I don't know what community you live in, but where I am from
its the Christian folks in the community that are the most proactive about making things happen for people in need.
Not exact matches
Several
folks in the comment section argued that one can not seriously follow Jesus
in the context of suburbia, and that true
Christians will sell their belongings, move to the inner - city, and live
in intentional
community among the poor.
Not all
Christians will follow the lead of the new monastics to create intentional
communities in abandoned places of empire, but those that do, such as the
folks at Camden House
in New Jersey, can teach the rest of us a lot — for example, about environmental racism.
Folks, a lot of
Christians in this discussion seem to be pleading not to paint the entire
christian community in bad light, just cos of the deeds of one person.
In the space of a single generation Christian communities were established in most of the eastern provinces of the Roman empire, and as far west as Italy: a remarkable achievement for a society which started with a handful of humble folk from the small towns of a petty «native state»
In the space of a single generation
Christian communities were established
in most of the eastern provinces of the Roman empire, and as far west as Italy: a remarkable achievement for a society which started with a handful of humble folk from the small towns of a petty «native state»
in most of the eastern provinces of the Roman empire, and as far west as Italy: a remarkable achievement for a society which started with a handful of humble
folk from the small towns of a petty «native state».
After years of those outside of the
Christian Faith define all
Christians as cloistered now someone inside of the
community writes a se - x book and
folks are up
in arms again.