Monday, February 28, 2005

A favorite songwriter goes over the top!

There's a singer-songwriter that you might not have heard of....His name is Dean Friedman and he's been around since the mid-seventies. His first two albums are classics and he has always had a quirky yet pointed sense of humor. He's a mensch (good guy) but he's definitely of the Air America/ Al Franken persuasion. Click on the title of this post to sample "Four More Years", his satirical attempt to best Fahrenheit 9/11, musically speaking! I don't agree with any of it...but he's still one of my favorite artists. ......Ahhh forgiveness is such a virtue!!!

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Intercession in Israel

Declaring God's Purposes at Mitzpa Ramon

courtesy of jnthnmoore
Deb Abernethy, my wife Allison and Simantov Allalouf, blowing the trumpet and shofars, February 10th, 2005

The Syrian Bride Effect.

I showed "The Syrian Bride" to my GED students at the center and at the jail. Considering most of them are unused to watching a foreign language film with subtitles, they coped very well and really enjoyed it. The guys at the jail usually only pay attention to films with car chases, guns and sex, but they too gave the film rapt attention and even were talking about the movie as they were watching, as opposed to talking through the movie, which they normally do if they are bored. Rarely has a film captured the sense of place and time as well as helped people understand the enigmatic quality of that particular region of the world. This film should be required viewing in american classrooms.

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

The Syrian Bride

The Syrian Bride is a powerful drama based on a true story. My wife Allison was just in the village where the story took place and met some of the family. This film has won a number of awards already and is scheduled for commercial release in the US later this year.

courtesy of jnthnmoore

Even though the film is subtitled, with actors speaking Arabic, Hebrew, Russian and English at different times, the pace and deft touch with which this drama unfolds, soon finds the viewer drawn into the world of the Druze, a unusual religious sect trapped in the middle of the conflict over the Golan heights between Syria and Israel. The actors are very effective and convey a range of emotions that we can all identify with, even though we are worlds apart. When this film is released....SEE IT!

Friday, February 04, 2005

What I'm listening to....takes me back home!

The Folk Roots album "KittyJay" by Devon Folkie Seth Lakeman

courtesy of jnthnmoore

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Freedom of vs. freedom from...

I think maybe we have become hyper-sensitive about so many things, but particularly about matters of faith. People are beside themselves over the overt nature of President Bush's Inauguaration Speech, with its references to God and lofty images of freedom, presented as the goal of democracy to liberate the world. If we truly believe that it is possible to remove from the public square anything that does or has potential to offend then I'm afraid we need to elect Dr. Michael Neudow as the next president because the future obviously rests with him and his liberal ideology. (HE failed to have prayer outlawed at the Inaugural and instead KirbyJon Caldwell made prophetic declaration over this nation in his benediction.)
Thankfully that is not so and eventually the media will cotton on to the fact that, while they are slinking ungraciously to the left, the rest of us are joyously dancing to the right. Just ask the folks at CBS which way the wind is blowing now!!

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Sunday, January 16, 2005

You make me fly - For MLK

You Make Me Fly - Jonathan Patrick Moore 01/16/2005
You are a hero in my eyes, I looked beneath the lies,
And touched the heart that lay within,
You were a giant among men, Though small of stature then,
You rose above the frailty of your sin...
To make me fly, and rise to be a better man,
With a chance to dream before I plan,
You still remain the soul of a movement,
That will never ever die...You make me fly!
The higher the eagle seeks to soar, His own strength must ignore,
And resting on the rising thermal wind,
No greater love has any man, Than to willingly lay down,
His own life to turn enemy to friend..
You make me fly, To soar on eagles wings again,
To take a chance and make a friend,
To reach beyond the anger and the pain,
We struggle to deny...You make me fly!
Some would not believe, had they not seen, had they not heard,
or be standing here today had they not received the word,
But its not enough to hear and its not enough to die,
If there isn't someone, somewhere, ready to spread their wings and fly
You make me fly, and rise to be a better man,
With a chance to dream before I plan,
You still remain the soul of a movement,
That will never ever die...You make me fly!

Monday, January 10, 2005

Bruised reeds and smoldering wicks...

I am learning that we are all, to a greater or lesser extent, living with our wounds. The pain surfaces from time to time: at moments of crisis, when provoked by anger or simply when we choose not to hide behind the facade anymore. As believers, we have an obligation to imitate Jesus. In Isaiah 42, he is described as one who would not break a bruised reed or snuff out a smoldering wick. In other words, one who does not treat the wounded with harshness but tenderly speaking into them the Word that helps bring stability to their lives.
That is our calling. It is the calling of the Body of Christ. Make us tender towards one another!

