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Christina Fox

A Heart Set Free
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A Life Update
Feb 4, 2025
A Life Update
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Jul 2, 2024
Available Now: Who Are You?
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Jul 2, 2024
Encouragement for Parents When Life Mutes Us
May 16, 2024
Encouragement for Parents When Life Mutes Us
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May 16, 2024
Coming Soon: Who Are You?
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Coming Soon: Who Are You?
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Caring for Hurting Women in the Church
Jan 30, 2024
Caring for Hurting Women in the Church
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Jan 30, 2024
Four Truths to Remember in 2024
Jan 2, 2024
Four Truths to Remember in 2024
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The Waiting of Advent
Dec 5, 2023
The Waiting of Advent
Dec 5, 2023
Dec 5, 2023
The Wonder of God's Faithfulness
Nov 21, 2023
The Wonder of God's Faithfulness
Nov 21, 2023
Nov 21, 2023
When We Speak the Gospel to One Another
Oct 24, 2023
When We Speak the Gospel to One Another
Oct 24, 2023
Oct 24, 2023
When God Asks A Question
Oct 3, 2023
When God Asks A Question
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Oct 3, 2023
The Encouragement We Really Need
Sep 19, 2023
The Encouragement We Really Need
Sep 19, 2023
Sep 19, 2023
The Great Big Sad: Available Now
Sep 12, 2023
The Great Big Sad: Available Now
Sep 12, 2023
Sep 12, 2023
Keep the Heart
Sep 5, 2023
Keep the Heart
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Sep 5, 2023
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Aug 24, 2023
Join the Launch Team for The Great Big Sad
Aug 24, 2023
Aug 24, 2023
Coming Soon: The Great Big Sad
Aug 1, 2023
Coming Soon: The Great Big Sad
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Aug 1, 2023

When We Speak the Gospel to One Another

October 24, 2023

“Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one another. The LORD paid attention and heard them, and a book of remembrance was written before him of those who feared the LORD and esteemed his name” (Malachi 3:16).

What happens when Christians speak to one another?

Imagine being that proverbial fly on the wall in the church narthex on Sunday morning. People stand around in small groups, refilling their cups of coffee, and catching up on each other’s news after a week apart. What are the two moms saying to each other as their littles pull on their skirts and tug on their hands? What are the trio of men in the corner laughing about? What is the greeter saying to the new couple by the door? What is the older gentleman saying as he shakes the pastor’s hand?

In the book of Malachi, the prophet speaks to a group of discouraged post-exilic people. They face unexpected hardship and adversity and are tempted to doubt God’s goodness and faithfulness. Their worship is half-hearted. They aren’t living as God’s covenant people. Many have responded in disobedience. They’ve even stopped giving God his tithe. In chapter three, we see God’s people speak against God, complaining against him, saying things like, Why should we bother living a life of obedience? Where has it gotten us? They believed serving God was futile.

That’s when Malachi 3:16 says, “Then those who feared the LORD spoke with one another.”

There were two groups of people listening to the prophet: those who were grumbling in their hearts and those who feared the Lord. Those who grumbled and complained against God did not receive the prophets words; they quickly disregarded what he said. They remained firm and committed to their sin. But there was also a remnant of those who feared the Lord. They heard the prophet and responded in repentance. And then they spoke to one another. They preached the gospel to each other. They encouraged and exhorted each other in the truth. They wanted their friends to return to the Lord. Calvin comments, “it is an evidence of true repentance, when each one endeavors as much as he can to unite to himself as many friends as possible, so that they may with one consent return to the way from which they had departed, yea, that they may return to God whom they had forsaken.”

What does it mean to be a God-fearer? It is to respond to him with awe, wonder, reverence, love, honor, obedience, and trust. It is to see him as greater. It is to love the Lord wholeheartedly, as a child loves and reveres his father. And when convicted of sin, the fearful turn back to their God in repentance and trust.

