tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8154347309622566061.post3793009232897479191..comments2023-03-31T04:03:21.957-04:00Comments on Joy B. Rudolph: At The Intersection of Faith and Life: We Are DisgustingJoyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06610739249516777157noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8154347309622566061.post-73585485521383479112012-08-21T11:22:15.883-04:002012-08-21T11:22:15.883-04:00So good, Brian. We can each do well the things God...So good, Brian. We can each do well the things God has equipped us to do and made us passionate about. I just never want to live as though the things my society deems as "permissible" are acceptable. <br />Joyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06610739249516777157noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8154347309622566061.post-86027104325320794372012-08-16T09:38:14.754-04:002012-08-16T09:38:14.754-04:00Pick one person, one corner, one issue to make a d...Pick one person, one corner, one issue to make a difference in. Find one or two or thirty others who will join you. I think we try to play God sometimes by thinking too big. If we start small and find some "success" we can allow God to build on it if he wants. <br /><br />I think too that the "weight of sin" is a motivator to us to do something, rather than a ball and chain that drags us down. If it drags you down, then you aren't walking in the freedom of grace. On the other hand, most of us walk in so much freedom and grace that we don't allow the enormity of the sin/error/unrighteousness to affect our lifestyles. That's probably the biggest problem in American Christianity.<br /><br />So I love that you take personal responsibility for it. You are a beacon to the rest of us, showing us the way to go. Praise him.Brian Daniel Stankichhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03588500291867768530noreply@blogger.com