🌿 Welcome to City2Country.living! 🌿
This channel is about my journey from city life to achieving the dream of country living. 🚜🌻
I share personal stories, practical tips, and spiritual insights to inspire and equip anyone on a similar path. Whether you’re just dreaming or already planning your move, join me as I document the steps, challenges, and lessons along the way. 🌾
Together, we’ll explore faith, resilience, and how the Adventist blueprint for health, agriculture, and education can guide us to a simpler, purpose-filled life. 🙏💚
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City2Country.living
✨ Share Your Country Living Dream! 🌱
We're excited to hear from you! Imagine sharing your dream or vision for country living in a video interview. Would you participate? Choose the option that fits you best, and let's make it happen together!
1 year ago | [YT] | 2
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City2Country.living
The Way to Perfection
In our obsession with perfection, we often treat it like a race—we want to be faster, stronger, better. But in comparing ourselves to others, we lose focus on the true aim—Jesus. We forget that their shoes aren’t our size, and when we stumble, we fall into discouragement. Instead of resting and recharging, we can find ourselves stuck in a pit of darkness, trapped in a vicious cycle where each day feels heavier than the last.
On the path to perfection, we fall into one of two traps: precrastination and procrastination. Precrastination is rushing through tasks just to get them done, sacrificing quality along the way. Procrastination, on the other hand, is putting things off until the last minute, usually out of weariness or laziness. In both cases, the root issue is the same—we have shifted our focus from Jesus to ourselves, and in doing so, we've lost the joy and purpose in life.
The solution? Turn the “M” of “Me” upside down and make it “W” for “We.” Jesus says, “Come to me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest... For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:28-30). Like Moses, who doubted his ability to lead, we often think of our imperfections as disqualifications. But God isn’t looking for perfect actions—He’s looking for authenticity, honesty, and trust.
Jesus calls us to “Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). But this perfection isn’t about flawless accuracy—it’s about being genuine in our walk with Him. When we stop precrastinating and procrastinating, and live fully in Christ, we can say with confidence, as Paul did, “It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me” (Galatians 2:20).
Let’s live authentically in Christ, free from the pressures of perfectionism, and let Him perfect us in His way and in His time.
1 year ago | [YT] | 3
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