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We all have questions for God. But what about the questions God has for us?
For example, in Genesis 3, God asks, "Where are you?" and "What have you done?" Let us sit with God in the searching questions. As we journey through Lent, let us make space for the Holy Spirit to lead us into deeper places of formation as we sit with these questions together.
Listen to this week's message on Genesis 32: 22-31.
“We must tell God our names and share with God who we really are and what we have done. Usually we want our relationship with God to work the other way around. Like Jacob, we want to know God’s name. Often this indicates that we want a take God whom we can manage for our ends. We do not want God to be too surprising or unpredictable or wild. Nor do we want to go into too many details about the mess in our lives. But that is not the way God works. If we want God to bless us, we need to face up to ourselves honestly.”- Trevor Hudson
By Nova Church in Denver, ColoradoWe all have questions for God. But what about the questions God has for us?
For example, in Genesis 3, God asks, "Where are you?" and "What have you done?" Let us sit with God in the searching questions. As we journey through Lent, let us make space for the Holy Spirit to lead us into deeper places of formation as we sit with these questions together.
Listen to this week's message on Genesis 32: 22-31.
“We must tell God our names and share with God who we really are and what we have done. Usually we want our relationship with God to work the other way around. Like Jacob, we want to know God’s name. Often this indicates that we want a take God whom we can manage for our ends. We do not want God to be too surprising or unpredictable or wild. Nor do we want to go into too many details about the mess in our lives. But that is not the way God works. If we want God to bless us, we need to face up to ourselves honestly.”- Trevor Hudson