
Hope in a Time of Darkness: A Sermon on Job 19: 13-27
What do you do when you come to the end of your rope? Job voiced his complaints but he also continued to hope in God Continue reading Hope in a Time of Darkness: A Sermon on Job 19: 13-27
What do you do when you come to the end of your rope? Job voiced his complaints but he also continued to hope in God Continue reading Hope in a Time of Darkness: A Sermon on Job 19: 13-27
Preached at United Reformed Church of Cliftonon Sunday, June 21, 2020 on Facebook Live. Sermon #3 in a Series on … Continue reading Three Responses to Suffering (Despair, Defensiveness, Engagement): A Sermon on Job Chapters 3, 4 and 7
Shared at United Reformed Church of Clifton during the Mid-Week Prayer Meeting, Wednesday, July 24, 2020 Meditation #2a in a … Continue reading How to Comfort Those Who Are Suffering: A Meditation on Job 2:11-13
Preached at United Reformed Church of Cliftonon Sunday, June 21, 2020 Sermon #2 in a Series on the Book of … Continue reading The Suffering of Job (Part 2)–A sermon on Job 1:20-2:10
Preached at United Reformed Church of Clifton on Sunday, June 14, 2020 Sermon #1 in a Series on the Book … Continue reading The Suffering of Job a sermon on Job 1: 1-19
The thoughts, prayers, and brain-dumps of a Presbyterian pastor-mom
[the stars]
Musings & Meditations
conversations about Jesus and community
TIME OUTDOORS ISN'T SPENT IT\'S INVESTED
I am an artist and illustrator. And these “episodes” are quick sketches of and stories about people that I meet or have met over the years. I do the drawings first, keeping them simple and spontaneous but (hopefully) sophisticated. They are with perhaps one or two exceptions, line drawings done with a fine-line pen. I started doing these drawings in business meetings. That expanded to doing them in waiting rooms or while traveling, as a way to remember the people I met, worked with, or just observed from afar. Once I’d done a number of these sketches, I began to wonder about the people they depict. What might they be really like on the inside? What are their dreams? Their fears? Their secrets? Since I did not know the people I was drawing (or because I did not know them well), I felt ill-at-ease about asking personal questions. And so, I began to create stories about these people, based on what I imagine their life is like. That way, each drawing became a kind of psychological adventure; I never knew, when I sat down to write, what I was going to find. Like the drawings themselves, the stories are not to scale or photographic. If there is any prevailing theme, it is this: people keep their inner world well-hidden and probably for damn good reason. A secondary theme: making stuff up is much more fun than reality. And in a way, that is the real truth in all this. If you would like to learn more about me or my work please send a note. Our email: myron.gilbert@att.net
Celebrating what makes Brittany unique
exploring ideas - inspired by texts - expressed in images
Hannah's daily devotional
"Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth; truths are found only in the depths of thought." (Victor Hugo, Les Miserables)
thoughts on life, teaching, and faith
Searchings: Sacred and Secular
Essays, poetry, sermons and images to spark your own creativity.
Writing Down The Bones
Explorations in Practical Theology and Youth Ministry
The Middle Ages in the Modern World