But even more, the fearful preach the gospel to one another. They know they are not isolated islands unto themselves. They are united to one another by faith in Christ. So they remind each other of what is true and right. They speak of God’s character and his ways. They point to the goodness and grace of God in Jesus Christ. They help each other see how the good news speaks to every area of life, bringing light to the darkness. They remind the weak and weary that the Man of Sorrows understands their sufferings so much, he suffered and died in their place.

And they walk beside each other in the journey of faith.

The prophet tells us that God saw and heard what these God-fearers said to one another. He took note of it. And he did something unusual: he wrote it down in a book of remembrance. The prophet wants the faithful to know that their obedience is not futile or meaningless. There will come a day when God will judge the world and those whose names are written in the book of life will live with him forever (Rev. 21:27).

Calvin notes, “He shows by the issue itself why a book of remembrance was written—that God in due time would again undertake to defend and cherish his Church. Though then for a time many troubles were to be sustained by the godly, yet the Prophet shows that they did not in vain serve God; for facts would at length prove that their obedience has not been overlooked. But the two things which he mentions ought to be noticed; for a book of remembrance is first written before God, and then God executes what is written in the book. When therefore we seem to serve God in vain, let us know that the obedience we render to him will come to an account, and that he is a just Judge, though he may not immediately stretch forth his hand to us.”

May we be God-fearers who encourage one another with the truth. Our faith is not in vain. Christ has conquered sin and death. He will return to judge the earth. And our names are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life.

Who speaks the gospel to you?

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez 🇨🇦 on Unsplash

In Closer than a Sister, A Holy Fear Tags community, church, friendship, Closer than a Sister, Malachi 3, fear of the Lord
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On Christian Friendship

October 12, 2021

After more than a year of cancelled retreats and speaking engagements, I’ve been speaking at churches once again. It’s been a sweet time of meeting my sisters in Christ in other places around the country. One of the topics I’m frequently asked to speak on is that of our relationships with one another in the church, based on my book Closer than a Sister. In that book, I wrote about our friendships with one another in the church, how the Bible describes those relationships, and what sets them apart from other friendships we might have. I think that now, more than ever, we see our need for the body of Christ—for our relationships with one another in the church.

I recently participated in a Zoom meeting with a book club in Melbourne, Australia where a group of women recently read Closer than a Sister. We talked about the difference between our friendships with those who are not in Christ and those who are—because there is a difference and an important one. While our non-Christian friends can truly care about us and serve us in practical and needed ways, there is one thing they cannot do for us. While they may love us and accept us, there is one need they cannot meet for us. While they may share a long history with us that our Christian friends might not share, there is a future hope they do not share with us.

What makes our friendships with Christians stand apart from our non-Christian friendships is that our Christian friends long to see us make it home. They want to see us reach the finish line and meet our Savior face to face. They long to see us healed and whole and sanctified. That’s because the friendships we share with other believers is a spiritual one. It goes deeper than even our biological relationships with the members of our family; we share the blood of Christ and are united together for all eternity. We will spend forever together worshipping our Savior face to face.

As we’ve well learned over the last year and a half, we need other people in our lives. God did not create us to be independent people, living as islands unto ourselves. Rather, he created us to be dependent upon him, and interdependent upon one another. This is especially true of the church. The Apostle Paul likens the church to a human body, where Christ is the head and we make up the parts (Rom. 12:4-5). Each part is united together and needs the other parts to function. This means our friendships with those in the body of Christ are crucial. They are fundamental to our life of faith. We simply cannot do life apart from them.

Our Christian friends are on the same path with us to eternity; they walk beside us in that journey. They see us when we stumble and fall and they help us get back up again. Sometimes, they carry us until we can walk on our own. When they see us wander from the path, they call out to us to return. When they see danger ahead, they warn us. They encourage, exhort, and equip us to move forward in the faith. And we do the same for them.

