Lenten Reflections – Forgiving – Day 37
Sean Quinn We are all born into a family not of our choosing and are challenged throughout life to create strong familial bonds with people who would otherwise be strangers. ⦠Read More
Sean Quinn We are all born into a family not of our choosing and are challenged throughout life to create strong familial bonds with people who would otherwise be strangers. ⦠Read More
Ruby M. Harmon I must admit that this “Lenten Reflection” has been one of the harder ones to pen. Perhaps because it requires a baring of the soul; a personal⦠Read More
Amanda L. Levering Being a “forgiving person” is a tricky thing. I’ve always excelled at giving others forgiveness, and although this was what I believed to be part of who⦠Read More
Susan Craig Now that I’m in my fourth decade, I have come to the realization that the person that I may need to forgive the most is MYSELF. Sure, there’s⦠Read More
Kathryn Carroll Perhaps I’ve lived a charmed life. Perhaps I’m the queen of denial. Perhaps I’ve been hard and soft wired to never play the victim, much less be one.⦠Read More
Nahal Hale I have been going to a self-evolvement course called Avatar since October of 1998. My daughters Haley and Sydne were 4 and 2 at the time. I loved⦠Read More
Jacquelyn Rebekka Bonner Whenever I despair, I remember that the way of truth and love has always won. There may be tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they may⦠Read More
Loyal Miles Poet William Carlos Williams wrote that there are “no ideas but in things”—a principle he practiced in his poetry through an emphasis on common language and the details⦠Read More
Naila Meyers In the chapter “Repentance” in her Lenten study on forgiveness, Majorie J. Thompson writes, “It can feel remarkably hard to apologize to someone, even for a relatively minor⦠Read More
Rebecca Grudzina Of all the steps in the process of forgiveness, I think repentance is the most out of style at the moment, at least for a bunch of 21st-century⦠Read More