Crazy to me that the people who lived when Christ did, the people who followed him, had no idea how incredibly lucky and blessed they were to actually meet him.
What a beautiful ode to Christ Jonathan, not meaning to make a pun. It is, seriously, quite beautiful. Through your piece, I think Christ is cultivating in me at least a moment of integrity and harmony...one step at a time. 1 Col. 16-17 enables me, through the Holy Spirit, to see work, rest, and relationships as related parts of a continuum of worship. "In the Lord, your work is not in vain." Every small endeavor, in Dr. Keller's words, in response to God's calling, matters for eternity. Thank you for this Jonathan. Sitting at my desk, working on a pleading and with my eyes starting to glaze over, I am now awake to something--Someone greater.
Crazy to me that the people who lived when Christ did, the people who followed him, had no idea how incredibly lucky and blessed they were to actually meet him.
What a beautiful ode to Christ Jonathan, not meaning to make a pun. It is, seriously, quite beautiful. Through your piece, I think Christ is cultivating in me at least a moment of integrity and harmony...one step at a time. 1 Col. 16-17 enables me, through the Holy Spirit, to see work, rest, and relationships as related parts of a continuum of worship. "In the Lord, your work is not in vain." Every small endeavor, in Dr. Keller's words, in response to God's calling, matters for eternity. Thank you for this Jonathan. Sitting at my desk, working on a pleading and with my eyes starting to glaze over, I am now awake to something--Someone greater.