Listening
Intuitive openness and acceptance of the Spirit’s yearning for us is an ancient path for God’s creative activity.
Intuitive openness and acceptance of the Spirit’s yearning for us is an ancient path for God’s creative activity.
am more like Zechariah than I am like Mary. When the angel visits with an unexpected insight of peculiar wonder, I am much more likely to ask, “How will I know that this is so?” than I am to respond, “Let it be with me according to your word.”
Amos’ prophecies, however, call us to a different place–a place of restoration. A place where the Kingdom of Interesting Times inches just a little pencil mark closer to the Kingdom of Heaven …
Ps. 55; PM: Ps. 138, 139:1-17 (18-23) Zechariah 8:9-17 Revelation 6:1-17 Matthew 25:31-46 ‘When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the
We know our Biblical history. We know that the rulers and the people failed to listen to the prophets over and over.
We beseech you, O Lord our God, be patient with us sinners. You who know our weakness, protect the work of your hands now and
She was in heaven, and there she met the dearest friends she had ever had. They loved her more than anyone else had ever loved her, and they knew her better than even her beloved family did. And she knew she loved them, more than anyone, even family. But, she wondered, she didn’t know their names.
To build a civilization in a new way. An open, defenseless city of welcome and hospitality. A city trusting in God rather than its own might. A city with God at its center instead of its own pride.
There is something about the flavor of Matthew 24-25 that is like a friend looking upon us — erect, bright-eyed, and smiling broadly — and saying, “Well, what did you expect?”
Some people today are constantly searching for signs that the end times are here, citing wars and famine, earthquakes and fires, abandoning the worship of the true God for a false one and failing to live in accordance with Biblical teaching.