This is not a final itch page - just trying to get something up so I can upload the project tonight! :D Config the goose! Alter properties in the config.goos file (open it in Notepad) to adjust his aggression!) Unlimited memes! Put whatever memes you want in the assets folder! Goose will bring them. NEW CONFIG TOGGLES! Customize the goose's behaviour further, silence the audio, and more! YOUR OWN NOT-EPAD TEXTS! Add whatever notepad phrases you want, and the goose will pull them up! NEW, OFFICIAL MODDING API ! Join the discord discord.gg/xZFRmPT and check the #goose-mods channel for more info on this :D Adds an official mod to let Desktop Goose play in leaf piles! See autumn.txt in the files for more! NOTE: I am not affiliated with House House or Panic. Play video games with a desktop buddy who will attack you if you poke him.įill out spreadsheets while your screen fills up with instances of Goose Notepad. He'll nab your mouse, track mud on your screen. Jesus speaks to the Church - parents, priests, catechists, all members of the Church - and gives this standing order regarding the souls he has raised to new life: “Untie them and let them go free.HONK HONK, HEAR YE. Christ raises us, but he has work for the Church to do: Untie those he has raised in baptism, and let them go free. “So Jesus said to them, ‘Untie him and let him go free.’” Notice something important here: Although Jesus raises Lazarus and gives him new life, Jesus also commands the bystanders to untie Lazarus and let him go free. You can skip right to the end of the Bible and see that Jesus wins there, too. “Jesus cried out in a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come out!’” The dead man came out, tied hand and foot with burial bands …” Its full force comes over him, and he weeps - so much so that the bystanders say, “See how much he loved him.” In his human heart, Jesus experiences the full force of the loss and the blow that death delivers. Coming upon the scene, Jesus is described as deeply moved, as perturbed, as weeping. And so before raising Lazarus and dispelling grief, Jesus checks the condition of Martha’s faith and elicits an act of faith: “Do you believe this?” “Yes, Lord, I have come to believe.” Our faith and our soul are more important to God than our bodies and creature comforts. Encountering Martha, Jesus inquires about her faith. Jesus is determined to go and help Lazarus even though he puts himself in great danger in doing so since they are plotting to kill Jesus in Judea. Note, too, how Jesus’ delay enables something even greater to take place. Somehow our waiting is tied to strengthening us and preparing us for something greater. This, of course, is paradoxical, because we expect love to make one rush to the aid of the afflicted. “So when Jesus heard that he was ill, he remained for two days in the place where he was.” Note that the text says Jesus delayed because he loved Martha and Mary and Lazarus. But, if we are faithful, every trial is ultimately for our glory and the glory of God. The Lord permits these trials and difficulties for various reasons. Sometimes there are trials in our life, by God’s mysterious design, to bring us to greater things. The Gospel opens noting that a close friend of Jesus, Lazarus, is deathly ill. Let’s look at this Gospel in six stages and learn how the Lord acts to save us and raise us to new life.
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