Life’s circumstances, what we come to believe, the knowledge we acquire, and the truths we come to understand make us who we are as individuals. Such different paths our lives take. How might our differentness become our most promising strength to light the way to peace and life abundant?
Liz is a retired programmer consultant, a UUFH member and volunteer for ten years. She is a community volunteer currently serving on the county’s Environmental Advisory Board, helping to sustain the 7 th Avenue Community Garden in Green Meadows, and bio-monitoring macro invertebrates for Mountain-True’s water quality program. And, yes, a student of the sermon-writing class with Rev. Joan. Thank you, Joan!
Very nice, friend! A thoughtful and thought provoking sermon!
What a well-thought out sermon. You illustrate both the bravery and risk involved in standing up and challenging a perceived truth, in replacing it with another truth. Of course, our emotional need for absolutes is at the core of this problem. Let’s banish that illusory word–well o.k. along with “certainty,” “absolute,” “forever”….