The last few days I have been enjoying the "real" in nature. When walking my dog in the woods, I hear my steps in the gravel (on path) and fallen leaves (off path). In my frequent "pauses", however, I really get to take in the "real" of the wind, trees, wildlife, temperatures, ect . . . Everything "doing it's own thing" . . . And it is beautiful! Since that which God created before man hasn't "free will", all I experience in the stillness of the woods is most pure in it's reality.
People (all of us) are sinners. We choose our reality (what we say, what we do). People choose who they are most comfortable "being real" with. We choose who we'd like to draw near to and who it is perhaps best to distance ourselves from by the "fruit of their tree". God called His creation of man and woman to be "very good", but in reality, our goodness comes from Him alone.
Your question, should we be real (in our fallen nature), is thought provoking.
On Nov 15, 2014 a sister wrote :
The last few days I have been enjoying the "real" in nature. When walking my dog in the woods, I hear my steps in the gravel (on path) and fallen leaves (off path). In my frequent "pauses", however, I really get to take in the "real" of the wind, trees, wildlife, temperatures, ect . . . Everything "doing it's own thing" . . . And it is beautiful! Since that which God created before man hasn't "free will", all I experience in the stillness of the woods is most pure in it's reality.
People (all of us) are sinners. We choose our reality (what we say, what we do). People choose who they are most comfortable "being real" with. We choose who we'd like to draw near to and who it is perhaps best to distance ourselves from by the "fruit of their tree". God called His creation of man and woman to be "very good", but in reality, our goodness comes from Him alone.
Your question, should we be real (in our fallen nature), is thought provoking.