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Dialogues of the deaf - ReachFM: Peace Country s hub for local and Christian news, and adult contemporary Christian programming

Dialogues of the deaf - ReachFM: Peace Country s hub for local and Christian news, and adult contemporary Christian programming
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Things aren t always what they seem | Comment

This is part two of a series about Luanna, our hospice patient, and her husband, Henry. In part one, “My strength is made perfect in weakness”, we saw how the

Ready for a New Adventure? Make Sure it Has These Four Things – 96five Family Radio

Ready for a New Adventure? Make Sure it Has These Four Things Whether we’re renovating a house, starting a side business, writing a book or launching a new mission, adventures of all kinds keep our heart beating. By: Sheridan Voysey If the pandemic has been good for anything, it’s been good for my local park. During the first lockdown, kids made a line of hand-painted rocks that snaked for yards and yards. Fairy houses with tiny doors, windows and picket fences appeared at the base of tree trunks, and recently a community library was set up. Thanks to the ingenuity of locals, the park has never been so alive!

HAL BRADY: Faith and doubt

Upon the tragic death of a friend, Alfred Lord Tennyson wrote the poem “In Memoriam.” For a long time, Tennyson blamed God for the accident. It took him 16 years to regain his faith, but with significant insight he wrote: “There lives more faith in honest doubt, Believe me, than in half the creeds.” We would have lost this beautiful poem forever had not Tennyson honestly battled with his doubts and won. What exactly did Tennyson mean? I think he meant that a person who faces his/her doubts in complete honesty is a person of much greater integrity than those who simply rip off a creed without careful consideration.

Field Notes: Radishes sprout radical wisdom

To cheer up and share the goodness of life, this January, I planted a flat of radishes. The little recycled-plastic tub of dirt goes outdoors by day for a cold sunbath, but back inside at night, as my radish variety wants a soil temp of 40+ degrees. Still, these amazing root veggies can survive a freeze and flourish in clammy cold air that I consider spine-chilling. They somehow condense the minimal warmth and vague light of a mountain winter into little subterranean fireballs that can burn your gizzard. The miraculous crimson-skin, snowball-o-fire radish, with its gruff, non-glorious greens and quiet earthward-pointing root, has long been thought a restorative and health tonic. To me, it’s also an uplifting source of wonder that never gets old or explainable.

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