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This week on The Gospel Jubilee Chip and Denny will be playing music by The Foresters, The Gibson Girls, Phillips & banks, Joe Mullins & The Radio Ramblers, The Wisecarvers, Mark D. Conklin, and the mystery artists of the week. Here are all of the ways you can listen to the Gospel Jubilee On your Echo device say, Alexa, play the Gospel Jubilee on Apple podcast. For a direct download go to: https://api.spreaker.com/v2/episodes/60729487/download.mp3 Ocean Waves Radio ... every Wednesday at 5:00 PM Eastern time., www.OceanWavesRadio.com Thursday afternoons at 4:00 PM and Sunday mornings at 9:30 AM EST on Southern Branch Bluegrass Radio, www.sbbradio.org Saturday evenings at 7:00 and Wednesday afternoons at 4:00 CST on Radio For Life, www.RadioForLife.org Legend Oldies Radio. Our broadcast will be aired every Sunday morning at 9:00 AM CDT. https://www.legendoldies.com Playlist: Artists |Song Title | Album 01. Zane & Donna King - Everything good - "Everything Good" 02. High Road - That's what love is - "Straight From The Heart" 03. The Foresters, God is good - "Unstoppable" 04. The Bibletones - I mean to be there - "New Beginnings" 05. The Regals - Modern day Lazarus - "Best Days" 06. Avenue Trio - New name written down in glory - "Crucified, Magnified, Glorified" 07. The Gibson Girls - A little more love - "Every Moment" 08. Kim McLean - God never gave up on me - "A Song & A Prayer" 09. The LeFevre Quartet - Never walk alone - "Nobody Like Jesus" 10. Phillips & Banks - Sweet hour of prayer - "Sing Them Again" 11. Reggie Smith - I'm not there yet - "Reggie Smith Collection" 12. Joe Mullins & the Radio Ramblers - Be Jesus to someone today - "Hymns From The Hills" 13. Doyle Lawson & QuickSilver - Help is on the way - "Help Is On The Way" 14. The Steeles - Be the reason - "Be The Reason" 15. Jim & Melissa Brady - Ever present, ever faithful - "Ever Faithful" 16. Jake Hess - Come Sunday - "Nothin' Fine ... 40 Years & Counting: Volume 1 Disk 2" 17. The Wisecarvers - Victory story - "Strike A Chord" 18. Mark Bishop - Prince of Nigeria - "You're Happy When You're Laughing" 19, 11th Hour - This is not the end - "That's Who He Is" 20. Mystery artists of the week - Double wide church - "Debut CD" 21. Mark D. Conklin - Through the storm - "The Gospel According To Mark" 22. Hillary Scott & The Scott Family - Beautiful messes - "Love Remains" 23. Balsam Range - Gonna be movin - "The Gospel Collection"
Hello friend! On this episode of the podcast, we sit down with Terry Harris to talk about her experience with CrossCounsel, and how that experience influenced one of her novels. You won't want to miss it!A few of the topics covered:1:00 - Introducing Terry;9:55 - Sharing through characters;12:00 - Love Remains.If you have questions about our ministry, want to know how to donate, or want to schedule a ministry session, please go to crosscounsel.com for more details.Don't forget to hit follow, and we'll see you on the next one!
“In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us.” (1 John 4:10–12 NAS95)
“In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us.” (1 John 4:10–12 NAS95)
Tal Wilkenfeld is a singer-songwriter, bassist, and guitarist. She has performed with legendary artists including Jeff Beck, Prince, Incubus, Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock, Mick Jagger, Rod Stewart, Hans Zimmer, Pharrell Williams, and many more. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - MasterClass: https://masterclass.com/lexpod to get 15% off - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get $1 per month trial EPISODE LINKS: Tal's Instagram: https://instagram.com/talmeastory Tal's Twitter: https://twitter.com/talwilkenfeld Tal's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/talwilkenfeld/ Tal's YouTube: https://youtube.com/TalWilkenfeld Tal's Love Remains record: https://talwilkenfeld.lnk.to/LoveRemains Tal's Linktree: https://linktr.ee/talwilkenfeld Big thank you to Crossroads Guitar Festival and Jeff Beck Estate for the footage included in this podcast. Crossroads Guitar Festival: https://crossroadsguitarfestival.com/ Jeff Beck & Tal Wilkenfeld at Crossroads: https://youtube.com/watch?v=BVgUzUZeTw4 Guitar: Jeff Beck Bass: Tal Wilkenfield Drums: Vinnie Colaiuta Keyboards: Jason Rebello "Cause We've Ended As Lovers" is originally by Stevie Wonder PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:51) - Jeff Beck (15:44) - Confidence on stage (32:23) - Leonard Cohen (40:23) - Taxi Driver (51:43) - Songwriting (55:23) - How to learn and practice (1:13:53) - Slap vs Fingerstyle (1:20:16) - Davie504 (1:24:36) - Prince (1:30:13) - Jimi Hendrix (1:32:27) - Mentorship (1:38:46) - Sad songs (1:44:43) - Tal performs Under The Sun (live) (1:50:00) - Tal performs Killing Me (live)
Love Remains | Ephesians 2:1-10In every situation, love is the better choice.
https://seandivine.bandcamp.com/track/love-remains-3 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unitedotlove/message
SUMMARY:Bush front man Gavin Rossdale joins to chat about the band's first career-spanning compilation as he looks back on all the classic songs. PART ONE:This is a long one that covers Scott's eyewitness account of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, Paul's experience at U2's Sphere show, and the guys' thoughts on new music from the Rolling Stones and the Beatles. PART TWO (28 minute mark):Our in-depth conversation with Gavin RossdaleABOUT GAVIN ROSSDALE:As the lead vocalist, guitarist, songwriter and founder of the band Bush, Gavin Rossdale has sold over 24 million records in the U.S. and Canada, garnered over 1 billion streams, and won the prestigious Ivor Novello Award for International Achievement in Songwriting. He and the band are responsible for a string of 25 consecutive Top 40 hit singles on Billboard's Modern, Mainstream, and Active Rock charts spanning over 30 years. Seven of those songs reached #1, including “Comedown,” “Glycerine,” “Machinehead,” the Grammy-nominated “Swallowed,” and 2022's “More Than Machines.” Rossdale has also starred in films such as The Bling Ring and Constantine, and has found success with his solo work, including the Top 40 single “Love Remains the Same.” Bush recently released its critically-acclaimed ninth studio album, The Art Of Survival. Gavin and the band's latest project is called Loaded: The Greatest Hits, 1994-2023, and is Bush's first career-spanning compilation.
What exactly is the love revealed by the Holy Spirit-- Are we understanding the relationship that we are in with God-- What is it that God wants us to see, during our time here-- What is the main thing so unimaginable that we will partake of when we enter the Kingdom-- For answers to these questions and more, please listen to -His Love Remains- taught by Pastor Jamie.
In our culture love is most often defined as a feeling. But that's not love according to the Bible. Love is something else completely—a willing choice to put the good of the other before our own. When we make that choice, we can form and strengthen relationships that can endure even the greatest challenges. Fill-In Sermon Notes (https://notes.subsplash.com/fill-in/view?page=S1CViIA6h) Watch the Sermon (https://youtu.be/ffu8sYnw7V8) Watch the Full Worship Service (https://www.youtube.com/live/xiMmwdhAftg?si=cC4B1MF5gVIccMYj) Follow Acts 2: Website (https://acts2umc.org) Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/acts2umc) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/acts2umc) Youtube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTjMQ3C5r50E8PGLwMvwuGQ) Twitter (https://www.twitter.com/acts2umc)
Betsy Wurzel's guest today is John T. Campbell, Author, Writer of "BEYOND THE FADING MEMORIES": Guiding Words for Dementia Caregivers and also wrote the song, BEYOND The FADING MEMORIES, Love Remains with Bradley Fish singing.Betsy and John discuss the book he wrote to help caregivers, how music was a very important part of his mom's journey, and how music does seem to help those with dementia. The discussion continues on with the many challenges of caregiving, and how he came to write the song, BEYOND the FADING MEMORIES, LOVE REMAINS which in Betsy's opinion is a beautiful heart-touching song that resonated with her!For more information: How Music Helps with Fading Memories
Memories can bring us happiness but they can also be a constant reminder of the loss that we've experienced. Grief can change and evolve from moment to moment. No one can predict how we will experience grief and how others will respond. My guest today is Patti LaFleur, she is a former care partner for her mom, Linda, who had mixed dementia. Eventually, Linda came to live with Patti, and the two shared "love, fun, and joy" every day. She continues to honor her mom by sharing her story and changing the stigma around dementia. Patti has a large following on social media and shows us how we can truly connect with our loved ones, hold space for grief, and share joyful moments along the way. She continues her advocacy as a volunteer and community educator with the Alzheimers Association, Caring Across Generations, and other organizations that empower and encourage care partners. Thank you, Patti, for sharing all you've learned about love, loss, and compassion- I know your mom was your biggest cheerleader and she is smiling from above. Through it all, the love remains and you are spreading it everywhere. Thank you! Patti shares about: Why she chooses to share her story of caring for her mom How she is changing the stigma around dementia What she wishes others would understand about grief How our relationships can change and evolve as we grieve What not to say to someone grieving The ways we can support others in their grief Navigating the holidays and special events in grief Honoring our boundaries and personal journey in grief Her favorite times with her mom About Patti LaFleur Patti LaFleur is the former care partner for her Mom, Linda, who had mixed dementia. She cared for her Mom for three years. These two were the perfect duo. They shared fun, love and joy together every day. Linda and Patti even made a special trip to Disney before Linda passed in March. Since Linda's passing, Patti has continued to advocate and raise awareness for the dementia and Alzheimer's community. She volunteers for the Alzheimer's association as a community educator and volunteers in the art class that her Mom attend. She shares her story actively on social media (misspatticake on instagram) and wants to change the stigma around dementia. She is shining a light on dementia and is sharing her story along the way. Please follow Patti @misspatticake on Instagram and @carepartnerpatti on TikTok. Visit carepartnerpatti.com for more information. We are not medical professionals and are not providing any medical advice. If you have any medical questions, we recommend that you talk with a medical professional of your choice. willGather has taken care in selecting its speakers but the opinions of our speakers are theirs alone. Thank you for your continued interest in our podcasts. Please follow for updates, rate & review! For more information about our guest, podcast & sponsorship opportunities, visit www.willgatherpodcast.com Instagram: @willgather Facebook: WillGather Nicole Will is our host and founder of willGather.
Peter Nathaniel Lee wrote Walk With Me - A Journey of Healing on the Camino de Santiago….and he discovered sometimes you have to change everything before you can change yourself… This is a wonderful discussion about Peter's journey of healing....his love for his father, and a search to find love for himself.
Christmas is a time of love. We pray that you remember to abide in love throughout the chaos of the Christmas season. Meditate on 1 Corinthians 13:13 as you listen to this short Advent Bible meditation from Abide.Unlock the high-quality, full-length, and ad-free Christian meditation experience in the Abide app: https://abide.co/signup?ref=podcast
From our series on I Corinthians 13 called: "All You Need is Love," a sermon titled "Love Remains" on I Corinthians 13.8-13 preached by Rev. Howard Dudley at First Presbyterian Church of Dunn on Reign of Christ Sunday, November 20, 2022.
Треклист передачи: 01 Fear Factory - I Am The Nightrider (Fuel Injected Suicide Machine Remix) 02 Rexor - Spirit of the Dark 03 Ravage Red - Amnesia 04 SILIUS - Worship 05 Organized Mess Bluesband - Last Slow Blues 06 Silver Phantom - Circle Of The Serpent 07 A Farewell Fire - All Else Fails 08 Stargazer - Live My Dream 09 Satin - Angels Come, Angels Go" 10 Golgotha - Waiting for My Death 11 Rick Boy Slim & Dose Tripla - Andando na Noite 12 John Norum (EUROPA band) - Gone To Stay 13 Joe Lynn Turner - Rise Up 14 Royal Hunt - One More Shot 15 Therion - Cavern Cold As Ice 16 Michael Bormann - Our Sweet Lullaby 17 John Waite - (Cover) Missing You 18 Turkish Delight - Never Will Forget 19 Stabar - One Bug 20 Todd Rundgren - Godiva Girl 21 Tuomari Nurmio & Knucklebone Oscar - The Battle Is Over 22 Steve Lucas and the Rising Tide - The Bomp a Bomp Song 23 HitnRun - Bad, Bad Luck" 24 Hangar 55 - Love Remains Слушайте каждую пятницу в 15-00 с повторами на неделе на motoradio.online
Playlist for this show :- 1 Love Remains .. Dave Bainbridge ( Celestial Fire 2014 ) 2 Kashmir .. Oceans Of Slumber ( Blue 2015 ) 3 Lost .. Eric Gillette ( Afterthought 2013 )( The Tandem Feature ) 4 Apocalyptic Visions .. Tim Morse ( Transformation 2005) 5 Blood Honey .. Long Distance Calling […]
In all the losses of life, is there anything we can count on that won't ever go away? Good news! There is and you're going to LOVE it!
Central United Methodist Church (Arlington, Virginia) Sermon Podcast
Sermon preached on June 26, 2022 by Rev. Sarah. Worship series, "We Make the Road by Walking." Sermon, "Love Remains" Scripture, 1 Corinthians 13:1-13.Support the show
Completion of second Corinthians chapter 13.
