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7 illustrations for sermon preparation
In Spotlight, Boston Globe journalists uncover the Catholic Church's systematic cover-up of child abuse. They share their roof with survivors, listen to painful stories, bring hidden wickedness into light.
"Carpe diem. Seize the day, boys. Make your lives extraordinary." Mr. Keating stands his students before photos of former students—now dead—and whispers their message: "We are food for worms, lads." The urgency of mortality. James writes similarly: "What is your life?
In Erin Brockovich, a twice-divorced single mother with no legal training uncovers a massive corporate cover-up poisoning a town's water. She has no credentials—just tenacity and a heart for the victims. "You are the light of the world...
In Titanic, as the ship sinks, many reveal their true character. The band plays on. The captain goes down with the ship. Rose finds a floating door but Jack stays in the freezing water, ensuring she survives.
Imagine a darkened room, the kind where the air hangs thick with the scent of stale coffee and the hum of fluorescent lights buzzes just overhead. A group of friends, tired yet content, gather around a flickering screen, their eyes...
Imagine you’re in a dimly lit room, the air thick with anticipation. You're surrounded by people, each one wearing a mask of comfort, their eyes glazed over in a hypnotic state of contentment. This is the world Neo finds himself...
In the poignant film *Dead Poets Society*, we find ourselves in the hallowed halls of Welton Academy—a bastion of tradition where the echoes of past generations linger in the air like the scent of old leather-bound books. The camera pans...
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