“I get the cross. And I don’t think it has anything to do with what I have been taught. “
Want to find out what I mean by that?
Is this another false teaching to be avoided – or a truth to be embraced?
“I get the cross. And I don’t think it has anything to do with what I have been taught. “
It’s probably just more “click bait” – an outrageous statement just to draw you in.
Or is it … ?
“I get the cross. And I don’t think it has anything to do with what I have been taught. “
This journeying is a very personal thing. “No one comes to the father except through me” invites this journeying to be a very personal thing. Invites going “off-piste” or else the road is wide and straight and someone else’s construction.
“I get the cross. And I don’t think it has anything to do with what I have been taught. “
Want to ski off-piste for a few minutes?
🙂
Thank you –
Paul
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In every training scenario my whole life – work, home and play – there is one constant:
Asking for help is a good thing.
And then the training finishes (and asking for help becomes a bad thing again).
Help please.
There was one time in my life when “asking for help” brought help advice from all sides. Every single person gave “good help advice”: to give up on someone – to give up on loving someone. And the help advice was the same from all sides – and that made “it” a force of its own – an assumption of unanimity – a decision taken without ever being taken.
Apart from one.
.
.
One voice that invited me to hope. Gave not advice but unconditional help love. One voice out of all the voices – even though all the other voices were also of love.
But a…
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