I am nothing if I do not love others. I Corinthians 13
On June 16, 2021, Holly Springs Officer Joe Burson met Jesus. Cherokee County, the State of Georgia, and beyond all mourned the loss of this young man. As a community, we showered prayers and gifts upon his bride and family to show our support. However, many of us never knew Joe Burson personally. Today that changes. Listen in as Joe's wife, Mary-Kate, shares her love story with all of us. You are a part of their story—now they are a part of yours.
During a season when “love” is celebrated with flowers, candy, and romantic cards, it's easy to forget that love has many facets. The kind of love that sticks around when it feels like there's not much to celebrate. The kind of love that forgives in the face of disappointments and dishonesty. The kind of love that lives up to the promise that God, who Himself is love, made to us; that no matter what, He will never leave us or forsake us. Our guests this week are two couples who have walked together through joyous and difficult seasons—only to find that their love had the capacity to carry them through it all. We're talking to country singers Linda Davis and Lang Scott and one time fugitive Bobby Love and his wife Cheryl. Links, Products, and Resources Mentioned: Jesus Calling Podcast Jesus Calling Jesus Listens Past interview: Danielle Coke Upcoming interview: John Siebeling and Wayne Francis Linda Davis Lang Scott Grand Ole Opry Reba McEntire Love Remains Hebrews 11 NIV Lady A Bobby Love Richard Nixon The Redemption of Bobby Love Interview Quotes: “God has blessed our life and our family with wonderful opportunities and experiences that we share with people now that we can go out and talk about.” - Lang Scott “Music has been our life. It's been our life together and now for our children as well. God uses what we have done in our life to make an impact in a positive way and in a spiritual way to us, to others.” - Lang Scott “My mother, she prayed that I would straighten up and do the right things, and she prayed that God would just be there for me.” - Bobby Love “I knew somewhere in my deepest of hearts that this is what I had been feeling for so many years, that he was keeping something from me. I just didn't know what it was.” - Cheryl Love “We had a faith in God, and we talked about that, that God had always been with us. He had never left us. And, you know, I just felt like I had to forgive [Bobby].” - Cheryl Love ________________________ Enjoy watching these additional videos from Jesus Calling YouTube channel: Audio Playlist: https://bit.ly/2PrbuwH Video Playlist: https://bit.ly/2PsmEkJ What's Good? Playlist: https://bit.ly/3i7VUlZ ________________________ Connect with Jesus Calling Instagram Facebook Twitter Pinterest YouTube Jesus Calling Website
Love Remains - 1 John 4:7-14 - Pastor Nigel Unrau - Advent 3 by If I Had An Opinion
https://api.fluro.io/get/61c4d3426f8bc7001409c53a Fri, 24 Dec 2021 00:00:00 GMT hello@villagechurch.sydney (Village Church Sydney)
Pastor Bill: [0:10] Hello and welcome to season 3 episode 43 of the Berean Manifesto; Faith, Hope, and Love for the Modern Christian. We are meeting today me here and Pastor Newms in [0:34] Tennessee. Sorry about that pause there. Hey Pastor Newms can you stop sharing your screen in Teams? I can't seem to get you to pin because you're sharing your screen. Yeah there we go, now I can see you all right yeah. So yeah, so this is our warm up here because we record live, on Sunday evenings at 6:30 p.m. Central Standard Time, if you're listening to this as a podcast you are more than welcome and encouraged to come join us at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday evenings. We have a Twitch channel that we stream live to, a Facebook Channel we stream live to and a YouTube channel that we stream live to. And you can go to ekk.house to find out what those channels are and then you can join us live on Sunday and interact with us through type in those channels and those also get forwarded to our Discord Channel where their in the Discord Channel we can talk back. [1:52] Join us, we have a good old time we have a good old time so if you want to see our faces instead of just listening to a podcast you can join us on Sunday evening. Pastor Newms: [2:04] I would I would say that's not the important part, no seeing our faces is not the important part. Joining in on the conversation because neither one of us care anything about our faces I don't even want you to look at my face he just makes me be on. Pastor Bill: [2:20] You know how much time I put into straightening and conditioning and beard, bombing my beard, to get ready for tonight. [2:31] I care about my face bro. Pastor Newms: [2:35] You can be vain if you'd like to. Pastor Bill: [2:37] It's not vanity I just want to look nice because I respect our listeners. Pastor Newms: [2:42] I just want anyone to look at me I did turn up the intro music so it will be interesting to see if it is way too loud or if it's way too quiet this time because. Pastor Bill: [2:55] Been a little soft yeah track gotta find that. [3:06] We will figure it out. Pastor Newms: [3:08] And then adjust the happy medium because nothing changed except for some reason the medium. Pastor Bill: [3:14] Yeah for some reason the medium became less me. Pastor Newms: [3:29] Ooooh, fire not that they can see it because we're not on camera. Pastor Bill: [3:32] See it all I can see now. Pastor Newms: [3:34] Minute and a half. Pastor Bill: [3:48] It is it is my turn to use a card I have my deck right here ready for when that's time I got my fresh Dr. Pepper I just opened and I have my pile of cough drops. [4:13] You're right. [4:27] No I do. Pastor Newms: [4:28] There was a Tic Tok of these parents and they're like when you sneeze it's cool say it with me allergy and little kids like Coronavirus. [4:39] She like no allergies 30 seconds and so that's I was watching one this morning of that because we had that issue this, where she got sick at school and they were like go home it might be a Corona. Pastor Bill: [5:15] Once again hello and welcome to season 3 episode 43 of the Berean Manifesto; Faith, Hope, and Love for the Modern Christian. Tonight's episode, yes I'm gonna do another soft open so don't get your, your feelings in a bunch over there Pastor Newms. I'ma do a soft open we're talking about what we know about fear, can teach us about faith. [5:47] And we're going to draw some correlations between fear and faith, and we're probably going to have some disagreements between myself and Pastor Newms, maybe at different points of the evening and I dropped my pen, I got these cool pins this week I needed I needed this desk pens and I got this pack of pins, you get these cool little you know fleur design on it and this particular one is pink and there was a green one and a blue one. Pastor Newms: [6:14] I'm sorry I'm sorry backup I'm sorry backup, it has one on it. Pastor Bill: [6:22] Fluer, the French word for for this kind of design yes yes yes calligraphic fluer. [6:44] We're joined by BiggsGFG on Twitch, he says something about spiders. I don't know what he's talking about and we've got Phoenix joining us on Twitch hey Phoenix, and you too could have your handle called out if you join us live on Sunday evenings oh Biggs is saying he fears spiders nice, Newms you're making eyeballs why are you making those eyeball like. Pastor Newms: [7:13] No reason. Pastor Bill: [7:17] Staring off camera like. Pastor Newms: [7:21] The wife entered the room no that's full thank. Pastor Bill: [7:26] It's the wife. Pastor Newms: [7:27] She was bring me my sneak because I completely forgot to make my sneak or ask someone to make my sneak. Pastor Bill: [7:35] So she snuck into. [7:42] Instead of playing it off you highlighted it don't roll out of camera shot hey Pastor Newms how was your week this week. Pastor Newms: [7:50] It was a week I was very very busy at work, talk about the thing I can talk about. Pastor Bill: [8:03] You talk about the thing you can now. Pastor Newms: [8:04] I can now yeah so I have been you know haven't talked about it on here just because can't talk about things that gets shoved out into the public until things are real. Pastor Bill: [8:16] Well you know there's a certain certain modicum of respect and. Pastor Newms: [8:19] Yeah so I was looking for a new job to move on from my current company and nothing terrible, nothing like oh my gosh this company is terrible you know unethical I hate my job it was just time for a move, I have dealt with that but we won't get into there and so I did accept a new position this week, and so I am starting there on the 15th it looks now you're now it's completely in the camera. Pastor Bill: [8:55] I was it how's that that better. Pastor Newms: [8:58] It's up to you there's nothing your camera your camera your microphone used to be completely in the shot I don't know why you're so worried about it being out of the. Pastor Bill: [9:05] I know I don't know why you keep saying talking about it when it goes into the. Pastor Newms: [9:11] Because you said I don't want it in the shot and I don't understand why but that's why I've told you it's in the shot I don't care you have a nice microphone that if it was a if it was a duct taped crooked. Pastor Bill: [9:25] I could add duct tape to my mic. Pastor Newms: [9:28] I will make you move it out of no I'm fine. Pastor Bill: [9:31] That would look so cool Newms. Pastor Newms: [9:32] No it no I'm okay with the rug behind you we start duct taping things and I'm going to have an issue. Pastor Bill: [9:38] Hey that's my wall rug man that sounds like walrus wall rug. Pastor Newms: [9:40] I don't care what it is okay so my week was good. Pastor Bill: [9:46] You don't like my wall rug? Pastor Newms: [9:48] I just I've never really liked the wall rug it's not a. Pastor Bill: [9:54] Tapestries. Pastor Newms: [9:55] No I don't like tapestries especially when it's not a tapestry when it's straight up an outdoor rug that you stapled to the wall and called a tapestry. Pastor Bill: [10:05] That's not stapled, I used nails. Pastor Newms: [10:08] Yeah you did I'm just harassing you because you know I can, my walls used to look just as bad let's be honest, and I tried the green screen there thing for awhile there that didn't work well, not for me it works for some people I've seen some people pull it off very well I don't know what it is I think it's the fact of what I don't like to have lights on. Pastor Bill: [10:36] I think it's your face it's doesn't it's not suited for green screen or something I don't know. [10:45] Anyway you were talking about your week. Pastor Newms: [10:47] So my week was good I'm just working on the transition and wrapping up the one company and getting you know on board it onto the new one. Pastor Bill: [10:57] Cool cool cool. Pastor Newms: [10:58] So that's always interesting. Pastor Bill: [11:03] Oh man you're going to hate me when you go to process audio. Pastor Newms: [11:06] What did you do. Pastor Bill: [11:08] I moved my mic I turned it down my mic volume I move my mic again that I turned down my mic volume again so this can be parts of it that are going to be blown up and parts of it are we. Pastor Newms: [11:19] I'm going to I'm going to make it a little smaller and I'm going to line it up to where it sounds okay and that's all I'm going to do and if you start bouncing in the middle of everything else that's not my fault, I'm not going to cut it and I'm not an audio engineer, whatever you send me is getting used the way you send it to me I love you but I don't even check my audio I'm like did it bounce cool all right it's on. Pastor Bill: [11:43] Okay well I'll make some adjustments on my end where I know it needs to be adjusted before I send it to you then. Pastor Newms: [11:49] That's fine you do you boo boo. Pastor Bill: [11:53] Boo boo already done talking about your week yet. Pastor Newms: [12:04] Seven and a half eight ten years ago, and it was fun it's fun that's one of the games were planning on starting streaming here in the next couple of days or week or whatever we get that going since your computer supposed to be in soon but that's part of your week not part of my week so that's okay, and I think that's everything I'm a good villain I push someone off a building. Pastor Bill: [12:35] Descendants enough of building today. Pastor Newms: [12:37] Didn't even know it was possible I'm like what is this citizen doing here went to talk to him, and I just shoved him off the building I was like oh I just killed that person like it's one thing to like, partially beat up a citizen and and steal their purse it's a whole nother thing to push them straight off a building like that's just I was like. Pastor Bill: [12:58] Now to be just just just roll this out a little bit more we aren't playing like Grand Theft Auto playing DC Universe Online. Pastor Newms: [13:09] Were you have to be a hero or a villain so. Pastor Bill: [13:15] We chose to go villain because we're already heroes in real life so, we have a strong moral code in real life that we allowed to dictate what we do, and it's heavily tied in with our ethical beliefs, and so when we're role-playing online sometimes we go villain because we don't get to do villainy stuff in real life. Pastor Newms: [13:41] Plus you know there's the whole thing about jail. Pastor Bill: [13:47] Jail I can be a villain just as easily in jail as I can out of jail. Pastor Newms: [13:51] I don't want to go to jail I'm too pretty for jail I like air conditioning soft towels I mean there's a whole list of reasons to not. Pastor Bill: [14:02] I don't not do things out of fear jail that's not my motivation I don't do things because those are wrong to do. Pastor Newms: [14:13] Me either I agree Pastor Bill. Pastor Bill: [14:16] Wow. Pastor Newms: [14:17] You anything out of knowing something is wrong and that's the reason I don't do it as. Pastor Bill: [14:22] All right take off your Veil take off your Veil and be real don't be Moses. Pastor Newms: [14:26] No I mean there's a lot of things I would do because my moral code is a little, no see that's the thing Biggs I'm worried about things like towels and soft beds and and things like that the things that are terrible about jail, I wouldn't worry is me as much as the minor inconveniences that would drive me batty. Pastor Bill: [14:54] It's a lot of there's a lot of Prisons where you don't get a towel unless you can afford one from the commissary they tell you to shake off like a dog. Pastor Newms: [15:02] There's there's a there's a, I know that I just I couldn't do it but like that's the crazy thing is is I'm so, like when people are like hey what error would you like to live in this one possibly the next one because it should be nicer like I don't want to go back, and right now is a great time because I really can go out and get an Axe and and, LARP with a with an axe with other people wearing axes and shields if I really some mean if I really wanted to even do that I could just go do it, I'm already a nerd look behind me. Pastor Bill: [15:50] All right so how was my. Pastor Newms: [15:52] How was your week Pastor Bill. Pastor Bill: [15:54] Excellent segue, so my week this week as you said we started playing that one game mainly in anticipation for my new computer that was scheduled to come in on Friday afternoon after, hey weeks eight weeks of waiting, but there was Chip shortage and so it wasn't like it wasn't like anybody's fault that it was delayed it was just straight up, situational issues with everything going on in the world today, and so then on Friday morning anyway I got an email from UPS, due to Hurricane Ida my delivery got pushed back to Tuesday afternoon so day after tomorrow, at the time that we recording this life. Pastor Newms: [16:46] And the idea correct me if I'm wrong Pastor Bill was to start a character, in anticipation so that way we could understand and be able to start streaming right off the gate, but and this was a game I suggested because you might enjoy it because of your love of DC and it may be something you enjoy and I've played it you know, many many years ago and I played it till I burnt out and then walked away so I'd be willing to try it again but hey maybe you'll like it, he's like I don't I don't want to wait and because it's an old game the computer I currently have can technically play it so let's play it till I get the new computer