“Inspirations for the week”

 

 

 
On this day of your life
Mary Ellen, I believe God wants you to know…

…that you have something important to contribute
to your world today.

 

Every day, God sends you one person for whom
you hold a gift in your hand. You will not know
what it is until that person greets you, but you
will then know it immediately.

 

The only questions remaining will be: Will you give
your gift? Right then and there? Fully and completely?

 

By the end of this day you will know why you
received this message just now.  (05-23-2013)

On this day of your life
Mary Ellen, I believe God wants you to know…

…that fairness is not obvious in every case.

 

Look, we all want life to be fair, right? But
sometimes it just isn’t. True? No. False. Life
is always fair — it sometimes just does not
look that way.
 
You will see how ‘fair’ life is if you will give
it a chance to play itself out. Wait. See. 
Your Higher Self, which always wants the
best for you, is in charge here. Believe it.
On this day of your life
Mary Ellen, I believe God wants you to know…
…that your trust has not been misplaced.

 

Listen to your Self today. You have been telling
yourself something very important for days now.
Today, listen more closely. And heed.
 
Trust the still, small voice within. Your soul is
gently leading you to your next step.
On this day of your life
Mary Ellen, I believe God wants you to know…
…that you are a pure child of God, beautiful in your innocence — and
that this is true no matter what you may have done.

 

There is no offense you could ever commit that can rob you of your
magnificence, or of the wonder of who you are. Gosh, Eliot Spitzer’s
drama has brought up a lot of stuff for all of us, hasn’t it? Yet who
among us hasn’t fallen from the path, betrayed another, acted
unwisely, fallen prey to temptation, given in to a craving or addiction?
 
All of us are human. And in God’s eyes that makes us perfect.
Really. Just the way we are. Like 3-year-olds, looking anxiously
up at some elder, wondering with quivering lips whether we’ll get
a spanking for breaking the rules…
 
The 3-year-old is beautiful in her innocence. He is pure as snow,
and there is simply something that has not been totally understood,
or fully integrated into behavior yet. It’s okay. We don’t mean to
be “bad.” And in truth, we aren’t. Not a one of us.
 
We’re simply, sometimes, mistaken. And God loves us anyway.
Immensely. Completely. Eternally.
 
Just    as    we    are.  (05-13-2016)

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