To whom much is given much is required. We are truly blessed to be able to bless someone else. We all should be fishers of men and not just fisherman. Get it. Awesome post my friend!!!!!!!
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To whom much is given much is required. We are truly blessed to be able to bless someone else. We all should be fishers of men and not just fisherman. Get it. Awesome post my friend!!!!!!!
In the story reproduced above, the actor portraying a homeless man is no psychology researcher, however — he's Jeremiah Steepek, the new head pastor of a very large
church. After spending half an hour incognito in his new church prior to services and finding that only a very few congregants would even return his greeting (much less respond to his pleas for money to buy food), he reveals himself to his new flock and delivers to them a lesson in Christian compassion.
But as for this particular version of the "incognito clergyman" tale, it appears to be a fabricated story. No one has yet identified a real pastor by the name of Jeremiah Steepek (or a similar variant of that name) or found any church, large or small, headed by a pastor with that name. Nor has anyone been able to verify the event described, even though it was supposedly witnessed by several thousand congregants.
Additionally, the photograph of "Pastor Jeremiah Steepek" that accompanies the online version of this story is complete unrelated to the narrative: it's actually a picture of an unidentified homeless man snapped by photographer Brad J. Gerrard in Richmond (London):
Read more at snopes.com: Pastor Disguises Himself as Homeless Man
Not as much about the factual proof of the story as the meaning behind the story Gomer. Just my opinion though. It does make a person think. Thanks for sharing!