tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2150363806357767058.post1382619151754985830..comments2023-12-30T22:13:20.677+01:00Comments on In the Way: "Brokenness" is in Style, But It Doesn't Have to BeLou Ann Keiserhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02684047509152182217noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2150363806357767058.post-31318890482441877192017-04-18T19:34:25.508+02:002017-04-18T19:34:25.508+02:00Thank you, Beth. God bless you!Thank you, Beth. God bless you!Lou Ann Keiserhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02684047509152182217noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2150363806357767058.post-49526723036793851672017-04-18T15:58:52.152+02:002017-04-18T15:58:52.152+02:00I am so on board with this idea, and I noticed the...I am so on board with this idea, and I noticed the trend myself. It's really reinforced in Christian music. I am eager to see believers get past the idea of being broken, realizing that with our Lord and Savior, we can live a life full of him, and the spirit within us heals us even beyond what we can imagine. Others need us to walk in the fullness of the Lord so they, too, can be "fixed." We just have to seek it and focus on what God has for us, not what we have done or what others have done to us. Repent, move forward, grow in Christ. Eternity has already begun...we need to live in it. Outstanding post, Lou Ann...so relevant and gently presented. Beth Hemptonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00705817016867682486noreply@blogger.com