About Madelon Maupin
Although Madelon Maupin's academic background includes both undergraduate and graduate degrees in Biblical Studies, it is probably her 35+ years in business and her strong emphasis on written and verbal communication that give BibleRoads its "punch." Madelon spent 15 years in the newspaper industry, cultivating a commitment to highly focused, content-rich presentation and a strong research background. Over the next 20 years she headed a leadership consulting firm in Los Angeles, where she worked with some of the film industry's top firms and developed a capacity for clear, direct verbal communication. Ever since closing her consulting firm, it has been Madelon's joy to focus full-time on BibleRoads.com, which allows her to combine all of her skills in the talks and workbooks she presents on Biblical topics. Madelon's goal is to help others unlock the Bible in a non-denominational way so that they can discover the Scriptures' spiritual meaning and application to their lives. By delving into the history, politics, geography, customs, and culture of all the Biblical periods and books, she aims to enable readers and listeners to dive deep into these subjects themselves so they can find their own spiritual answer.
Thank you Madelon for this inspiring message for the New Year. I will follow through….and may your New Year continue giving you blessings as you have given me…I’m so grateful.
Love this fresh view of starting a New Year by committing to what contributes to a meaningful life, rather than just self improvement! It seems to me that as our priorities line up to a closer relationship with God, our lives naturally take on purpose, harmony, productivity, joy and all of that ripples out to our dear world. Thanks Madelon!
So insightful! Spiritual growth vs self-improvement (alone). Efficient vs meaningful. Differences we may not even think about until somebody points it out.
Thank you for the emphasis on renewed purpose and action. I love this phrase from a Christian Science hymn 529:
“Turn the page, rewrite the story.” It speaks of moving forward and revision and releases us to living in the present.
Marsha