Mosaic (Mar 28)
- Amber Thiessen
- Mar 28
- 2 min read

Hey friend! I'm back! 😉
From swirling snowstorms to the scorching humidity of the Caribbean, we've been there and back again. Our time away was full of family moments — playing football on sandy beaches, catching waves, and soaking up the sun. Now, we're home on the prairies, where patches of snow still linger, and the post-trip "catch up" is in full swing.
I'm grateful to be back and excited to share a few articles with you this week. I hope they offer moments of encouragement and spark some deeper reflection.
Grace & Peace,
Amber
Content: This Week…
On the Blog
In Articles (curated content just for you)
Previously on Mosaic
On the Blog
In Articles
“If you had the power to fast-forward through the most difficult times of your life by pressing a button, would you skip them?” If we're honest, our gut reaction would say yes. Nobody wants to suffer or face hardship. Yet, I look back on my toughest seasons and see God's work in my life, and I see how it shaped and changed me. 1 Pet 1:6-7 encourages us, "In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ."
Images of this accident were all over the news a while back. Tim kindly challenges us with this reminder: "It is as possible to crash and burn with 14 seconds left as with hundreds, thousands, or millions. Hence, I know I need to pray all the more that God will keep me to the very end, not to almost the end."
I always appreciate my friend Jana's insights on studying Scripture. These three questions can help you uncover the gospel in every passage — I hope you ask them the next time you're reading!
The monkey, the fruit, and the lion. What are we holding onto that risks leaving us consumed by unforgiveness?
Here's your invitation to reflect on something or someone that irks you and to consider them through the eyes of God's grace.
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