Guestplaining 001: Sarah Kroger

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024
  • Guestsplaining 001: Sarah Kroger
    Join Fr. Joseph-Anthony Kress and Fr. Patrick Briscoe as they welcome Godsplaining's first guest to the show! Sarah Kroger, a Catholic worship-leader and songwriter, tells the story behind her music and discusses her newest album, Light.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 8

  • @susanhalbedel9605
    @susanhalbedel9605 Рік тому +1

    Sarah, I’m playing Belovedness as part of a talk on the Bride of Christ this coming weekend. Your song and voice have ministered to me for a year and a half! I’ve passed it on to many women and hopefully men as the world is desperate for God’s hope. Thank you and I can’t wait to listen to Standing in the Light!! ✝️🎶🙏🕊

  • @rowenamarthaquesada348
    @rowenamarthaquesada348 8 місяців тому

    Discovered Sarah on the Hallow app and I was moved by her songs. And, I'm glad that I also discovered this channel. God bless

  • @Carolfoasia
    @Carolfoasia Рік тому

    I just came across your song Belovedness. I lead people through meditations in their belovedness where they come out writing a "Beloved Charter," and your song adds such beauty to it. Thank you!

  • @jessr1698
    @jessr1698 Рік тому +1

    Just got into her music on Hallow

  • @tbburditt
    @tbburditt Рік тому +1

    Love Sarah! I laughed out loud at the part of the interview when they discussed that NO ONE buys CD's anymore! LOL! This old lady does!!!!!! LOL!

  • @monique2177
    @monique2177 Рік тому +1

    Gardening is violent? That statement disappointed me. I find gardening quite loving and maternal. And God is fully present; it’s a miracle in the making. Peace.

    • @antonioabunassar
      @antonioabunassar Рік тому

      Greetings! Just sharing some thoughts: I don't think she meant to degrade the value of gardening or say that it is not loving or maternal, rather her point seemed to be that in our spiritual life, just like in other aspects of life, there is patience and discomfort that we need to accept in the "planting" season, so as to allow God to grow fruit in us in the future. The working with the soil, the digging, albeit a special moment to some, does have the connotation of "making your hands dirty," which is not negative or wrong -- it is just the more difficult side of things, and therefore might be grasped as "violence" to our nature (in the same sense that fasting, mortification and even insistent prayer are violent to our nature). Just some thoughts that I hope made sense :)