Family Comes in All Shapes and Sizes
In 2012, my neurologist suggested that I get a service dog to help with certain impairments due to having Parkinson’s disease. Several months later, I
A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another.
Jesus
In 2012, my neurologist suggested that I get a service dog to help with certain impairments due to having Parkinson’s disease. Several months later, I
The Advent Life Seventh-day Adventist Church is an active congregation in Santa Fe that is known for reaching out to its community. The church aims
When students of Sandia View Academy (SVA) met Manuel Gómez, better known as “Pipo,” during their mission trip to Puerto Rico in 2020, the only
“Just as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts form one body, so it is with Christ.” 1 Corinthians 12:12.
GALLUP, N.M. – Like most of the United States, the Navajo Nation in the Southwest has suffered greatly, even disproportionately, from the COVID-19 pandemic. The
Think about your community. The people in your life. Your church. Your local schools. It’s probably not difficult to think of at least one individual who lives a life of pouring out into others-someone who invests their time, attention, and love into those around them. I can think of a few, and I imagine you can too.
In this issue of the Record, we look at what it means to be a living legacy in Christ–someone who lives to uplift others by sharing His love. Joel 1 :3 says, “Tell it to your children, and let your children tell it to their children, and their children to the next generation.” One believer can impact the spiritual path of multiple generations. How can we become living legacies, living to share His love with those around us?
The November | December issue of the Southwestern Union Record, the official publication of the Southwestern Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Volume 120, No. 06.
ESPAÑOLA, N.M. – On a sunny, yet chilly Sabbath afternoon this past spring, my family and I were heading home after the church service. Although
Stay home, stay safe. Just over a year ago, the nationwide lockdown in response to COVID-19 sparked a season of isolation. As information changed daily, uncertainty increased and many churches closed doors for safety. Yet, in that time, creative methods of connection began to emerge.
In 2016, Casey Harris beat cancer. Amidst the nightmare that was 2020, it came back for another fight. But this time Harris, now principal at Sandia View Christian School (SVCS) in New Mexico, was ready for it.