Tag: salvation

  • Impact of High-Potency THC on Youth

    I recommend listening to this informative podcast by Michael Savage titled “Cannabis Crimes: How High-Potency THC Marijuana is Destroying America’s Youth” featuring Laura Stack. In this podcast, President Trump reclassified cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III. Savage and Laura Stack discuss the impact of high-potency THC marijuana on adolescent brain development, public health, and the normalization and legalization of marijuana. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-savage-nation/id635045292?i=1000741964629

  • Exploring Grace in A Christmas Carol

    You’re invited to a special presentation by Matt Pandel, President of Global Grace Seminary: “A Christmas Carol Through the Lens of Grace”

    🎥 Watch here: https://youtu.be/C6Q78DxStc8?si=5Tljz3dAYYhBO4U0

    Matt will explore Dickens’ classic tale, uncovering how themes of redemption and grace shine through Ebenezer Scrooge’s journey. It’s a meaningful reflection for the Advent season and a beautiful way to prepare our hearts for Christmas.

    Join us and be inspired by this timeless story told through the lens of grace. 💕✌️🙏

  • Biblical Lesson: Transforming Faith Through Deconstruction

    This weeks biblical lesson inspired by Michael Morrell’s conversation on “From Deconstruction to Contemplative Composting” in the Rethinking God with Tacos podcast: it invites us to see faith not as something to be discarded when it breaks down, but as something that can be composted—transformed into fertile soil for deeper growth in Christ.

    1. Breaking Down Is Not the End

    • Deconstruction: Many believers experience seasons where old certainties collapse. This can feel like loss, but Scripture reminds us that God works even in dismantling. “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit” (John 12:24).
    • Faith traditions, doctrines, or practices that no longer sustain us can be broken down, not to destroy, but to prepare for renewal.

    2. Composting as Transformation

    • Contemplative composting: Michael Morrell uses the metaphor of composting—taking what seems dead and letting it become nourishment for new life.
    • In biblical terms, this echoes Paul’s teaching: “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has passed away; behold, the new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17).
    • What feels like waste or failure can, through prayer and contemplation, become the very soil where love and wisdom grow.

    3. Consent and Community in Faith

    • Consent in spirituality: The podcast emphasizes that authentic faith requires freedom, not coercion. Jesus himself invited rather than forced: “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).
    • Community and curiosity: Composting is not done alone. The early church thrived in community, “devoted to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship” (Acts 2:42). Questions and curiosity are not threats but gifts that deepen discipleship.

    4. Mysticism and the Power of Love

    • Mysticism: Morrell highlights the contemplative tradition—silence, prayer, and mystical union with God.
    • Scripture affirms this: “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10).
    • Transformative love: Love is the ultimate fruit of composted faith. “Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony” (Colossians 3:14).

    Practical Takeaways

    • Allow old forms of faith to break down without fear—they can become the soil for new growth.
    • Practice contemplative prayer as a way of composting doubts and struggles into wisdom.
    • Stay rooted in community, where curiosity and questions are welcomed.
    • Keep love central, for it is the fruit God desires from every season of transformation.

    This lesson reframes deconstruction not as a crisis but as a sacred process of renewal. Just as compost transforms decay into life, so God transforms our brokenness into deeper communion with Him. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rethinking-god-with-tacos-podcast/id1505604825?i=1000741606281

  • Enlighten Us

    May God the Father bless us; may Christ take care of us; the Holy Ghost enlighten us all the days of our life.

    The Lord, be our defender and keeper of body and soul, both now and forever, to the ages of ages. Saint Aethelwold (d. 984) Bishop of Winchester and monastic reformer

  • A Blessing for Grandparents

    Lord Jesus, you were born of the Virgin Mary, the daughter of Saints Joachim and Anne.

    Look with love on grandparents the world over. Protect them! They are source of enrichment for families, for the church and of all society.

    Support them! As they grow older, may they continue to be for the family, strong pillars of gospel faith, Guardian of Noble domestic ideals, living, treasuries of sound religious traditions.

    Make them teachers of wisdom and courage, that they may pass on to future generation the fruit of their mature human and spiritual experience.

