An Invitation

Our Physical Health and Spiritual Health.

The invitation to start the conversation that deals with our physical health I am finding on the front cover of a magazine.

Can I invite you to start the conversation that deals with our spiritual health?

LIFE

“Listen, are you breathing just a little and calling it life?” asks the American poet Mary Oliver.

I am glad she asks that question

In John 10:10 the Lord Jesus Christ says, “‘I have come that they may have  life and have it to the full.'”

And in John 11:25 the Lord Jesus Christ says not only that he is the life, but that he is also the resurrection.

The Lord said to Martha, “‘He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?'” (John 11:25,26)

I believe in the name of the Son of God and I know that I have eternal life. (First John 5:13)

No, I am not  breathing just a little and calling it life!

“ONE WAY”

The hymn “I have decided to follow Jesus,” comes to my mind, when I am thinking about “One Way.”

One – Way traffic means moving in one direction only.

“One Way”

In verse two of the hymn “I have decided to follow Jesus,” the hymnwriter says that the world is behind and the cross is before.

In verse three the hymnwriter will still follow the Lord Jesus Christ even though nobody else will.

In the last verse the writer of the hymn asks, “Will you decide now to follow Jesus?”

All four verses  of  the hymn have the same ending, namely: “No turning back, no turning back.”

The Tongue (Fiction)

“They have found him dead in THE VALLEY!”

It was one day before Christmas, when the sad news spread like a wildfire through the little remote village in the mountains of Switzerland.

Sepp was one of the best mountain climbers in the village, and was missing for quite some time.

Now everybody asked the question, “What happened?”

Christmas Day Ida rushed into her neighbor’s house , where she found her gossiping with Lotte and drinking tea with the latest news, “They found a paper in one of Sepp’s pockets on which was written, ‘The tongue has the power of life and death.'”