Greg Skodacek

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Perhaps Charles’s most prevailing sensitivity to others was found in his ability to resonate with anyone who was in bondage—bound by either physical or spiritual chains. He detested darkness with all his heart, and when he stumbled across news of women and children enslaved by evil men, or foreign tribes bound and bruised by oppressors, or men and women enchained to depression or addiction of any kind, his heart sank, as he knew all too well the darkness that came with being enslaved.
Steal Away Home: Charles Spurgeon and Thomas Johnson, Unlikely Friends on the Passage to Freedom
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