tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1714705934434259449.post2703657897953953302..comments2015-10-24T08:39:26.460+01:00Comments on Strength and Song: Ministering to the sick....during Lent.Natashahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07210654343161593719noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1714705934434259449.post-41946532870988765822014-02-24T17:34:51.678+00:002014-02-24T17:34:51.678+00:00I just found your blog through the comments at Con...I just found your blog through the comments at Conversion Diary, and this is beautiful. It's sad that the sick (especially the terminally ill) are so marginalized from society that unless we are part of the medical field we forget about them. My husband is in seminary to become an Episcopal priest (in America) and he had to go through clinical pastoral ed which sounds like what you did. For him it wasn't too big of a shock because his mother has multiple serious illnesses, but for many of the students it was a shock just to see how many sick people there are. (Sorry, this comment is going on forever). It's good to have that burden of knowledge and compassion that you have, even though it hurts. That seems like a good sign that God is working through you.Sarahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08112924098753896966noreply@blogger.com