So do you ever feel like you're heading somewhere you're unsure of, that you're in a place that's uncomfortable or scary, that you've just come out of a time of sadness or worry, that you know that difficult times may be ahead.... and how often do we try to blame it on someone or something; a situation, an environment, a person, something evil, something good gone wrong... it's a place I have often found myself in during those seasons in life. It's a place I have often found my friends or family in during those seasons in their life and it makes you think about the reasons for those seasons...
At a recent Sunday meeting Alan shared with us some interesting and encouraging thoughts. I found they really spoke to me, not necessarily because I'm in one of those seasons at the moment but also because it will prepare me with encouragement for when those certain situations may occur in the future in my life but also for other people.
We were looking at Mark 1: 7-13- Jesus' baptism and the sending of the Spirit upon Jesus; the Holy Spirit seals Jesus in love. We were looking at the roles of the Holy Spirit within this world; within our lives by looking at the Holy Spirit in Jesus' life. As the Spirit came upon Jesus, God the Father's love covered him. The Holy Spirit communicates the Father's love to us. We can be constant in God's love for us. When we feel low and rubbish remember he loves us as much as he does when we feel elated and on top of the world.
After Jesus' baptism he was driven into the wilderness where he was tempted and tested. But, he wasn't driven into the wilderness by Satan; he was driven into the wilderness by the Holy Spirit; he was driven into a place of hardship and of temptation, by the Spirit. This goes against all predisposed ideas of what we think when we are in those seasons and in those situations in life. We so often blame the situation on the devil- and yes in some cases the devil does attack us in those ways because we live in an imperfect world and our bodies and lives are imperfect, and sometimes we run away from God's direction and run into the wilderness ourselves. But also we need to look at what happened in Jesus' life. He was driven not walked into the wilderness, he was driven to the wilderness and allowed to be in a position of hardship and temptation because the Spirit drove him there. So we may be asking ourselves why would/does this happen? Well this is a very good question and one that challenged me.
One way of looking at it is by looking at the next part of Jesus' life. When he came out of the wilderness he went on to complete his first missional talk - the Sermon on the Mount. Ok so what does this mean? Well we learnt that within the wilderness of our life, in those situations, of those seasons something amazing, yet may be subtle is happening! We may be being driven to the limits, to the extremes, to the boundaries of physical pain/hurt, led into uncertainty, and quite often we feel stripped of all reliance and hope within ourselves and upon ourselves to get through that situation or season. We may even become so broken or confused without any understanding YET where it's uncomfortable that's where The Comforter can comfort us. The Holy Spirit (The Comforter) steps in and allows us to place our reliance on him completely. This may sound trivial but the impact is massively changing! If it's the uncertainty of the path our life is taking, if it's the sudden fear of an illness, whether it's the place of massive temptation that you are struggling to over come the Holy Spirit is there, he is the person that will be the only dependable element within that situation. And within this he increases our reliance on him and shows himself to us in different ways. Within those wilderness seasons the Holy Spirit loves to turn them into gardens of Eden, so let's hang on in there long enough by clinging onto the promise of the Spirit to comfort us and communicate the Father's love to us.
Another role of the Holy Spirit is to send us out empowered by himself. Let's not resist the leading of the Spirit into the wilderness, and I'm talking about when we're being lead into those wildernesses which are maybe a place of uncertainty. Let's go to the wilderness in obedience and rather then praying for God to get us out, let's pray to be got through. Within the wilderness God is moulding and shaping us and realigning us with Himself, our reliance increases upon Him and He is equipping us to get through the situation he has called us into as well as equipping us for the task he is secondarily calling us into as we return from the wilderness. We may not know what that secondary calling is but we can be excited for what God is directing us into because He is sovereign and He is God!
These are just some of my reflections from Alan Frow's (Southlands Church) talk at our church. Other's may have drawn different personal meaning for themselves but these were the areas that really spoke into my life and situations as I stand today.
Why not check out the talk at http://www.thehousenewcastle.org/SermonsMedia/AllSeries/TheGospelofMark.
My purpose driven life..
Sunday, 18 March 2012
Thursday, 14 April 2011
You can change
This week I have been at the Christian Conference New Word Alive in North Wales. It has been an awesome, well-needed week of refreshing teaching amongst a crazy season in my life.
