For liturgical Christians-and you know who you are, lol!-this is such a sad and somber time in the church year.
At my church, on Wednesday evenings in Lent, we have a simply supper in community and then go to the sanctuary and do Stations of the Cross as well as the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. Nope-we're not Roman Catholic.
How does your church commemorate the last 40 days of our Lord's life and ministry?
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
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Indeed, gold will NOT buy everything and though trite, the best things in life are free.
ReplyDeleteThe Bible tells us that it's easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into heaven.
It is often the smallest, most humble acts that have the greatest affect...like the woman in the Bible who gave 2 mites out of her lack which in the eyes of God was worth more than larger tithes given by wealthy people.
The things that gold does buy are temporal-they will fade away but what God gives, those things will never fade away.