help, God will empower him to live in accordance with his command. You might say, “Did you know God will help you to speak with self-control if you ask him?”

Train Your Child to Speak with Self-Control:

Explain that it is love that motivates you to train him. You might say, “Sweetheart, I love you too much to allow you to speak foolishly. Because I want to help you learn to speak with self-control, I’m going to set the timer for three minutes. When the buzzer goes off, you may come back and speak the right way.” It may be necessary to demonstrate the correct way to speak to help your child along. If the child refuses to come back after the three minutes, a natural consequence would be that he doesn’t get to have that conversation with you. (Cute timers for children are available at www.GingerHubbard.com.)

Q: Once parents start implementing this training, how long does it normally take before they start seeing change?

Parents who are consistent with this teaching are telling me that their children are absolutely transformed in the way they communicate in one week or less. It’s an easy way to address it, and if you’re consistent, it works! 

We often find ourselves scolding, ignoring, or giving in because we don’t really know how to respond. We don’t have a plan. So out of frustration, we respond in ways that aren’t beneficial. This plan not only helps us stay consistent, but it also gives us a self-controlled way to respond to whining.

Q: How would you address the issue differently with older children who whine?

When older kids whine and demand that their wants and desires be met immediately, it can be rooted in the sin of idolatry. It’s vital that we recognize it in ourselves as well. We can know that whining has become the idolatry of selfishness, when we start believing that our temporal wants, and desires are going to satisfy us more than God.

1 Timothy 6:17 tells us that God “Richly provides us with everything for our enjoyment,” but those gifts for our enjoyment become idols when they’re desired and enjoyed over God himself. A good indicator that gifts are becoming idols is when the absence of them, or withholding of them, ruins our trust and delight in the goodness of God.

As children mature, we want to begin warning them against the dangers of idolatry. A simple way to explain that might be to say something like, “Idolatry is when a person or thing is loved more than God, wanted more than God, desired more than God, treasured more than God, or enjoyed more than God.”

Q: Can you tell us how this book will help children learn about the dangers of idolatry and the importance of self-control?

In the story, Sam and the Sticky Situation, Sam figures out that he gets his way when he whines, so he starts whining more and more. But as a result of all his whining Sam finds himself stuck in the sticky situation of being covered in cotton candy from head to toe and stuck on top of a Ferris Wheel.

Later in the story, Sam’s mom winds up confessing to her own problem with whining, which God uses to help Sam realize his problem. In the end, they both learn that nothing they want is more important than God. They also learn the value of self-control, and the importance of asking for God’s forgiveness and help.

Q: In Sam and the Sticky Situation, Sam has picked up on his whining tendencies from his mom. As parents, when our children struggle with an issue, should we look inward to examine our own hearts to see if we might be struggling too?

Yes, we’re told in Matthew 7:5 that we should remove the plank in our own eye and then we can see clearly to remove the speck from someone else’s eye. There is one thing we all have in common with our kids. We are sinners in need of a Savior just as much as they are. We need God’s rescuing grace and help as much as they do, and it’s encouraging for them to know that.  As parents, we need to be honest with our kids about our own struggles at age-appropriate levels. 

It’s okay for us to say to our children, “I was whining about having to do the laundry this morning, but my whining and complaining was not honoring to God. I’ve asked him to forgive me. Will you forgive me, too?” When we admit our own sin and our own need for Jesus to our kids, it encourages them to do the same.