and then we'll play it more I'm like all right cool no problem, and I'm leveling a character with you and then we'll go to the other character that I already have that. Pastor Bill: [17:53] Some streaming to that in Gaming With The Pastors. Pastor Newms: [17:59] Will probably only be on Twitch we're not using the church's out for that so that will only be on the Twitch channel that is the Pastor Newms Twitch Channel and then possibly. Pastor Bill: [18:12] Join and watch that show, that streaming those streaming things that'll only be on Twitch and you can go to our website ekk.house that is e as in elephant and then K as in kite and K is in ketchup, dot house like you live in a house ekk.house. [18:43] So is kangaroo. Pastor Newms: [18:44] Watch you loss watch you lose yeah we're going to get killed a lot so at the moment. Pastor Bill: [19:03] And we're winning like crazy right now. Pastor Newms: [19:05] Yeah like you have to like you have to really really really really really mess up to die but, which while Pastor Bill was having some electrical issues yesterday, I went on to play my other character for a little while to get him caught up to the same point because there's been so much content in the 397 3097 days that I was AFK which was just funny to read but the. Pastor Bill: [19:43] Hey is almost 10 years that's like eight years. Pastor Newms: [19:46] Yeah and they just went through their 10-year anniversary and I played for a good while with one of our other friends from North Texas, so yeah it was it was I. Pastor Bill: [19:58] Of K for 8 years. Pastor Newms: [20:00] I died I died several times to actual content and I was like something is wrong and then I realized what was wrong and I fixed it and it was more of that, that I had missed so now. Pastor Bill: [20:15] It is now time for Get To Know The Pastor's. Pastor Newms: [20:18] The thingy cards. Pastor Bill: [20:21] Okay are you ready Pastor knew. Pastor Newms: [20:22] No I'm never ready for this segment. Pastor Bill: [20:25] Excellent that pull this out and wrong order. [20:38] Weird last time we pulled the card it was if you were to die tomorrow what little thing would you regret not doing. Pastor Newms: [20:46] Yep. Pastor Bill: [20:47] And this week's card is what is your greatest regret. Pastor Newms: [20:52] Your deck is just like a whole bunch of the same questions. Pastor Bill: [21:01] Which Talent would you most like to have. Pastor Newms: [21:07] Define talent. Pastor Bill: [21:10] I'm not telling. Pastor Newms: [21:14] Like something a normal human can do not like something crazy not a superpower a talent right. [21:44] Something that would hugely altar, like my life I can't think of anything small like I'd like to be able to juggle I don't care about any of that kind of stuff but if anything I would like to be able to, play games as efficiently as I could 15 years ago because my hands don't work the same anymore, and my thumb goes you know because I shake my thumb just goes it for and, I mess up my rotations and so I can't play a lot of competitive games anymore because of it which is frustrating so I would like to be able to play competitively, and I could even throw in the word again cuz in my early twenties I could before my, inflammation disorder got worse and worse arthritis and etcetera what about you Pastor Bill what would you like to be able to do in life. Pastor Bill: [23:11] It's not my lack of shuffling skills it's my lack of luck. [23:20] I have the worst look if anyone I've ever met. Pastor Newms: [23:22] It looks pretty bad. Pastor Bill: [23:26] So I guess you know if I if I if there was a talent I would like to have I would like to have a better look. Pastor Newms: [23:34] Phoenix is trying to use logic tell Phoenix to stop using logic. Pastor Bill: [23:42] Phoenix I already went through the deck and threw away the cards that were inappropriate. Pastor Newms: [23:47] There's a difference between inappropriate and just bad. Pastor Bill: [23:53] Hmm we'll just now I took out the cards that we hit already done and then shuffle them, twice with the you know the flip method and then I, cool and stick method so they've been reshuffled now. Pastor Newms: [24:13] And the other ones are put where where did you put the ones that are bad, already done or we skipped. Pastor Bill: [24:26] So we I pull from the Dark Side and then I put them into the light side so I know that they're the ones that are already dead dad who dad, done and bad together. Pastor Newms: [24:41] Several of them have been bad so. Pastor Bill: [24:48] And some of them have been duplicates of your. Pastor Newms: [24:51] Yep yep and I think I think mine are better just because I mean like every one of those is one, like mine's not like a deck I mean I've got like, this is a whole I'm pulling from the middle so we don't mess up put like it's a whole stack of them. Pastor Bill: [25:15] Cards is it because I've got a hundred and four. Pastor Newms: [25:19] More a crap ton, I just messed up the deck I tried really hard not to and a bunch fell on the bottom, I don't know if it says on it the girls bought this for us my two girls that live here the two adult girls found this and got them for me. Pastor Bill: [25:47] You don't know how many cards today. Pastor Newms: [25:48] I don't know I'm going to look in a second it might. Pastor Bill: [25:52] My video feed is on the home Wi-Fi. Pastor Newms: [25:58] And he hasn't had as many issues you only froze. Pastor Bill: [26:04] My video feed is on the cellular service. Pastor Newms: [26:08] This is question to spark conversations hundred and fifty six cards. Pastor Bill: [26:21] You definitely have more than me by 52. Pastor Newms: [26:22] Yeah see the crazy thing is is now you're you're having issues. Pastor Bill: [26:28] Video issues I'll get back on the Wi-Fi. Pastor Newms: [26:29] Yeah it's back its back okay but yeah I find that to be interesting. Pastor Bill: [26:36] You never know I just I just never know what's going to happen. Pastor Newms: [26:41] Yeah that's weird, just the fact that you would think the opposite not that because I know your Wi-Fi I know where you get your Wi-Fi from you would think you'd have better cell surface. Pastor Bill: [26:59] You really would you think that my AT&T cell service would be better than the, dish on top of my house appointed, receiving from several miles away. Pastor Newms: [27:10] We talked about it now you're Frozen. Pastor Bill: [27:17] My Frozen now. Pastor Newms: [27:18] Yeah and now it's crappy quality. Pastor Bill: [27:32] We shouldn't here I'll fix it you ready all better how's that. Pastor Newms: [27:34] Yeah no no because then it's just my face. Pastor Bill: [27:40] Yep it's just your face now. Pastor Newms: [27:42] I can pull that picture I made if you that one day and. Pastor Bill: [27:45] Oh no don't do that. Pastor Newms: [27:46] I can do it when you when your video was completely dead and we only had so it was just, because that was the picture I got. Pastor Bill: [28:00] Absolutely all right well I think we're sufficiently warmed up is Zaydiee not going to join us tonight. Pastor Newms: [28:08] I just think she's not talking. Pastor Bill: [28:10] Okay usually sounds off by now that she's here. Pastor Newms: [28:13] I hear you from the living room so. Pastor Bill: [28:20] So she's somebody's watching well we know Phoenix is watching if she's there. Pastor Newms: [28:21] Someone's watching haha she spoke. Pastor Bill: [28:27] Up there's is Zaydeii19 sounds off on Twitch, and you can too if you join us on Sunday yeah this I don't know why that I feel in such a such a push for inviting people on this episode to join us live on Sunday night, seriously if you're not doing anything else on Sunday nights we got a you know you should come and be a part of the conversation live, and ask questions and. Pastor Newms: [28:57] You're just having a night. Pastor Bill: [29:00] I am well I mean it's a weekend thing it's the whole weekend just shot just. Pastor Newms: [29:09] Do you want to talk about your electricity issues. Pastor Bill: [29:13] Sure five o'clock yesterday all the power here just went off and I was like what just happened oh look at that my audio, when I turn my camera back on my audio on my phone came back on so I was getting an echo all right so all the power for my desk comes from a plug right back, it all went down the air conditioner over there went down and I went to check on it and it was like a line that followed around this into the house and then across the skip to plug, and then continued on the front of the house the porch light the thing we have the TV plug into all the way to the other the room on the other end of the house, those plugs and then across that side of the house to the far side of the house to all went out and I check the breaker box are all on the same line, and the lines getting power but then somewhere between the line getting power and this first plug here. [30:19] The powers not getting here and, so now it's trying to track that down and I found a short in this plug thinking this plug is part of it too but this plug right over here in front of me is not part of it too and so I fixed the short that wasn't actually causing any problems only to find out, it wasn't part of the problem so now I'm going to have to call an electrician on Tuesday because I'm not paying labor day prices for an electrician to come out to my home, and the last time I had electric problems every electrician I called said they were not doing residential work until the pandemic was over, except for one this little old man who I don't think is going to want to crawl under my house to try to figure out what's going on, so I don't know what I'm going to do. Pastor Newms: [31:20] Yeah. Pastor Bill: [31:21] So if you know any electricians in the Decatur Texas area that do residential electric work even though we're in the middle of a pandemic. Pastor Newms: [31:31] And for a trailer. Pastor Bill: [31:33] and for a 37 year old trailer, have them send me an email info@ekklesianhouse.com or info@ekk.house You know I found out that some some internet services won't let you put ekk.house as the email address, when you stand up for something or even trying to send an email, there's certain programs that won't accept .house Pastor Newms: [32:02] Yeah there's some people who have it programmed for the old style of programming where it had to be a.com because that was the only domain that actually allowed emails and so the. Pastor Bill: [32:13] So then you got dot-org and info and done. Pastor Newms: [32:17] But a lot of them that is one of the requirements for. [32:26] Those aspects. Pastor Bill: [32:27] He has better work ethics than you. Pastor Newms: [32:30] The little man witch. Pastor Bill: [32:32] What did he say about his work ethic it's about can you physically get down on the ground and crawl underneath my house. [32:46] No I respect him I think he would go. Pastor Newms: [32:49] Because he did a really good job with your last electrical issue when. Pastor Bill: [32:52] He did an amazing job. Pastor Newms: [32:54] Yeah so now we're not. Pastor Bill: [32:57] So he pieced together and built an outside breaker box from pieces that weren't supposed to work together because everything in here is, Jury rigged to work and so it took him forever and he got it done and get it done well and it looks amazing. Pastor Newms: [33:18] So we love the little man we're just not sure if he wants to get underneath the falling apart trailer where there's literally. Pastor Bill: [33:29] Okay so we are definitely sufficiently warmed up now so. Pastor Newms: [33:31] Yes we are we are longer than we normally warm up I'm sorry. Pastor Bill: [33:36] Yeah well yeah I know what I'm listen to other podcasts like podcast is that talking Trek I wasn't talking check podcast which is, live right now with 26 people on the Discord listening to them they like at the beginning it's like a to our podcast and at the beginning they spend like 20 minutes, talking about, okay and then the for 40 minutes they talked about the Star Trek game that you and I play that newms and I place Star Trek Fleet command and then for the next 30 minutes they talk about sports again, and for the last 30 minutes they usually talk about the only information that I'm there for, and so I'm like this hurts my brain I don't want to hear about sports and your opinion on Sports this is not a sports podcast why why are you talking about sports, shut up and get back to the actual content that your podcast is about. [34:53] So we apologize if we frustrated you with the last 35 minutes of warm up and getting to know us and hearing good things about our lives but we didn't talk about. Pastor Newms: [35:04] But at least it wasn't Sports. Pastor Bill: [35:08] The only time we're going to talk about sports on this podcast is. Pastor Newms: [35:13] Supposed to. Pastor Bill: [35:13] The commercials when we talked about the commercials that ran, in the Super Bowl, that is when we will talk about sports when women talk about those. Pastor Newms: [35:24] Someone at work this week we were in a meeting and they started talking about one of the Tennessee teams and something about them and then like what do you think about it and I said I'm currently sitting at my desk wearing a Marvel t-shirt, I didn't even I don't even know what sport season were in. Pastor Bill: [35:44] I don't even I don't even know what team that is. Pastor Newms: [35:46] But now I do now. Pastor Bill: [35:49] Is that foosball where they ride the horse and they got that ball made of pig skin and they have to kick it. Pastor Newms: [35:54] Okay stop combining things like I even know I even know more than that okay. Pastor Bill: [35:58] And then they're like home run go. Pastor Newms: [36:01] We go we're done I'm fearful for how this is going to go ha ha ha ha. Pastor Bill: [36:09] I always use that to poke fun at people who talk about sports and they asked me a question about a sport I'll be like is that the one where they and then I just start piecing random pieces of different sports together that I know about, because that's what it sounds like to me when they're talking about their Sports they're like, and he flip its the widget and I'm like I don't understand what you just said, I have no idea what you're talking about flip it's the widget okay all right so what do we know about fear that can teach us about faith. [36:52] And the reason is important to talk about this is because well obviously these three remain faith hope and love so faith is one of our you know one of our core tenant areas that we talked about and, it's surprising to me how often I talk to people who are like. [37:13] I just don't know how to have. [37:18] I don't know how to exercise faith I don't know what that means to have faith don't understand faith I don't understand the concept of faith I don't understand how this whole, Faith the size of a mustard seed thing works what does that even mean A Little Bit of Faith Can blah blah blah, and it's this concept that people have such a hard time wrapping their brains around, but the the simple answer is and if you want to turn this podcast off after I say the simple answer because it really is just this is the answer, and then we're going to you know expound upon that the simple answer is that you already know how to have faith, and it comes naturally to you expressed as fear, fear is your natural human expression of faith, faith is a spiritual expression that comes naturally to your spirit but your spirits done in control of your body your body is, and for the human flesh fear, is the natural reaction to something that you believe without evidence. [38:44] And faith is something you choose to believe without evidence you already know how to have faith, and so think about it fear is believing in something without evidence now you may have, you may have precedents, that something has happened and that's informing your fear okay if I sit on a railroad track in a car as the car stalled other cars have gotten hit by a train I'm afraid I'm going to get hit by a train, no you're going to get hit by train you're not a precog are you have you seen the future, you have a fear of the unknown you're choosing to believe something that you don't know you don't have evidence that you are going to get hit by that train, we watch scary movies where these people are running from