Posts: 2958
Joined: 3/31/2005
From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow, Point B, NC
Status: offline
I took the "Hello" to be a subliminal admission of guilt. So they are halfway to true repentance. Admission of Guilt is the easy part- As we can all attest, TURNING from said sin is REALLY hard. I am off to Wal-Mart in a bit... anyone need me to grab them some groceries. Buying my own groceries just isn't enough of a buzz anymore.
Posts: 2223
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: just north of Florida
Status: online
Yes Ezri, I am almost out of peanuts. You know the big bag that has the peanuts still in the shell? It would be lovely of you to pick some up for me.
You know what is sinful? Gas is creaping up closer and closer to $4/ gallon! I'll be glad when we sell our home. The three hour weekend trip between home and work is getting expensive.
Posts: 7707
Joined: 9/19/2005
From: Washington State
Status: offline
Well, I confess that I went grocery shopping, then I went and took out a second mortgage gassed up my car. However, in my defense, at the grocery store, I did pick up the fixings to make smores...
Well, I confess that I went grocery shopping, then I went and took out a second mortgage gassed up my car. However, in my defense, at the grocery store, I did pick up the fixings to make smores...
I didn't see "in my defense, I'm sharing my s'mores with y'all," so...
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Faith without obedience is impossible. Obedience without faith is unlikely. Together they are powerful beyond measure.
What is truly confusing to me is that diesel is 70-80 cents a gallon higher than regular. Anybody know why?
So far, what I've been able to figure out is that the demand for diesel coming from Europe (and other countries smart enough to figure out how much better it works than gasoline) is creating a bit of an imbalance. In the US, cars are 99% gasoline, so there's a bit less competition.
Shouldn't we be raising and growing our own food in our own fields? If we are doing this then there is no reason to be grocery shopping.
Laura, For shame! Don't you know that this is a serious no-no as well? (Seeds have to die for crops to grow... imported wisdom from a real knowledgeable guy...) If not, maybe you should read all about it here.
Posts: 2223
Joined: 4/11/2005
From: just north of Florida
Status: online
It's scriptural for seeds to die. Kinda like Jesus being put in the grave and all that. But I never read about anyone fertilizing Jesus in the grave. Perhaps that is why that gardener was there when the gals showed up the next morning. (thinking about what fertilizer is made of I am sure that God must be glaring at me right now. If not God than maybe Jimbo or Ezri).
Posts: 2958
Joined: 3/31/2005
From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow, Point B, NC
Status: offline
quote:
It's scriptural for seeds to die. Kinda like Jesus being put in the grave and all that. But I never read about anyone fertilizing Jesus in the grave. Perhaps that is why that gardener was there when the gals showed up the next morning. (thinking about what fertilizer is made of I am sure that God must be laughing at me right now. If not God than maybe Jimbo or Ezri).
<-- edited by me
*pulls on her hip waders*
I think that the question of using fertilizer on dead seeds being scriptural or not should be another thread. We have far too much controversy with the grocery topic to really dive into the fertilizer topic and do it justice here.