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"Didst not thou sow good seed?"
It was 7 a.m. Just moments before, I had been thinking, "What a splendid morning!" And then, out of the blue, our teenage son verbally assaulted his father. An immediate, loud, and threatening altercation ensued.
Dazed, I found myself asking, "Where in the world did all this come from?" Immediately, the answer came into thought—it seemed almost audible: "An enemy hath done this."
I recognized these words as part of Christ Jesus' parable of the tares and wheat in the Bible (see Matt. 13:24–30). I almost laughed as I realized that the challenge was not really between parent and child. The challenge was to stay mentally and spiritually awake, to understand that the harmony of divine Love and its embrace of each individual are permanent. An eternal fact of God's spiritual creation, harmony cannot be assaulted. This impersonal attack truly had no source, no target or substance. That understanding enabled me to see that there was nothing to react to. The "enemy" was that which would deny the ever-presence of good, God.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
May 13, 1996 issue
View Issue-
Stopping terrorism through spiritual vision
Barbara Cook
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Your dominion: established in God
Mary Hardin DeSena
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Being is intact
Christina Sloan
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"Thy neighbour as thyself"
Margaret Singleton Decker
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A gem
Elliot O. Yemitan
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"Didst not thou sow good seed?"
Written for the Sentinel
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A home no one can take away from you
Mary Metzner Trammell
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I would like to add my gratitude and thanks to the pages of this....
Seaward B. Grant
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For many years, I was self-conscious about a lump on my face
William M. Fabian