What Jesus Meant When He Called Us Family
What the early church can teach us about living together, and loving, as Jesus intended.
What the early church can teach us about living together, and loving, as Jesus intended.
The biggest and easiest need to meet during this season is the need to belong.
Here are two practical ways Jesus is meeting me in my story and showing me grace in my Christmas melancholy.
Isn’t that language of “sharpening” rather wonderful? What if we thought of ourselves as being sharpened, not simply worn down?
Tables are places to eat, connect, laugh, cry, pray, and be human. Most of all, tables are a place to belong and feel included.
Through my cooking, I balance the tension of living with the longings from Eden and awaiting the hope of New Jerusalem. What’s your cooking?
Even if you forget everything else, remember this: You have a gift to give others in the way you interact with them and listen to them.
We should often examine our own thinking: Where are we accepting a false ideal? Where are we passing judgments when we should be offering grace?
It’s the age-old question in the church: Where and when does friendship turn into romance, and how can we keep them divided?
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