One of the seminar tracks I went too each day was by Tm Chester, the Director of the Porterbrook Institute and a leader in The Crowded House church in Sheffield.
The seminars were titled 'You can change' and the theme was broken down into 10 points exploring the theme further.
If we look at our lives I'm sure we can all find something in it that we would like to change; and especially as Christians I'm sure there are various sins we want to change and maybe even attempt to change. We don't have to look far into ourselves and into the world before we realise that things do not always work in harmony, there are problems in the order of things and imperfections that clearly confront us all in the face. The world, and us included are not as they were meant to be. We were created in God's image to reflect God's glory. But when we rejected God, that image was broken and we were then less of the image we should be. Enter Jesus- the true image of God who perfectly reflects God's glory. So instead of living in the 1st seed: Adam- a life only leading to condemnation for eternity, God wants us to come back into alignment with Him, enjoy him fully and become more like Jesus the 2nd seed . He is calling us to be 'glory-reflectors'. God recreates Christians in his image, we are given new life and receive the blueprint of our heavenly Father. So, hoe can we fully be 'glory-reflectors' like Christ when we so clearly have a lot of changes to make because of our sinfulness. Tim Chester put it like this: Seeing God's glory in Jesus by faith is what leads to reflecting God's glory like Jesus.
So, I don't know about you but I know that pretty much all the time I can see the sinful behaviour in my life and think hummm that really needs to change; how can I change that to be more godly or to be more like Jesus. But no, actually I completely forget that even if I attempt to change my behaviour that we have no lasting effect because the real problem is that this behaviour stems from a deeper more powerful source; the heart. Mike Reeves describes the heart as not just a physical heart but that it is associated with emotions and feelings and desires which direct our paths. So if the core problem is my heart then to try and change that is a whole nother level, and in fact by the strongest of will-powers I will never be able to change it myself- to think that I can change this, shows no faith in what Jesus did at the cross, it shows no faith in God's saving act of love and grace that meant His son Jesus Christ was slaughtered on a cross for the sinful hearts of the world, including mine, so that we can come back into relationship with God himself through Jesus and reflect God's glory again and fulfil the purpose of our creation and being.
Tim Chester then took a look at the question 'Why would you like to change?'. There are so many reasons why we would like to change but he identified the 3 common reasons: to prove ourselves to God (so he will bless us or save us); to prove ourselves to other people (so people like us or to hide our true selves); and to prove ourselves to ourselves (so we feel good about ourselves). And I think if we really think about all the things we hope would change in our lives we can pretty much categorise them under one of these reasons. I know for me I hide my real self sometimes from people because I worry what they might think of me, and actually this mask keeping can be a real strain. I also try to put distance between myself and my last sin to make me feel better and not feel down. So none of these reasons really work because they all put 'me' at the centre of the change project which we know as being wrong because we know now we can't make those changes. The great thing to remember regarding these reasons is that God proves us or justifies us through Jesus so we don't need to prove ourselves. God gives us a new identity and this new identity is the motive and basis for change:
New Identity:
-Child of the Father- so don't live like a slave when you are a son/daughter of the King of Heaven
-Bride of the Son- Jesus is already our bride-groom, he has already made his covenant promises with us and he will never leave us!
-Home of the living Spirit- we have been washed clean and cleansed so there is no point trampling mud around a clean house, sin is mud in the house of the Holy Spirit.
Tim Chester said: The reason Christians should want to change is to enjoy the freedom from sin and delight in God that God gives us through Jesus.
So how are we going to change? We could live a life that pleases God but again this is our behaviour and this won't make the change. As it says in Colossians 2:20, living by rules doesn't work either in making the change; they have no power to change our hearts. Legalism has the appeal of importance and wisdom- but it makes holiness a human achievement. Put simply but so profoundly, change is God's work. 1 Thessalonians 5:23 says this 'May God himself, the God of peace, sanctify you through and through'. The liberating work of the Father, The Son and The Spirit. The Father is intimately involved in our lives so that our circumstances train us in godliness and Christ-like character. The Son, Jesus Christ, has set us free from both the penalty and the power of sin so we now live under grace and are free to delight in God. The Spirit gives us a new attitude to sin and new power to change. When God sanctifies us it's almost as though we now have DNA of holiness written into our genes. I was really challenged at this as I realised I need to be sensitive to the Holy Spirit that is leading me to change.
