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A Poem for All Saints Day- sometimes I cannot always be there
Work itself is the topic. How we work. Why we work. To what ends we work. With whom do we work? etc. etc.
These questions address the core issue of the stewardship of our lives. A freedom and responsibility shared by every one of us.
The questions far out-number the answers.
Spaghettipie, I always enjoy hearing from you too. HR at TI, huh? That sounds very interesting. Your comment reminds me of a comment I read at Jesus Creed this morning from John Frye: We in the evangelical camp have turned witness into “teller of all things Gospel.†I believe witness is the “story†we have about meeting God through Jesus. In many ways, John is beginning to get at something very important to TheHighCalling.org. Witness has as much to do with the quality of our work as it does the quantity of our Jesus talk. Maybe more.
Which is why I love what The High Calling does. It breaks down those barriers. Faith is physical. It's not something that can be relegated to any corner. If that's so, why did Jesus heal the sick? Why did he eat with the lonely? Why did he feed the hungry? Why on earth (yes, I use that phrase purposefully) did he physically raise from the dead? Jesus models a life of faith that is holistic.
Okay, done with diatribe #4,782. I'll let you have your soapbox back.
You know, this is one of the reasons I love zombies. Not that Jesus was a zombie mind you, but the inversion of resurrection helps clarify the idea of resurrection.
I blogged about it at:
http://redletterbelievers.blogspot.com/2008/03/...