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To Our Readers
Children! To them , life is full of promise and seems eternal. How could they possibly entertain thoughts of limitation or decline? Age does not enter into the equation for them. Newness, perpetual discovery, is all they know.
To view the world through the eyes of a child is to perceive the beauty and continuity of life. The stars shining brightly in the night, the renewal of nature through the cycles of the seasons, the majestic rock face of a high mountain, all speak of the permanence and grandeur of the universe. Each one of us belongs to this universe. Continuity, not decline, is its characteristic.
But what of the passing of years? Is it not taking something away from us? Not if we are looking in the right direction. The passing of years cannot take away from us what is truly substantial and good in our life. It cannot take away our yearning to keep learning and growing. And it surely cannot take away our moral sense, our determination to live with honesty, according to God's law, and with consideration for others.
Enjoy 1 free Sentinel article or audio program each month, including content from 1898 to today.
July 3, 2000 issue
View Issue-
To Our Readers
Cyril Rakhmanoff
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YOUR LETTERS
with contributions from Markha G. Valenta, A. Belle Anderson
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items of interest
with contributions from Jonathan Gallagher, Angie Cannon, Carolyn Kleiner
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Tell us when it's time to party
By Kay Ramsdell Olson
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A NEW APPROACH TO LIFE FOUND
Aurora Sepúlveda
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Rapping with God
By Judith M. Little
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But I'm right!
By Pamela S. McKnight
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Certainty
Genie B. Demers
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Always connected
By Cynthia N. Beavers
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100 marathons
By Kim Shippey
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Of pets and letters to God
By Terri Higgins Murdock
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Cool cat outfoxes bully
By Pauline D. Jenner
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A lifetime of spiritual healing
Ruth S.Allen
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Mother and son healed through prayer
Lark D'Auria
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Prayer eliminates painful effects of a serious fall
Francis Walsh
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Choosing a new home
By Robert A. Johnson
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Break the "midlife" myth
Mary Metzner Trammell