Real fellowship is so much more than just showing up at services. It is experiencing life together. It includes unselfish loving, honest sharing, practical serving, sacrificial giving, sympathetic comforting, and all the other “one another” commands found in the New Testament.
When it comes to fellowship, size matters: Smaller is better. You can worship in a crowd, but you can't fellowship with one. Once a group becomes larger than about ten people, someone stops participating—usually the quietest person—and a few people will dominate the group.
Jesus ministered in the context of a small group of disciples. He could have chosen more, but he knew twelve is about the maximum size you can have in a small group if everyone is to participate.
(Rick Warren, The Purpose Driven Life. Grand Rapids: Zondervan [2002] 138-139.)
A way of funding writing in the future: pitch and idea and get people to support it.
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How to recalibrate the home button on your iPhone.
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Thought Balloon is a group blog in which the writers tackle a new theme every week? month? with one-page scripts. This URL is for their Phonogram ones.
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Issues organised by tale.
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Er, but doesn’t that mean that ideally Jesus should have stopped at ten disciples?
Maybe Jesus wasn’t an idealist
j/k