The Cup That Stays: A Story About What We Hold, What We Share, and Who We Become
z A story about friendship, life, sacred vessels, and the things worth passing on. There's a particular kind of Sunday morning in small-town America that feels almost holy even before you step inside a church. The air carries that specific coolness that only exists in early October. The parking lot is half-gravel, half-broken asphalt. Old men stand near the entrance, shaking hands the same way they have for forty years. Inside, the wooden pews smell faintly of polish and age — a smell that doesn't exist anywhere else on earth. And at the front, on the altar, something gleams. A cup. A vessel. A chalice or a ciborium — a word most people outside the faith have never heard, and yet one of the oldest ideas in the world. A container for something sacred. This is a story about what we put inside our cups. And what our cups hold about us. Two Boys, One Summer, and a Mason Jar Marcus and Daniel grew up three houses apart on the same dead-end street in rural Ohio. The kind o...