Credit Where It Is Due
Credit Where It is Due
I like to make photographs, and I enjoy being praised for what I have done. But God teaches a different attitude, one of thankfulness and humility. He pointed that out to me recently. I DO NOT MAKE THESE PHOTOGRAPHS ALONE. I didn't create the light, or the technology which makes photography possible. I didn't buy my camera, it was a gift from my husband. I didn't give myself the ability to see through the camera in order to make an image which others find pleasing. It is right to use what I have been given to the best of my ability, but it is wrong to take credit for what I have not done. God made the light, the elements which are used to manufacture the camera, and the world from which these images come. He has given me gifts: people to teach me, eyes to see with, and a brain to process information. I am thankful for these gifts. He deserves all the praise, not I.
12 comments:
Fun shots, I've driven that highway on the way to Spokane. Thanks for bringing back the memories.
I-70, my local east-west interstate, goes under the continental divide at an elevation of over 11,000 feet, and in early April I posted pictures of that tunnel on my blog. But I didn't post the approaches, as it was snowy and there wasn't much to see.
What a nice road to ride by my motorcycle...
:D
TFS and commenting on my blog too!
Happy nice weekend.
I've driven that road before--I LOVE the reflection!
That looks quite a dramatic ride. Those rocks look full of character.
Maggie
Nuts in May
We see you!
What a neat trip!
KK
I love road trips across our country. It's so interesting to see how the landscape changes. You've captured these changes very well here for Scenic Sunday!
Such fantastic views from that road :)
This is the first time I've seen a reflective GPS :-)
Ahhhhh you've got me dreaming!
That looks like a great place for a road trip. That's a pretty clever place to find a reflection. :)
Yep the covered bridge is just one lane.
We've been on that roadtrip many times; but your pictures are better! Thanks for visting my mockingbird post on FT-L. We're lived our whole (other) life in the Pacific Northwest, and just like you had never seen or heard those birds until we started our RVing life. This is the first time we've had them in our backyard.
Sounds fun ... reminds me of driving through the mountains when I was a kid. My dad would purposely drive near the edge of the road to torture me! I still get ill even thinking about it!
Ryan
www.rmbpcola.blogspot.com
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