Monday, October 19, 2009

Our Christian Lives

Faith provides liberty and breadth to our Christian lives, encourages us to discover ideas from beyond the current epoch to allow our point of view of life to be equitable and universal. We must learn to question our lives and our world. We must learn to examine our actions, beliefs, and thoughts. We must judge our behavior and make adjustments to be more Christian, to be more charitable. Our point of view should be directed toward heaven and eternal life; our focus should be on fairness and justice. If all our lives were reviewed and rated like new novels and movies by critics, every word and gesture analyzed, would anyone be able to learn about our belief in God, about our faith.

Faith is salutary. It provides answers about our existence and prescience. Lucent is our honest and true faith. Our lives our brief and vincible. Faith is infinite, encourages us to survey, imagine life beyond ourselves. Faith prepares and leads us to eternal life.

Goodness follows those whose lives are filled with lenity. Our goal should always be to serve, to help. Our goal should be to offer aide and love unconditionally to all of our neighbors. And we might hope for eternal life. And we do imagine how eternal life will be and what heaven will look like.

But it is a noteworthy fact that ideas about eternal life may inspire altruism and social justice. Knowledge requires focus and study; our mental abilities will use our experience and observation to form questions and solutions. Ideas about eternal life are beyond our physiological views, are more sacred and spiritual.

Our spiritual lives influence and help to form our individual characters. We have different tendencies and idiosyncrasies which help to create and to promote our images of our eternal life. The Bible provides suggestions, our mind designs and builds gardens and palaces.

Our Christian lives remind us about other considerations that help define us as the faithful. We are prepared for eternal life by our personal humility, compassion, and adherence to God’s laws and teachings.Our Christian lives depend upon something intrinsic to nurture our faith.

My life balances hope and love; I learn about saints and miracles. My mind looks for goodness, struggles to be good, fair, and just. I am human. I have moments of being alone, moments of feeling alone. At the end of the conversation, I have danced around all types of social formulas, observed social mythologies develop and then be abandoned, recorded different social metamorphoses and name and address changes. At the end it is what can’t be seen, the spiritual developments that are important.

Faith helps us communicate with God.

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