Difference between revisions of "The new world"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "==Long Quotes== You are not living in the past. The old world has passed. You are living in a new world—a world with an unstable climate and changing environmental conditions, ...") |
m (added internal link) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Long Quotes== | ==Long Quotes== | ||
− | You are not living in the past. The old world has passed. You are living in a new world—a world with an unstable climate and changing environmental conditions, a world of diminishing resources, a world of ever greater fragility, ever greater uncertainty, where even human civilization itself is imperiled. | + | You are not living in the past. The old world has passed. You are living in a new world—a world with an unstable climate and changing environmental conditions, a world of diminishing resources, a world of ever greater fragility, ever greater uncertainty, where even human [[civilization]] itself is imperiled. |
But who will see this? Who will hear this, not with their ideas or their opinions or their beliefs, but deeply, more profoundly? Who has the courage to face this? Who has the humility to face the New Revelation? Who can admit that God has more to say to humanity and give up self-righteousness and all of the admonitions and declarations that accompany it? | But who will see this? Who will hear this, not with their ideas or their opinions or their beliefs, but deeply, more profoundly? Who has the courage to face this? Who has the humility to face the New Revelation? Who can admit that God has more to say to humanity and give up self-righteousness and all of the admonitions and declarations that accompany it? | ||
*The Will of Heaven (May 17, 2011) | *The Will of Heaven (May 17, 2011) |
Revision as of 15:13, 27 August 2013
Long Quotes
You are not living in the past. The old world has passed. You are living in a new world—a world with an unstable climate and changing environmental conditions, a world of diminishing resources, a world of ever greater fragility, ever greater uncertainty, where even human civilization itself is imperiled.
But who will see this? Who will hear this, not with their ideas or their opinions or their beliefs, but deeply, more profoundly? Who has the courage to face this? Who has the humility to face the New Revelation? Who can admit that God has more to say to humanity and give up self-righteousness and all of the admonitions and declarations that accompany it?
- The Will of Heaven (May 17, 2011)