Dear God-Thank You.org
My colleague Rob Hatch just referred me to this site: Dear God-Thank You.org.
What a cool way to use the web!
Has anyone else seen any innovative church sites?
My blog is dedicated to the turning point in the Parable of the Lost Son, "when he came to his senses..." (Luke 15:17). For me, pursuing passion is a journey of coming to my senses...of me "waking up and smelling the coffee."
This blog is an incomplete chronicle of that journey. Here are my thoughts on life, simplicity, personal productivity, the Kingdom of God, and...coffee.
My colleague Rob Hatch just referred me to this site: Dear God-Thank You.org.
I just read an interesting editorial in the Morning Sentinel by James K. Glassman about Kyoto and the US. (Sorry, try as I might, I was unable to find a link to this editorial.)
Peter and his companions were very sleepy, but when they became fully awake, they saw [Jesus'] glory and the two men standing with him.
I just was referred to this blog posting from Stanley Road Baptist Church while listening to a podcast from The Blogging Church.
I wonder if the topic of the sermon would mean more to us personally if we sat round small tables with a cup of coffee and then discussed it afterwards.I know Todd Hunter was experiencing with this in Southern California a few years ago.
In a the his most recent sermon (available here), Phil Strout mentioned something about "give us our daily bread" meaning "give us tomorrow's bread." I'd heard that so I decided to Google it. And the BBC's site was the first to come up!
"It probably means daily, it probably means the stuff we need to survive, but at least some people in the early church understood it to mean the bread we want for tomorrow or even the bread of tomorrow; 'give us today tomorrow's bread'.
And they've thought that might mean give us now a taste of the bread we shall eat in the Kingdom of God. Give us a foretaste of that great banquet and celebration where the universe is drawn together by Christ in the presence of God the Father."
Just catching up on my Bloglines subscriptions when I came across this post from Seth Godin. Seth's Blog: Understanding Local Max
People all over the state, from Portland, Lewiston, and Waterville, have been telling me I've been on their TV screens.
Or better, su crisis mi crisis?