Teenage Love Relationship We have spoken in the past of how, if we take an 'adult' approach to what might be called romance relationships (I use the term loosely), love can seem childish or even meaningless. But there are reasons why one partner may find a romantic relationship with another – for example, a mother who sees her child playing as she walks home from school and wants to keep them company whilst they do so; both parents wanting to spend time together outside their marriage at weekends due that such things become more frequent now but would prefer not to get too involved because it will affect all aspects going forward - whether he/she feels like becoming engaged late The prospect of your teen beginning to date is of course unnerving. It is easy to fear your child getting hurt, getting in over their head, being manipulated or heartbroken, and particularly, growing up and leaving the nest. But as uncomfortable or scary as it may feel to think about your child with a r...
Egoism and the self-denying nature of Jesus. Whether or not Jesus is the way to salvation is a moot point and is open to debate, but even if Jesus was not, we do not have to be him, and we do not have to be someone, to point our way to Him. As a pastor, as a Christian, as a man, Jesus set an example of self-denial for us to follow. And so we do not need to become self-denying saints to glorify God, but we can be self-denying, self-denying servants of God. That is the ideal of the man Jesus described. Self-denying servants of God are, ultimately, self-absorbed and selfish men, not self-denying saints. But our self-denial is not self-denying virtue and self-denying goodness. Our self-denying love of God is selfish and self-serving and false. Our self-denying love of Jesus is honest and genuine and true. Self-denying saints of the Bible are, first and foremost, individuals. But self-denying servants of God are, ultimately, churches, like the church at Ephesus, and self-denying churc...
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