www.storymania.com
Storymania Logo

 

 

Essays




The Future Of Islam In Russia by Wael El-Manzalawy - [263 words]
Metrolink608: Number One Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Christmas, New years, laughter, tears, teasing, the engineer steeler, and liv... [6,046 words]
Metrolink608: Cuddled By The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi quiet confidence, energetic moments, teasing, ephiphany, the engineer and... [3,783 words]
She Likes Trains: Station Gold by Shelley J Alongi Glen the Metrolink engineer's first vocal utterance has inspired my new series o... [2,734 words]
Metrolink111: The Best Two Minutes by Shelley J Alongi I've always said that Glen provided the best two minutes of my day. This wee... [3,088 words]
Metrolink111 Love On The Rails by Shelley J Alongi Oh the joy and pain of communicating with a locomotive engineer. MP36 verses FP5... [5,155 words]
Metrolink111: Going Steady by Shelley J Alongi Steady as she goes, a dilemma, cherishing the engineer, it doesn't get any better th... [4,897 words]
Heavy. What. by Angel Of Hope A vignette of my family. [170 words]
Annoyingted One by Angel Of Hope A vignette about my name. [170 words]
Splatterpunk: Welcome To It by Iron Dave An essay on the splatterpunk movement of the 1980s [2,637 words]
Metrolink111:She Likes Trains by Shelley J Alongi Metrolink Glen, my engineer, how did you ever get it so right? How could somethin... [2,190 words]
Metrolink111: Sweet Engine Purring by Shelley J Alongi Locomotives, engineer withdrawals, a stressful day, crying on the engineer's... [3,992 words]
Metrolink111: Alfa Cat Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Another week ends at the fullerton station for Shelley and her engineers. Well,... [3,359 words]
Hamkatramck by Angel Of Hope A vignette about Hamtrack, Michigan. [171 words]
Metrolink111: The Disney Engineer by Shelley J Alongi This doesn't take place at the Fullerton train station, it takes place at Dis... [2,046 words]
Who Americans Are And What They Do by Angel Of Hope - [869 words]
Timeline Of My Life by Angel Of Hope - [569 words]
Now That I'm Older, I'm Still Not Wiser by James Snyder Now that summer is over and the children are back in school I found mys... [883 words]
Metrolink111: Sweet Nothings by Shelley J Alongi This week, at the fullerton train station, Glen, the mysterious Metrolink engineer... [4,452 words]
Metrolink111: Slumming It With The Guys by Shelley J Alongi the engineer factor, can she find the train, plans, a supportive metrol... [3,522 words]
Metrolink111: Shaking Hands With The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi My Glen full of surprises. [2,541 words]
Metrolink111: My Happy Places by Shelley J Alongi An engineer, food, a gentle train journey, and meeting a restaurant owner. It's a... [3,331 words]
Metrolink111: Love Your Best Station Girl by Shelley J Alongi Does he remember my name? Does he know where to find locomotive specs... [6,322 words]
A Pretty Girl by Angel Of Hope - [1,592 words]
Metrolink111: Touching The Locomotive by Shelley J Alongi This week it's all about Glen and doign something that I've been afraid t... [2,520 words]
Metrolink111: Questions People Ask by Shelley J Alongi A stellar day in the nonlogic department at the fullerton train station. [1,645 words]
Metrolink111: Listening To The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi After gushing about glen, it's time for the story I haven't told you ye... [1,540 words]
Metrolink111: Finding The Gold Nuggetts by Shelley J Alongi An accident memorial, a not for an engineer, and everything in between.... [5,339 words]
Metrolink111: Finding The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Comfort, food, waving, and just plain finding the engineer. [2,750 words]
Metrolink111: All The Engineer You Need by Shelley J Alongi A heckler, intrigued engineers, and just how do you pronounce chatswort... [2,122 words]
Those Darndest Packets Of Powder by Angel Of Hope An editorial for class. [872 words]
Real Women Vs. Media's Version Of Women by Dream Rinsed Pretty&Beautiful vs. Hot&Sexy. [156 words]
Metrolink111: The Place Of Escape by Shelley J Alongi Waving at and interacting with engineers, teasing, and escaping with trains. [3,034 words]
Metrolink111: Chatsworth Stories by Shelley J Alongi Today I make thirty seconds of contact with a locomotive engineer who knew Rob... [3,903 words]
Metrolink111: All My Engineers by Shelley J Alongi What a journey I've had over the last year since the chatsworth accident. I keep... [2,519 words]
Metrolink111: A Crush On The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Why don't I just admit that I have a mad crush on someone I never met, an... [2,595 words]
Letters About Islam I by Wael El-Manzalawy - [170 words]
Metrolink111: In Search Of The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Which engineer you ask? By now in my story you have several choices. Pi... [3,492 words]
Metrolink111: Flowers For An Engineer by Shelley J Alongi On this trip to Chatsworth I meet rob's conductor, lay flowers for him, g... [3,305 words]