serial killers, no they're going to get killed they have precedents that has convinced them and they're choosing to believe. [39:59] People are afraid of storms they don't know, they've learned friend of this or afraid of that. [40:16] This is why I said there is going to be some disagreement here tonight. [40:27] The can't move we're recording a podcast. Pastor Newms: [40:30] I know I know but. Pastor Bill: [40:31] The video is a courtesy to the people who showed up live. Pastor Newms: [40:33] I know I know but it's it's your talk and then it's frozen and then it catches up and so you're doing this on the screen and so it's it's hard to focus in the times when you're doing this so, I understand the point that you're making, and I agree faith is you know the belief that something is going to happen based on, sometimes president sometimes Faith sometimes just belief sometimes it's the belief, that something's going to happen because of a belief you know so I get that. Pastor Bill: [41:17] So tell me how fears any. Pastor Newms: [41:21] Because humans have a natural fear response we don't have a natural Faith response. Pastor Bill: [41:35] I'm supposing that are Spirit does. Pastor Newms: [41:39] Yeah I could see that but you are drawing a very strong correlation between. Pastor Bill: [42:04] Well not really connection but a correlation. Pastor Newms: [42:08] That's what that's what I mean sorry I used a word and then lost the word but I think there is fear is. [42:24] To me more raw than faith is because faith is something that you do have to, to a certain degree learn, it's like when you're a small child you don't have faith in anything and you don't like you don't know, is this thing going to because you don't have the Precedence you've built upon where as fear, you can be you're afraid of anything you don't understand some people not everyone, and so I think they're that fear is more raw now I'm not saying that there's no, correlation and I always you know there are, there are lots of people who do the whole fear Faith versus fear or fear versus Faith depending on how they word it and they'll do a whole sermon series on how we have to have faith and not be fearful because we have faith, and I don't always agree with that line of reasoning because. Pastor Bill: [43:38] Fear is what keeps me from stepping out in front of a coming train. Pastor Newms: [43:42] Right. Pastor Bill: [43:42] Keeps me from jumping off the edge of the Grand Canyon keeps me from you know that it out of that. [43:59] Keep you safe and healthy. Pastor Newms: [44:01] And without being safe and healthy your faith to a certain degree won't matter because you probably won't be here if you're not afraid of the things that can kill you. Pastor Bill: [44:15] But Faith isn't for your physical. Pastor Newms: [44:17] It's not. Pastor Bill: [44:19] Faith does the same thing for your spirit that fear does for your body. Pastor Newms: [44:26] But on the same token Faith does affect the physical in that the things that we are, we have the faith that it'll work a great example that you always use is a chair that doesn't work for me because I'm fearful of every chair I sit in, but you've used that example many times I have faith that the chair will work which isn't necessarily spiritual, it is physical because there's not a youth you know it happens in your mind so quickly you make that decision before you move. Pastor Bill: [45:10] So but what I'm saying is not that you can't physically have faith I'm saying that, what fear is for the flesh meant to be a protective, you know don't do this or you'll die don't do this we'll get hurt faith is the same thing for your spirit, whereas Faith informs you not to step out and sorry where's fear informs you not to step out in front of the train Faith informs you spiritually, to not get involved with voodoo so I'm saying, faith and fear are serving purposes for physical and spiritual life they're serving the same purpose but one, full spiritual and one full physical. Pastor Newms: [46:13] I don't know. Pastor Bill: [46:18] All right Twitch on Twitch on Zaydiee. Zaydiee on Twitch says wouldn't small kids have an inherent Faith though, because their faith in the adults who take care of someone they are trusting you will take care of them just in some kids the fear is stronger than their faith, and Phoenix you know seconds that oh good point except, that's not how it works kids that are abused inherently fear adults and kids that are loved learn to trust adults, and some kids they, I'm sorry your whole body went pixelated on my video but your background is completely crystal clear. Pastor Newms: [47:11] You see what I mean though because the technical sometimes does get in the way you're like I can't focus on. Pastor Bill: [47:19] Yeah it's totally distracted by that, the child learns to have faith in their physical surroundings when they are taking care of, when they are too young say a newborn baby, they're not exercising faith in the adults that are around them they're exercising lack of awareness, they don't they're not aware that they're being held they're not aware that they're being loved they're not aware you know and they learn these they get these little pieces of awareness, when they're feeding when they're when they're skin-to-skin and through those little pieces of awareness then they learn faith, but baby that you leave alone crying in a crib, they are exercising fear of being alone it's instinctively know being alone is bad. Pastor Newms: [48:21] A predator can eat me. Pastor Bill: [48:24] Because their flesh wants to keep them safe and they inherently know alone is bad they don't reason because the Predator can eat me there a reason that they don't know why being alone makes them afraid but being alone puts them into fear, so I would have to not say that I believe the same way you do on that question I'm not saying you're wrong though I'm saying the way I see the situation, is what I've explained there. [49:21] So Phoenix on Twitch says but hold on because like babies that are born new are like automatically comforted by their you know your Phoenix is not talk that way in real life but she types that way which is weird, um like automatically comforted by their parents, so you're right babies that are new are automatically comforted, and what I believe is happening there is they've gone from a place where they are warm and comfortable and surrounded and completely enveloped to this harsh crazy environment, and then when they are put back into the mother's arms their swaddled and wrapped up and back to a place where they can sense and here, the same sounds that they were Hearing in that comfortable place if that makes any sense, I see you saying. Pastor Newms: [50:23] So I understand what you're saying don't necessary. Pastor Bill: [50:25] Understand what I'm saying you don't fully agree with my supposition although I haven't heard you actually disagree with my supposition. Pastor Newms: [50:31] I just I don't what I did I said I don't know that I believe the correlation is. Pastor Bill: [50:39] But then you went on to explain what you do believe and it wasn't, exclusionary of what I'm saying in any way past any way at all. Pastor Newms: [50:48] It's not but that does not mean I agree. Pastor Bill: [50:50] Even say I would even say you could put both of them together in a book and it would just read through like okay we're just fully explaining the thing. Pastor Newms: [50:59] Could be could be and then and then might not be because, something irks me about it and I don't know what yet and I might get there but something about it irks me and I don't know why. Pastor Bill: [51:15] It might just be that it's different from what you've always been taught and always heard. Pastor Newms: [51:21] No cuz I've never liked the fear versus Faith anyway so it's not that. Pastor Bill: [51:27] I've never liked it either because people like no fear no fear and I'm like, well I mean I don't get out of a I've never been but I don't get out of a tour truck in the Sahara, you know and the African Sahara because a lions and that's a fear response and that keeps me alive right. Pastor Newms: [51:48] Well and you know you should have a healthy fear of certain things even in the spiritual you know and so, you know I think that there is a I think that the no fear is very flawed, you know there was a t-shirt you know when the no fear shirts came out there was one that said no fear but it was the know, and then it had the scripture but my point was. [52:32] The question was where does that fit in with the scripture you want to talk about tonight how do those tie in together, now that I understand your premise of your thought process. Pastor Bill: [52:57] Second Timothy chapter 1 verse 7, for God has not given us a spirit of fear but one of power love and sound judgment, so I believe what Paul is telling Timothy here when he says power love and a sound judgment he's, trying to describe Faith how you break Faith down into what it naturally is, power which was the word dunamis which was understood in Christian circles to mean the ability to do Miracles was the Power House of the Holy Spirit it was known as, divine power that that word there is what they meant when they would use that word the word dunamis love, which is, and sound judgment so to make wise decisions big we are in second Timothy chapter 1 verse 7 and sound judgment there. Pastor Newms: [54:10] That's an interesting word. Pastor Bill: [54:11] Played down in a lot of, a lot of translations but in the Greek it's the word so for mismos which is discipline or self-control. Pastor Newms: [54:31] Oh that is an "S" woo, I was like that's not what I read because my brain did not even process the S my brain started with the oh I was like that is not the word I just read what are you talking. Pastor Bill: [54:46] For Annie's most Heroes over knees most now so. Pastor Newms: [54:47] Yeah yeah I was like that is not what I just read homie like I don't know where you're going. Pastor Bill: [54:55] So for needs most and. Pastor Newms: [54:56] Who I thought you were. Pastor Bill: [54:59] It comes from the word sofa needs oh, which is to discipline or correct or to teach specifically in the area, of how do we do things right it's not necessarily the, spare the rod idea it's not bad it's not the rod idea it's the teaching disciplined in teaching and sharpening the mind. Pastor Newms: [55:36] You know it's a very interesting word because, you know there's a lot of Greek and Hebrew that used a lot and then there are some that are used very little in the Bible, and that's one that used once and then the word that it comes from, is used once and the word it comes from is used only for X so it's an interesting word choice, to think that there's all the New Testament that Paul wrote and there's, this words only used a couple times he uses it very succinctly. Pastor Bill: [56:24] And then is one of the tropes that Paul uses when he's wanted to say something specific and highly it that it's important he'll choose an obscure word. Pastor Newms: [56:34] And so to answer your question Phoenix if we don't have a spirit of fear than why do we have a fear response when we spiritually sense demons or bad vibes so, I would say that that is not your spirit that is your physical body your physical body has the the flight or fight, responses in the brain, respond even when there is not a physical stimuli but because it's still processing all the information even when we don't understand what its processing it's still the physical process it's not the spiritual process it's your brain it's your. [57:18] Soul tone your spirits tell your brain that something's wrong and even though you can't physically see what it is it's still your brain that decides whether to fight or flight, so it's still a it's a the fear overall is very much a physical response I think, creature things that are built into as automatically you know dark is bad because I don't know what dark is it does that mean something's in the dark I don't know but it's bad, the unknown is always a fear and then yes there are, times to be afraid like you know sensing demons bad vibes. Pastor Bill: [58:17] All right so it's time for us to wrap up but I just wanted to. [58:21] So I just wanted to touch right here real quick big says fear God and unfortunately in the modern definition of the word fear, that message is lost, because of translations and yada yada yada so basically we are taught in the Old Testament to fear God and Paul does in yes I believe that Paul wrote Hebrews Paul does in the book of Hebrews, tell us to have a Godly fear when we're approaching God, but the word and the idea of fear of God that's talked about in the Bible is the Greek word you Lobby, okay and it's properly caution, reverence piety right now in by implication it's dread or fear but the word itself is, giving it its own do and I think when we say you know someone needs to fear God in the modern vernacular, we're we're missing something all together because the word fear now doesn't communicate the same thing it did then now it only me. [59:49] You know I'm afraid I'm going to kill it doesn't mean respect it doesn't mean reverence it's you know modern fear, and so I wanted to real quick highlight first John chapter 4 and we're gonna, start in verse let's start in verse 15. [1:00:13] Whoever confesses and that was first John chapter 4 starting in verse 15 whoever confesses that Jesus is the son of God God remains in him and he in God, and we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us God is, and the one who remains in Love Remains in God and God remains in him, in this love is made complete with us so that we may have confidence in the day of, because as he is so also are we in this world, there is no fear in love instead perfect love drives out fear because fear involves punishment, so the one who fears is not complete in love, we love first because he first loved us if anyone says I love God yet hates his brother or sister he is a liar. [1:01:27] You can go finish reading that for yourself from then on but, and the modern vernacular of the word fear it doesn't fit with God being loved and loved driving out perfect fear and notice it didn't say faith drives out fear, his said love drives out fear right so if you're afraid of me. [1:01:53] And I showered you with love not in a creepy stalker anyway then that can drive out that fear. [1:02:02] I like to watch those videos where those people find the abandoned animals, and rescue them and nurse them back to health because you see this this overwhelming fear in these animals who have been abused and Abandoned and left on the streets, and it usually only takes The Rescuers half hour 45 minutes top of loving this animal, before the animal loses all fear of them and trust them completely. [1:02:35] And it just every time my heart is like oh it's so great it's so great, and I just wish there were more videos like that, like I shared a video with Newms as politician that's running for for mayor of New York and he's doing the speaking thing in this gentleman without a shirt on comes up and stands right in front of him, and any other politician the police would come up and just assure the guy away, this guy stops his speech and walks down there and starts having a private conversation with the guy and when the police walk up he says no no no no I got this we're good, and he does shows nothing but compassion to this gentleman who, needed medication didn't have medication wasn't in his right mind was suffering on the streets of Newark New York because of it. [1:03:40] And he approached him with compassion and what appeared to be loved, almost instantly broke down that man's sense of defense and fear and I got to protect myself, it was beautiful beautiful thing to see did you did you think it was beautiful. [1:04:08] It was amazing I was like we need we need more of that. Pastor Newms: [1:04:12] Yeah I don't know what the person believes aside from that and that's always you know. Pastor Bill: [1:04:17] I don't know anything else that's why I didn't say the person's name. Pastor Newms: [1:04:22] It is shocking it I was shocked to see it because so many politicians are not like that, and to see something like that was very interesting, and I would did want to point out that that word fear that's used in first John is of course a