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The Difficulty and Healing Path of Forgiveness

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  Forgiveness is often described as a gift—but rarely as a struggle. And yet, for many, it is both. It asks us to confront pain, to release resentment, and to choose peace over righteousness. It is not a single act, but a process. Not a surrender, but a reclamation. 🧠 Why Forgiveness Is So Hard Psychologists like Robert Enright and Frederic Luskin describe forgiveness as a  multi-phase journey : Uncovering the Hurt : Naming the pain and acknowledging its impact. Deciding to Forgive : A conscious choice, often made before emotions catch up. Working Toward Understanding : Exploring the offender’s humanity—not to excuse, but to contextualize. Finding Meaning : Reframing the experience in a way that fosters growth. Neuroscience shows that holding onto resentment keeps the body in a low-grade fight-or-flight state. Forgiveness, by contrast, activates brain regions linked to empathy and emotional regulation. It’s not just emotional—it’s physiological. 🌿 What Forgiveness Is Not For...

Publisher's Pride: Books on Bestseller Lists - Super Spunky Grandmas and Other Amusing Stuff (Mogren)

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  Today's publisher's pride is  Super Spunky Grandmas and Other Amusing Stuff  by Ken Mogren, which reached #96 on Amazon in the category of limericks and humorous verse. Description A follow-up to highly acclaimed  Spunky Grandmas..and Other Amusing Characters ,  Super Spunky Grandmas...and Other Amusing Stuff  features many of the same type of clever stories about comical human behavior that entertained readers of Mogren's earlier work. It adds dozens of amusing, tongue-in-cheek observations about human nature and the world we live in, all written in sonnet form. Illustrator, Joella Goyette, is back with cartoonish drawings that introduce the themes of each of the book's 13 chapters. Keywords Funny short stories,  Humorous character sketches,  Comic poetry book,  Mini stories in sonnet form,  Illustrated humor book,  Books about quirky characters,  Funny grandma stories,  Ken Mogren humor writing,  Funny grandma boo...

When God Appears: A Reflection on Theophany and Human Response

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  Theophany—literally “appearance of God”—is not just a theological term. It’s a moment when the veil between heaven and earth thins, and the divine becomes perceptible to human senses. These encounters are rare, dramatic, and transformative. They do not merely inform; they reorient. Let’s explore two vivid biblical theophanies and how their recipients responded—not with casual awe, but with trembling, wrestling, and lifelong change. 🔥 Moses and the Burning Bush (Exodus 3) In the wilderness of Horeb, Moses sees a bush ablaze yet unconsumed. He approaches, curious. Then comes the voice: “Moses, Moses.” God identifies Himself and commands Moses to remove his sandals—he is on holy ground. Reaction: Moses hides his face, afraid to look at God. He protests his inadequacy, questions his calling, and ultimately obeys. This theophany doesn’t just reveal God’s presence—it commissions Moses to liberate a nation. The encounter marks a pivot from exile to leadership, from anonymity to prophet...