Az ajándékom nektek
Hogy ma semmilyen, de tényleg semmilyen pszichózisról nem mesélek.
Ma békén hagyom a kapcsolati konfliktusok elemezgetését, a múlton való rágódást, de még a jövőről való ábrándozást is. Ma nem fejtem meg a személyiségfejlődés kulcskérdéseit, nem szembesítem magamat, sem másokat semmivel, és nem teszek fel kérdéseket se.
Mindenkinek azt kívánom, hogy töltse úgy ezt a napot, ahogy a lelke legmélyén szeretné, és, ha most még nem sikerült, de jövő karácsonyra kapja meg mindazt amire most vágyik!
Szeretek itt lenni, és köszönöm, hogy figyeltek rám.
Sokat jelent nekem.
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Mornings and Evenings with Jesus
by William Jay
Morning Devotional - November 24th
The blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel.
- Hebrews 12:24
The blood of Abel here referred to is typical. The language is used comparatively. Abel’s blood was shed by wicked and cruel hands; so was the blood of Christ. Abel’s blood was shed by his own brother according to the flesh. Abel’s blood spake; so did the blood of Christ. But here comparison becomes contrast. In common language we say of the murdered, His blood cries aloud for vengeance. So it is said of the sins of Sodom, that the cry of them came up before God. The dreadful crime committed by Cain is referred to in a bold but very elegant figure:-“The voice of thy brother’s blood crieth to me from the ground.” The action was horrid: it was the murder of a brother because his works were righteous. No wonder that such guilt should have provoked the wrath of God.
But the blood of Christ was not only shed by men, but for them; and “his blood speaketh better things than that of Abel,” for Abel’s blood speaks and calls to God for punishment, but the blood of Christ speaks and calls for pardon. The one calls for the death of the murderer, the other calls for-oh, marvellous mercy and grace!-his life. The blood of Abel only called for the destruction of one murderer; the blood of Christ calls for the life of the world, and for salvation for the vilest upon earth, even for those who shed his blood. Therefore he said to his disciples, “When ye preach the gospel, begin at Jerusalem: let those who smote the rock drink of it first.”
Yes, he died to give himself a ransom for sinners, and by his death has shown God’s displeasure and abhorrence of sin, and “he was raised up from the dead that our faith and hope might be in him.” His death was “a sacrifice, and an offering to God of a sweet-smelling savour,” and here “mercy and truth are met together, righteousness and peace embrace each other.” Yea, it is more glorious to God that Christ thus died, than if an apostate world had all perished. He now appears for us above as our High-Priest, “who ever liveth to make intercession for us.”
This blood speaks also to us as well as to God. Abel’s blood spoke not only to God but to Cain; that is, it spoke in his conscience, filling him with horror, and following him wherever he went. He may have become a builder, but he could get no rest; so he became a fugitive and a vagabond upon earth. Christ’s blood speaks peace to all Christians; it tranquillizes the soul; it encourages the penitent; it shows that God is gracious, yea, that “God is love,” for “herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us, and gave his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.” It shows us the possibility of salvation for the very chief of sinners; it tells us how Jesus hath “made peace by the blood of his cross,” -that, therefore, we may venture into the holiest of all by his precious blood.
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Twitter
The Big Screen Awards unveil 2022 nominations
SOURCE: KARLOVY VARY / ‘BOILING POINT’
The shortlist for The Big Screen Awards 2022 has been announced, with Philip Barantini’s Boiling Point leading the way with six nominations.
Two of the new categories, Breakthrough British Filmmaker and Actor, include the likes of Reggie Yates, Bella Ramsey, Honor Swinton Byrne and Jim Archer.
Companies nominated for this years awards include The Walt Disney Company, Picturehouse, Vue, Odeon, Altitude, Curzon, Lionsgate UK, Everyman Group, Cineworld, Sony Pictures, MUBI and BFI Distribution.
The Big Screen Awards were rebranded from the Screen Awards, last held in 2019, and aim to recognise the achievements of marketing, distribution, publicity and exhibition teams and companies for their work releasing films into UK cinemas and connecting them with audiences.
In addition to the breakthrough UK filmmaker and actor awards, there are three other new categories for 2022: Big Screen Event; the Green Screen Award; and the Diversity and Inclusion Initiative.
The shortlist will now be debated by an independent jury of industry experts, who select the final winners. This year’s Big Screen Awards judges are listed here.
The Best British Film category will be decided by a public vote.
The Big Screen Awards ceremony will be held on November 24 at the Brewery, London.
For more information on this year’s nominees, click here.
The Big Screen Awards 2022
Best British Film of the Year
After Love (UK distributor: BFI Film Distribution; producer: Matthieu de Braconier)
Ali & Ava (UK distributor: Altitude Film Distribution; producer: Tracy O’Riordan)
Belfast (UK distributor: Universal; producers: Laura Berwick, Kenneth Branagh, Becca Kovacik, Tamar Thomas)
Boiling Point (UK distributor: Vertigo Releasing; producers: Hester Ruoff, Bart Ruspoli)
The Father (UK distributor: Lionsgate UK; producers: Philippe Carcassonne, Simon Friend, Jean-Louis Livi, David Parfitt, Christopher Spadone)
Good Luck To You, Leo Grande (UK distributor: Lionsgate UK; producers: Debbie Gray, Adrian Politowski)
The Lost Daughter (UK distributor: Netflix; producers: Charles Dorfman, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Osnat Handelsman-Keren, Talia Kleinhendler)
The Power Of The Dog (UK distributor: Netflix; producers: Jane Campion, Iain Canning, Roger Frappier, Tanya Seghatchian, Emile Sherman)
The Reason I Jump (UK distributor: Picturehouse Entertainment; producers: Jeremy Dear, Stevie Lee, Al Morrow)
The Souvenir: Part II (UK distributor: Picturehouse Entertainment; producers: Ed Guiney, Joanna Hogg, Andrew Lowe, Emma Norton, Luke Schiller)
Big Screen Event of the Year
Baby Lame presents Showgirls Live!, Rio Cinema
Gentleminions Screenings, Vue Entertainment
Glasgow Film Festival, Glasgow Film
Irish premiere of Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast, Belfast Film Festival
Kino Dreams – A Wim Wenders Retrospective, Curzon Film
Nightmare Alley at Screen on the Green, Pearl & Dean, IM Marketing, Searchlight Pictures & Jaguar
UK Royal Premiere of Top Gun: Maverick, Odeon Luxe Leicester Square
Other nominees listed at ScreenDaily
The Big Screen Awards
Northern Ireland Premiere • Belfast Film Festival • 4 November 2021
Remember… there is something about this place that inbuilt in its character is a very strong sense of identity. Sort of an invitation to claim it, own it, your home, like through a stick of rock, so when you leave that or lose that I think you can have a troubled time. — Sir Kenneth Branagh
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