completely different word than the the fear that fear actually means. Pastor Bill: [1:04:54] That's the modern fear. Pastor Newms: [1:04:55] To be terrified so, it's actually to be frightened, It was like yeah that's fear, so no but I think that is very interesting when you look at those types of things next to each other. Pastor Bill: [1:05:24] Yes Phobos. Pastor Newms: [1:05:26] Yes. Pastor Bill: [1:05:28] Very telling because we we use the word phobia and this is the word Phobos it's. Pastor Newms: [1:05:34] Just close as you can get yeah. Pastor Bill: [1:05:37] Putting fear alarm or fright be afraid exceedingly afraid fear Terror. Pastor Newms: [1:05:42] There's not a lot of it's not a lot of gray area in that particular word it's not one of those that we don't know what it means is straight up like oh yeah we use that Greek word to make other words. Pastor Bill: [1:05:55] We already we are to use that work we like we throw that into all kinds of things. Pastor Newms: [1:05:58] We know we know that one that one's easy. Pastor Bill: [1:06:00] Arachnophobia we we got that one Phobos. [1:06:08] Father said spiders earlier so that's one of that's why I chose that. Pastor Newms: [1:06:13] But it makes me itchy. Pastor Bill: [1:06:16] Okay clora phobia how's that I'll refer phobia how do you spell that word the fear of clowns. Pastor Newms: [1:06:25] That's what you have. Pastor Bill: [1:06:26] I don't have that anymore. Pastor Newms: [1:06:27] You don't what changed sorry not important to this. Pastor Bill: [1:06:31] I stopped caring, my anxiety went away my phobias went away I got it peace with, I'm going to live until I don't and I got to be came in peace with that idea and my phobias are away my anxiety went away and I just, I'm not afraid of clowns anymore fire ants and I can sleep with my back to the edge of the bed and I can sleep with the door open I can turn off the lights I don't need sound going to keep me from being anxious. [1:07:12] Big says Libby her Janu Miss Libby is big dog we love Libby so cute little fur monster. Pastor Newms: [1:07:17] Yes and I have not seen I have not seen my sister I have not seen my sister in like a week and she does not like it if I don't come over, I think she's more needy than my parents are about seeing me she gives me more face kisses than they do luckily because I don't. Pastor Bill: [1:07:40] We're eight minutes over do you have anything concrete to. Pastor Newms: [1:07:42] Um Pastor Bill: [1:07:46] You figure out why you don't, what is irking you about the concept. Pastor Newms: [1:07:52] No I don't I don't know what irks me about the concept, but I mean I'm not it's not like a I disagree with this wholeheartedly it's just. Pastor Bill: [1:08:07] Well it's not a Salvation issue it's a quality of living issue. Pastor Newms: [1:08:09] Not at all yeah so I just I don't know I don't know. Pastor Bill: [1:08:17] We're allowed to disagree we don't have to agree I just wish I just wish you felt I just wish you could put your hood up. Pastor Newms: [1:08:26] Yeah no I know. Pastor Bill: [1:08:28] Express what it is so that we. Pastor Newms: [1:08:30] Well it'll hit, it'll hit me at some point and hopefully then we will remember it and talk about it on a podcast as opposed to in the middle of the week when we're talking and I go this this is why you're wrong because of this and which does happen every now and then. Pastor Bill: [1:08:46] And I'll laugh at you and I'll go you're so funny. Pastor Newms: [1:08:48] I know irritates me greatly but like you said not a saint. Pastor Bill: [1:08:53] You come with all this passion and I'm like it's not a Salvation issue I can be wrong. Pastor Newms: [1:08:58] There are there are sometimes I get overly passionate about some things in your nonchalant - drives me insane, your smug just sitting there because it's not important drives me up the wall and I lose my mind and have to stop talking to you and just, it happened a couple weeks ago and it was really funny and it wasn't important it was just something that got up my crawl and, you said one phrase and it just it I was set off for like what was it three or four hours for no good reason. Pastor Bill: [1:09:34] You said you see this is what I don't like about you this right here and I was like okay give it to me. Pastor Newms: [1:09:38] Yeah. Pastor Bill: [1:09:45] All right so it's time for a 30-second buffer we have a cool little song we seen here at the end because some of the services require 30 second buffer, unless we want the last 30 seconds of what we talked about to be cut off so if you're a fan of a certain cartoon dog of a certain color you'll probably recognize the tune that here we go, 30 second buffer 30 second buffer 30 second buffer has it been 30 seconds yet of course not that's not how time works 30 second buffer 30 second buffer. Pastor Newms: [1:10:20] Second buffer. Pastor Bill: [1:10:20] In buffer I love you have a great week. Pastor Newms: [1:10:24] Be safe out there guys love you. Pastor Bill: [1:10:26] And until next time.
The Message Of The Week Vision: Each One, Reach One NEW CHRISTIAN LIFE CHURCH 3945 Boynton Beach Road Boynton Beach, Fl 33436 561-736-7828 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/newchristianlifechurch/message
The Good, The Bad, The Ugly... But God's Gracious Love RemainsSeries: Book of Judges Preacher: Jim MastersSunday MorningDate: 6th June 2021Passage: Judges 8:1-32
God's People are Sinners and Need Gracious Love, 1 - 17 2. Leaders of Gods People are Sinners and also Need Grace, 18-32
We revisit our conversation with Tal Wilkenfeld. Tal boasts a remarkable resume having shared the stage or studio with Jeff Beck, Herbie Hancock, Eric Clapton, Prince and The Allman Brothers, just to name a few of the revered artists who have called on the Sydney born bassist. Tal speaks about her new album - the fantastic "Love Remains" - which finds her fronting material that synthesizes rock, chamber-folk and jazz influences. We discuss epic 'band solos', what Tal brings into leading her own band, juggling improvisation and parts and much more. This episode is brought to you by Fretboard Biology - the online guitar college created by Joe Elliott, ex Head of Guitar at GIT and McNally Smith Music College. Fretboard Biology Guitar Speak Podcast #146 - Joe Elliott - ex guitar head of GIT - launches Fretboard Biology Guitar Speak Podcast Links PayPal Tip Jar Visit us at guitarspeakpodcast.com Subscribe and find previous episodes at: Apple Podcasts Spotify Stitcher Follow us on Facebook & Instagram Buy a T-Shirt! Contact us at guitarspeakpodcast@gmail.com
Co-host: Rebecca Hoffman: rebecca@goodeggconcepts.comRebecca's website: www.GoodEggConcepts.comPodcast Guest: Rabbi Ari Moffic Email: arimoffic@templebeth-el.org Podcast Transcription:Kris Parsons 0:03 Welcome to "Changing the Rules," a weekly podcast about people who are living their best life and how you can figure out how to do it too. Join us with your life, the host Ray Loewe, better known as The Luckiest Guy in the World.Ray Loewe 0:17 Good morning, everybody. This is Ray Loewe. And I'm sitting here in wonderful Woodbury, New Jersey at the Wildfire Podcast Studios with our engineer Taylor, manning the foreword over here and he's going to keep me straight and make sure that this podcast goes through because I'm a technical Luddite. But I've got some great things to talk to you about today. First of all, let me recap what "Changing the Rules" is all about, and "Changing the Rules" is a podcast that we developed for The Luckiest People in the World. And it's to help them become luckier and luckier and luckier. The Luckiest People in the World are those people who invent their own lives, and design them constantly as things change, and then live them to the fullest. And "Changing the Rules" is about one of the factors that we have to go through to do that. You know, throughout our lives, we've all been given rules. And those rules started with our parents when we were growing up. And then they went to the schools, and then they went to our church or synagogue. And then they went to our jobs, and everybody seems to have rules for us. And those rules generally are good, because they add structure to our life, but over time what happens is they add clutter to our life. And a lot of those rules that we are given are no longer as important or critical to, to our lives. And one of the things that we found is that if you're living your life by other people's rules, you can't really truly live your own life, you're living somebody else's life. And that's what the show is all about. And I'm excited today because I have a co-host today and Rebecca Hoffman is going to be our co-host for the next month. Okay. And she's going to do a whole lot of interesting things for us. So good morning, Rebecca. Rebecca Hoffman 2:14 Hi, Ray, how are you? Ray Loewe 2:16 You know, let me introduce you and I want to read something that I took off of your website or your LinkedIn post. You run a company called Good Egg Concepts. Okay, it's true. And it is, quote, "an economical, thoughtful, clever, endlessly curious consulting firm, focused on your goals and brand." And so, I got a couple of quick questions for you. You know, first of all, tell us real quickly how Good Egg Concepts, how you got that name?Rebecca Hoffman 2:56 Well, Good Egg comes from many years ago, when I made my first email address when the internet was just getting started. And I asked a friend, what should my email handle be? And they said, well, you're a good egg, be the good egg at blah, blah, blah. And I became the good egg and the name never left, the good egg just stuck around and became the name of my consulting practice many years ago. Ray Loewe 3:16 Well, it certainly is a unique brand. And it certainly is a clever brand and a thoughtful brand. And it's an I don't know about the endlessly curious though. Where did that one come from? Rebecca Hoffman 3:27 Well, I think to your point, when you talk about the luckiest people in the world, one of the marks of a lucky person is someone who remains curious, which means always finding something interesting along the way in life. I think that's where that comes from. Ray Loewe 3:40 Absolutely. Absolutely. And let me add one other thing. Rebecca is a storyteller. And she is one of my favorite storytellers. And she's a storyteller coach, I kind of stumbled on that one. Rebecca Hoffman 3:55 That is true. That is true. You know, a good story. We need those. Ray Loewe 4:00 Well, absolutely. And, a good story beats everything. And boy, do we have a good story for us this morning. Okay. And why don't I let Rebecca introduce Ari? And then I've stored up my questions. So you got to let me in there sometime. Rebecca Hoffman 4:19 Okay, okay. Well, I would like to tell our listening audience that I would like to introduce Rabbi Ari Moffic, who is someone I've worked with and I call her a dear friend as well. She's currently the Director of Education at Temple Beth el in Northbrook, Illinois. But previous to that she's done some very interesting and kind of groundbreaking work in her rabbinate. She founded a concierge rabbinic practice and worked with people in an independent way bringing Judaism into people's homes and also worked with an organization that was devoted and dedicated to working with interfaith couples and interfaith families around the United States and actually in the world. And she's also the author of a book, which you can find on Amazon that's called "Love Remains a Rashanna Story of Transformation" about a family experiencing the growth and transformation of a child who is expressing themselves in a transgender way. And I know Ari so well, I have to say, I'm just thrilled to be able to talk with her this morning. You have a wonderful sense of humor and a wonderful look on life. And I think Ray, you know when we started talking with Ari, before this session, we were talking a lot about how did you become? And really, I think it's interesting to hear how did you choose to become a rabbi? Rabbi Ari Moffic 5:44 Well, thank you so much for having me. I'm so happy to be part of this conversation. And I love hopeful, optimistic podcasts and stories. So I'm happy to be here. You know, it may seem like a very unusual career to become a clergy person. But somehow for me, it seemed kind of normal, I don't know. But you know, I grew up in a secular ish, Jewish Home in the suburbs of Boston. We belong to a congregation at a synagogue we went to. Fairly often we did all of the Jewish holidays, I was very close to my grandparents who were very ethnically, culturally Jewish. My uncle, my mom's brother is a reformed rabbi, I was very close with my Jewish Sunday school teachers. I was just one of those unusual kids who actually liked Sunday school, local thing turned me on. I loved thinking about God, the way the world works, ethics, philosophizing, and I did all the Jewish youth group things, I spent a semester of high school in Israel. And, you know, I just, I, that's just how the path unfolded. I knew I wasn't going to be a pulpit, congregational rabbi, for a lot of reasons. I'm sort of an introvert weirdly.But I did a master's in Jewish education. And so I've based my rabbinate in it in education. And along the way, I've done a lot of lifecycle events, so that kids, Rebecca Hoffman 7:29 Can you talk a little bit about your Rabbinate that you are "Changing the Rules." I mean, Ray, is working very hard through this podcast and his other initiatives to help people see that when you change your rules, you can become the luckiest person in the world and feel like life has been extremely fulfilling along the way. How are you changing the rules? through your rabbinate I know, you work hard, and the space around inclusivity and this notion, we talk a lot about of what is a community? And how do we use that phrase, and what does that mean? Right? Talk a little bit about that. Rabbi Ari Moffic 8:03 I mean, I think for a lot of us, life happens and because of just how things unfold, you get a lens that you might not have ever had, by training or on purpose kind of, and this is what happened to me. I went to the reform rabbinical seminary, there's no choice there's one place to go. And you go through the whole program and truthfully, it's just very in the box and you do the classes and you learn the stuff. And you know, they turn you out to kind of be you know, to serve the how they I think they understand the mainstream of the people. But for me, what happens is that my oldest friend, I called her parents aunt and uncle growing up, although you know, they weren't really but with that so close we were. She ended up marrying someone Catholic. She grew up Jewish, and I was in my last year of rabbinical school. She asked me to stand with her at her wedding. I wasn't allowed to officiate, but I sort of co-officiated, you know. And through that process of meeting their priest, figuring out how they understood religion, what they imagined it would be in terms of raising kids what we were doing. I found that so exciting and so modern, and so interesting, and such an honor to represent Judaism at that time that I just that's how my life ended up going. And luckily, I just landed in these places where that was celebrated. And so we my husband is also a rabbi. We ended up we started with at Chicago Sinai congregation which is a historic. It was a classical reformed congregation, which is a very interesting part of reformed Judaism where they did services almost all in English. They even had Sunday services. It was a very American version of Judaism. And they celebrated interfaith families, in fact, had a partnership with the fourth Presbyterian Church right down the street in Chicago there. And so we learned so much about interfaith weddings, counseling families. And then I ended up being an educator at a congregation in Wilmette, Sukkot, a little more, almost all of the children at that time in my religious school had a parent who wasn't Jewish, and the families wanted Judaism in their lives. And again, we had a very close connection with the neighborhood church. And this just grew for me, this era, this interest in these blended, layered interesting families, who had so I mean, talk about stories. Each family has such an interesting story and somehow, Miracle of miracles, Judaism is part of it. Yeah, I was like, Yes, that's me. I want