While we will have friendships in many areas of our lives—through school, work, neighborhoods, hobbies and more—our Christian friendships stand apart as unique from the others. Only these relationships are eternal. We certainly shouldn’t forsake one for the other, because after all, the Lord calls us to bring the gospel to the ends of the earth. Lord willing, he will bring our unbelieving friends into the Kingdom with us—let us pray to that end! But we also need to remember just how important our Christian friendships are and take the time to invest in them. To cultivate them. To nurture them. Because we need these friendships and they need us.

“Rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ, from whom the whole body, joined and held together by every joint with which it is equipped, when each part is working properly, makes the body grow so that it builds itself up in love” (Eph. 4:15-16).

In Closer than a Sister Tags friendship, Closer than a Sister, the church, Ephesians 4:15-16
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We Need True Friends

August 10, 2021

People have strong opinions about neighborhoods with a Home Owner’s Association (HOA). Some refuse to live in one. Perhaps because such neighborhoods often come with restrictive rules, regulating things such as exterior paint color, yard care, and the number of vehicles parked in the driveway. Others like HOA’s because of the rules, for the regulations often mean an increase in home value. Not only that, but there’s less of a chance of looking over at your neighbor’s yard and seeing a cemetery for broken down cars.

I don’t have a strong opinion about living in a neighborhood with an HOA, but when ours recently sent us a letter telling us our driveway needed pressure washing, I wasn’t thrilled. It looked okay to me. And it meant work I didn’t have time to do. But I didn’t have a choice. So I tracked down a pressure washer from a friend. As I swept the wand of pressurized water back and forth across my driveaway, I realized it really did need attention. The water pushed away the dirt and mold and I saw the true color of the driveaway underneath.

As it turns out, my driveway was not supposed to be brown.

How true this is of my own life! There are things in my life and heart that I’ve simply grown used to. Temptations I frequently give into. Habits that shape my days. Sins I’ve embraced. Idols I worship. They blend in so that I don’t notice that they don’t belong. Until someone points it out to me. They show me how I’ve wandered from Christ to do my own thing. They then remind me of who I am in Christ. They remind me that I’ve been cleansed and made new. They remind me of the grace that is mine through Christ and of his Spirit at work in me.

Their exhortation shines a light in the darkness and I see the harsh reality—I see the ugliness that I’ve long overlooked. And I’m reminded once again of how much I need the redemption Christ purchased for me.

Sometimes we need someone else to see what we can’t see. Yet how hard is to hear a friend’s exhortation! Just as I didn’t like receiving the letter from my neighborhood, I resist it when my brother or sister in Christ points out where I’ve strayed from the Lord. After all, I’m content with how things are, why should I change? Or maybe I compare my life to others and think it doesn’t look so bad. Because if everyone around us has brown driveways, it’s hard to see the need for cleansing. But a true friend tells the truth. Not because they enjoy pointing out error in us. And not because they think they are without sin. But they do so out of love for us—out of a desire for us to be who we truly are in Christ.

A true friend doesn’t allow us to play in the mud when a beautiful beach lies just around the corner. A true friend wants us to know the blessing that comes through the sanctifying grace of our Lord. A true friend doesn’t want us to miss out on the joy that comes from walking in the ways of the One who knows what is best. As the psalmist wrote, “Let a righteous man strike me—it is a kindness; let him rebuke me—it is oil for my head; let my head not refuse it” (Ps. 141:5).

Many friends will see us wander off the path of life and not say a thing. Some will tell us whatever we want to hear rather than what is true. Some will even encourage us to do what feels right, rather than what is right. But a true friend in the Lord will go to great lengths to rescue us, sometimes even from ourselves. May we all have friends who desire the best for us, who desire what Paul wanted for the church at Philippi, “And it is my prayer that your love may abound more and more, with knowledge and all discernment, so that you may approve what is excellent, and so be pure and blameless for the day of Christ, filled with the fruit of righteousness that comes through Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of God” (Phil. 1:9-11).

And by the way, my driveway is now shiny white!

