Born Royal
Overcoming Insecurity to Become the Woman God Says You Are
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4.5 • 2 Ratings
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A revolution for women to live confidently in their God-given identity and united in the call to bring goodness to the world, adapted from Born of a Woman, from speaker and pastor of the influential Shoreline City Church.
“In these pages, you will experience the beauty of a friend who says, ‘Royal sister, take a seat. We have been waiting for you!’”—Charlotte Gambill, pastor, author, and global Bible teacher
We know women are meant to bring powerful and lasting goodness into the world because God repeatedly called women to do so: He trusted Mary to give birth to Jesus, Esther to save His people, and Deborah to lead His kingdom. Yet so much of our potential is limited by our own insecurity and fear. It’s time for us to stand confident in our stunning worth as royal daughters, unite in community, and walk in the unshakable hope of Christ.
In a message that’s both vibrant and conversational, Pastor Oneka McClellan reminds us that God has uniquely positioned and gifted women to be a source of life, wisdom, and strength. Through insightful biblical truths and real stories of women showing up in powerful ways, McClellan equips you to
• completely trust your God-given identity
• lead with courage and wisdom in any room
• fight for the flourishing of others
• celebrate the greatness in every woman
• see with eyes of hope that God can redeem any story
To every woman who’s ever felt held back, pushed down, or disqualified from stepping fully into her purpose, McClellan’s Born Royal offers hope, encouragement, and empowerment. It also sounds a liberating call for each and every one of us—including you—to walk boldly and precisely as the women God has created us to be.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Pastor McClellan debuts with an invigorating call for Christian women to form a "royal sisterhood" that fosters faith, self-worth, and communal support. Reminding women of their "limitless value" in divine eyes, McClellan encourages readers to use the confidence conferred by such a status to weather periods of personal uncertainty, effect change in their churches and communities, and support and uplift other women. The aim, she writes, is to create a sisterhood in which women bolster self-esteem and celebrate each other's differences in order to "lift up the name of Jesus" communally and globally. While tired stereotypes sometimes distract from the message (God "sees you as pure" despite past transgressions; women are God's "chief servants"), McClellan wisely makes room for the complexities of modern womanhood, both individually ("You can be tough and tender. You can be strong and kick butt, but you can also be soft, speaking words of life") and collectively ("The royal sisterhood will be on display when... both stay-at-home moms and working moms notice the inherent strength in one another and call it out for the whole world to see"). The result is an inspiring invitation for "God's daughters" to fortify their spiritual bonds and strengthen themselves and their communities in the process.