to be there. Ray Loewe 11:01 You know, and that you're talking about me here, you know that. So I was born, my father was Jewish, my mother was Catholic. I was raised as a Methodist because we had a Methodist Church on the corner of the street. And my parents thought that religion was an important thing. And so it's, interesting to hear you talk about this. I never felt the strength, I probably felt the strength more of the Protestant side of things in anything else. But this whole concept of interfaith stuff intrigues me and so go on I'm sorry, interrupt. Rabbi Ari Moffic 11:38 Well, that's it. But you know, at some point, today, over 70%, of Jews partner with someone not Jewish, if you can survey as reform, you know, specifically reform, it's over 80%. So, the people, I've kind of spoken and we are in an open global society, and people fall in love. And so that's really made rabbis liberal rabbis, figure out how can they be there? How do they want to be there? What do they have to change ritual in order to be there and talk about boundaries and opening the tent? You know, that's where the conversation is. Rebecca Hoffman 12:17 Can you talk a little bit also, by extension, about the recent Gallup poll, that showing the steep decline in American affiliation with what we could largely call organized religion or affiliation with a specific house of worship? But how does that dovetail with your experience as a disrupter in the rabbinic world and the, you know, Judaic interfaith world? Rabbi Ari Moffic 12:39 Yes. You know, sometimes, I think rabbinic colleagues are worried that our participation is somehow allowing, you know, a new religion or a third religion. That by saying yes to everything, and not really sticking to, you know, in a kind and loving way, kind of sticking to some boundaries, that there won't be anything authentically Jewish going forward, and we're going to kind of lose it to secularism, or to some kind of, you know, what they may say, is some kind of watered-down Judeo Christianity. You know, be a good person, I don't see that. I don't see that I've never seen that. I think for a lot of families, ritual continues to be very important customs, their family traditions, the holidays, but they are doing it in different ways. And we see now from the Gallup poll, that the majority of Americans say that they're not connected to a specific bricks-and-mortar house of worship. That doesn't mean they're not spiritual. That doesn't mean they're not doing the holidays and life cycle events. The institutional religion of America has to change because the people have said it has to. Rebecca Hoffman 14:08 So, Ray and Ari, that's really an aspect of changing the rules, right? It's an evolution. Ray Loewe 14:16 Well, there's no question that the rules are changing. And this, especially in this sector, you know, one of the things that. I didn't get a chance to do this last week, but I noticed that you and your husband did a podcast or a broadcast of some kind. About faith and religious traditions, and will they be relevant in the future? And I think what you're saying is they will be relevant, they're just going to be different.Rabbi Ari Moffic 14:41 Yes, yes, exactly. I think that's the key. We're not Yes. The narrative is changing, and we're going to have to run in, you know, as religious leaders run and keep up to if we want to be part of it. Yes. The main thing we talked about in that webinar,was kind of Our word of the day was fluidity. And we were talking about how fluid life is today, especially with this last year of the pandemic. The fluidity between home and work, the fluidity between public and private, and even in terms of a Facebook account, you know where it is your work and your brand and your personal it all blends. It's all fluid.Fluidity of gender, fluidity of roles, roles in life, and definitely fluidity in terms of religion, that people feel inspired by all different religious traditions. People have different gurus and leaders they follow. They are personally touched by different religious practices. We are in multicultural families. And so for mainstream organized religion, I think it's going to be important to embrace this fluidity with open arms. Okay, it's fascinating.Ray Loewe 16:03 It is fascinating. And, you know, one of the things that when I when we did our pre-interview, you talked a little bit about the state of marriage today to do you want to comment on that?Rabbi Ari Moffic 16:14 Well, yeah, I mean, I think young people see marriage in all different ways. I mean, for some people, it's still, you know, a beautiful covenant. Some people don't want to enter into the institution, and they live as partners. There's polyamorous families, there's all different kinds of families, there are single parents by choice, blended, layered. I mean, even thinking about a nuclear family, whatever you're thinking of, in your mind, you know, expand it out, you know, because they're their families come in all shapes, sizes, ways. And that's another thing that impacts religion.Rebecca Hoffman 17:00 These expressions of diversity that emanate from this the core of the home, in a marriage or in the home, or the family. How do you help people feel connected in a world that it does appear to be so connected? And yet there's so much loneliness and such a sense of disconnection? What, as a rabbi, how do you help people feel connected and feel a sense of I mean, the wrong word probably to use is community? But that's kind of the word we've always used. Where's that going? Rabbi Ari Moffic 17:27 Yes, community, religious leaders use this word all the time, you know, especially on a website. Join our welcoming community. And it's, I think, it's because especially in Judaism, community is everything. We are a people, you know, more than almost anything, if you can even argue Judaism as a religion. You know, that's one piece of the Jewish civilization. But it's really about community and peoplehood. You can't pray with less than 10 people. You know, Ruth's famous line, in the Bible, your people, will be my people, your God, my God, so people before God.And it within more traditional orthodox communities, people kind of live together, they see each other at the kosher butcher, they see each other at the synagogue. They have the religious day school and your lives are intertwined. And you just take care of each other in that religious sense where you are responsible for the community. And for more liberal Jews, where we're spread out in the suburbs, or in an urban area, community takes on a different way. Because when you think about who are your closest people? Who's someone you would you know, text if you've got a flat tire on the side of the road? Who can grab your kids? If you've got the stomach flu? Who are your core people in life? Who is your emergency contact? That's kind of your community? And then, you know, so does a synagogue or church kind of have to be a community? Do you need that from that? Or are people looking for something else from their house of worship, that's their way for education. That's their center where they can come do the services and holidays. But they, need that sense of community life. And then for some people, they do want that sense where they want to feel part of something bigger than themselves. They want to feel that their community works too, you know, make a change in their neighborhood, and even in the world. And so it's a balance, I think it's for sure a balance in terms of talking about it realistically of what a group a religious group can accomplish and be. And knowing that with our busy, stressful lives, sometimes we just want to know that there's a place where we belong and that there are people who care about us. Ray Loewe 19:54 You know, let's go back a little bit because you started out kind of in the traditional course of being a rabbi, I think. You know, you had strong roots as to why you wanted to take this path. Now you've thrown into all of these things that are changing in here. How is this changing your course of action and the way you treat your job? And your career? Rabbi Ari Moffic 20:19 Yes, you know, I've been the director of religious schools for many years now. And that's what I'm doing now. And so I think so deeply. And I really do the sacred struggle of figuring out what the point is, and why children come on Sundays for a couple of hours. And they come during the week to learn the Hebrew. And I really take very seriously what we're doing and what I'm sharing with the children. And what, you know what this experience is about because I don't want it to be anthropologic. Where I'm saying, children, you know, the Jewish people, you know, did this thing, Shabbat, but, you know, we, what I'm telling you has nothing to do with our lives, and we don't do it in that way. And maybe you're thinking that's the right way to do it. But none of us do it that way. So we're all doing it wrong, you know, I'm very careful not to have that narrative. And to say, you know, some people have this practice, some people have this practice. And what we want to figure out is, Shabbat, let's say the Sabbath day is a gift for humanity telling us imploring us to rest. To stop. To put down the phones for a minute, to look at the people in your homes. And, you know, look at each other in the eye say, Hello, we live together, how are you. You know, and to have a good meal together, to go for a walk, to study something of interest. This is the gift of the Sabbath of Shabbat of coming together even in prayer or song, but it's going to look, differently, maybe then the textbook shows it. So I'm always trying to translate for a modern sensibility truly, and make sure that we're not alienating people but drawing people in. Rebecca Hoffman 22:08 How would you tell our listeners, as they hear this discussion, how they might go about their life to find even greater fulfillment without judgment within their faith? Or what if they're of interfaith? And they're mixed? Rabbi Ari Moffic 22:22 Yes. I mean, I think finding like-minded people and is where this community comes in. And some people are finding it online. And definitely, I think people yearn for in real life as well. So you know, don't give up there are so many creative things happening in religion. Truly start-up churches, congregations meeting and all different interesting places. Third places, there are clergy, people who are of the people with you struggling to have meaning in life. And don't give up keep looking for like-minded people, and, you know, be vulnerable in it and try to, you know, figuring out how we are now as adults. Not what we felt at 12 or 13, or 15, or, you know, 20 or whatever. But now, what do you believe about the world? Now? What do you believe is out there? How do you make sense in order of existence and our purpose in life? And, you know, if you care about those things, and that kind of is interesting to you, then there's going to be, I think there will probably be religious, cultural things that will speak to you. Ray Loewe 23:41 Okay, we're getting near the end of our time, unfortunately, time flies fast when you're telling good stories, right, Rebecca? Right, absolutely. It does go too fast. So are you Do you have any last comments that you want to make that you want people to think about? Or sum up somehow?Rabbi Ari Moffic 23:58 I guess, just you know, maybe, if you have found a community, or a method, or a practice, that works for you, that's so wonderful. And if you're looking or searching and things haven't really clicked for religion, or you're unsure. You know, realize that things are changing they are. Be part of it, be part of the conversation, talk to religious leaders about where you are and what you're interested in. And, you know, what, we can't wait to meet people who are interested, because that's really, that will be key for us going forward. Ray Loewe 24:39 Cool. Well, thanks very much for being with us. You certainly have made changes in your life, you're certainly are continuing to change in your life. And I think you've found the pathway to become one of the luckiest people in the world. So welcome to our community to Ari. Thank you. Thank you. It was wonderful. Ari you thanks again for being with us. And Rebecca and I will be back next week with another wonderful podcast. Showing another part of Rebecca's great storytelling, whatever. Okay. So thanks for being with us and we'll see you all again next week. Thank you.Kris Parsons 25:21 Thank you for listening to changing the rules, a weekly podcast about people who are living their best life and how you can figure out how to do that too. Join us with your lively host Ray Loewe, better known as The Luckiest Guy in the World.
This Good Friday we know it has been a season of losses and grief for a year with the pandemic, weather, racism. In many ways we wonder if we can’t just get over this day and get on with Easter. But we actually need to acknowledge and make space for grief. On this day we are called to walk toward the cross with all of our sorrow, guilt, shame, and human emotions, the day when we lay it all bare. God meets us in deep, complicated, messy places. In John’s telling, the women are at the foot of the cross, experiencing all the anguish, demonstrating the power of bearing witness. Out of this comes love, even hung on a cross.
This Good Friday we know it has been a season of losses and grief for a year with the pandemic, weather, racism. In many ways we wonder if we can’t just get over this day and get on with Easter. But we actually need to acknowledge and make space for grief. On this day we are called to walk toward the cross with all of our sorrow, guilt, shame, and human emotions, the day when we lay it all bare. God meets us in deep, complicated, messy places. In John’s telling, the women are at the foot of the cross, experiencing all the anguish, demonstrating the power of bearing witness. Out of this comes love, even hung on a cross.
From our Lead Pastor, Greg Pickering.
From our Mid County Campus Pastor, Michael Acres.
Nashville singer songwriter Bill Whyte was one of the writers on the 2021 Golden Guitar winning tracks "Finger Pickin' Good" by Kristy Cox featuring Tommy Emmanuel that won for "Best Bluegrass Recording of the Year". Bill's song “Safe Haven” co-written with Jimmy Fortune, Syndi Perry and Hillary Scott is on the current “Love Remains” album by Hillary Scott & The Scott Family that won the Grammy Award in 2017 for Best Contemporary Christian Album. Through the years, Bill has performed with, Jeff Dunham, Heywood Banks, Larry the Cable Guy, Crystal Gayle, Little Big Town, Gary Morris and many others. And in 2019 Bill signed an exclusive publishing deal with Billy Blue Publishing in Nashville. Connect with Bill Whyte: Website Facebook YouTube Twitter Instagram Spotify Support Songwriter Trysts - Buy Rae Leigh a coffee HERE >> https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SongwriterTryst www.SongwriterTrysts.com
Hey, hey, hey Brownstoners!!! We have made it to the end of 2020 (breaks out into dance) and oh what a year it has been On this last episode of the year (I'll be back in January) it's just me and you as I talk about what it means to "release" and all the things that I am grateful for this year - like all of you! You also get to hear me ramble on about LOVE and who would want to miss that?!? I apologize for any sound issues and hope to be done w/ technical & frequency troubles in 2021 As always please don't forget to Rate, Review, & Subscribe to the show and share us on your socials :) instagram: @thebrownstonepodcast & @jaramonique Email: thebrownstonepodcast@gmail.com Love to you all & a HAPPY, HEALTHY, PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
This week I echo the virtue love endures... To endure is to remain in existence or suffer something painful or difficult patiently... I give my take on how I have overcome difficult seasons knowing that God's love for me remains... Happy Listening
This special episode was recorded live from "Granzchelor Extragranza" weekend in Atlanta! Our brother Dan-La made a special trip to join us as we discuss his role with VAR, music, sports, and life. Love Remains!
Inspired by her trans daughter’s personal journey, Rabbi Ari Moffic has written a new children’s book based around the themes of Yom Kippur that celebrate change and transformation.