    Lord Jesus, help families and society to value the presence and roles of grandparents. May they never be ignored or excluded, but always encounter respect and love.

    Help them to live serenely and to feel welcomed in all the years of life which you give them.

    Mary, Mother of all living, keep grandparents constantly in your care, accompany them on their earthly pilgrimage, and by your prayers, Grant at all families, may one day be reunited in our heavenly homeland, where you await all humanity with the great embrace to live with that end. Amen. Pope Benedict. XVI (1927-)

  • Scripture Blessing for Youth

    The Lord created you just the way you are, inside and outside. He formed and shaped you when you were still in your mother’s womb. He designed you with a special purpose. You are wonderful just the way you are. And never forget. God has incredible plans for your life. Plans for success, not failure…plans to fill you with hope and excitement for your future. Paraphrase from Psalm 139:13-14 and Jeremiah 29:11

  • A Blessing for Parents

    Almighty God, you know what it is like to be both Mother and Father to us all.

    We ask you, the source and sustainer of all life, to bless these parents in the role you have set before them.

    Get their lips with the wisdom to speak the truth so it can be heard.

    Gift their ears with sensitivity as they listen to the needs of their children.

    Gift their souls with the faith radiating your ultimate presence and their life.

    Gift their minds with patience and understanding to handle the changing needs and demands place before them each day.

    Guide our hearts as they seek out and reconcile the areas of conflict and pain that may exist.

    And through all these, may your abundant blessings continue to affirm and support all they do as parents.

    We asked this blessing upon each of them, in the name of the father, the son and the Holy Spirit. Amen. – A prayer for world youth day.

  • A Blessing For Youth

    Almighty God,

    We ask your blessings upon our young people, gathered here. You have gifted each one of them in a special and unique way. May they come to know, and share the wonder, and all that lives within them as they grow and wisdom, knowledge, and understanding of you.

    Guide and sustain them as they discern your invitation to your discipleship.

    Bless their openness and enthusiasm and allow their questions to enliven and challenge us as a community of believers gathered to do your will.

    Strengthen and support the many good works they do. Challenge and provoke them along their journey of faith so they may help lead church into the possibilities of tomorrow.

    In all these things, we ask your blessings upon them this day, in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

    Amen. – A Prayer for World Youth Day

  • A Blessing to Forget and to Remember

    Always remember to forget the things that made you sad. But never forget to remember the things that made you glad. Always remember to forget the friends that prove untrue. But never forget to remember those who have stuck by you. Always remember to forget the troubles that passed away. But never forget to remember the blessings that come each day. -Traditional Irish Blessing.

  • Bless This Nation

    O Lord, our Heavenly Father, I and mighty King of kings, and Lord of the lords, who dost from your throne, behold all the dwellers on earth and reignest in the power supreme and uncontrolled over all Kingdoms, Empires, and governments; look down your mercy, we beseech Thee, on these are American states, who have fled to Thee from the rod of the oppressor and thrown themselves on your gracious protection, desiring to be henceforth dependent only on thee.

    To Thee have they appealed for the righteousness of their cause; to Thee do they now look up for that countenance and support, which thou alone canst give. Take them, therefore, Heavenly Father, under your nurturing care; give them wisdom and Council and valor in the field; defeat the malicious designs of our cruel adversaries; convince them of the unrighteousness of their cause, and if they persist in their sanguinary purposes, O, let thy the voice of Thy own on unerring justice, sounding in their hearts, constrain them to drop the weapons of war from their unnerved hands in the day of battle!

    Be thou present, O God of wisdom, and direct the councils of this honorable assembly; enable them to settle things on the best and surest foundation. That the scene of blood may be speedily closed; that order, harmony and peace may be effectively restored, and truth and justice, religion, piety, prevail, and flourish among the people. Preserve the health of their bodies and vigor of their minds; shower down on them and the millions they here represent, such temporal blessings as thou seest expedient for them in this world and crown them with everlasting glory in the world to come.

    All this we ask in the name and through the merits of Jesus Christ, Your Son and our Savior. Amen – Reverend Jacob Duche (1737-1798), Rector of Christ Church of Philadelphia, First prayer of the Continental Congress, 1774