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James R. Cooper's avatar

This article captures something that is hard to put into words without either flattening it or making it sentimental.

To me, the way you frame distance and separation not just as something to endure, but as something that may actually belong to the conditions of becoming. Not as a flaw in the plan, but as part of what makes love deepen into something more conscious, chosen, and lasting.

It also made me think about mortality itself as a gift, even with its losses. Not because loss is easy, and not because separation hurts any less, but because this life seems to be the place where love, longing, gratitude, and sorrow actually teach us something. Scripture does not treat suffering as meaningless interruption. It can become part of what gives us experience and shapes us for more than we are now.

That is part of what I appreciate in this piece. It does not rush past the ache, but it also does not treat it as empty. It leaves room for the possibility that even these distances, painful as they are, belong to the kind of life through which God is enlarging the heart.

It leaves room for the possibility that even these distances, painful as they are, belong to a life where improvement and progression have one eternal round.

Randall Paul's avatar

True and beautiful like great poetry. Thanks! Zion bound we are to improve everlasting lives among Kolobians . . .

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