Thank you for being willing to have this conversation. Yes life is messy, and loving someone is messy.
To quote a guy from 2000 years ago. Let the person who has no sin, be the one to throw the first stone. When we are honest, we all know that we have failed at some point, which means no stones being thrown.
Interesting through-line with your previous interview with Rachel Cohen, about volunteering: the importance of community. Despite its fatal flaws, I’ve always been impressed with how church communities rally around each other in times of hardship. Possible/probable correlation between rising divorce rates and the media’s push to normalize divorce, and the drop in church involvement. I’m glad this fellow had people around him.
Thank you for being willing to have this conversation. Yes life is messy, and loving someone is messy.
To quote a guy from 2000 years ago. Let the person who has no sin, be the one to throw the first stone. When we are honest, we all know that we have failed at some point, which means no stones being thrown.
Loved this. Thanks for interviewing him.
Interesting through-line with your previous interview with Rachel Cohen, about volunteering: the importance of community. Despite its fatal flaws, I’ve always been impressed with how church communities rally around each other in times of hardship. Possible/probable correlation between rising divorce rates and the media’s push to normalize divorce, and the drop in church involvement. I’m glad this fellow had people around him.