Sam and the Sticky Situation: A Book About Whining
by Ginger Hubbard and Al Roland, Illustrated by Veronika Kotyk
Print ISBN: 978-1-64507-200-3
February 21, 2022 / Retail Price: $16.99
RELIGION / Christian Ministry / Children
About the Authors
Ginger Hubbard speaks at women’s events, parenting conferences, and homeschool conventions across the country, and cohosts the Parenting with Ginger Hubbard podcast. Engaging every audience with charisma and warmth, Hubbard’s unforgettable and life changing messages enlighten and inspire women from coast to coast. She has been interviewed on national and international television and radio programs, including Focus on the Family, Revive Our Hearts, and Family Life Today.Hubbard is the bestselling author of Don’t Make Me Count to ThreeWise Words for Moms, and I Can’t Believe You Just Said That and the coauthor of the Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely series.Ginger and her husband, Ronnie, have four adult children and live in Opelika, Alabama, where they enjoy working together from home.Learn more and listen to her podcast at www.GingerHubbard.com. She can also be found on Facebook (@OfficialGingerHubbard) and Instagram (@ginger.hubbard).
Al Roland has worked as a software developer for over thirty-six years. He enjoys spending time with his family, long road trips, mountain biking, adventure, and serving several ministries including RYFO which provides Christian host homes for traveling musicians. He is the coauthor of the Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely series.

Al and his wife, Jennifer, live in Opelika, Alabama where they raised and homeschooled their four children.
About the Illustrator:

Veronika Kotyk is a Ukrainian illustrator who is passionate about creating quirky characters and bright worlds for children’s books. After receiving a fine art degree, she explored foreign cultures and various forms of art. Her awards include the 2017 stArt Award and a gold medal at Mom’s Choice Awards. She is the illustrator for the Teaching Children to Use Their Words Wisely series.

All Scripture links to Bible Gateway.

[Spotlight] Darkest Night Brightest Day by Marty Machowski

Link for the book @ Amazon.

Link for the book @ Christian Book.

Link for the book @ New Growth Press.

Best-selling family devotional author Marty Machowski helps families celebrate the Passion and Easter weeks with his new two-in-one, upside-down book, Darkest Night Brightest Day. Focusing on the main events of the week of the crucifixion, Darkest Night is designed for families to read beginning on Palm Sunday. There are seven stories, one for each day of the week, that recount the events of Passion Week ending with Christ’s crucifixion and burial.​An Interview with Marty Machowski,
Author of Darkest Night Brightest DayQ: Your newest book, Darkest Night Brightest Day, is for families to read together around Easter. Tell us more about the unique format.


Darkest Night Brightest Day is an illustrated family Bible study on the week of Jesus’s life leading up to his death and the appearances of our Lord after his resurrection leading up to his ascension. This Holy Week/Easter week book harmonizes the Gospel accounts leading up to and following the first Easter morning to retell the complete story in a conversational way young children can grasp.

Darkest Night Brightest Day is designed to begin on Palm Sunday with the triumphal entry of our Lord into Jerusalem. The first half of the book, Darkest Night, has seven stories that recount the events of Passion Week ending with Christ’s crucifixion and burial. Then on Easter Sunday, you flip the book over and continue by reading Brightest Day with seven more stories that progress from Christ’s resurrection through Pentecost. Children are sure to remember the contrast between the darkness at the death of our Lord and the light-filled events from Christ’s resurrection onward.

I suggest families start a tradition of reading the first half recounting the Passion Week and positioning the book prominently in their home with the Darkest Night cover showing. Then Saturday night, after the children go to bed, flip the book upside down and around to show the Brightest Day side of the book on a white cloth and cover it with Easter morning treats for an Easter morning surprise.

There are a number of Passion Week devotionals available for families, and a few more include Easter week, but none of these are illustrated and flip upside down like Darkest Night Brightest Day. I wanted a book that would make celebrating Easter engaging and fun.

Q: How did the idea to create an upside down and backwards book come about?

When the apostle Paul shared the gospel story with the Jews in Thessalonica, saying, “that it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead” (Acts 17:3 ESV), some of the Jews were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas. But others became upset and formed a mob and accused Paul and his followers with these words, “These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also” (Acts 17:6).

The gospel message happily turns the life of anyone who believes it upside down. Sin is flipped for righteousness, judgment for mercy, and condemnation for forgiveness. The resurrection turns death on its head so that it is no more. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die.” (John 11:25–26).

Q: Does that message of turning the world upside run through Darkest Night Brightest Day as well?

The message of Darkest Night Brightest Day is the age-old story of the gospel. John announced Jesus as “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29). Jesus plainly taught that “the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes and be killed, and after three days rise again” (Mark 8:31).

