An Unlikely Hero

An Unlikely Hero

Perhaps I shouldn't admit it, but I still think of certain works of literature as “girl books.”  I would never say such a thing about Jane Austen—a genius universal if there ever was one—but I have (intentionally) never read Anne of Green Gables or Little Women.  I like to announce, in mixed company, that I've never seen “Gone with the Wind” and then bask in the scandalized expressions. Which makes it all the stranger to confess that I love “Downton Abbey.”  When my wife raved about the six-season BBC series, my mind naturally dismissed it—I like football, not intrigues between valets and lady's maids.

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Suffering

Suffering

Suffering is one of the universal experiences of the Church. We are promised that in our walk with Christ we will experience hardship for His sake. Christ addresses this issue in John 16 as He explains to His followers that, “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” The amount and nature of our tribulations will be different for each believer. Some seem to suffer without end while others appear to escape all but the slightest of inconveniences. Whatever the degree, suffering is a part of the Christian life.

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Redeeming Discipline

Redeeming Discipline

For me the word discipline brings up many unsavory images. Coming from a family that believed in spanking growing up, I think the word takes me back to two main roots: receiving treatment for behavior that I undoubtedly incurred punishment for, and cartoons of Calvin (from the comic strip “Calvin and Hobbes”) of having to do things he hated because it built “discipline” and “character”.

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