In Closer than a Sister Tags friendship, exhortation, Closer than a Sister
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I Miss Community

February 23, 2021

Every day when I open the refrigerator, I’m reminded. I see drinks and food I keep stocked for specific people. When I get ingredients from the pantry to cook dinner each night, I am reminded then too. I see my stock of paper plates and plastic cutlery, just waiting to be used. When I walk by my dining room and see the linens folded on the sideboard, cleaned and ready to lay out on the table, I am reminded. I see empty chairs whose seats have not been filled in a year.

These are all small daily reminders of when I used to have people over for a meal—friends, family, small group, parties. I’m reminded of how much has changed over the last year. And how much I miss community.

I miss the spontaneous, “Hey, let’s meet for lunch at that new restaurant down the street.”

I miss potluck meals and the sharing and trying of new recipes with friends.

I miss what the Spanish call “sobremesa" when you sit around at the table talking far long after all the food has been eaten. All of a sudden someone checks the time and you realize you’ve sat in the same spot for hours doing nothing but sharing life with one another.

I miss celebrating special occasions with family and friends where everyone surrounds the person in front of a big cake and we sing “Happy birthday” and laugh as the person blowing out the candles always struggles to blow out that one stubborn flame.

I miss looking at a friend and being able to tell just by the look on her face what she is thinking.

I miss all my church members gathered together, singing and rejoicing together as one Body. While I am thankful that a quarter of us can fit socially distanced in the gym on Sunday mornings, I miss the other three quarters whose faces and voices I’ve not seen in a year.

I miss being with people and not worrying about who might or might not be sick and am I standing too close and wondering is that a frown or a smile under the mask and hating that everything I hear sounds like mumbling but I nod in understanding anyway.

I miss community.

In Psalm 42, the sons of Korah write about being far from the house of God. For some unknown reason, they can’t go to the temple to worship God. They hunger and thirst to be in his presence. They are saddened and grieved by the separation and wonder when they can be with him again. They look back on sweet memories of joining with the throng to gather for worship, singing and rejoicing at their great God. “These things I remember, as I pour out my soul: how I would go with the throng and lead them in procession to the house of God with glad shouts and songs of praise, a multitude keeping festival” (Ps. 42:4).

I feel this longing each Sunday. I also felt it this past weekend— the weekend when our denomination’s yearly women’s ministry leadership conference is held. More than a conference, it is like a homecoming. I love seeing my sisters from all over the world. I love catching up with hugs and stories and fellowship. I love how we pick up right where we left off the last time we met, as though there was only a brief pause to our conversation. I love how we encourage one another on in ministry. I love how we learn from one another. I love how everyone rejoices in the fruit God produces in each other’s ministry. This year’s conference was virtual and oh how we longed to be with one another in person!

We used the technology available to us to connect, encourage, and equip each other in the work of ministry and I’m grateful for that. I’m grateful for platforms that allow us to have Bible studies virtually. I’m grateful for church leadership which labors to provide worship that is safe for everyone. I’m grateful for all the ways we’ve learned to navigate our new reality.

But I still miss community.

That’s because we weren’t made for filtered connection. We weren’t made to be satisfied with friendship mediated through a screen. We weren’t made for six feet of separation. We were made to do life together. To sit at the dinner table for hours. To laugh and hug and tell stories. To gather with the throng and rejoice at the goodness of God.

I don’t want to grow used to how things are. I want to continue to long for in person fellowship. I want it to nag at me and remind me of how things are supposed to be. So I’ll leave those drinks my friends like in the fridge and continue to keep my paper plate supply ready and waiting.

And I will continue to miss community.

In Community Tags community, fellowship, church, Body of Christ, Closer than a Sister
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Pray for the Church

June 30, 2020

Back in March, I wrote a piece on prayer for a website I edit. At the time, we were covering the theme of church/community and it seemed fitting to encourage our readers to pray for the church.

