“The beginning is always today” (Mary Wollstonecraft).
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“Hope makes room for love in the world. We can all share it, we can all believe in it, even if we are radically different in every other way. We no longer need to fear our differences because we have common ground. We can hope together—therefore, hope liberates us. It frees us from our fear of the other. It opens our eyes to see love all around us. It unites us and breaks our isolation. When we decide to embrace hope—when we choose to make that our goal and our message—we release a flow of energy that cannot be overcome. Hope is a light that darkness can never contain” (Steven Charleston).
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“No matter where life takes you, the place that you stand at any moment is holy ground. Love hard, and love wide and love long and you will find the goodness in it” (Susan Vreeland).
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“Think lightly of yourself and deeply of the world. (Miyamoto Musashi)
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“Only by first disposing ourselves to the joy of the Spirit that is ever on offer can we resist the crippling anxiety that otherwise cramps all our attempts at mission and witness. This doesn’t mean, of course, that our anxiety will go away completely . . . rather, we just mustn’t let it “stick” on any particular concern (“be anxious for nothing,” that is, in particular). As our greatest Afro-American spiritual guide of the 20th century, Howard Thurman, puts it in one of his meditations: “I must take a positive attitude toward the [very] thing that is the source of my disturbance. [For] I recognize that I am never alone … God is with me. He is present in the midst of my anxiety, as insight, as courage, as confidence. … [Whereas, in contrast, as Thurman goes on] Worry is against life. It is anti-vitality and anti-God” (Deep is the Hunger, 196, 197) (Sarah Coakley).
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“The issue for many people isn’t exactly a denial of truth as such. It’s more a growing weariness over the process of finding the truth at all. And that weariness leads more and more people to abandon the idea that the truth is knowable” (Sean Illing).
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“The way we learn to respond to pain and suffering is to press into it. Can we sit with it long enough to listen to what is wants to say? What is it trying to teach us? Can we listen to that ache in our lower back or to those cloudy thoughts that keep circling our mind? Because the beginning of all real healing, Henri Nouwen says, is solidarity with the pain. And this is the truth we keep bumping into into: pain does not define us – it refines us. If we can respond with the right intention, if we can sit with it long enough, if we can steward it, if we can let it do the work it wants to, then it will become a refining experience. But if we stifle pain and suffering, if we stuff all of the anger and despair down deep, then affliction will not refine us – it will define us (Jonathan R. Bailey).
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“In normal life we hardly realize how much more we receive than we give, and life cannot be rich without such gratitude” (Dietrich Bonhoeffer).

I love these. Thank you for the time they take to share them.
——–Chris Moore520-241-1625
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Thanks so much for a valuing them – and letting me know!
Thanks so much for reading them and for sharing that they have value for you.