Metrolink111 Education On The Rails by Shelley J Alongi Saturday September 12, 2009 finds me passing through Chatsworth on my way t... [3,334 words]
A Strange New Car by Orin G Quilar An essay about an embarrassing moment with someone else's car. [347 words]
Metrolink111: Asking The Freight Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Making life happen, conversations, a pleasant August evening at the f... [2,756 words]
In An Airplane Going To San Francisco by Angel Of Hope - [133 words]
The Falseness Of The Evolution Theory by Wael El-Manzalawy - [332 words]
Metrolink111: The Case Of The Dejected Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Questions, Chatsworth connections, eyes, and a milestone. [1,950 words]
Metrolink111: No No Magic Days by Shelley J Alongi Only someone at a train station would call me a gold digger. Heartache, trouble,... [2,182 words]
On And Off The Wall by Piper Davenport - [1,538 words]
My Silent Friend (Shadows) by Veraelaine Louch We are never truly alone. There is always someone with us. [201 words]
Moving Beyond The Pain by Piper Davenport - [2,014 words]
Metrolink111: Shoes, Songs And Tunnels by Shelley J Alongi All I can say is that two trains colliding last September led to all thi... [3,128 words]
Metrolink111: Rob Among The Chips And The Cookies: Almost by Shelley J Alongi Someone told me that I would stir up fireworks in Cha... [1,910 words]
Society, The Family And A Thatcher. by Colin Baker When UK conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asserted in 1987 that... [5,380 words]
What Do We Want? Concrete Fairness! When Do We Want It? Now! by Colin Baker Live Aid and Live 8 failed because they made metap... [4,232 words]
Screwball Scramble by Colin Baker There is a good reason for the phenomenon of frenzied shopping in the Western world. [2,381 words]
Metrolink111: Late Baby Late by Shelley J Alongi Late trains, freight engineers, and new connections. [2,786 words]
Metrolink111: Assist At Chatsworth by Shelley J Alongi I meet the fans that knew Rob Sanchez and get ideas for the memorial plaque.... [2,561 words]
A Hypothesis On Life by Mike Piotrowski A philosophical approach to a question with an impossible answer. Would like to hear your ... [416 words]
The Islamic Civilization And The Western Civilization by Wael El-Manzalawy - [472 words]
On Turning Sixty by Robert Levin The rewards of turning sixty [544 words]
Metrolink111: Here Comes Your Freight by Shelley J Alongi Of horns, freights and memorial plaques. [2,178 words]
Metrolink111: Finding Rob's Spot by Shelley J Alongi A cheeseburger, freight trains, and the quest to find a spot for a memorial pl... [1,590 words]
Metrolink111: Defending The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi Two trips to the Fullerton station, a trip to a railroad model shop, the C... [2,416 words]
Metrolink111: Railroad Family Ties by Shelley J Alongi You would never ever guess what the common factor in my train station journe... [2,056 words]
Metrolink111: Sick For Trains by Shelley J Alongi The chatsworth accident, engineers, friends, a dog that's a train fan, quiet mome... [2,995 words]
Easter Everyday
Chatsworth Journal: Observations About The Metrolink111 Crash On September 12 2008 by Shelley J Alongi I'm obsessed with the Chatsw... [1,785 words]
Metrolink111: Not Quite Throwing The Switch by Shelley J Alongi Finally, a real live, sort of railroad switch! [2,017 words]
Metrolink111: Blame The Engineer by Shelley J Alongi So people want to drag Rob Sanchez's name through the mud after the Chatsworth... [2,215 words]
What If I Die Today by Raine Lariza It is an essay about how is it like if one person dies today.. Read on :) [507 words]
Metrolink111: Is She A Foamer by Shelley J Alongi Six months and it all comes down to one question. Between grief, solace, creativi... [2,665 words]
The Paradise by Wael El-Manzalawy - [183 words]
Sex In Islam by Wael El-Manzalawy - [244 words]
Metrolink111: The Human Place by Shelley J Alongi Six months after the Chatsworth train wreck it is the human story that draws me t... [1,174 words]
Pagan Cycles Of Modern Religion by Dr Lemuria - [2,935 words]
Our Secret Reality by Dr Lemuria - [196 words]
Metrolink111: The Planter By The Railroad Tracks by Shelley J Alongi Margaret Mitchell had her window seat. I have my planter by th... [2,342 words]
How We Create Reality by Dr Lemuria - [7,362 words]
Dr Lemurias Host by Dr Lemuria - [12,404 words]
Aura's by Dr Lemuria - [301 words]
Amphibian Features by Dr Lemuria - [544 words]
All Religions Need To Read This by Dr Lemuria - [3,363 words]
Aliens by Dr Lemuria - [1,087 words]
Alcyone by Dr Lemuria - [382 words]
Alchemy by Dr Lemuria - [272 words]
Akashic Records by Dr Lemuria - [231 words]
Ahkenaton by Dr Lemuria - [701 words]
After-Life by Dr Lemuria - [241 words]
Affirmation by Dr Lemuria - [352 words]
Adamic Men by Dr Lemuria - [235 words]
Abydos by Dr Lemuria - [253 words]
Abductions by Dr Lemuria - [174 words]

