I was so happy to see Mo on your episode, and share in listening to your conversation. I had the pleasure of seeing him live in Zurich when he was on tour, and the air in the auditorium was heavily silent as we felt the depth of his spoken montage on time. It was moving and powerful and felt like a spiritual call to action.
His reference to faith during the conversation as something that is about embodying patience felt particularly touching to me. In a world where we so often feel a need for things to happen quickly, this reminder about "being timely, and timelessness" was a soft but incredibly mighty reminder that faith is not to be obtained - or practised - quickly. Thank you for this wonderful conversation, and for platforming Mo. He is absolutely a voice for our time.
I was so happy to see Mo on your episode, and share in listening to your conversation. I had the pleasure of seeing him live in Zurich when he was on tour, and the air in the auditorium was heavily silent as we felt the depth of his spoken montage on time. It was moving and powerful and felt like a spiritual call to action.
His reference to faith during the conversation as something that is about embodying patience felt particularly touching to me. In a world where we so often feel a need for things to happen quickly, this reminder about "being timely, and timelessness" was a soft but incredibly mighty reminder that faith is not to be obtained - or practised - quickly. Thank you for this wonderful conversation, and for platforming Mo. He is absolutely a voice for our time.
We couldn’t agree more. We need Mo Amer.
https://open.substack.com/pub/lullabyamber/p/start-living?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=18juii
After reading your post I wrote this poem.
It looks like Jesus. God first, others second, myself third.