We can\u27t make this event happen any more than we made creation happen. But we are a busy people and most days our frantic waiting drowns out the echo of our cries from deep within. Posting about anticipating Christ\u27s coming from In All Things - an online hub committed to the claim that the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ has implications for the entire world. http://inallthings.org/preparing-advent-and-psalm-51
During Advent, our focus is supposed to be on waiting for the Lord and what he will do. This season ...
Perhaps Advent is, in part, a season of remembering journeys in to strange lands and stories about l...
When I face challenges and am in the midst of one of life’s storms, I can look at Noah’s life and ha...
Consider how our lives might reflect a patient optimism for righteousness to prevail in our lives an...
The idea of preparing the way of the LORD is a word picture that reveals to us that the real prepara...
I often ponder on what it was like in the Old Testament: to know the promises of God, and yet to be ...
What are you doing to prepare your heart? How are you welcoming and inviting the Holy Spirit to fill...
On Christmas day we not only rejoice that our Savior was born, but also look with hopeful anticipati...
Waiting is open-ended, filled with hope for what God desires to bring us beyond our imagination. Po...
Are we even aware of our need for a Savior? Of our gratitude for deliverance? Could our material com...
Even as we expect Christ’s coming during this third week of advent, we also are aware of our need fo...
The lives of so many of the Old Testament saints are examples of waiting on the Lord; many provide a...
I am always thinking about what is next and wondering what God is doing in his bigger picture, yet S...
I learn that preparation is the work of waiting well: rejoicing, choosing to see what He sees, bowin...
As we struggle not to be overwhelmed by the Christmas season, I wonder: Do we still have a concrete ...
During Advent, our focus is supposed to be on waiting for the Lord and what he will do. This season ...
Perhaps Advent is, in part, a season of remembering journeys in to strange lands and stories about l...
When I face challenges and am in the midst of one of life’s storms, I can look at Noah’s life and ha...
Consider how our lives might reflect a patient optimism for righteousness to prevail in our lives an...
The idea of preparing the way of the LORD is a word picture that reveals to us that the real prepara...
I often ponder on what it was like in the Old Testament: to know the promises of God, and yet to be ...
What are you doing to prepare your heart? How are you welcoming and inviting the Holy Spirit to fill...
On Christmas day we not only rejoice that our Savior was born, but also look with hopeful anticipati...
Waiting is open-ended, filled with hope for what God desires to bring us beyond our imagination. Po...
Are we even aware of our need for a Savior? Of our gratitude for deliverance? Could our material com...
Even as we expect Christ’s coming during this third week of advent, we also are aware of our need fo...
The lives of so many of the Old Testament saints are examples of waiting on the Lord; many provide a...
I am always thinking about what is next and wondering what God is doing in his bigger picture, yet S...
I learn that preparation is the work of waiting well: rejoicing, choosing to see what He sees, bowin...
As we struggle not to be overwhelmed by the Christmas season, I wonder: Do we still have a concrete ...
During Advent, our focus is supposed to be on waiting for the Lord and what he will do. This season ...
Perhaps Advent is, in part, a season of remembering journeys in to strange lands and stories about l...
When I face challenges and am in the midst of one of life’s storms, I can look at Noah’s life and ha...