seen from Germany
seen from Italy

seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from Italy
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Bulgaria
seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
You don’t have to be who you first were. That early version of yourself, that season you were in, even the phase you are currently experiencing—it is all good or purposeful or at least useful and created a fuller, nuanced you and contributed to your life’s meaning, but you are not stuck in a category just because you were once branded that way. Just because something was does not mean it will always be.
Of Mess and Moxie.
I am very late here, but if you are a progressive Christian, a female Christian LGBTQ+ Christian, someone who leans Christian, is a former Christian and wants to go back or any body else I’d recommend listening to Jen Hatmaker’s podcast (in general) with Rachel Held Evans. I am such a fan of Rachel’s writing and way of thinking about the Bible being a conversation starter, not an ender. They cover more during the podcast, like giving ourselves permission to doubt and questions things we aren’t okay with, and reading the Bible in context. Every time I listen or read anything from either of these women it makes me excited to be alive in the Church today
Be the kind of friend you are hoping for. Trust me, no one wants a perfect friend who can’t offer a minute of transparency. We can get that on Pinterest. Our souls ache for real people in real homes with real kids and real lives. We may carefully curate online identities with well-chosen pictures and selective information, but doing so leaves us starving for something true. I seek only friends who bleed and sweat and laugh and cry. Don't fear your humanity; it is your best offering.
Jen Hatmaker, For the Love: Fighting for Grace in a World of Impossible Standards
There is no scarcity in creativity. The world always needs good offerings. We cannot have too much beauty. There is no such thing as too much wisdom and literature and story and craftsmanship. There is room for you. Don't be intimidated by successful makers; be inspired by them. Creativity doesn't divide but multiply, finding new expressions in everyone inspired by someone else's gift. We can draw from our favorite writers, artists, musicians, thinkers, leaders, teachers; they sharpen and stretch us, laying pavement for our own gifts, offering possibility and permission to be even better versions of our own creative selves. No need to feel threatened or minimized by someone else's amazing talents. It is all fed by the same river that has no end, no threshold, no limits. Draw from your treasured mentors and then create what only you can; there is no one else who can do exactly what you do in the way you do it. Your story is yours alone. No one has already claimed your seat at the table no matter how similar the genre. Do your time; there is room for you.
Jen Hatmaker, Of Mess and Moxie
Listen to those of us 20 years ahead of you: this life is not a race or a contest. There's enough abundance to go around. Your seat at the table is secure. And you have incredible gifts to offer. You are not in competition with your peers.
Jen Hatmaker, Of Mess and Moxie
This podcast episode is so, so healing and beautiful. If any queer Christians just need to hear a mama bear offering her kid love and support, or if you wanna hear said gay daughter talk about growing up gay in church, this is a goodie.