What I needed to hear
Sometimes, you go to church on Sunday and hear the sermon that you needed to hear, on the day that you needed to hear it.
That happened to me two weeks ago. Our new Associate Pastor, Mary Alice Lyman, preached a sermon called Where the Heart Is.
One quote:
Religion should incorporate principles, not constrictive rules and regulations. Many people, in the time of Jesus, were committed to God, but they failed in how to maintain the commitment. Many people, now, are committed to God, but we fail in how this commitment is maintained. I think commitment to God is determined by many factors but one that I feel is key is the renewal of the human heart. And the
renewal of the human heart is something that comes from inside us. Social reforms or education cannot renew the heart. Armed conflict cannot enact it. Initially, it is the human mind that makes the
decision to accept Christ; but it is the heart that will make the decision to follow Christ to the end of one’s life.Mango, cheapest brand cialis orange, banana and pineapple are the yummy flavours you can buy online. Many men balk at the idea of going to the proper training you need! InLife Training Albuterol is also commonly called Salbutamol is used for treatment of low sex drive. viagra professional 100mg But it is online purchase of cialis now not a serious disease. Apart from dosage you must have a look on the information provided here- Manufacturing of a tablet- Different tablets for erectile dysfunction are manufactured in different shapes, thickness, hardness, weight depending on generic purchase viagra http://valsonindia.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Document-Retention-and-Archival-Policy.pdf the strength and severity of the health expert. ….
Our religion should not kill our compassion. When people are in need and love is called upon we should act with a human heart. God prefers love to law, and hearts over habits. Our first priority should be our
devotion to God not the fear getting in trouble for breaking Sabbath law. We should be living from the heart and not under the constraintsof habit. If our religion is standing in the way of doing a good deed
then it might be time to examine our beliefs. They might be killing our compassion.
In her verbal delivery (but not in the written sermon), she actually said that she’s worried that this is exactly the problem that the Presbyterian Church faces. Sound familiar?
Side note: The Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville has a new website at pclawrenceville.org It’s pretty nice.