September 20, 2020 - From the beginning, Israel has been God’s chosen nation. A nation that God selected to be His people and that He selected to be their God. Yet time and time again, God’s people turned away from Him, falling captive and enslaved to surrounding enemy nations. But through it all, God never allowed His people to be completely destroyed. He always held onto a remnant. And even now, at this present time, there is a remnant because of grace.
Dear everyone, In moments of upheaval, human kindness and solidarity are even more evident. In Vietnam, we have also seen heart-touching acts of altruism in the community during the epidemic period. Also, there have been countless examples of unsung sacrifices, like the medical workers - who are 'fighting' on the front line risking their lives all the time; or the teams of volunteers who are serving thousands of people in isolation centres... And there are many other silent sacrifices that we don't hear about or cannot be named. This radio episode number 7 titled "Only Love Remains" serves as our deep gratitude to those who are making silent sacrifices for the community and the society and we hope to partly acknowledge some of the arduous effort of the frontline workers.
This episode we get the immense pleasure talking with Tal Wilkenfeld! Known first as an extraordinary bassist playing on just about everyone's record for the last decade or so, and now her very own solo artist with a record called, ‘Love Remains', out now!Tal Wilkenfeld is an Australian singer, songwriter, bassist and guitarist whose career began performing alongside artists including Jeff Beck, Prince, Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock and Mick Jagger. In 2008, Wilkenfeld was voted "The Year's Most Exciting New Player" by Bass Player magazine readers' choice poll. In 2013, Wilkenfeld was awarded Bass Player Magazine's "Young Gun Award" by Don Was, where she performed "Chelsea Hotel" by Leonard Cohen.Wilkenfeld is a bandleader of her own eponymous bands in which she sings, plays bass and guitar. In her earlier work, she was backed by musicians such as Wayne Krantz and Vinnie Colaiuta. She opened for The Who on the North American part of The Who Hits 50! tour in 2016. In 2016, Wilkenfeld released a single entitled "Corner Painter" which features Blake Mills and Benmont Tench. Rolling Stone praised "Wilkenfeld is working on new music that sees her evolving from an instrumental prodigy into a formidable singer-songwriter" On 15 March 2019, Wilkenfeld released her vocal debut album Love Remains,which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Heatseeker charts on the first week of its release. Love Remains has been highly praised by the press and featured in Rolling Stone, Relix, Paste, Billboard and Forbes. Rolling Stone described Wilkenfeld's vocal debut as "ten dense, riff-heavy tracks with brazen, introspective lyrics—prove her songwriting abilities." Wilkenfeld has also been a guest on popular podcasts including Marc Maron and Bill Burr. Wilkenfeld was featured on the cover of Bass Player magazine's March 2019 issue.https://talwilkenfeld.com/https://www.amazon.com/Love-Remains-Tal-Wilkenfeld/dp/B07MXRWQ3T/ref=tmm_msc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1591917016&sr=8-1
This episode we get the immense pleasure talking with Tal Wilkenfeld! Known first as an extraordinary bassist playing on just about everyone's record for the last decade or so, and now her very own solo artist with a record called, ‘Love Remains', out now!Tal Wilkenfeld is an Australian singer, songwriter, bassist and guitarist whose career began performing alongside artists including Jeff Beck, Prince, Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock and Mick Jagger. In 2008, Wilkenfeld was voted "The Year's Most Exciting New Player" by Bass Player magazine readers' choice poll. In 2013, Wilkenfeld was awarded Bass Player Magazine's "Young Gun Award" by Don Was, where she performed "Chelsea Hotel" by Leonard Cohen.Wilkenfeld is a bandleader of her own eponymous bands in which she sings, plays bass and guitar. In her earlier work, she was backed by musicians such as Wayne Krantz and Vinnie Colaiuta. She opened for The Who on the North American part of The Who Hits 50! tour in 2016. In 2016, Wilkenfeld released a single entitled "Corner Painter" which features Blake Mills and Benmont Tench. Rolling Stone praised "Wilkenfeld is working on new music that sees her evolving from an instrumental prodigy into a formidable singer-songwriter" On 15 March 2019, Wilkenfeld released her vocal debut album Love Remains,which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Heatseeker charts on the first week of its release. Love Remains has been highly praised by the press and featured in Rolling Stone, Relix, Paste, Billboard and Forbes. Rolling Stone described Wilkenfeld's vocal debut as "ten dense, riff-heavy tracks with brazen, introspective lyrics—prove her songwriting abilities." Wilkenfeld has also been a guest on popular podcasts including Marc Maron and Bill Burr. Wilkenfeld was featured on the cover of Bass Player magazine's March 2019 issue.https://talwilkenfeld.com/https://www.amazon.com/Love-Remains-Tal-Wilkenfeld/dp/B07MXRWQ3T/ref=tmm_msc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1591917016&sr=8-1
This episode we get the immense pleasure talking with Tal Wilkenfeld! Known first as an extraordinary bassist playing on just about everyone’s record for the last decade or so, and now her very own solo artist with a record called, ‘Love Remains’, out now! Tal Wilkenfeld is an Australian singer, songwriter, bassist and guitarist whose career began performing alongside artists including Jeff Beck, Prince, Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock and Mick Jagger. In 2008, Wilkenfeld was voted "The Year's Most Exciting New Player" by Bass Player magazine readers' choice poll. In 2013, Wilkenfeld was awarded Bass Player Magazine's "Young Gun Award" by Don Was, where she performed "Chelsea Hotel" by Leonard Cohen. Wilkenfeld is a bandleader of her own eponymous bands in which she sings, plays bass and guitar. In her earlier work, she was backed by musicians such as Wayne Krantz and Vinnie Colaiuta. She opened for The Who on the North American part of The Who Hits 50! tour in 2016. In 2016, Wilkenfeld released a single entitled "Corner Painter" which features Blake Mills and Benmont Tench. Rolling Stone praised "Wilkenfeld is working on new music that sees her evolving from an instrumental prodigy into a formidable singer-songwriter" On 15 March 2019, Wilkenfeld released her vocal debut album Love Remains,which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Heatseeker charts on the first week of its release. Love Remains has been highly praised by the press and featured in Rolling Stone, Relix, Paste, Billboard and Forbes. Rolling Stone described Wilkenfeld's vocal debut as "ten dense, riff-heavy tracks with brazen, introspective lyrics—prove her songwriting abilities." Wilkenfeld has also been a guest on popular podcasts including Marc Maron and Bill Burr. Wilkenfeld was featured on the cover of Bass Player magazine's March 2019 issue. https://talwilkenfeld.com/ https://www.amazon.com/Love-Remains-Tal-Wilkenfeld/dp/B07MXRWQ3T/ref=tmm_msc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1591917016&sr=8-1
This episode we get the immense pleasure talking with Tal Wilkenfeld! Known first as an extraordinary bassist playing on just about everyone’s record for the last decade or so, and now her very own solo artist with a record called, ‘Love Remains’, out now! Tal Wilkenfeld is an Australian singer, songwriter, bassist and guitarist whose career began performing alongside artists including Jeff Beck, Prince, Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock and Mick Jagger. In 2008, Wilkenfeld was voted "The Year's Most Exciting New Player" by Bass Player magazine readers' choice poll. In 2013, Wilkenfeld was awarded Bass Player Magazine's "Young Gun Award" by Don Was, where she performed "Chelsea Hotel" by Leonard Cohen. Wilkenfeld is a bandleader of her own eponymous bands in which she sings, plays bass and guitar. In her earlier work, she was backed by musicians such as Wayne Krantz and Vinnie Colaiuta. She opened for The Who on the North American part of The Who Hits 50! tour in 2016. In 2016, Wilkenfeld released a single entitled "Corner Painter" which features Blake Mills and Benmont Tench. Rolling Stone praised "Wilkenfeld is working on new music that sees her evolving from an instrumental prodigy into a formidable singer-songwriter" On 15 March 2019, Wilkenfeld released her vocal debut album Love Remains,which reached No. 1 on the Billboard Heatseeker charts on the first week of its release. Love Remains has been highly praised by the press and featured in Rolling Stone, Relix, Paste, Billboard and Forbes. Rolling Stone described Wilkenfeld's vocal debut as "ten dense, riff-heavy tracks with brazen, introspective lyrics—prove her songwriting abilities." Wilkenfeld has also been a guest on popular podcasts including Marc Maron and Bill Burr. Wilkenfeld was featured on the cover of Bass Player magazine's March 2019 issue. https://talwilkenfeld.com/ https://www.amazon.com/Love-Remains-Tal-Wilkenfeld/dp/B07MXRWQ3T/ref=tmm_msc_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1591917016&sr=8-1
How can we know when love is true? In this episode learn what genuine love really looks like. Ruth 1.1-22
Our world is changing around us at an unprecedented rate. Our feeds and friendships are chattering with fear, helplessness, and isolation around Covid-19. We know that God is still on the throne. In everything, Faith Remains, Hope Remains, and Love Remains.And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.1 Corinthians 13:13
Our world is changing around us at an unprecedented rate. Our feeds and friendships are chattering with fear, helplessness, and isolation around Covid-19. We know that God is still on the throne. In everything, Faith Remains, Hope Remains, and Love Remains.And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.1 Corinthians 13:13
Our world is changing around us at an unprecedented rate. Our feeds and friendships are chattering with fear, helplessness, and isolation around Covid-19. We know that God is still on the throne. In everything, Faith Remains, Hope Remains, and Love Remains.
The following sermon was preached online at Helensburgh and Stanwell Park Anglican Church on March 22nd 2020. The sermon recording is poor due to the first time we have done this online. Apologies. The following is the sermon outline: Intro Love Or Nothing (v1-3) What Love Is And Is Not (v4-7) Love Remains (v8-13) Conclusions
The final message in a four-part series covering the second half of the season of Epiphany. For sermon notes and Scripture references through YouVersion, click here: https://www.bible.com/events/7061709 GROW: 1. What do you need to allow the consuming fire of God to burn or destroy in your life so you reflect God’s image and Only Love Remains? 2. How is Christ being manifest in and through you? If this sermon generated any questions for you, text them to 567-246-0807 and we will try to address them during our next Facebook Live Q&A. Music by Jeremy Mockensturm. Check out more of his music at https://jeremymockensturm.bandcamp.com/
American folk singer and songwriter, Alice Peacock released her latest album, "Minnesota" earlier this year. The album's title track is a love song to her home state, where her family spends their summers. Much has changed for Peacock since her last solo studio album, 2009’s "Love Remains." She has had three kids, moved to Cincinnati and … gotten 10 years older.
I In my journey of following God, I have enjoyed all of His love. His words and His requirements are all His protection and love. In my times of great weakness and tears, God's words encourage me on. Through all the times I've been let down, His words lift me back on my feet. (God) Your love is precious, without regrets. Your love in me I deeply feel. (Almighty God) You are so lovely. (Your love) Your love I recall. (God, Your love) Your love I recall. Your love, Your love I recall. II God's love for man is vivid and real. His judgments and His trials are aimed to cleanse and perfect me. His refinement helps me to grow. God suffered great hardships to lead me, staying always by my side. I've complained and misunderstood Him, and He has tolerated those times. (God) Your love is precious, without regrets. Your love in me I deeply feel. (Almighty God) You are so lovely. (Your love) Your love I recall. (God, Your love) Your love I recall. Your love, Your love I recall. III God's selfless love has been exchanged, exchanged for my salvation. The truth bestowed by God made me have a true life. Oh! Almighty God, Your love remains in my heart. Oh! Almighty God, I'll love You forever. IV No matter how corrupted I am or how difficult I can be, God is always incredibly patient, always feeding and watering me. Through persecution, setbacks and failures, God's words have encouraged me on. His love is most beautiful and true. Forever I could speak this way. (God) Your love is precious, without regrets. Your love in me I deeply feel. (Almighty God) You are so lovely. (Your love) Your love I recall. (God, Your love) Your love I recall. Your love, Your love I recall. from Follow the Lamb and Sing New Songs
Time Artist Title Length Album Year Composer Record Label Listeners 0:00:00 Von Hertzen Brothers Bring out the Sun (So Alive) 10:40 Love Remains the Same 2008 VHB Decca 39 0:10:39 musicinwidescreenopening 1:10 41 0:11:47 0:00 40 0:26:09 District 97 02 Sheep 6:34 Screens 38 0:32:43 Bill Bruford Fainting In Coils 6:22 One of […]
Time Artist Title Length Album Year Composer Record Label Listeners 0:00:00 Von Hertzen Brothers Bring out the Sun (So Alive) 10:40 Love Remains the Same 2008 VHB Decca 39 0:10:39 musicinwidescreenopening 1:10 41 0:11:47 0:00 40 0:26:09 District 97 02 Sheep 6:34 Screens 38 0:32:43 Bill Bruford Fainting In Coils 6:22 One of […]
Time Artist Title Length Album Year Composer Record Label Listeners 0:00:00 Von Hertzen Brothers Bring out the Sun (So Alive) 10:40 Love Remains the Same 2008 VHB Decca 39 0:10:39 musicinwidescreenopening 1:10 41 0:11:47 0:00 40 0:26:09 District 97 02 Sheep 6:34 Screens 38 0:32:43 Bill Bruford Fainting In Coils 6:22 One of […]
Progrock.com's - Music in Widescreen's - Progressive Rock Podcast
Time Artist Title Length Album Year Composer Record Label Listeners 0:00:00 Von Hertzen Brothers Bring out the Sun (So Alive) 10:40 Love Remains the Same 2008 VHB Decca 39 0:10:39 musicinwidescreenopening 1:10 41 0:11:47 0:00 40 0:26:09 District 97 02 Sheep 6:34 Screens 38 0:32:43 Bill Bruford Fainting In Coils 6:22 One of […]
Much has changed for singer-songwriter Alice Peacock since her last solo studio album, 2009’s Love Remains. She’s had three kids, moved to Cincinnati and … gotten 10 years older. “Feel the weight of the world on my shoulders/ Am I wiser or am I just older?” she sings on “Dry Spell,” from her new collection, Minnesota. The record suggests that despite her “wondering what all is yet to be,” she has indeed attained a measure of wisdom.