Monday, January 03, 2005

Another CD worth having... click HERE!!


courtesy of jnthnmoore

Rainy Days and Mondays...

I've learned over the years never to make any life-altering course changes on a Monday. It seems that the second day of the week invariably brings me down to earth, no matter to what heights we soared the day before. For every mountaintop there is a corresponding valley and it is in the valley where I uncover my true mettle, the authenticity of my experience and my ability to handle the 'slings and arrows of outrageous fortune' as Shakespeare so eloquently put it. "Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen," so, right now I'm asking God for faith to stand and continue to stand whether or not I can see the outcome already assured.

Back to work...

It's a New Year and it's back to work and back to school. Time to reawaken desire and drive and rediscover the passion for teaching and enriching lives! It's always tough after the Christmas holidays to get back in the swing of things. It's not that I make a lot of New Year's resolutions, I merely struggle with the need to do something other than eat and watch movies!!
January is going to be hectic, February is going to be frantic, and by March I shall be ready for the burst of Spring. By the way I have successfully negotiated the use of 05 on my date writing. Everyone else is still writing 04. Maybe that's a hopeful sign.

Sunday, January 02, 2005

On a more serious note...

The latest news from Asia following last week's Tsunami is pretty bleak. This overwhelming catastrophe puts our petty, media driven, self-absorbed lives into pretty stark perspective. As a pastor and teacher I am challenged to reassess my own theological reasoning in the area of suffering, tribulation and escatology. The events of 9/11 are nothing compared to this.
Check out http://www.christianmediaresearch.com/cmc-12.html to read an excellent article on the subject of Catastrophic Christianity.

Tuesday, December 28, 2004

Saturday, December 25, 2004

"Tolkien turkey"

We have just come to the end of a full and enjoyable Christmas Day. We've talked to family in California and England; we've feasted on lamb and ham and mince pies with brandy butter (only once a year...) and finally we've just watched "The Return of the King - extended edition" (4 hours and 10 minutes worth). Tolkien's epic reminds us of the battle we are involved in and return to after the joy of the season. He also reminds us that it is in the small hobbit-sized acts of goodness and character that the battle is won and that 'greater is He that is in us than he that is in the world.'

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

It's beginning to "sound" a lot like Christmas...

Last night, our church together with some other friends, went carol singing. This was a tradition in England that was a big part of the run-up to this wonderful season. Somehow, the sound of carols being sung outside a home draws the spirit of Christ ever closer to that house. We left the church in a caravan of vehicles, armed with bells, guitar and shaker and before the night was over we had visited seven individual homes, a nursing home and the foyer of our local WALMART to bring some christmas cheer. I lost my voice but all agreed that carol singing is a wonderful tradition that brings joy to the ears and hearts that hear it. "We wish you a merry Christmas, we wish you a merry Christmas, we wish you a merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year!"

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

In the Swing

We're having two Christmas parties today for our day and night students and tonight we've been singing carols and having a great time.
Also tonight one of our students came in just to tell us that she had passed the writing test on the GED and how excited she was. It makes all the effort worthwhile when you see the fruit of your labors....As I said to her,"That is the best Christmas present you could have given me!"

Saturday, December 11, 2004

Christmas Music

I'm listening to more Christmas music this year than ever before. There has been an increase in the number of holiday-specific releases over the last few years. Many are little more than attempts to 'cash in' on the current popularity of the artist and consequently the music performed is pretty lightweight. I have highlighted a couple of releases that I think are worthy of mention. "Bethlehem" by Brian McKnight stands out by virtue of the amount of original material as well as the breadth of the styles contained therein. The only downside to the experience is to realize that since this CD was released in 1998, Brian's marriage has ended in divorce...which tends to nullify certain of the sentiments he expresses on the album.
"Christmas Worship" by John Tesh surprised me, because I had felt that John's new 'worship' direction deprived us of his undoubted original composing skill which had graced his earlier recordings such as "AVALON" and "ONE WORLD". However his foray into modern worship has allowed his skill as an arranger and adapter of other works to come to the forefront. The result is an extremely well performed and arranged selection of christmas favorites as well as two of the best 'new' christmas songs in years, "This is your gift" and "Without You".

Friday, December 10, 2004

Counting down the days...

It's just about two weeks until Christmas and already the strain is beginning to tell! Each year poses new challenges... The pressure of the commercialism, the rising tide of excitement at home, keeping within a budget!
The hardest part of the season is maintaining a focus upon the real meaning of the season and allowing the natural sequence of the advent calendar to guide our journey into this most blessed and holy time.
You almost have to make a conscious choice to turn off the TV and retreat, to simplify, simplify, simplify!