How cute!
Good Morning GB.{{{HUGS}}}
Wonderful thread.:)
The Kittens better look out
looks like there will be frost on the pumpkin soon!
Perhaps a warm fluffy or Warm feathery rather than warm fuzzy???
I took many pix Sunday close to sunset as I was biking. This pix is NOT far from where I live. I was biking on the towpath in the valley behind my home & captured the blue heron & a pair of mallards.
I have seen this SAME heron many times over the years. They are very territorial in their FISHING/living spots. They also rebuild or USE the same nest every year, This one is always in the canal within about 30 feet of this spot.
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October 11, 2006
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Those who walk in pride He is able to put down. Daniel 4:37
After being warned by Daniel about his pride, the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar was struck with insanity. The Lord restored his mind, but only after he spent 7 years in a field thinking he was a wild animal.
Nebuchadnezzar went from boasting, "Is not this great Babylon, that I have built for . . . the honor of my majesty?" (Dan. 4:30) to a humble prayer: "I, Nebuchadnezzar, praise and extol and honor the King of heaven" (v.37). He had repented of prideful empire building.
Bible teacher J. Vernon McGee expressed concern about empire building in the church today. He advised Christian leaders, "Don't try to build a little empire of your church. I started out with that viewpoint, and I had never been more unhappy." He encouraged them to "build into the lives of people" and leave the results to God.
When a church devotes undue energy to statistics, buildings, and programs, pride can enter in and the needs of God's people can be forgotten.
Jesus never forgot the importance of individuals. He invested His time in 12 men (Mark 3:14). Paul discipled Timothy who in turn discipled others (2 Tim. 2:2). God's kingdom grows when we invest in people.
Bible in One Year: Bible in One Year; Isaiah 37-38; Colossians 3
GeeBee and I, along with her knowledgeable rose forum friends, have determined that the mystery rose that I have been trying to identify is probably a "Tropicana". Thanks so much for your help with this, GeeBee.
I am posting a photo of it here, in case one of you recognizes it and has a differing opinion. But, unless someone else tells me differently, I believe we have discovered it's name. :-)
I am a bit embarrassed to post this since my husband reminded me that, even though it is a "very nice photo", I forgot one of the cardinal rules of photography; to mist it with water before taking the picture - me of all people, being married to a photographer! Now I will have to wait until next spring to get a misted shot of this rose, as this one has finished blooming for the season. :-(
Hope you all have a wonderfully warm, fuzzy and rosy Wednesday.
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