There are of course plenty of times when we struggle in life and so often we blame our circumstances for causing or triggering our sin. But no our circumstances do not cause us to sin, the root cause is always our heart and it's sinful desires. We sin because we believe lies about God instead of believing God's word and also because we don't desire God above anything but worship idols instead. Therefore, every time we don't trust God or his word then we are believing something else= a lie. But as Christians we need to remember we have freedom and life which is found by trusting and delighting in the truth about God.
We need to learn to preach the truth about God to our hearts. We need to remember each truth and tell ourselves them in each situation daily.
Tim Chester then shared four life-changing truths from the Bible we can use in each situation:
1. God is great- so we don't have to be in control
2. God is glorious- so we don't have to fear others or rejection by others, i.e.fear of man
3. God is good- so we don't have to look elsewhere for true joy/ fulfillment
4. God is gracious- so we don't have to prove ourselves- He has done all in Christ, nothing changes our standing with God, nothing, nothing nothing!
If we tell ourselves these truths daily especially in the difficult situations and turn to these rather then the sinful desires of our heart to sin, then we recognise by faith that God is better and more satisfy. The gospel of Christ has the melting power over our sinful hardened hearts so lets tell our hearts the truths and the true gospel of our God daily! When we see the glory of God in Jesus' we won't be able to help but desire him, and strive to know him more!
The last point of encouragement is to say yes to whatever strengthens our God desires- we need to plant in beautiful godly characteristics and godly desires. In other words sow to the Spirit which involves:
-the truth of God
-the power of God (we need his power to help us in this journey of change)
-the people of God
-the worship of God (says God is better then my sinfulness, we are calling our hearts back to him.)
-the service of God (changes us from self, towards others)
The journey of holiness is a life long developing of the heart. And no it's not easy but we press on because faith in the gospel tells us the view from the top of the mountain is glorious, the fullness of which is to come! Praise the Lord!
One of the seminar tracks I went too each day was by Tm Chester, the Director of the Porterbrook Institute and a leader in The Crowded House church in Sheffield.
The seminars were titled 'You can change' and the theme was broken down into 10 points exploring the theme further.
If we look at our lives I'm sure we can all find something in it that we would like to change; and especially as Christians I'm sure there are various sins we want to change and maybe even attempt to change. We don't have to look far into ourselves and into the world before we realise that things do not always work in harmony, there are problems in the order of things and imperfections that clearly confront us all in the face. The world, and us included are not as they were meant to be. We were created in God's image to reflect God's glory. But when we rejected God, that image was broken and we were then less of the image we should be. Enter Jesus- the true image of God who perfectly reflects God's glory. So instead of living in the 1st seed: Adam- a life only leading to condemnation for eternity, God wants us to come back into alignment with Him, enjoy him fully and become more like Jesus the 2nd seed . He is calling us to be 'glory-reflectors'. God recreates Christians in his image, we are given new life and receive the blueprint of our heavenly Father. So, hoe can we fully be 'glory-reflectors' like Christ when we so clearly have a lot of changes to make because of our sinfulness. Tim Chester put it like this: Seeing God's glory in Jesus by faith is what leads to reflecting God's glory like Jesus.
So, I don't know about you but I know that pretty much all the time I can see the sinful behaviour in my life and think hummm that really needs to change; how can I change that to be more godly or to be more like Jesus. But no, actually I completely forget that even if I attempt to change my behaviour that we have no lasting effect because the real problem is that this behaviour stems from a deeper more powerful source; the heart. Mike Reeves describes the heart as not just a physical heart but that it is associated with emotions and feelings and desires which direct our paths. So if the core problem is my heart then to try and change that is a whole nother level, and in fact by the strongest of will-powers I will never be able to change it myself- to think that I can change this, shows no faith in what Jesus did at the cross, it shows no faith in God's saving act of love and grace that meant His son Jesus Christ was slaughtered on a cross for the sinful hearts of the world, including mine, so that we can come back into relationship with God himself through Jesus and reflect God's glory again and fulfil the purpose of our creation and being.
