Whether we turn time backward or forward, we just might experience something totally unexpected.
Do you write a daily journal? This inspiring thought comes from my journal, and much of what is written in my journal comes from reading and commenting on other bloggers’ posts. Thanks to many of you for adding so much to my journal.
Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.
Life is progressive, no matter what our intentions.
F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) was an American novelist and short story writer. Much of his best writing occurred during the Jazz Age, with THE GREAT GATSBY being recognized as his best work.
From Psalm 51:1-2: “Have mercy on me, O God,according to Your steadfast love; according to Your abundant mercy,blot out my transgressions. Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity,and cleanse me from my sin.”
From Psalm 51:10-12: “Create in me a clean heart, O God,and put a new and right spirit within me. Do not cast me away from Your presence,and do not take Your holy spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of Your salvation,and sustain in me a willing spirit.”
What a blessing we have with faith’s journey built through Jesus.
Do you write a daily journal? This inspiring thought comes from my journal, and much of what is written in my journal comes from reading and commenting on other bloggers’ posts. Thanks to many of you for adding so much to my journal.
Unseen by human eyes, a great exchange took place as Jesus hung on the cross. He took all our sin upon Him and bore the wrath of every single one . . . past, present, and future.
From Romans 8:38-39: “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Charles Stanley (1932-2023) was an American pastor and Christian writer. He was dedicated to leading a teaching ministry.
This informative post will be published on Saturday in place of my regular one. You are invited to participate with the opening question.
Brain Teaser Question
What starts with a T, ends with a T, and has T in it?
(answer found at the end of this post)
Featured Facts
The 28th American President, Woodrow Wilson, served two terms (1913-1921). He was the first President to be from the Democratic Party since Grover Cleveland was elected in 1892.
Here are a few interesting facts about President Wilson:
State Represented: New Jersey
Birth: December 28, 1856 in Staunton, Virginia
Death: February 3, 1924 in Washington, DC
Occupations: Lawyer, author, college professor
Achievements: Princeton University President (1902-1910), New Jersey Governor (elected 1910)
Wilson was elected to the Presidency in 1912, and his campaign benefited greatly from the split in the Republican Party. Current President William Howard Taft was the Republican candidate, but former President Theodore Roosevelt received the nod as the Progressive candidate.
As President, Wilson pursued a progressive agenda. He welcomed legislation which created the Federal Reserve system in 1913 and later the Federal Trade Commission. One of the major flaws of his administration was returning segregation to many areas of the Federal Government’s workforce.
In 1920, two dynamic Constitutional amendments were approved during Wilson’s tenure in the White House. The 18th Amendment prohibited the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcoholic beverages. The 19th Amendment granted women the right to vote.
As President, much of Wilson’s time and energy was consumed with the war in Europe. The Great War (later renamed World War I) began in 1914, and it would not end until the Armistice was signed in November, 1918. Wilson worked tirelessly to keep the United States on neutral ground in order to stay out of Europe’s conflict.
Finally in 1917, the war crept closer to America, and Wilson asked Congress for a resolution to declare war on Germany and its allies. The Great War now became a legitimate world war. Wilson had narrowly defeated Republican candidate Charles Evans Hughes for re-election in 1916. Ironically, Wilson promised to keep the country out of war.
Wilson’s lasting legacy as President was wrapped up in his “Fourteen Points” as the world moved into peacetime at the end of 1918. Wilson’s framework for the post-war years called for the formation of an international body, the League of Nations, as an early version of a “United Nations” for lasting preservation of world peace.
As Wilson campaigned across America in the fall of 1919 to bring public pressure upon the United States Senate to ratify the country’s membership in the League, he suffered a stroke. With the President left partially paralyzed, First Lady Edith Wilson acted as the President’s unofficial gatekeeper. The Senate voted down American membership in the League of Nations.
top left and moving clockwise: portrait of president wilson, Princeton University where Wilson served as president, wilson (on the right) with other victorious allied leaders in europe, wilson’s burial site at the national cathedral in washington (he is the only american president interred within the boundaries of the nation’s capital city), president wilson with first lady edith wilson. (All photos courtesy of pinterest)
Just as our prescription changes for eyeglasses and contacts, our outlook may improve when we trust to view life through an updated lens.
Do you write a daily journal? This inspiring thought comes from my journal, and much of what is written in my journal comes from reading and commenting on other bloggers’ posts. Thanks to many of you for adding so much to my journal.
This series of poems (written in the German-inspired style of Elfchen or Elevenie) shares a total of eleven words in each poem, with a sequence by line of one, two, three, four, and one words.
God’s Word blesses with a daily connection to His light. Without it, Jesus would remain absent in the darkness of one’s empty faith.
Do you write a daily journal? This inspiring thought comes from my journal, and much of what is written in my journal comes from reading and commenting on other bloggers’ posts. Thanks to many of you for adding so much to my journal.