In the fifteenth century, a rural village in Germany was home to a family with eighteen children. The family was poor, but despite the difficulty of making ends meet, two of the boys still held a dream, namely to pursue their talent as artists. With the financial situation bleak, the two boys came up with their own solution to the problem. They agreed to toss a coin with the loser going to the local mines to work so he could support the other while he attended art school. When the first was finished with his training, he would support the education of the other, either by sale of his art works or by going to the mines himself. Thus, one brother went off to the dangerous mines while the other went to the art academy. After four years the young artist returned triumphantly to a homecoming di…
Sacrifice Leads to Life
Hebrews 10:16-25
Hebrews 10:16-25
Sermon
by Richard Gribble
by Richard Gribble
CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Redemption to Transformation: The Journey of Lent and Easter, by Richard Gribble