Sunday, December 27, 2020

We live in a modern society of the legendary hero. A society that develops a functional pathway to success. We maintain the most autonomous society that has been developed on the face of the earth. We have a disconnect between what is in our heart and our view of the world. This imagination opposes genuine hope. The bible teaches we develop a callous heart. How we examine ourselves is that by which we think, feel, and act as we relate to our culture. The objective danger is the logical extremes of life.

The first thing that we require to recognize is people fall in a direction in a  disconnected way. We have a tendency in this secularist fashion, to project our cultural success in a meaningful way that maintains no proper view of social unity. Consequently, our personal view of our idealized image is very deceptive. Our problems ordinarily come from both logical extremes. On one hand, we project our moral importance when we judge the desired direction,  seeking to grasp why they go in that independent direction. Our view of the practical things that transpire as we vicariously experience to see,  hear, and touch. If we view this life in determining events by conclusions in the direction people take, we burden ourselves projecting our importance. We suffer a hard time as sinners accepting that people go in an imaginative course. We ordinarily grasp why and what needs to be lawfully done but we are not omniscient nor omnipresent.

  People go in grievous directions and remain a cause for concern. Solomon recorded the book of Ecclesiastes describing genuine grief as he was looking back over his  life. We are hasty to evaluate another person about things we have no knowledge of because we have been influenced in the same way that person reasoned. We represent the Pharisees falling under the loaded weight of sin and grief. But we are commanded to enthusiastically promote the beneficial interest of our brothers.

 Therefore, we discover the problems that Christians develop in view of themselves. Most problems are due to the familiar weight of something that we held not considered in the simplicity of the gospel. There is one thing about saying Christ died for the sins of His people but another valuable thing to accurately apply that identity to unburden our own hearts. We develop healthy relationships by how Christ has dealt with us in our salvation. We have a Shepherd who actually carries our burdens teaching us to walk in peace. 
 

 

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