David shares the experience of Divine Mind behind ACIM WB Lesson 50: I am sustained by the Love of GodTrust and Faith combine into a sustaining experience of Care and Safety and Security that are not of the body or linear time. Miracles light the way, and darkness fades and disappears. Peace of Mind requires no thoughts of the past or future, which are unreal memories and imagined fictitious outcomes only found in dreams. Reality beckons through the Present moment and beyond to a Continuity of Spirit and Everlasting Life in God.
AWS Morning Brief for the week of August 12th, 2019.
The brilliant Tal Wilkenfeld stops by to talk life in Australia, her love for music as a kid, going gig to gig in NYC, how Jeff Beck found her, and how she was lovingly embraced by the LA comedy community! She just crushed it on Jimmy Kimmel Live, has new tour dates in Japan at talwilkenfeld.com, and her new album LOVE REMAINS is out now for your listening pleasures :) Enjoy this episode and follow Tal on TWITTER @talmeastory, @adamraycomedy, @funnybrad & @alnpodcast! Go see Adam in LA at THE HOLLYWOOD IMPROV this Friday Aug 2nd at 8pm! Tix at adamraycomedy.com Go see Brad at THE BREA IMPROV Aug 2-4th! Tix at bradwilliamscomedy.com
Tal Wilkenfeld has a brilliant new album called Love Remains, packed full of great songs and incredible musicianship. You should totally get it. Wanna support I Heart Guitar (and by extension my little family and our dreams of getting another dog soon)? patreon.com/iheartguitar or paypal.me/iheartguitar, my friend.
Bassist extraordinaire Tal Wilkenfeld joins us on the Fretboard Journal Podcast to talk about coming to the US to pursue music, opening for the Who and about the making of her new album, Love Remains. We also talk about her gear of choice, including her rather unique baritone guitar (built in part by Jackson Browne). This episode is sponsored by Mono Cases. Like what we're up to? Consider subscribing to the paper or digital edition of the Fretboard Journal.
What’s good witches! Welcome to day 8 of our love invocation. Our topic today is LOVE REMAINS. For today’s activity I would like you to visualize an ideal day! I would like you to sit down in the morning or before you retire for bed in the evening, close your eyes and simply imagine what an ideal day would look like for you! Who would you be with? Where would you be? Where would you live? What sorts of activities would you do? How would people treat you and communicate with you? I want you to imagine that the love you feel or desire in your heart has expanded out into your life and touched every relationship and interaction. Feel the love of this vision filling you up. Let’s pray. Prayer God is here. God is absolute love so love is always with us because God is always with us. God will never forsake us or forget us even if the whole world does. God is with us. God is here and God is total wisdom so the wisdom to know what to do and how to handle things is always available to us. We know that nothing, absolutely nothing can separate us from the love of God and that love is the greatest power in existence. God is love. And God is all power. So we accept that we are completely loved now and forever. We feel this love penetrating to the depths of our subconscious mind. This love evacuates and eliminates all traces of illogical fears and self-doubt. Now we stand in the confidence that we are love, we are loving, we are lovable, we are loved. Today we give thanks for the ability to see love in ourselves and reflected back to us from our world, relationships, and our partner. We are thankful to have discovered this great love in the heart of another person and to share the love we feel in our hearts with them in return. Romantic love is one of the great gifts of this lifetime and we there is no one we would want to share this love with more than our beloved partner. We are grateful to life for happening in the ways that it has to bring us to this exact moment and point in our lives. We acknowledge that wherever we go from here is a choice we make. We acknowledge that life is the gift God has given us and what we choose to do without life is the gift we give back to Life, to God. We choose to invest our life loving, caring, educating, sharing, supporting, building, and improving conditions for ourselves and our loved ones. We choose to invest this life experiencing and enjoying our life down to the very little things. This is our right and our pleasure. And it is the delight of the spirit within us to express and experience life through us. We lend our minds, hearts, words, bodies, and relationships to be used and thereby prospered by the Creator of all. I release this word to law knowing that it goes out into the world to prepare the way. May we always demonstrate that which is for our good and the good of those around us with ease, understanding, and gratitude. I consider it done and so it is. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bossybrujaprayers/support
Tal Wilkenfeld's sophomore record Love Remains has been out since mid March, and shame on you if you haven't heard it. Even more shameful probably is, is if you've never heard of this absolute prodigious woman who has played bass for the likes of Herbie Hancock and Jeff Beck. Her career has already been a fairy tale for anyone into classic rock, and music more generally. She counts people like Jackson Browne, Benmont Tench, as friends, which in and of itself is so random. She has also sat in with the Allman Brothers (which we'll get to when we chat with with Tal), and Bob Weir and Wolf Brothers and so many others. But what makes her even more outstanding, then just her talent at bass is her ability as a songwriter and singer. We've been trying to get in touch with Tal for quite some time, because we are intrigued by her story and talent. You can learn more about Tal Wilkenfeld talwilkenfeld.com but seriously, take the time to do a search on youtube for some unreal performances. Show Notes: First Song: 00:55 - Corner Painter Interview Begins: 4:59 Extro Song: 42:29 - Pieces Of Me See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We are joined by the amazing Tal Wilkenfeld for episode #108. Tal boasts a remarkable resume having shared the stage or studio with Jeff Beck, Herbie Hancock, Eric Clapton, Prince and The Allman Brothers, just to name a few of the revered artists who have called on the Sydney born bassist. Tal speaks about her new album - the fantastic "Love Remains" - which finds her fronting material that synthesizes rock, chamber-folk and jazz influences. We discuss epic 'band solos', what Tal brings into leading her own band, juggling improvisation and parts and much more. Thanks to Chris Maric of Maric Media for helping set up this interview. We mention Chris' third 300km bike ride for charity with the Heavy Metal Truants at the end of the show. Check out the links below. Show Notes talwilkenfeld.com Heavy Metal Truants Charity Bike Ride Guitar Speak Podcast Links Visit us at guitarspeakpodcast.com Subscribe and find previous episodes at: Apple Podcasts Spotify Stitcher Follow us on Facebook & Instagram Join our Guitar Speak Forum Buy a T-Shirt! Contact us at guitarspeakpodcast@gmail.com
Gifted musician Tal Wiklenfeld chats to HEAVY Mag about her new album - Love Remains.
Let this be my wish: If sometime in the future I get amnesia—if my name, possessions, occupation, and very identity are all stripped away—then, like the character in my dream, let only love remain.
On this UNCUT episode of the Sleeping Situation podcast, Matt’s still crazy about stickers, Ivy returns to life in Stardew Valley, and we discover a surprising cat fact. Also on this episode, we review the album Love Remains by Tal Wilkenfeld and play a rousing round of Scattergories. This week’s outro music: “It’s a Thing”
Tal Wilkenfeld is a musical marvel; the kind of dynamic young talent whose fresh vision and uncanny intuition puts a whole new perspective on an age-old art form. While many people know Wilkenfeld as the masterly bassist with Jeff Beck and her high-profile guest appearances with legends from Mick Jagger to Herbie Hancock, music fans are about to discover an entirely new side of her as a vocalist, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer. On her forthcoming vocal debut album, "Love Remains," her range of talents are on full display, achieving a stunning balance between instrumental prowess and exquisite song craft, quickly captivating the ear and soul. Wilkenfeld joined BUILD to discuss the album and perform a couple of songs.
I was in a musical mood so I invited my good friend over, bassist and songwriter Tal Wilkenfeld to talk about her musical journey and her new album "Love Remains". We also end with a nice Roast in Peace of my friend Ernie Barry. Feel free to subscribe to our show on Itunes, and send your feedback to thickskinwithjeffross@gmail.com. Rock and Roast on! @realjeffreyross @Eddietunes_ @talwilkenfeld
I was in a musical mood so I invited my good friend over, bassist and songwriter Tal Wilkenfeld to talk about her musical journey and her new album "Love Remains". We also end with a nice Roast in Peace of my friend Ernie Barry. Feel free to subscribe to our show on Itunes, and send your feedback to thickskinwithjeffross@gmail.com. Rock and Roast on! @realjeffreyross @Eddietunes_ @talwilkenfeld
Father Gonnella- "Only Love Remains" by Saint Patrick Parish Homilies
2 John 1:7-13 | 9/9/2018 | Matt Jones | Part 2 of 2
On today's show, host Chris Manning (@cmwwrites) talks about Kevin Love remaining the team's starting center, why Cedi Osman isn't playing, how the Cavs can get Rodney Hood and Jordan Clarkson going and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On today's show, host Chris Manning (@cmwwrites) talks about Kevin Love remaining the team's starting center, why Cedi Osman isn't playing, how the Cavs can get Rodney Hood and Jordan Clarkson going and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Claim2Fame Podcast is a resource for artists Every episode features successful artists and industry experts sharing compelling stories and valuable knowledge about the music industry hosted by CMA, ACM & CCMA Award Winning Broadcaster Cliff Dumas. Cliff talks to Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood Scott from Lady Antebellum. Lady Antebellum Lady Antebellum blend contemporary country with soulful '60s R&B into an infectious brew that relies on the trio's rich harmonies and impeccable instrumental skills. The trio was formed in 2006 by Charles Kelley (brother of singer/songwriter Josh Kelley), Hillary Scott (daughter of Grammy-winning country artist Linda Davis), and Dave Haywood, and soon graduated from dive bars to the Grand Ole Opry. Their 2009 single "Need You Now" became the first of many hits to reach not just the country Top Ten but the pop Top Ten as well. The group formed when Scott met Kelley and Haywood in Nashville, and after a few months of performing around the area, they signed with Capitol Nashville in 2007. Lady Antebellum's first single, "Love Don't Live Here," peaked at number three on the country charts. A self-titled debut album followed in April 2008, featuring production from Victoria Shaw and Paul Worley and stocked with more country hits (including the chart-topping single "I Run to You," which also enjoyed crossover success as a Top 40 pop hit). Lady A has sold over 18 million records and have released their new album Heart Break—their sixth release and first new music since 2014’s 747—the multi-platinum-selling group mapped out a liberating approach. It’s not as if they were slacking during the hiatus (Kelley released the Grammy-nominated The Driver, Scott won two Grammys for her faith-based project Love Remains, and Haywood produced and wrote with several developing acts), but they always knew they would get back to making Lady A music. The question was how. “We knew we wanted to take that break to be with our families and chase some new creative paths,” says Haywood. “But even during that time, I remember Charles saying ‘Guys, let’s figure out how to use this time as a way to really dig into this next record, make time to do nothing but create music together. How do we come at it in a totally different way?’“ So the trio embarked on a new mission—setting aside time to put themselves in new surroundings, and concentrate on writing and exploring musical possibilities with no distractions. They rented a house in Florida, living and working under the same roof, and when the experiment proved successful, they set up a second retreat in Southern California. [jwplayer f2pe8CM1-l7EWbzYK] “The goal was to give each other our undivided attention,” says Scott. “Being in a new space meant we could really free our minds to focus solely on our art. We took some of our favorite writers and some writers we hadn’t worked with before to a new inspiring backdrop, where we were able to just write and soak up the process.” Even more crucially, along the way, the members of Lady Antebellum were able to dive into their relationship as friends. “We’d wake up and Dave would have cooked breakfast and it was amazing,” says Kelley. “Making drinks and staying up talking until 3 in the morning—we hadn’t gotten to do that in forever.” “Being together every day, living in a house together, that was the special ingredient this time,” says Haywood, while Scott adds, “We’ve always been close, but we got to reconnect even deeper into our friendships, and that was really priceless.”
Host Amy Loftus shares a personal life passage in and a listener connection in honor of Thanksgiving and in the spirit of gratitude. Thanks to LovePop for supporting Something Better. Unlock special pricing for 5 or more cards AND get free shipping on any order by going to lovepop.com/better
Bill Cody with Hillary Scott & the Scott Family as they celebrate the release of "Love Remains". Check out www.HillaryScott.com.
David starts off by sharing about the six stages of the development of trust and mentions that five of the six are difficult with lots of intense emotions. He shares that a commitment is necessary as these emotions are faced. With the combination of support from ACIM and these intense emotions it can be looked at as our wake up call into our true Identity. Following the inspiring meetings in autumn last year in Finland, David and Frances return to meet with friends, and welcome new ones. In this session the movie The Ultimate Gift is shared as a backdrop for teaching. Helena joins them and everyone in Presence to share the Joy, coming from Sweden where she is now extending 24/7 through The Open Heart (see www.TheOpenHeart.org)! This is the third recording from this weekend retreat in Southern Finland.
Sunday 10:45 Service Guest Speaker 1 Corinthians Being God's People Together Love Remains Guest speaker Chris speaks from 1 Corinthians 13. Apologies for missing the introduction on the recording. - 17 Minutes long.
Sermon by Peter Kapsner (Love Costs Everything series)
Tracklisting: 1. Shifted Reality – Love Affair (Original Mix) 2. Andrea Love – Faithful (Jamie Lewis Bar Dub) 3. Hott[...]