The “gift of life,” God’s special gift, is no less beautiful when it is accompanied by illness or weakness, hunger or poverty, mental or physical handicaps, loneliness or old age. Indeed, at these times, human life gains extra splendor as it requires our special care, concern and reverence. It is in and through the weakest…
This week we have suffered the loss of more precious people we love and now miss. Like them, we must keep our focus not on what we can see, but upon what we cannot see, that which is eternal and not temporary.
What can we do when a friend or loved one turns their back on the Lord who died to save them?
We have gone through a great week of Thanksgiving as a holiday. Who among us will be “one” who returns regularly to give thanks?
David shows us the way to live life and draw close to God when life is not as we want it to be.
As we gather with loved ones Thursday to celebrate our bounty of blessings, let us remember to thank God for His unspeakable gift, His only Son, for what He has done, is doing, and promises to do.
In a world of religious confusion, Jesus could not be clearer on the subject of eternal salvation. He is the world’s Savior and the only way to the Father in Heaven.
What does it mean for mankind if we are only creatures instead of persons created in the image of God?