Tim Chester then took a look at the question 'Why would you like to change?'. There are so many reasons why we would like to change but he identified the 3 common reasons: to prove ourselves to God (so he will bless us or save us); to prove ourselves to other people (so people like us or to hide our true selves); and to prove ourselves to ourselves (so we feel good about ourselves). And I think if we really think about all the things we hope would change in our lives we can pretty much categorise them under one of these reasons. I know for me I hide my real self sometimes from people because I worry what they might think of me, and actually this mask keeping can be a real strain. I also try to put distance between myself and my last sin to make me feel better and not feel down. So none of these reasons really work because they all put 'me' at the centre of the change project which we know as being wrong because we know now we can't make those changes. The great thing to remember regarding these reasons is that God proves us or justifies us through Jesus so we don't need to prove ourselves. God gives us a new identity and this new identity is the motive and basis for change:
New Identity:
-Child of the Father- so don't live like a slave when you are a son/daughter of the King of Heaven
-Bride of the Son- Jesus is already our bride-groom, he has already made his covenant promises with us and he will never leave us!
-Home of the living Spirit- we have been washed clean and cleansed so there is no point trampling mud around a clean house, sin is mud in the house of the Holy Spirit.
Tim Chester said: The reason Christians should want to change is to enjoy the freedom from sin and delight in God that God gives us through Jesus.
So how are we going to change? We could live a life that pleases God but again this is our behaviour and this won't make the change. As it says in Colossians 2:20, living by rules doesn't work either in making the change; they have no power to change our hearts. Legalism has the appeal of importance and wisdom- but it makes holiness a human achievement. Put simply but so profoundly, change is God's work. 1 Thessalonians 5:23 says this 'May God himself, the God of peace, sanctify you through and through'. The liberating work of the Father, The Son and The Spirit. The Father is intimately involved in our lives so that our circumstances train us in godliness and Christ-like character. The Son, Jesus Christ, has set us free from both the penalty and the power of sin so we now live under grace and are free to delight in God. The Spirit gives us a new attitude to sin and new power to change. When God sanctifies us it's almost as though we now have DNA of holiness written into our genes. I was really challenged at this as I realised I need to be sensitive to the Holy Spirit that is leading me to change.
There are of course plenty of times when we struggle in life and so often we blame our circumstances for causing or triggering our sin. But no our circumstances do not cause us to sin, the root cause is always our heart and it's sinful desires. We sin because we believe lies about God instead of believing God's word and also because we don't desire God above anything but worship idols instead. Therefore, every time we don't trust God or his word then we are believing something else= a lie. But as Christians we need to remember we have freedom and life which is found by trusting and delighting in the truth about God.
We need to learn to preach the truth about God to our hearts. We need to remember each truth and tell ourselves them in each situation daily.
Tim Chester then shared four life-changing truths from the Bible we can use in each situation:
1. God is great- so we don't have to be in control
2. God is glorious- so we don't have to fear others or rejection by others, i.e.fear of man
3. God is good- so we don't have to look elsewhere for true joy/ fulfillment
4. God is gracious- so we don't have to prove ourselves- He has done all in Christ, nothing changes our standing with God, nothing, nothing nothing!
If we tell ourselves these truths daily especially in the difficult situations and turn to these rather then the sinful desires of our heart to sin, then we recognise by faith that God is better and more satisfy. The gospel of Christ has the melting power over our sinful hardened hearts so lets tell our hearts the truths and the true gospel of our God daily! When we see the glory of God in Jesus' we won't be able to help but desire him, and strive to know him more!
The last point of encouragement is to say yes to whatever strengthens our God desires- we need to plant in beautiful godly characteristics and godly desires. In other words sow to the Spirit which involves:
-the truth of God
-the power of God (we need his power to help us in this journey of change)
-the people of God
-the worship of God (says God is better then my sinfulness, we are calling our hearts back to him.)
-the service of God (changes us from self, towards others)
The journey of holiness is a life long developing of the heart. And no it's not easy but we press on because faith in the gospel tells us the view from the top of the mountain is glorious, the fullness of which is to come! Praise the Lord!
Monday, 28 March 2011
'Sabbaths'
'Sabbath' by definition means 'day of rest or religious worship.' Many of us I'm sure have heard the term used to talk about a day of rest at the end of the week on a Saturday as a Jewish religious tradition, or as a day of rest at the beginning of the week on a Sunday for Christians, who traditionally go to church on this day.
Recently, I listened to a talk by Mark Driscoll who emphasised the importance of Sabbaths both with our relationship with God but also within our marriages.
