Good Friday is my favorite day of the liturgical year . Perhaps you can chalk that one up to my melancholic temperament. I tend to think deeply on the tragedies of life, which to me are more powerful than euphoric moments. Isn't joy more powerful than sorrow? Isn't God a God of joy and love rather than a God of doom and gloom? Totes. However, like most things pertaining to God, there is a wide range of adjectives that can apply to how He reveals Himself to us. After all, there's a wide range of His life experiences: He was born in a manger; He was transfigured with Moses and Elijah. He spoke authoritatively to vast crowds; He was abandoned by all but one of his closest friends. He encompasses all things (omnipresence) and knows all things (omniscience). We think about these things, that is, how the Son of God found glory in being made incarnate in a manger, or how He won salvation for all men while at the trough of human emotion, because we can empathize. I doubt I...
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