I made a blurb book of the first year of my blog.
It is so cool!
The pictures are just beautiful.
I am so excited!
(and yes, that is my big toe holding down the pages!)
Now may I speak . . . to those buffeted by false insecurity, who, though laboring devotedly in the Kingdom, have recurring feelings of falling forever short. . . .
. . . This feeling of inadequacy is . . . normal. There is no way the Church can honestly describe where we must yet go and what we must yet do without creating a sense of immense distance. . . .
. . . This is a gospel of grand expectations, but God’s grace is sufficient for each of us.~~Thomas Merton: No Man is an Island
October 1st
Don't try to dazzle everyone with how brilliant you are. Dazzle them with how brilliant the gospel is. Don't worry about the location of the lost tribes or the Three Nephites. Worry a little more about the location of your student, what's going on in his heart, what's going on in her soul, the hunger, sometimes near-desperate spiritual needs of our people. Teach them. And, above all, testify to them. love them. Bear your witness from the depths of your soul. It will be the most important thing you say to them in the entire hour, and it may save someone's spiritual life.
We come to expect God to accept our understanding of what his will ought to be and to help us fulfill that, instead of learning to see and accept his will in the real situations in which he places us daily. …The plain and simple truth is that his will is that he actually wills to send us each day, in the way of circumstances, places, people and problems. The trick is to learn to see that- not just in theory, or not just occasionally in a flash of insight granted by God’s grace, but every day. Each of us has no need to wonder about what God’s will must be for us; his will for us is clearly revealed in every situation of every day….The temptation is to overlook these things as God’s will. The temptation is to look beyond these things, precisely because they are so constant, so petty, so humdrum and routine, and to seek to discover instead some other and nobler “will of God” in the abstract that better fits our notion of what his will should be.[It is] the temptation faced by everyone who suddenly discovers that life is not what he expected it to be. The answer lies in understanding that it is these things- and these things alone, here and now, at this moment- that truly constitutes the will of God. The challenge lies in learning to accept this truth and act upon it, every moment of every day.
~~Walter Ciszek
That is great!!
ReplyDeleteThat looks awesome! Were you able to fit a whole year's worth of blogposts in it?
ReplyDeleteI've been working on mine for a few weeks now, trying to get all the formatting done. It's only the first two years, 2007-2008, and I think I'll probably hit 200 pages. I'm nervous to see how much it's going to cost, but still! So worth it to have it all in print.
ReplyDeleteMegan--The book started with blog posts from my family blog, before I had my own blog. So the first 40 pages are from that, and then the next 118 pages are from 3 months of my blog. Which means it will take a lot of books to get current! But I figure I'll just start and do one every now and then.
ReplyDeleteJenny--I think 200 pages for 2 years is great! My 158 pages (I was trying to stay under 160) was $52 and about $7 shipping. They had a 20% off coupon good till tomorrow night, though, so I saved $10. It is very cool to have it in print, and the 158 pages doesn't seem like too much at all. I'll be interested to see how your 200 page book looks!
Did it take you forever to make? It looks great! I need to get one of those made sometime...
ReplyDelete