Posted on 03/14/2011 6:05:59 PM PDT by laurenmarlowe
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Hi MA!
*HUGS*
Off to go pack some boxes, moving in ten days! WOO HOO!
Hopefully can pop back in a little later.
Y’all have a great evening!
Mahalo nui loa for another intesting place that I’ve heard about never visited. Tyndall is so impressive that I’m pinging Fidel and Raul in Cuba as well as Hugo in Venezuela. Seems the thing to do!
Nice to see you!
Thank you for tonights Road Trip!
How are ya?
Moving to Oregon?
Great, let's do lunch!!..:=)
HiYa Teen ... *hugs*
Doing fine .. and you?
One day down!
Weather still ugly?
Good evening, Hope, and thank you for our pledge! *hugs*
'Sup, big Sis?
It's finally college baseball season up here and my Oregon State Beavers Rock!!
10 in a row and 15-3 overall, going to the series here in a couple of weeks against the UC Santa Barbara "Gauchos", Spring is almost Sprung!!
internet is crashing here.....
I read about your vandals! Sheeeeeeesh!
Things aren't bad enough, they have to make them worse!
Hope you don't have a large deductible and your comprehensive covers it or, did you take the initiative and do it yourself?
Hope all is well with you!
How's Dad doing?
internet is crashing here.....
Globalwarming?
One of my favorite stories is about the Texas rancher who was doing agricultural consulting for a farmer in Germany. He asked the German farmer about the size of his property, to which he replied, About a mile square. When the German asked the Texan about the size of his ranch, the rancher explained that if he got in his pick-up truck at dawn and drove until sunset he would still be on his ranch. Not to be outdone, the farmer replied, I used to have an old truck like that!
All joking aside, its important to have the right perspective. Unfortunately, the Christians in Laodicea had the wrong perspective about wealth (Rev. 3:14-22). By all appearances, they were rich. They had plenty of earthly goods and thought they needed nothingnot even Jesus. But Jesus had a different perspective. In spite of their material prosperity, He saw that they were wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked (v.17). So He invited them to become truly rich by seeking what only He could provide: purity, character, righteousness, and wisdom.
Lets not make the Laodicean mistake. Instead, lets keep our perspective right about what it means to be rich. True wealth is not measured by what you have but by who you are in Christ.
I’m good, thanks! :)
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