The Firm was...
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The Firm was a book and movie about power and corruption. Tom Cruise played a gifted, young lawyer who was courted by a prestigious southern law office. He was wined, dined, and enticed to accept, which he did with great excitement.
How joyous Cruise and his wife were! A beautiful house, European car, and of course, that powerful position with a prestigious law outfit. The storyline shows this couple gladly leaving their "simple" college life. No more restaurant work or auto breakdowns. Paradise found!
The riveting drama unfolds with Cruise discovering how dark paradise can really be. The power this law firm displayed was wicked. Cruise held his ground in pursuing the evil all around him. Justice won, but only by a nose. This young lawyer's pursuit for purity prevailed because of simple faith. Cruise believed in right over wrong.
That great truth applies to two women: Mary and Elizabeth. The power they possessed was similar to that displayed by Cruise in The Firm. Our greatest power, like all three people, is simple faith. It is Mary's simple faith that responds courageously to an angelic promise, "I am the Lord's servant ... may it be to me as you have said" (Luke 1:38).
Elizabeth, too, displayed that same power of simple faith. She was rewarded with delivering a miracle named John the Baptist, despite being well beyond child-bearing years.
Simple faith is not simplistic. Simple faith survives storms by clutching to a belief that with God the best is always yet to come. Tom Cruise kept us on edge by surviving storm after storm. Mary and Elizabeth surely had their share, too. Those women prospered spiritually even under Rome's heavy boot.
I won't reveal how The Firm ends, but it has a lot to do with the power of simple faith.
-- Webster
How joyous Cruise and his wife were! A beautiful house, European car, and of course, that powerful position with a prestigious law outfit. The storyline shows this couple gladly leaving their "simple" college life. No more restaurant work or auto breakdowns. Paradise found!
The riveting drama unfolds with Cruise discovering how dark paradise can really be. The power this law firm displayed was wicked. Cruise held his ground in pursuing the evil all around him. Justice won, but only by a nose. This young lawyer's pursuit for purity prevailed because of simple faith. Cruise believed in right over wrong.
That great truth applies to two women: Mary and Elizabeth. The power they possessed was similar to that displayed by Cruise in The Firm. Our greatest power, like all three people, is simple faith. It is Mary's simple faith that responds courageously to an angelic promise, "I am the Lord's servant ... may it be to me as you have said" (Luke 1:38).
Elizabeth, too, displayed that same power of simple faith. She was rewarded with delivering a miracle named John the Baptist, despite being well beyond child-bearing years.
Simple faith is not simplistic. Simple faith survives storms by clutching to a belief that with God the best is always yet to come. Tom Cruise kept us on edge by surviving storm after storm. Mary and Elizabeth surely had their share, too. Those women prospered spiritually even under Rome's heavy boot.
I won't reveal how The Firm ends, but it has a lot to do with the power of simple faith.
-- Webster
