Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.
Do you believe that you are your own person, belonging to no one else? Whether this leaves you feeling free from all restraints or anxious and overwhelmed, you are probably used to assuming that you are responsible for making your own identity and your own path through the world. But what if the most life-giving truth is that you are not your own?
This fall, Pascal Study Center’s student reading group is discussing Alan Noble’s You Are Not Your Own: Belonging to God in an Inhuman World. With self-deprecating humor and all-too-relatable examples, Noble considers the ways we all try to navigate the Responsibilities of Self-Belonging and the unexpected comfort of belonging to God.