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The Peace Pulpit: What it means to change our lives — I suggest just one profound way and an important way for us to live in what is truly the richest country in the world.
In Luke 5:1-11 we see Jesus calling Peter. His response to Jesus is instructional to us. Jesus calls his disciples to abandon everything and follow him. Peter was the first disciple that Jesus called.
The Peace Pulpit: We have to carry the message of love of the Good Shepherd. Listen to Jesus, take in his words, follow his example, and change the situation in our world.
They teach me that spiritual progress tends to be characterized by a returning—to the places we call home, but doing so in light of Jesus’ love, power, and grace.
When Jesus calls out your name, impossibilities become possible. Your eyes are opened … Mary encountered a “gardener” outside the tomb, asking him where he had taken Jesus’ body.
This Sunday, in the liturgical readings of the Catholic Mass, believers continue to accompany the Lord Jesus on his southern journey to Jerusalem. The course for the Holy City was set after the ...
In How Jesus Became God, Bart Ehrman explores how a Jewish preacher from Galilee was transformed into a deity. "Jesus himself didn't call himself God and didn't consider himself God," Ehrman says.
As Christians, let’s make sure we are known by the way we love our neighbors as ourselves, especially those different from us.
We can’t relax and lead a comfortable life and stay close to Jesus. “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross and follow me,” Jesus says.
He Who died for us also calls us to die with Him. “If anyone would come after Me,” He said, “let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow Me” (Luke 9:23).
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