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Jesus in Mobile, Alabama: When Grace Walked Through a Tired City

Before the sun had fully climbed over Mobile Bay, Jesus was already in quiet prayer. The city was still half asleep, but the hurt inside it was not. A man in a small apartment off Government Street had been awake since three in the morning, staring at bills he could not pay. A mother on the other side of town had packed lunches with one hand while wiping tears with the other. A young woman had driven downtown before her shift because she did not want her children to see her cry in the driveway. Mobile had not yet filled its sidewalks. The traffic had not yet thickened. The old buildings had not yet caught the light in their windows. But pain was already moving through the city like a low sound under the morning, and Jesus heard it before anyone else did. He knelt near the water in the early stillness, not far from where ships would soon move through the port and men would begin another day of lifting, loading, driving, fixing, waiting, answering, and pretending they were not worn out. ...

Jesus in Montgomery, Alabama: When the Worn-Out People Met the Mercy of God

 Jesus was already awake while Montgomery still carried the weight of yesterday. Before the first rush of cars moved through downtown and before the heat began rising off the streets, He stood near the Alabama River in quiet prayer. The water moved slowly in the early light. It did not hurry. It carried no argument. It simply moved past Riverfront Park with the kind of steady patience most people had forgotten how to feel. Jesus stood still with His head slightly bowed. His hands were relaxed at His sides. Nothing about Him looked dramatic, yet the morning around Him seemed to quiet itself because He was there. Behind Him, the city was beginning to stir. Somewhere a truck backed into an alley. Somewhere a tired man shut off his alarm for the third time. Somewhere a mother stared at a bill on her kitchen table and wondered how one more day could demand so much from someone who had so little left. By the time the light reached the rooftops downtown, a woman named Denise was already ...