So much has happened in our world and in our nation since I wrote that piece. As a church, we have had to be physically distant because of the virus. And in many ways, we are also spiritually distant from one another. Just a simple scroll through social media reveals such division. It seems that now, more than ever, we need to pray for the Body of Christ. We need to pray for unity. We need to pray for the growth and health of the church. We need to pray for her purity and peace. Oh, that Paul’s prayer to the church in Colossae would be true of us: that we would “be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, so as to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him: bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God” (1:9-10).

To that end, here is a prayer for the church. (This is revised version of a prayer that originally appeared at enCourage.)

A Prayer for the Church

Father in heaven,

I come before you today with a heavy burden on my heart. When I scroll through tweets and posts on social media, it grows heavier. I hear whispers and complaints among the saints and I am grieved. I see brothers and sisters divided, sometimes even lashing out at one another in sarcasm, anger, and bitterness. At times, I feel my own growing discontent and dissatisfaction with the church. Then there are those times when I come across articles proclaiming false gospels, seeking to lead your people astray, and I am sickened.

I can relate to Paul’s anxieties for the church for I too worry for your Bride. So I come before today, asking for your grace to be at work in your church. You are rich in grace and have showered it upon us in Christ. You are a good Father, providing for your children all that we need. You are sovereign ruler over all things. You see our wayward hearts. You know of our conflicts. You are not surprised by leaders who fall into temptation and sin. You have warned us and called us to repentance (Rev. 2:5,16).

Forgive me for not loving your Bride as you have loved her in Christ. Forgive me for failing to see the church as beautifully diverse as you describe her in Revelation 7. Forgive me for all the ways I try to do life on my own apart from the Body. Forgive me for keeping my gifts to myself and not using them to build up your church. Forgive me for not praying for its purity and peace. Forgive me for my own discontentment and dissatisfaction, for the ways I think the church should serve me, rather than I serve her. Forgive me for participating in gossip and furthering disunity.

Hear my prayer today as I bring the church before you. I pray for local church leaders, that they would watch over the flock you’ve entrusted into their care. I pray for wisdom as they navigate ministry in the midst of a pandemic. I pray you would also give them wisdom to spot false doctrine and point your sheep to the true gospel. I pray they would be committed to you, your word, and your mission. I pray they would be bold, godly, and blameless. Use them to equip the saints to do the work of ministry.

I pray for the church’s witness to the world around us. I pray we would be faithful and stand for what is right and true. May we not bow down to the culture of this age nor be influenced by its doctrine. Help us to shine a light in this dark world, drawing people to the truth of who you are and what you have done. Equip us and strengthen us to share the gospel wherever it needs to be heard. May we not cease our efforts until all the world hears.

I pray for our unity, both in the local church and in the church universal, that we would be united by the gospel. May we be known by our love for one another. As Paul prayed, may our love “abound more and more, with knowledge and all discernment” (Phlippians 1:9). May we show one another honor, put each other first, and serve one another’s needs. I pray there would not be a needy person among us because we always share what we have with each other. May we show forbearance toward one another and forgive each other just as Christ has forgiven us. Oh, that the world would look at the church and see Christ in her!

Father, preserve and keep us until the day of Christ’s return. Like a bride waiting for her bridegroom, sanctify and purify us so that we would be beautiful and radiant, ready for that glorious day.

In Jesus’ name, amen.

In Prayer Tags prayer, gospel prayer, church, Body of Christ, community, unity, Closer than a Sister
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On Spiritual Grief and the Body of Christ

April 21, 2020

Each Sunday since this crisis began, I’ve found my eyes tear up during virtual worship with my church.

Easter Sunday, I cried the whole way through the service.

I cried because I wanted to hear all the voices of my brothers and sisters in Christ singing together praise to our glorious Christ who conquered the grave. I cried because I wanted to hear our voices together proclaim the truths in the Belgic Confession. I cried because I wanted to hear the word preached in person. I cried because I miss feasting together at the Lord’s table. I cried because I miss the gathered Body of Christ.

