The World Gives to Fiction the Praise that Christians Should Give to Our Master Jesus

From "Steelheart", by Brandon Sanderson

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He wore black.  A shirt tight across an inhumanly strong and large chest.  Pants loose but not baggy.  He didn't wear a mask, like some early Epics did, but a magnificent silver cape fluttered out behind him.  He didn't need a mask.  This man had no reason to hide.  He spread his arms out from his sides, and wind blew the doors open around him.  Ash scattered across the floor, and papers fluttered.  Steelheart rose into the air a few inches, cape flaring out.  He began gliding forward into the room.

Arms like steel girders.  Legs like mountains.  Neck like a tree stump.  He wasn't bulky or awkward, though.  He was majestic, with that jet black hair, that square jaw, an impossible physique, and a frame of nearly seven feet!  And those eyes - intense, demanding, uncompromising eyes!

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Consider this description of a fictional character, how it is high praise!  We Christians need to remember our Master Jesus with such fervor and devotion!  We see it in the opening chapter of Revelation, where John describes Him in His glory.  We see it in King David's Psalms, but we don't generally hear descriptions this well of Him today, and that's wrong.

Since even the World in its decrepitude can utter fineries about fiction, we can devote ourselves to contemplations of He Who Is The Truth.  Let's build right thoughts about Him together, dear Church.

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