It is the hardest thing to do. It is the thing needed most. This week let us love where it is easy and even where it is hard.

It is the hardest thing to do. It is the thing needed most. This week let us love where it is easy and even where it is hard.

In this month we will celebrate our history. Our affirmations will remind us from where we came.

There are lots of things I love about African Americans, but one of the dearests is that we grieve as a collective. 2020 has been a year of loss.
We have lost a way of life and doing things. We have lost lots of people, the last count was 183,045. We lost Kobe Bryant. We lost Chadwick Boseman. We lost heroes.

I love seeing what other people are thinking and feeling. I find comfort in their words. I love seeing other people’s stories that confirm what type of man we are mourning. That my love is not misplaced.

This morning Albert Tate, senior pastor at Made For Fellowship, said in the collective laughter and tears flow from the same place. This is a safe place for our tears. I don’t grieve this loss alone.
More so, it is the loss of another African American man. God must need them desperately. I can’t wait to hear the story of why.
I also hold onto the truth that God doesn’t take something away from you unless, he has something else for you. My people have experienced a lot, but I believe we will gain more than we have ever imagined.
The old folks used to say Are you yet holding on? (You need to ask someone black how to respond and do it;)

if we want to get anything done. Commit to it. Whatever your goal, commit to it.

Philippians 4:7 says the peace of God will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. This week lets take on this attribute and watch it change the world.

Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves
for the rights of all who are destitute
Speak up and judge fairly
defend the rights of the poor and needy

https://filmyloop.com/destinys-dilemma-by-karen-j-anderson-book-review/

This week’s theme is justice. It is the bone that runs down my spine and holds me together. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr thoughts on justice inspire and give me a vision of what it looks like.

This MLK video on Justice
How you approach 2020 determines what you hope in. Where do you find hope? Is it in yourself? Your family and friends? Your faith? Your job?
This year has shown us that those things are not reliable.
I find my hope in Jesus Christ. He has taught me that He is faithful and I can trust him. When everything around me is shaky and unreliable, daily time in His word reminds me He is constant.
This week, think about where your hope is. What are you relying on to get through the week? Where do you find hope?

This month I learned to work from a place of rest. Let this be your verb this week.
