Practical, fun tool for parents raising kids. Encourages obedience motivated by God’s love and grace.
Part of the Training Young Hearts series.
Fun lift-the-flap board book that motivates small children to use their eyes in a Christ-like way.
This helpful and engaging training tool will help parents to teach their kids that God didn’t make their eyes to look down on others, but for positive things like watching, blinking, squinting and winking.
Not only will children be encouraged to follow Jesus’ example, but they’ll also be reassured that he loves us no matter what we do. He can forgive us when we fail and help us to change.
This book is part of a series called Training Young Hearts, that addresses the attitudes of the heart that underpin behaviour and explains how the gospel of grace enables us to change.
Parents, teachers, and other loved ones can refer back to these resources when specific behaviours need both to be corrected and to be connected to forgiveness, grace and growth.
Age range: | 1+ |
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Contributors | Abbey Wedgeworth, Emma Randall |
ISBN | 9781784989569 |
Format | Board book |
First published | February 2024 |
Dimensions | 165mm x 165mm x 20mm |
Weight | 0.32 kg |
Language | English |
Pages | 9 |
Publisher | The Good Book Company |
I am incredibly excited about these new books from Abbey Wedgeworth. Engaging, helpful, and full of truth, these books are sure to become a favorite in your home!
One of the most important ways we can train young children is to teach them what is right as well as teach them what is wrong. In the Training Young Hearts series Abbey Wedgeworth faithfully shows children how to live while also telling them the good news of God’s grace. These board books are such an engaging (and fun!) way to teach big truths to young hearts.
The Training Young Hearts board books will help parents encourage positive behavior through one of the most effective methods of learning—play! These engaging books will not only instruct kids but parents too, by equipping both with training refrains based in biblical truths. Abbey has provided us with an incredible tool to help us clearly and intentionally communicate with our kiddos in a way that points to them to Jesus.
Training Young Hearts book series is a new lift-a-flap board book for little ones and their parents to enjoy together. As an educator, I find value in the formula of each book in this series, a few pages that ask questions (and you get the answers under the sturdy flap with simple, clear child-friendly illustrations).
First, the book talks about what to do with your eyes then what not to do, then teaches the child that Jesus was human and had eyes and used them to obey God with the Holy Spirit's help, just like the child can do! Each body part book repeats this same formula, with every page requiring a lifting of the flap, and examples that are natural child tendencies.
Are these books immensely creative and entertaining for the reader, not likely? But are they developmentally appropriate for the intended audience? Why yes they are. Will the format, style, and questions/answers appeal to the child who listens? Yes, they will.
Will people understand or misunderstand the concept of sin, as implied by other reviewers? I do not think it is a problem. I see this as a tool to train young hearts in how to use their bodies and in the basic concepts of faith from the youngest age.
I've already purchased the four-book set as a baby shower gift, finding the series worth the investment. I believe if you are reading to your child from a young age, this series is worth owning. Encourage your child to read, re-read, read alone, and ask every loving adult in their life to read again. I have other books from this stage of my children's lives still memorized and my kids are 14, 18, and 22. This would have been a much-preferred option than a book about pajamas, a cat, or goodnight, and far more worthy of learning.
I purchased these books on my own and am reviewing them to share with those looking for honest input.
Abbey Wedgeworth Has written another book in her Training Young Hearts series called What are Eyes For?
This cute toddler board book helps young children learn that God created their eyes to look upon the needs of others like Jesus did.
There are plenty of flaps to lift open inside making this book very engaging for little people with short attention spans.
The illustrations are bright and colorful. The little kids' pictures on each page are just too cute.
I would highly recommend this book to any Christian family, and it also would be a favorite in any church nursery.
I received What Are Eyes For? compliments of The Good Book Company in exchange for my honest review.
What Are Eyes For? is the latest book in the Training Young Hearts series by Abbey Wedgeworth. This series was made to train toddlers while pointing them to the good news of the gospel. This volume in the series teaches young readers that God made their eyes to do many things like open and close and observe feelings on faces. It reminds them that their eyes weren’t made for glaring or looking down on others.
What Are Eyes For? includes flaps on each page for children to lift making it an interactive read. The illustrations are lovely and contain depictions of children of various ethnicities and abilities which I consider important in children’s literature. We are enjoying this lovely board book and can’t wait to read more in the Training Young Hearts series!
This fun lift-the-flap board book teaches young children through practical and age-appropriate examples how to use their eyes in a Christ-like way. And with examples of what our eyes are not made for, children also learn that no matter what they do, they can come to Jesus in prayer and ask for forgiveness and help to be more like Him.
This board book is rich in Biblical truth and engaging illustrations, making it the perfect gift for the little ones in your life.
Thank you, The Good Book Company, for my copy in an exchange for an honest review.
We love this series. We have the whole set and love each book without exception. It engages my 2 year-old in age appropriate ways and explains the Gospel in a way littles can grasp without inducing guilt or shame. There really is no other books out there like these.
This is such a great series of books for toddlers, taking simple concepts (such as what we do with our eyes) and linking them to Jesus. In this book, we see how Jesus used his eyes, and how we can use ours too, looking to Jesus and his Holy Spirit, and looking towards his good plan for us. These are superb gifts for the young children in our churches, or for your little ones, helping them to have fun with reading and learn something about God's goodness to us too!
The What Are Eyes For? Board Book is a lift-the-flap board book by Abbey Wedgeworth to encourage your kids to use their eyes like Christ. I love the entire concept of this book and how we can use body parts like our eyes to worship God.
Through Eyes of Our Savior
Wonderfully illustrated by Emma Randall, this book is an engaging and delightful. I was most moved to share with my children that we can look up to God while also looking around to the needs of others in this world. Help your children see through the eyes of our Savior!
I received a media copy of What Are Eyes For? and this is my honest review.
My toddler loves these lift-the-flap books! We have the entire series now.
Beautiful and engaging book, with big flaps. Not only it talks about what eyes are for but also what they aren’t for. Seamlessly integrated with Bible verses and compared to Jesus and God. Written in a way that even the smallest readers will understand and learn from. I honestly couldn’t remember this book enough.
I have found these books to be extremely timely and helpful in the shepherding of our little ones hearts. I have three children under 6 and so sometimes, ears and eyes aren’t doing what I’d hope they’d be doing. These books have been just the tool we’ve (long) needed to bring a visual to the conversations we are consistently having around thinking of others and using our bodies to glorify God. Thank you Abbey for creating these incredibly practical tools which point our children’s hearts to Jesus and all he has done for them.
The books go through what our ears and eyes are for, what they are not for, that Jesus was once a child like them and that because of his loving sacrifice for us, we can say sorry and ask for his help. A wonderfully positive and clear message for our little ones. All with the assistance of the alluring lifting of the flaps ☺️
As a side note, I loved how inclusive the illustrations were too ♥️