Just the gays rachel and jacob
Connect Group Guide
Genesis 29
Theme: Our theme for this week is “Jacob, Rachel, & Leah”. This story is yet another picture of how rebellious man can be, but also how much grace our God has. Jacob & Leah both were broken people with disordered worship that needed God’s intervention. They were consumed with things like; cash, power, sex, and acceptance yet still couldn’t peace and joy. As we look at this story, think about all of the brokenness in your life, but also think about a good God that desires to form you whole again.
Major Points:
(A broken man) Jacob has proven to be a selfish & deceptive man (deceiving his family to inherit the birthright). This birthright included coins and power. The problem is this money and authority Jacob was pursuing was only a trap that could never deliver the satisfaction he looked to gain. On top of that, his selfish desires ended up hurting not only himself but his entire family (we sometimes struggle to perceive the damage our selfishness brings to those around us). This led to him fleeing his home and ruling Laban and his daughters. Jacob’s brokenness continued to show itself in his lust & sex
Dateline Port Charles: Hello Obrecht, Farewell Tits LaRue
Farewell to St. Maria of the Push Up Bra......
Can we all possibly stand yet another shirtless Rory photo? I hope so.
by Anonymous replies 225 July 23, 2025 6:44 PM I will expend two minutes running the vacuum over a stubborn piece of lint in the carpet before I’ll bend over to select it up.
by Anonymous replies 43 July 23, 2025 6:43 PM John Dean is the last surviving major player in the Nixon Administration.
Dean, who was disbarred and served second for his involvement with Watergate, moved to Beverly Hills where he wrote a best selling book, Blind Ambition, recounting his time as White House Counsel, and went into investment banking.
After retiring in 2000, he has authored several books, many criticisms of the modern Republican Party.
by Anonymous replies 7 July 23, 2025 6:43 PM Cunning. Shrewd. Cold. Bitch.
These are just a few of the names she has been called in her forty years of being in high fashion and journalism. Yet, to only classify her as a British Leona Helmsley would be misguided.
From a young age, she either worked in her father's publishing residence or at magazines like
twilight's for the gays now
- The theme this week will be ‘Silence’. At the start of the episode Mercedes tries belting out one of her solos and her voice cracks, they’re were relying on her performance for regionals. - Shue orders her to be silent to save her voice, and as a team building practice the team should stay silent too, Rachel protests and Finn has the great idea to sing songs with silence in the title all week, so everyone can be happy. - There’s a bunch of new students who are all ‘siblings’ at the school. Quinn and Artie are convinced they’re in a cult. - Shue aggressively tries to recruit them in case Mercedes can’t perform at regionals. When they politely decline he corners their father Carlisle, who is the new school nurse and preaches the merits of harmony to him. - Only Edward auditions in the termination and his tortured rendition of ‘Behind blue eyes’ in Gregorian chant moves Mr Shue to tears, Tina is quaking in her shoes (her vampire fetish is stirred), Mike is not happy. - Shue has the galaxy brain idea to do Gregorian chants for the rivalry, cause it’s never been done before and will inflate everyone away. -
(Note: Because AMC is rerunning the first season of "Mad Men" every Sunday at midnight, and because a lot of people missed the show the first time around, I'm reposting my blog reviews for each episode the morning after. These are written as they were back in the summer/early fall; if I touch differently about anything in retrospect, I'll mention it in the comments. Also, while comments from both newbies and people who watched the first moment are welcome, if you've seen these episodes before, please be vague about events in later episodes so as not to spoil things for the newcomers.)
Spoilers for the sixth episode of "Mad Men" coming up just as soon as I view a dog play the piano...
After the last rare episodes focused on Don and Pete, episode six is another look at the women of "Mad Men": the compromises made, the four very slender and yet very unlike routes that Joan, Peggy, Rachel and Midge possess chosen to navigate this world they never made.
Joan had been our mystery woman until now, the queen bee vamp who buzzed around the typing pool, handing out guide on matters both personal and professional without uncovering anything about herself -- like, for instance, why a woman