Sabbath with our God
We learn so often through the Bible that taking time out to Sabbath (rest) with God is so important in our relationship with Him. Since starting as a physio in the big scary world of work I have come to realise that hours in the day at limited and in scarce supply. Trying to fit in all the different areas of life into the waking hours of the week can be extremely difficult. Mastering the balancing act between 12 hour days at work, being a loving wife, spending devotional time with God, seeing friends, making calls to distant friends, going to church events, spending time with work friends, sleeping, eating, cooking, cleaning and every other thing you yourselves could think of that you might want/need to fit into a normal week is a balancing act I'm still trying to master. So often in my life, taking a Sabbath with God or taking time out to rest with God and delighting in Him can quickly become the last priority on a long list of things to do for any number of reasons from being too tired to fully concentrate, to not being able to rest in God in a busy home, to forgetting how to spend time with God because it's been so long since actually doing so.
Jesus knew how important it was to take time out with God the Father and it is equally as important for us. We need our Sabbaths with God in order to cultivate a God-centred life, so take rest out of our stressful crazy lifestyles, to realign our lives/priorities/thoughts/actions/desires with God and his divine plan for our lives, to become more Christ-like and also to fully experience the joy and delight available to us through our relationship with God.
There's a plus to the traditional Sabbath being on a Sunday at the beginning of the week, it's so that we can focus our hearts and minds on Christ and what he has done for us in rescuing us back to God before we even step foot into work on Monday morning; it's so we can have reassurance in the Hope that we have bang at the start of the week so that we don't have to endure that Monday morning feeling before the so-called hard slog of the week to come because we can be overflowing with joy; it's so that we can draw near to God and trust Him that He is with us in everything!
Sabbath with our Husband/Wife
Mark Driscoll as talked about the importance of Sabbathing with your spouse. Over the recent months since getting married in November 2010 I have come to begin to understand the importance of taking a Sabbath with husband i.e. taking a rest/ a time out with him. It is so easy when living together to see each other, eat together and sleep together but not actually grow together/ talk together/ spend time together and love each other. Again the unique balancing act of life can get in the way as ever increasing disproportionate priorities swamp our lives. However, one of the main things that was stressed to Chris and I during marriage preparation was that spending time together, just the two of us, will be one of the most important things we will learn in our marriage, and it will be one of the most valuable things that we should try to nail on the head. We need to be able to take time and Sabbath with each other and this should be the next layer of the foundation of our marriage after the initial and continuous rooting of our marriage in God! These things in themselves should lead to a fruitful, loving and lasting marriage together in Christ.
Recently, I listened to a talk by Mark Driscoll who emphasised the importance of Sabbaths both with our relationship with God but also within our marriages.
Sabbath with our God
We learn so often through the Bible that taking time out to Sabbath (rest) with God is so important in our relationship with Him. Since starting as a physio in the big scary world of work I have come to realise that hours in the day at limited and in scarce supply. Trying to fit in all the different areas of life into the waking hours of the week can be extremely difficult. Mastering the balancing act between 12 hour days at work, being a loving wife, spending devotional time with God, seeing friends, making calls to distant friends, going to church events, spending time with work friends, sleeping, eating, cooking, cleaning and every other thing you yourselves could think of that you might want/need to fit into a normal week is a balancing act I'm still trying to master. So often in my life, taking a Sabbath with God or taking time out to rest with God and delighting in Him can quickly become the last priority on a long list of things to do for any number of reasons from being too tired to fully concentrate, to not being able to rest in God in a busy home, to forgetting how to spend time with God because it's been so long since actually doing so.
Jesus knew how important it was to take time out with God the Father and it is equally as important for us. We need our Sabbaths with God in order to cultivate a God-centred life, so take rest out of our stressful crazy lifestyles, to realign our lives/priorities/thoughts/actions/desires with God and his divine plan for our lives, to become more Christ-like and also to fully experience the joy and delight available to us through our relationship with God.
There's a plus to the traditional Sabbath being on a Sunday at the beginning of the week, it's so that we can focus our hearts and minds on Christ and what he has done for us in rescuing us back to God before we even step foot into work on Monday morning; it's so we can have reassurance in the Hope that we have bang at the start of the week so that we don't have to endure that Monday morning feeling before the so-called hard slog of the week to come because we can be overflowing with joy; it's so that we can draw near to God and trust Him that He is with us in everything!
