Archive for the ‘Runnerryan’ Category
Survival Story of All Survival Stories
I just saw thisarticle linked ayak kokusu on Open Book about a child who has survived three abortion salyangoz kremi attempts before being born alive at 24 weeks in the abortion clinic. After the child was born, lida apparently mistakenly, he was
rushed to the hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit where he was on a ventilator for seven-and-a-half weeks.
He fought off lahana kapsüü several life-threatening infections and severe lung disease and was allowed home after seven biber hapı months.
I cannot wait to hear this child’s views on a woman’s right to choose in 20 years or so. Come to think of it, I wonder if his mother’s have now changed.
The Life in Christ
I’m not sure about anybody else, but most of the time I think I know my faith more than I feel it. Since I don’t really know that much, this could be problematic, but anyway…When I’m talking about feeling, though, I don’t mean thoughts of sunshine and whatnot, but rather those moments when something about God strikes me on such a level that I just have to stop and wonder for a moment. Today I had one of those when I finished reading Nicholas Cabasilas’s The Life in Christ.
After discussing, amongst other matters, the sacraments of Baptism, Chrismation, and the Eucharist, Cabasilas goes on to sum up our “Life in Christ” with some general comments. In discussing the fact that we are “slaves of Christ” he points out that Christ
paid the ransom, not in order to enjoy anything from those who have been ransomed, but in order that what is His might belong to them, and that the Master and His labours might profit the slaves, and that he who has been purchased might himself wholly possess Him who has purchased him.
This got me thinking about how much of the world views Christianity (at least I did in the past): namely that we are slaves to some power-hungry God who just wants to tell us what to do. The response to this thought is usually, “No one tells me what to do.”
We all know, however, that everything God does is based on love for us, and this little bit from Cabasilas really emphasized that for me. Christ didn’t empty Himself in order to do anything for His own good; He undertook all He did for our sake, so that we might become partakers of His nature. Sure, this is basic theology, but there are those times when I feel it more than I know it. I’ve come to appreciate them, because, for me at least, they are few and far between.