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Revive Our Hearts

The Power of Cause and Effect

Revive Our Hearts

Nancy DeMoss Wolgemuth

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.92K Ratings

🗓️ 21 January 2015

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why do you say what you say? Mary Kassian says your words are like plants, connected to the roots of your attitudes which are buried in the soil of beliefs.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Mary Cassian reminds us that our words come from our hearts.

0:04.6

You need to look under the surface of your words to examine the attitudes and the deep beliefs in your heart.

0:12.7

If you notice that your words are snarky, malicious, critical, biting, or sarcastic, take some time to pull on that fowl plant and examine the roots in the soil underneath.

0:28.1

This is the Revive Our Hearts podcast for Wednesday, January 21st, 2015.

0:46.2

Thank you. 2015. We read in scripture that out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks.

0:52.3

Mary Cassian is going to expand on that important truth today. She'll help us identify what our words say about our hearts. My friend Mary is a wife, she's a mom,

0:58.0

she's a speaker and an author who lives in Canada. She and I have been hard at work on a new

1:02.9

resource that will be coming out in a couple of months called True Woman 201 Interior Design.

1:09.9

I look forward to telling you more about that in the weeks ahead. But for now,

1:13.8

let's get back to our guest teacher, Mary Cassian, in a series called Conversation Peace.

1:20.4

Farmer He lives in a brick and tile home surrounded by lush green rice fields in China's

1:26.8

tranquil countryside.

1:28.3

What can't be seen and what's difficult to fathom

1:32.3

are the heavy metals polluting the soil under his farm.

1:36.3

Shangba, the village where Mr. He lives,

1:39.3

was nicknamed China's Village of Death.

1:43.3

It's one of hundreds of China's cancer villages, small communities

1:47.2

that are located near industrial, chemical, or pharmaceutical plants and factories, where cancer

1:52.7

rates have soared. The presumed source of pollution for Shangba is the De Boisian mine, which is located

2:00.7

10 miles upstream from Farmer He's farm.

2:04.8

The mine was once Asia's largest source of copper and zinc.

2:09.0

During rainy season, rusty-colored water from the mine's tailing pond rushes over the dam,

...

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