Thursday, September 2, 2021

 Because the world is evil, we will suffer destruction and loss, but God determines in advance what we will suffer because everything comes from God's hand. "Open your hand and satisfy the desires of all creatures." The guiding principle of action is what God takes with one hand, and with the other God gives in extraordinary abundance. Behind all evil is God's pleasant smile for his vulnerable children. God represents a permanent God.
Everything we are and have is gifts from God. God describes himself as a direct connection to us through his moral qualities. We rightly regard them as certain and firm promises of God.God makes a covenant of redemption with us. When we suffer loss, God's purpose is to ease our burden. However, we do not experience this creative freedom in the concrete context of the operational loss, but rather by being drawn into a mysterious freedom. God constantly approaches us and responds to our need to satisfy our desires, and it is more stable to us than the way we take in things in this world which is under the limitations of time.God properly approaches us in an external context; how we suffer loss and pain; it recovers us in a person-to-person context; build a personal relationship in this covenant of salvation by breaking the limitations of this world and letting us see things too wonderful for us to be. We would like to introduce ourselves.This face-to-face connection is that He speaks to us in a way that fixes all things.
God comes to the only person who delegates absolute authority over everything in this world, including the will of men; by all things working together for our best, it determines how events happen according to peoples will. Eternal salvation comes when God carefully controls peoples will as He undoubtedly works to properly establish His own success through patience and faithfulness without ours He works in this way to lead us to heaven in time. He participates in our eternal reception. Of eternal life. He mysteriously invests sin and moral suffering in our vast experience of merciful goodness.

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