
Join Chris Duthie-Jung, Rosalie Connors & Colin MacLeod in conversation with John O’Connor reflecting on the scriptures of the Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary TIme – Sunday 2 October 2022.
Read the scriptures for this Sunday at this link.
Join Chris Duthie-Jung, Rosalie Connors & Colin MacLeod in conversation with John O’Connor reflecting on the scriptures of the Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary TIme – Sunday 2 October 2022.
Read the scriptures for this Sunday at this link.
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It’s easy to make the mistake of seeing life as a treadmill, day after day ups and downs, a movement through time from youth to old age, then death and beyond.
Too often if feels as if we are helplessly captive carried along by the momentum of all that is expected of us and demanded from us, and we risk falling into an existence mode, a daily rhythm of survival, enduring, coping and so the treadmill rolls on.
Over the years, and even in recent months, weeks and days, I’ve prayed many prayers which have not been answered as I had hoped.
You’ve probably had the same experience: praying and wondering if and when or how your prayer will be answered.
Bible questions still pop up regularly in quiz shows and they often cost otherwise sharp players much needed points.
I’m ready for a question asking for the two names for the last book of the Bible. The book often known as Apocalypse is perhaps more often referred to as the Book of Revelation.
It’s common (thanks to movies) to think of an apocalypse as a devastating and unwelcome time of destruction.
The pics I use on these daily posts are sometimes snapped by me, and often borrowed from free-use websites. I thought it might be interesting to move towards using only my own snaps, and then only those taken in the past 24 hours. We’ll see how I go.
I took the pic above yesterday morning on an early walk.
Perhaps we find the miracles of Jesus too difficult to understand. How can we cope with what we may not have seen with our own eyes?
Many people cope with the miraculous by reducing it to what they can understand. They say Jesus just increased the blind man’s psychological vision, or opened his eyes of faith rather than actually giving him physical sight.
I really enjoy these reflections, thanku. I loved the analogy of faith as breath.
Thanks Chris, Rosalie Colin and John for this episode. I like how everyone was chewing over what this free gift of faith really is and does. A question I need to spend time with also. Not quantifiable and more like breathing which we can qualify in terms of depth and speed. Because of faith we live …