@yippykayyee The man can be private, comes with the turf. So you must be saying his son can't maintain any form of privacy if he can't see his father without the need to let us know 😅
@danielholkss glory.
So are we reading the Bible as destiny, or as an account? Because if it’s an account, things could have happened differently, and God would still be glorified 2/2
@danielholkss Not a theologian, just a curious mind.
Free will doesn’t mean God doesn’t know you, at least based on the Bible. If anything, it shows you can still choose actions that go against Him, and He may not intervene.
That also doesn’t mean He can’t use those same situations for His 1/2
The way I’ve been thinking over the past few months isn’t healthy😔
If this crosses your timeline, PLEASE REPOST🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽. You could change my life.
My UK visa expires May 1st and I’m actively searching for a visa sponsored job before then. I’m a Technical/Application support analyst. I’m skilled at incident & problem management, SQL & database querying, SLA management & ticketing, API & integration support.
I’m adaptable and ready to hit the ground running from day one. I’m ready to relocate to any city in the Uk. I’ll really appreciate every retweet, tag, comment.
God bless🙏🏽
My article is the day 😂!
The hill I will die on: Online shops, please, I beg – stop with endless post-purchase emails | Athena Kugblenu | The Guardian https://t.co/HvdKrXa1xN
“An increase in the material means at the disposal of humanity may even present dangers unless it is accompanied by a corresponding spiritual effort.”
Philosopher and author Henri Bergson, awarded the 1927 Nobel Prize in Literature, reflected on the moral challenges of progress in his 1928 Nobel Prize banquet speech.
He noted that while the 19th century made tremendous technological advances – from steam to electricity – many assumed these inventions would automatically bring people closer and make society better. Instead, Bergson warned, without a matching effort toward moral and spiritual growth, technology can deepen divisions rather than bridge them.
His message still resonates today: our machines may connect us, but only our humanity can unite us.
#WorldPhilosophyDay
“Do something that you’re obsessed with, that you just have to understand, because that’s where the joy comes from, and that also, I think, is where the great discoveries come from,” said medicine laureate Linda Buck.
#NobelPrize
“Do something that you’re obsessed with, that you just have to understand, because that’s where the joy comes from, and that also, I think, is where the great discoveries come from,” said medicine laureate Linda Buck.
#NobelPrize