Many people think too often about eating -- whether they're trying to lose weight or whether they're feeling bad because they're not trying to lose weight. God never meant for food to be such a primary focus!Spirit-filled speaker, teacher, and former weight-loss struggler Joyce Meyer shows readers how to break free from the bondage of losing and maintaining weight. "To be all that God intends us to be -- including the right weight for the frame He gave us -- we must first be set free from our preoccupation with food, " Joyce reveals.
Readers will learn the 12 reasons why people overeat, and as God reveals their own reason for struggling with food, will be set free to eat for the right reasons. Readers will identify and overcome unfulfilled emotions and spiritual barriers, including an inability to accept God's great love, to have a rich and truly intimate relationship with Him. God has a "diet plan"? Absolutely. And it's the only thing that will make readers emotionally, spiritually, and physically satisfied.
True weight loss starts with feeding the soul. Readers will want to begin today to eat better and to live free.
Pauline Joyce Hutchison Meyer, more commonly known as Joyce Meyer, is a Charismatic Christian author and speaker. Her television and radio programs air in 25 languages in 200 countries, and she has written over 70 books on Christianity. Joyce and her husband Dave have been married since January 7, 1967, have four grown children, and live near St. Louis, Missouri. Her ministry is headquartered in the St. Louis suburb of Fenton, Missouri.
In 1993, her husband, Dave, suggested that they start a television ministry. Initially airing on superstation WGN-TV in Chicago and BET, her program, now called Enjoying Everyday Life, reaches a large audience.
In 2004 St. Louis Christian television station KNLC, operated by the Rev. Larry Rice of New Life Evangelistic Center, dropped Meyer's programming. Rice had been a longstanding Meyer supporter, but claimed that her "excessive lifestyle" and teachings which often go "beyond Scripture" were the impetus for canceling her program.
In 2005, Time magazine's 25 Most Influential Evangelicals in America ranked Joyce Meyer as 17th.
... Show more