This is an article published in The Pneuma Review, which is an online Pentecostal journal (pneumareview.com). To continue reading this article, please click on the following link: When Presence is a Verb—A State of Being and an Action
The woman abruptly arose from the Sunday dinner table and accusingly spoke to her husband, “You wouldn’t care if I drowned in the waterhole.” She then turned and walked out the door.

Image by 👀 Mabel Amber, who will one day from Pixabay
It had been a typical Sunday for the sixteen-year-old girl. The Pentecostal family had dressed in their Sunday best, driven to church, and come home to eat a pot roast that had been cooking in the oven. But the tenor of the day had abruptly changed, and silence now ensued in her mother’s absence. . . .
To finish reading this article, please go to: When Presence is a Verb—A State of Being and an Action