Everyone from Hyperlink is super-grateful to have served
so many awesome Relationships since 1981!
Thanks all for doing us proud with your future success!
I'm riding in BIKE HSS to support Hospital for Special Surgery! Please support my ride on Saturday, September 24th for research, patient care, and education at HSS. How you MOVE is why I ride. https://t.co/8abSWqt0F0 via @DonorDrive
This "1st Annual" Bike thing is an overlay to the 20th Annual Walk thing, a dry-run for future Bike-A-Thons! No pressure. Though The Fuller Center immediately applies all the support we can muster to serve so many, including too many who've recently lost their homes to Ida.
It’s TOTALLY all right if biking’s not your thing! The main-event supporting The Fuller Center of Greater New York https://t.co/95Wx3CxCri (formerly known as: Habitat for Humanity) on Sunday is the beautiful (and reasonably short) TWENTIETH ANNUAL… “Walk for Homes” @ 1:00pm!
Short Story!... Let’s meet at 11:00am at St Augustine's Church at 18 Cherry Avenue in Larchmont this Sunday 11/7! Playland is a totally leisurely & sun-shiny ride of 12.5 miles! Here’s a visual of the fairly flat & bike-friendly loop!... https://t.co/6fnF5kGpfY
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny and to experience every day in the present, living according to our values, grateful for every moment.
To say “hineni” is to admit that I cannot be fully present without a community to say “hinenu” - “here we are.” Indeed, we are a hopelessly communal people.
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny a legacy I stand ready to pass down to those who follow.
To say “hineni” is to live simultaneously in the past, present and future: To be aware of our past as a source of our identity and values; to see the future, alert to its possibilities, committed to its betterment;
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny It indicates a receptive mind and an openness of soul. It declares a readiness to engage, to take part in the unfolding of our history.
It signals the moment when the details of my own life story become one with the story of our people -
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny Yet the word conveys so much more. To say “hineni” expresses a yearning for a spiritual awakening, a moment, however fleeting, in which we feel close to the heart of the Universe.
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny Perhaps instead, God is asking: Where are you in your moral decision making?
`The answer “hineni” means: “Here I am, ready and waiting to do Your will. Here I am, a partner with You in the eternal covenant between You and our people. How can I fulfill my role more fully?”
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny On several occasions, God asks Adam, Abraham and Moses, “Where are you?” Understood literally, it’s a nonsensical question. If God is all knowing, doesn’t God know where they are?
Perhaps the question isn’t about geographical location.
@Jimkilloran @fullercenterny (Pronounced: hee-nay-nee)
Hineni: A world of meaning
Rabbi David Cohen | February 26, 2014 | 26 Adar I 5774
“Hineni” literally means “here I am.” Examples of its use in the Torah will explain its significance.
@ValueWireless01 @hyperlinkusa @dean_hyperlink All thanks to you Brother.
Your natural light will always be more infectious & contagious than any unnatural darkness.
(Can you believe? This is my first ever tweet! Feeling blessed that it's about respect & love.)