As I’ve thought about these emotions, I’ve come to realize I am experiencing a kind of spiritual grief. Though I have remained virtually connected to my church body, we are still physically apart. Though I am grateful for the technology that enables us to continue in our Bible studies, small groups, and Sunday worship, it is not the same. I can relate to Paul’s words in Romans 1:

“For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son, that without ceasing I mention you always in my prayers, asking that somehow by God’s will I may now at last succeed in coming to you. For I long to see you, that I may impart to you some spiritual gift to strengthen you— that is, that we may be mutually encouraged by each other’s faith, both yours and mine” (vv. 10-12).

Though Paul communicated via letter and through fellow ministers with the churches he planted throughout the Mediterranean, he still longed to see these church members in person. I too feel that longing for in-person community.

That longing is there for a reason: We were created for community. We were not made to live isolated and independent from others. We were not made to do life on our own. We were made to image our God who is a community within the Triune Godhead. We were made to love, serve, and honor one another and in so doing, reflect our glorious God.

When Christ died and created the church, the gathered body of believers, he united us to one another through his blood shed for our sins. Paul compares this union we have with Christ and each other like that of a human body. Christ is our head and we make up the parts of the body. We are so connected to one another that like the human body, when one part suffers, every part suffers. I think that’s why this separation is so difficult. So painful at times. And why my heart grieves to be apart.

I don’t know how long this situation will last, but one thing I do know, I don’t want this longing and grief to go away. I don’t want to grow comfortable with this new way of virtual church life. I don’t want to think that I can do life on my own apart from the Body. In truth, I want this unsettled feeling to remain.

And so, I will continue to grieve until the day I can reunite with my church family, until the Body is once again together and whole. And I will continue to long for it as the Apostle Paul did: “For God is my witness, how I yearn for you all with the affection of Christ Jesus” (Philippians 1:8). 

Lord Jesus, keep your church strong and healthy during this challenging time. Strengthen our bonds while we are apart. Keep us united as one in Christ. Use us to show the love of Christ to those around us. And endure us until we can come together again. Amen.

In Closer than a Sister Tags Closer than a Sister, community, church, Body of Christ, worship
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About Christina

I'm so glad you are here! I'm Christina and this is a place where I desire to make much of Jesus and magnify the gospel of grace. Will you join me?
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I’m in Tacoma this weekend for a work related event. Beautiful place to catch up with Covenant College alumni!
I’m in Tacoma this weekend for a work related event. Beautiful place to catch up with Covenant College alumni!
I’m in the mountains of Virginia this weekend, walking through the Psalms of Lament with the lovely women of Trinity Pres. I love endorsing books for fellow writing friends. And not just because I get new books to add to my shelves! 😊 I know the labor involved in bringing a book into the world and want to encourage my friends in their efforts. Here are two that just arr I’m in Richmond this weekend, talking about relationships in the church at Sycamore Pres. I love meeting my sisters in Christ! Senior night was a blast! I’m sure it will come as no surprise to those who know us best, but we have another Scot in the family! We are excited that our youngest will be at Covenant College next year. #wearethescots #newscot I love this new book by @sarahpwalton! It’s a retelling of the parable of the prodigal son and helps parents talk with their children about the things we might chase after that only leave us empty and the hope found in Jesus Christ. I found fall in New Jersey! I’m here speaking to the women of The Church Gathered and Scattered about the fear of the Lord. They’ve been so welcoming and hospitable. It’s a joy to connect with my sisters in the Lord I love getting new books in the mail from writing friends! Betsy’s book on peer pressure will help young children turn to Jesus in the midst of temptations they face from peers. The illustrations are engaging, the story relatable and Christ cen This new devotional book based on Colossians helps readers see their secure identity in Christ. Congrats to @aimeejosephwrites on writing this beautiful, encouraging book! I’m in Tacoma this weekend for a work related event. Beautiful place to catch up with Covenant College alumni!

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