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May/Mental Health Month: The Lifetime Stress of Career First Responders

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  For most people, trauma is an event. For career first responders, it’s a career. Police officers, firefighters, paramedics, emergency nurses—these are the people who meet crisis head‑on, day after day, year after year. They don’t just witness trauma; they absorb it. They carry it home in their bodies, their sleep, their silence. Over time, the stress becomes cumulative. It’s not one call, one fire, one accident—it’s hundreds. It’s the slow layering of adrenaline, grief, and responsibility. It’s the body learning to stay alert even when the shift is over. It’s the mind replaying scenes long after the sirens fade. Many first responders learn to compartmentalize. They joke, they focus, they move on. But the nervous system doesn’t forget. It keeps score. And eventually, the score shows up—in insomnia, irritability, hypervigilance, emotional numbness, or a sense of disconnection from the world they once served so fiercely. This isn’t weakness. It’s biology. The human body was never me...

🌿 Transformation Tuesday: Lee Strobel — Following the Evidence to Faith

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  Lee Strobel didn’t set out to find God. He set out to prove that God didn’t exist. As a journalist and legal editor at The Chicago Tribune , Strobel trusted evidence, logic, and cross‑examination. When his wife became a Christian, he decided to investigate the claims of faith the way he would a courtroom case — interviewing experts, examining documents, and testing every argument for truth. But the deeper he looked, the more the evidence pointed in a direction he hadn’t expected. The historical record, the eyewitness accounts, the coherence of belief — all began to form a case he couldn’t dismiss. His skepticism became curiosity; his curiosity became conviction. Strobel’s transformation wasn’t emotional. It was investigative. He followed the facts until they led him somewhere he hadn’t planned to go — to belief. His story reminds us that faith and reason aren’t enemies. Sometimes, the search for truth ends not in proof, but in presence. post inspired by A Believer-in-Waiting's Fi...

Sura Maryam: How does Islam depict Mary?

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  In Islam, Mary — Maryam in Arabic — is deeply revered, honored far more than many non‑Muslims realize. She is the only woman mentioned by name in the Qur’an and has an entire chapter dedicated to her: Surah Maryam . Here’s how her role is understood: 🌿 Maryam: The Pure and Chosen One The Qur’an calls her “chosen above all women of the worlds” (Qur’an 3:42). She is celebrated for her faith, chastity, and obedience to God. Muslims believe in the virgin birth of Jesus ( Isa ), seeing it as a miracle by God’s command — “Be, and it is.” Mary is not divine, nor is she part of a trinity; she is a human exemplar of devotion and purity . 🕊️ Mary in Islamic Devotion Muslims do not pray to Mary or venerate her as an intercessor. She is honored in sermons, art, and literature as a model of righteousness and courage. Her story is often told to inspire trust in God’s will , especially among women and families. ✨ Shared Reverence Across Faiths Like Catholics and Orthodox Christians, Musl...