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7 illustrations for sermon preparation
WALL-E is the last robot on Earth, compacting trash after humanity fled. He's developed something unexpected: a personality, curiosity, loneliness. He collects treasures from the garbage. He watches old musicals and dreams of holding hands. Then EVE arrives—sleek, modern, purposeful.
In Remember the Titans, Coach Boone forces his racially divided football team to room together, eat together, learn each other's stories. Gary and Julius—white captain and Black leader—start as enemies and become brothers.
In Rush, James Hunt and Niki Lauda are rivals who despise each other—and make each other better. Hunt's recklessness pushes Lauda's precision; Lauda's discipline challenges Hunt's chaos. Neither would be champion without the other. As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.
In Stand By Me, four 12-year-old boys walk twenty miles to find a dead body. The journey isn't really about the body—it's about friendship forged in shared adventure. Gordie, the narrator, reflects: "I never had any friends later on like...
In 127 Hours, Aron Ralston is trapped alone in a canyon, arm pinned by a boulder. For five days he faces death in isolation. The film flashes to memories of community he took for granted—family, friends, a woman he loved carelessly.
Picture Chuck Noland, stranded on a desolate island, his world reduced to the sound of crashing waves and the rustling of palm fronds. In the midst of the vast emptiness, he discovers an unlikely companion: a volleyball named Wilson. With...
In the film *Whiplash*, we journey into the gritty world of jazz through the eyes of a young drummer named Andrew Neiman. Picture Andrew, a bespectacled dreamer, practicing in a cramped apartment, the echoes of his sticks hitting the snare...
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