At his death, the Roman centurion declared, “Truly this man was the Son of God!” (Mark 15:39) at his death. And the angels told the women at the tomb, “He has risen, as he said” (Matthew 28:6). Darkest Night Brightest Day puts the story together so children can make sense of the gospel.

The upside down book is a way to capture the life-transforming effect of the gospel.

Q: How long does it take to read each devotional? Does the time commitment vary based on the age of the kids in the family?

Darkest Night Brightest Day is targeted at families with preschool/grade school children. Still, those who make reading this Easter devotional a tradition with their family can use it all the way through the teen years, as the meat of the book is the retelling the story of the gospel in a way that both children and adults can enjoy.

The individual devotions in Darkest Night Brightest Day are short and easy to read through in a few minutes. Families can easily complete a devotion in ten minutes. I’ve found the best time for family devotions is after dinner, before dessert. Other families read just before bed or gather in the morning before their day begins.

Q: In addition to reading the devotional each day, are there ways to extend the conversation and go deeper, especially with older children?

Each devotional includes notations of the scripture notations for where the day’s story originated, so the family can read those passages together. At the end of each reading there are also several discussion questions for the family to talk about together.

Q: Why is it so important to use family devotionals such as Darkest Night Brightest Day regularly within the home?

Parents worry about the spiritual condition of their children’s souls and desperately want them to follow Christ. The reality, though, is that only God can change a heart. But he has given us a tool in the gospel that allows us to participate in the miraculous work of salvation.

The gospel is the seed we plant in the heart of our children, and our prayers are the water over that seed. Paul said it is “the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (Romans 1:16). Charles Spurgeon said the gospel is “meat for men, but it is also milk for babes.”

I’ve written Darkest Night Brightest Day as well as other resources to provide parents with tools that will help them share the life-transforming gospel with their children.

Q: Even though your own family has grown past the time of everyone coming together for family devotionals, you still enjoy writing for young families, don’t you?

The Lord has blessed me with six beautiful children and now five grandchildren. With only two of my children still at home, the days of pulling the kids together to do family devotions are complete. But a page has turned to a new chapter in my life. I now get to read gospel-rich books to my grandkids. 

One of the joys of writing about the gospel and looking for creative ways to retell it to children is that I get to steep in the gospel every day. Most of my mornings begin with prayer, study, and then writing for kids about the old, old story. There is nothing like reflecting on the gospel to start your day right.

Darkest Night Brightest Day: A Family Devotional for the Easter Season
By Marty Machowski, Illustrated by Phil Schorr
February 28, 2022 / Retail Price: $21.00
Print ISBN 978-1-64507-208-9
​Religion / Christian Living / Devotional
About the Author and Illustrator
Marty Machowski is a Family Life Pastor at Covenant Fellowship Church in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania, where he has served on the pastoral staff for thirty years. Machowski leads Promise Kingdom, the gospel-centered children’s ministry of Covenant Fellowship. He is also the Executive Editor for Children’s Resources at New Growth Press.He is the author of a number of family devotionals, Sunday School curriculums (including the Gospel Story Curriculum), children’s books, and parenting titles. His latest releases include WonderFullBrave and BoldGod Made Me for HeavenDarkest Night Brightest Day, and Build on Jesus (co-written with Deepak Reju).Machowski and his wife, Lois, have six children and several grandchildren. They reside in West Chester, Pennsylvania.Learn more at www.martymachowski.com. He can also be found on Instagram (@martymachowski) and Twitter (@MartyMachowski).
About the Illustrator:Phil Schorr resides in southern California with his family, where he tells stories through visual mediums. He has always been fascinated with mid-century design and the use of bold yet imperfect geometric shapes. As an art director and visual designer, he brings his influence of music, animation, and global stories into his work. He has the privilege to do what he does because of the love and support of his wife, Joelle and his wildly adventurous kids. Phil is the illustrator of Jesus Saves and Darkest Night Brightest Day.