Happy Groundhog Day.
And after you’ve risen and shone, don’t forget your booties ‘cause it’s cold outside. (Our midsummer maximum today was 16.4 degrees Celsius at 10.00am)

Happy Groundhog Day.
And after you’ve risen and shone, don’t forget your booties ‘cause it’s cold outside. (Our midsummer maximum today was 16.4 degrees Celsius at 10.00am)

Empathy is not the same thing as knowing how someone feels. You can’t know exactly how someone feels. And their knowing that you felt the same way isn’t what they need anyway.
Empathy is appreciating the need for presence and support that others need in their pains, fears, and losses.
Our pains, fears, and losses draw us toward others in their experiences when those experiences would otherwise repel us away from them.
Think of the season of life when pain, fear, and loss were strangers. The pain, fear, and loss of others left us in retreat.
Our own pain, fear, and loss changes us so that when others suffer pain, fear, and loss we want to draw near.
Our pain, fear, and loss are not good. But this is one outcome they bring to our lives.
Jesus is the president of the fellowship of sufferers. When you go to him, expect to encounter understanding, compassion, and love … but that’s not enough, and God made it not enough. A friend of mine told me that he was never alone because Jesus was his “best friend.” While I get that, it is a denial of what it means to be human. Sometimes we need Jesus “with skin on.” Jesus said that we would do greater works than he himself had done (John 14:12). And one of those works is to walk in the darkness with our brothers and sisters.
A part of the sanctification process (and it should be a part of discipleship in the church) is preparation for a mature connection with one another. I believe that our own personal losses and pain are designed, at least par-tally, for that very purpose. It is making us “holy” enough to listen, love, accept, and laugh with brothers and sisters in Christ who, if it weren’t for us, would experience that alone. When I told a friend about a particularly difficult period in my life, he said, “You should not have had to face that alone. I wish I had known you then.”Steve Brown, Laughter And Lament, New Growth Press, 2022, pgs. 121.

The question “What is your church like?” or similar variations comes up time and again.
These days the model answer is apparently supposed to contain the words ‘vibrant’ and ‘authentic’, along with similar sentiments.
This little post from David Doran contains what I think is the best answer I’ve ever read: “What was your last church like?”
Read Doran’s post at this link, where he expands on the answer with a little story which also provides a couple more insightful answers for those seeking find out more about a local church.
In a world that seems increasingly polarised with harsh and judgmental opinions being thrown from every quarter against every other quarter it’s refreshing to take a moment or two to appreciate anything that can negate negativity itself and bring us all together in a moment of simple amusement.
Thank you Selfie Bear, the woodland inhabitant who decided to pose in front of a stationary wildlife camera for a some candid portraits
400 candid portraits in all.
Look around the inter webs for more if you’re interested.