|
Previous Posts
Dancing... or drinking through life
I am not even sure that I know how to do a link anymore. I'm giving it a shot though so, three readers, please forgive me if I mess this up.
So Rod Dreher's sister is battling cancer. It is nasty. Their faith is extraordinary. Here's his latest post (I think)
There are 8 comments on it.
As I scrolle
posted 3:05:22pm Mar. 02, 2010 |
read full post
»
Back...
I'm back here at JWalking after a bit of time because I just want someplace to record thoughts from time to time. I doubt that many of the thoughts will be political - there are plenty upon plenty of people offering their opinions on everything political and I doubt that I have much to add that will
posted 10:44:56pm Mar. 01, 2010 |
read full post
»
Learning to tell a story
For the last ten months or so I've been engaged in a completely different world - the world of screenwriting. It began as a writing project - probably the 21st Century version of a yen to write the great American novel - a shot at a screenplay. I knew that I knew nothing about the art but was inspir
posted 8:01:41pm Feb. 28, 2010 |
read full post
»
And just one more
I have, I think, just one more round of chemo left.
When I go through my pill popping regimen tomorrow morning it will be the last time for this particular round of drugs. Twenty-three rounds, it seems, is enough.
What comes next? We'll go back to what we did after the surgery. We'll watch and measu
posted 11:38:45pm Nov. 18, 2008 |
read full post
»
A Newfie for Obama
NPR asked me to do a short memo to the president-elect. I chose to do it on the dog he should choose... and why. Check it out.
posted 12:25:10am Nov. 15, 2008 |
read full post
»
|
posted December 27, 2007 at 12:00 am
As I have worked with America’s “troubled youth” for two decades (and buried one of them, my own son), I live with the overwhelming desire to be a missionary like Roxanne. I wish that my busy and hurried life would slow down to not only allow me to do something about my desire, BUT, to thank God every moment of every day for people like Roxanne. My friend from Nigeria just became a US citizen this month. He came here because he feels that more Americans are like Roxanne than any other kind of person. May God richly bless her and the beauty that is the children she has reached out to.
posted December 27, 2007 at 8:04 am
As M.Theresa’s sisters said to us in Port Au Prince, Haiti. Sometimes you can be a Roxanne right in your own home town. Pray, seek, have the courage to love and serve. God will bring you to the right places.
God bless Roxanne and Joseph.
posted December 27, 2007 at 11:18 am
David…thank you for impacting our ministry in a very “Roxanne” quality this year. May God bless you in your desire for more of Him.