Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann
3.6K posts

Philip Swann
@PhilipSwann
Christian, husband, father, grandpa, son, pastor, preacher and hopeless optimist
Llanelli Katılım Ekim 2011
2.1K Takip Edilen892 Takipçiler
Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi

On this day 6 years ago, I made a plan to end my life. This could have been the last photo taken of me.
I'm glad I got help. I'm glad I'm still here.
If you're struggling, please know
- You're not alone
- It's good that you are here
- There is hope
mind.org.uk/information-su…

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In the 90’s we were poor because players went north, in the 2000s we were not fit enough, now no excuse
#ITAvWAL
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Shane Williams hoping to be awarded the Legion d’Honneur for his commentary tonight #FRAvWAL
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Philip Swann retweetledi

Last year @holland_tom invited me to attend a service of Evensong with him at London’s oldest church, St Bartholomew the Great.
Holland, who co-hosts the phenomenally popular The Rest is History podcast, has been a regular congregant for a few years. He began attending while researching Dominion, his bestselling book which outlined the way the 1st-century Christian revolution has irrevocably shaped the 21st-century West’s moral imagination.
It also recounts how Holland, a secular liberal westerner who had lost any vestige of faith by his teenage years, came to realise he was still essentially Christian in terms of his beliefs about human rights, equality and freedom.
🧵

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Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi

#OTD January 6, 1850:
Charles Spurgeon, who would become one of the most renowned preachers in history, converts to Christianity.
Amid a snowstorm, he sought shelter in a small Primitive Methodist chapel in Colchester. There, a lay preacher delivered a simple sermon on Isaiah 45:22: “Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth; for I am God, and there is none else.”
Spurgeon later recounted how the preacher’s words pierced his heart, leading him to a sudden and life-changing realization of Christ’s role as Savior. He described the moment vividly:
“He had not much to say, thank God, for that compelled him to keep on repeating his text, and there was nothing needed—by me, at any rate except his text. Then, stopping, he pointed to where I was sitting under the gallery, and he said, ‘That young man there looks very miserable’ . . . and he shouted, as I think only a Primitive Methodist can, ‘Look! Look, young man! Look now!’ . . . Then I had this vision—not a vision to my eyes, but to my heart. I saw what a Savior Christ was. . . . Now I can never tell you how it was, but I no sooner saw whom I was to believe than I also understood what it was to believe, and I did believe in one moment.”


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Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi
Philip Swann retweetledi

Very timely, in today's Mail on Sunday - "Ex-defence chiefs lead calls for SAS legend to get posthumous VC for wartime heroics." Please share to spread the word - let's get this over the line and a great wrong rightly corrected. Thanks.🙏
dailymail.co.uk/tv/article-142…
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Philip Swann retweetledi

Map of the largest religious group in each constituency in England and Wales as of the 2021 census. (1/11) #ukpol #ukparliament

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Philip Swann retweetledi


















