November 3rd, 2025

“Then the LORD God formed the man of dust from the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living creature.” - Genesis 2:7
We know that life is a gift, but it is easy to forget. We feel the pressures from the world around us, prompting us to believe we are self-made; after all, we know where babies come from. Or we think that we are who we are because we’ve worked hard to get there.
But Genesis 2 tells us a different story. It reminds us that we are of dust and that God’s breath brought that dust into life. Why are we who we are? Because of the life-breath of God! Our very breath depends on him.
Have you ever stopped to think about the fact that, from moment to moment, we rely on the gracious gift of breath that makes human life possible? That makes God the constant source of our being, not us. At the same time, we also serve a God who sees our vulnerabilities and knows the challenges of being human.
And that points us to Jesus, who not only sees them, but who has experienced them in the flesh. What gives us hope is that Jesus, who was clothed with our own flesh, died, rose to new life, and is now ruling with God in heaven. To think...The dust from which we were made has entered the heavenly throne room on our behalf! Knowing that, we can sing together with the Psalmist who remembers that we are dust in Psalm 103:1, “Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name.”
Grace & Peace,
Pastor Aaron
We know that life is a gift, but it is easy to forget. We feel the pressures from the world around us, prompting us to believe we are self-made; after all, we know where babies come from. Or we think that we are who we are because we’ve worked hard to get there.
But Genesis 2 tells us a different story. It reminds us that we are of dust and that God’s breath brought that dust into life. Why are we who we are? Because of the life-breath of God! Our very breath depends on him.
Have you ever stopped to think about the fact that, from moment to moment, we rely on the gracious gift of breath that makes human life possible? That makes God the constant source of our being, not us. At the same time, we also serve a God who sees our vulnerabilities and knows the challenges of being human.
And that points us to Jesus, who not only sees them, but who has experienced them in the flesh. What gives us hope is that Jesus, who was clothed with our own flesh, died, rose to new life, and is now ruling with God in heaven. To think...The dust from which we were made has entered the heavenly throne room on our behalf! Knowing that, we can sing together with the Psalmist who remembers that we are dust in Psalm 103:1, “Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name.”
Grace & Peace,
Pastor Aaron

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