Sabbath with our Husband/Wife
Mark Driscoll as talked about the importance of Sabbathing with your spouse. Over the recent months since getting married in November 2010 I have come to begin to understand the importance of taking a Sabbath with husband i.e. taking a rest/ a time out with him. It is so easy when living together to see each other, eat together and sleep together but not actually grow together/ talk together/ spend time together and love each other. Again the unique balancing act of life can get in the way as ever increasing disproportionate priorities swamp our lives. However, one of the main things that was stressed to Chris and I during marriage preparation was that spending time together, just the two of us, will be one of the most important things we will learn in our marriage, and it will be one of the most valuable things that we should try to nail on the head. We need to be able to take time and Sabbath with each other and this should be the next layer of the foundation of our marriage after the initial and continuous rooting of our marriage in God! These things in themselves should lead to a fruitful, loving and lasting marriage together in Christ.
Saturday, 5 March 2011
Cherish Him
Ok, so I have been reading a book recently called 'Feminine Appeal' by Carolyn Mahaney. Near the beginning of the book there's a chapter called 'The Delight of Loving My Husband' which is based on Titus 2 verse 4 'So train the younger women to love their husbands.'. It helps us remember one of the vows we made on our wedding day 'to love and to cherish till death do us part.' The chapter asks the question about whether we even understand what we promised when we said this line. To cherish means to hold dear, to care tenderly or to nurture, to cling fondly to, or treat as precious.
'So how do we make our husbands feel cherished? Who better to ask than husbands?' The author proceeds to write some of the answers husbands said in response to the question 'What is one way your wife cherishes you?' Here are some of their answers shortened for the sake of this blog:
- Little notes hidden around the house to open each day.
- Catch his eye in public with a smile and a subtle wink
- Greet with a warm hug or cuddle when he gets in from work
- Hang on his arm when you go out on a date- the message will come through loud and clear that you enjoy being with him.
- If he confesses a sin, communicate your love for him before bringing correction- He'll know you love him even at his worst
- If he sick in bed prepare tea, meals for him without him asking.
- Regularly encourage him in his walk with God and thank him for pursing God with all his heart
- Show up at his work with his favourite hot chocolate or coffee with some home baking
- Observe his life and his needs, listen carefully whenever he expresses the smallest desire for something.
- Pray fervent and faithful intercessory prayers for him. Make your conviction that no one can care for him like his heavenly Father.
May these ideas spark your own creativity in cherishing our husbands. And you may also be interested in knowing that when I asked my brothers-in-law the same question, one answered:
- breakfast in bed, which was amazing
- writing love letters
- post-it notes in the lunch box
- home-made presents
While the other said:
- 'well, my wife generally sends presents to all her brothers-in-law to show me that she loves me, so you could try that too I guess.'
... yes thanks that's great!! hehe.
If you're reading this and you have any other ideas on something you have tried that works then why not comment below :)
Thursday, 3 March 2011
Ultimate power
About 6 months ago I was at home group and there were only 3 of us there that night but what we looked at actually ended up being a massive encouragement the next day...
The part were looking at was Ephesians 1:15-25 and it was talking about us having access to the power of God, the power which lifted Christ from the dead and which seats him next to God in heaven and which gives him authority over all things in this world both physically and supernaturally and THIS is our inheritance as believers and children of God. We have the inheritance of Christ's power to keep us strong and standing against any challenge we face and any difficult situation we come up against... and that really is awesome news and an amazing truth to stand firm in!
The part were looking at was Ephesians 1:15-25 and it was talking about us having access to the power of God, the power which lifted Christ from the dead and which seats him next to God in heaven and which gives him authority over all things in this world both physically and supernaturally and THIS is our inheritance as believers and children of God. We have the inheritance of Christ's power to keep us strong and standing against any challenge we face and any difficult situation we come up against... and that really is awesome news and an amazing truth to stand firm in!
New Blog
Ok so I took this list from someone else's blog and they took it from John Piper@Desiring God; but I thought it would be a suitable introduction as to why this is something I would love to do. So here it is, 6 Reasons to Blog...
1. To write.
2. To teach.
3. To recommend.
4. To interact.
5. To develop an eye for what is meaningful.
6. To be known.
So get involved, get ready and get reading, I look forward to it :)...
1. To write.
2. To teach.
3. To recommend.
4. To interact.
5. To develop an eye for what is meaningful.
6. To be known.
So get involved, get ready and get reading, I look forward to it :)...
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