Go to page: 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
TITLE (EDIT)
Easter Everyday
DESCRIPTION
A passionate portrait of Mary's love for her son and how the Easter message should be celebrated everyday.
[505 words]
TITLE KEYWORD
History
AUTHOR
Bridgett Nesbit
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bridgett Nesbit is a single mother and award winning writer for newspapers such as the Charlotte Observer.
[April 2009]
AUTHOR'S OTHER TITLES (4)
Child Of God (Short Stories) Tamara Stevens's husband had forgotten how long they'd known one another and rumors of Pastors infidelity had always been just a vivicous rumor. But this time it would be different; this time he would... [16,631 words] [Popular Fiction]
Freedom Song By Bridgett Nesbit (Poetry) Even behind bars some still have a song in thier hearts. This poet depicts that spirit while hoping for freedom [77 words] [Drama]
Opening Up Her Home And Heart (Short Stories) Anna Howard could shoulder her own pain; living with lupus for over ten years but the retired school teacher decided to open her home and heart to the homeless. [831 words]
Victory In The Mist Of Defeat (Short Stories) A young pastor along with other concerned community leaders and pastors hold a meeting to discuss prevention steps for the summer in an area known for drugs, crime and murder. [882 words] [Biography]
Easter Everyday
Bridgett Nesbit


TO LEARN MORE ABOUT JESUS' LIFE, CONSIDER MARY'S
RESURRECTION WAS PROOF OF WHAT SHE HAD KNOWN: HER SON WAS DIVINE

Even though Easter has come and gone, I wanted to find a way to celebrate the resurrection of the Son of God everyday and in a more intimate than before.

I picked up my Bible and began poring through the New Testament Scriptures about the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.


Unexpectedly, the person who leapt out at me in the passages was Mary.
How did Mary feel about the baby Jesus, who had been prophesied to save the world?

It isn't farfetched to be intrigued by Mary when trying to understand and appreciate Jesus intimately.

Jesus was born in the audience of animals and some fortunate shepherds and to bewildered parents who witnessed divinity emerging from a teenager's womb.

As Mary stood at the cross of her dying son, she must have remembered those moments and what the prophet Simeon told her when the couple took the baby to the temple.

"A sword shall surely pierce through your soul also, that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed" (Luke 2:35).

Jesus as a child must have had a favorite bedtime story, toy and playmate, with no one but a few like Mary noticing that he was the growing image of the invisible God.

She'd probably wiped his runny nose, kissed his scraped knee and removed splinters from the fingers of the budding carpenter, knowing all the time that he was assigned to be the bishop of many souls.

Jesus performed his first miracle for Mary, turning water into wine, and I'm sure Mary must have heard about him giving sight to the blind, feeding multitudes and raising Lazarus from the dead.

In looking at Mary's part in the story, I believe a strange mixture of grief and joy flooded her heart as Jesus spoke to her and the disciple from the cross (John: 19:26-27).

To Mary, he said, "Woman, behold thy son."

To the disciple, "Behold your mother."

Then, the disciple led Mary away.

Soon the Messiah, also known as the living water, would profess that he was thirsty (John 21:28).

The walk from the cross must have been hard for Mary, watching the carpenter who had put away his hammer and nails to be nailed to the cross of the world's convictions.

After Jesus rose from the dead, there is no scriptural reference to a conversation between mother and son, but we were given a front-row seat to salvation, learning what Mary knew from the beginning.

It is the biggest detail of God's divine rescue mission, that he rose again.

From that point, no one could say that God did not understand and love his creations.

He rose again, and God stepped from behind the veil and introduced himself more intimately than before.

Mary knew that the nails did not hold Jesus on the cross; love did.

He did not die and rise again for the world's glory; he was and still is the world's glory.

He rose again because he wanted us to know that through him, nothing is impossible for those who believe.

 

READER'S REVIEWS (1)
DISCLAIMER: STORYMANIA DOES NOT PROVIDE AND IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR REVIEWS. ALL REVIEWS ARE PROVIDED BY NON-ASSOCIATED VISITORS, REGARDLESS OF THE WAY THEY CALL THEMSELVES.

"I loved it; it reminds me to take what Jesus did with me to the cross everyday, literary." -- Yeve Parker, Charlotte, NC, US.

TO DELETE UNWANTED REVIEWS CLICK HERE! (SELECT "MANAGE TITLE REVIEWS" ACTION)

Submit Your Review for Easter Everyday
Required fields are marked with (*).
Your e-mail address will not be displayed.

Your Name*     E-mail*

City     State/Province     Country

Your Review (please be constructive!)*


Please Enter Code*:

Submit Your Rating for Easter Everyday

Worst     1     2     3     4     5     6     7     8     9     10     Best

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
© 2004 Bridgett Nesbit
STORYMANIA PUBLICATION DATE
April 2009
NUMBER OF TIMES TITLE VIEWED
1676
 

Copyright © 1998-2001 Storymania Technologies Limited. All Rights Reserved.