-
Search It!
-
Recent Entries
- Texas Rangers – 2010 AL West Champs!
- Art and Media – “Cloudscapes”
- Homeschooled and Humbled
- SBFC-SW “Being a Calvinist in the SBC”
- Lost Sheep
- Music Reviews – “In Feast or Fallow” by Sandra McCracken
- Art and Media Wednesday – Michael Blaine Myers Jr.
- Christian Ethics and the New Media – Summary
- Art and Media Wednesday – Pixels
- Christian Ethics and the New Media – The Local Church and the New Media
-
Links
- 9 Marks
- Access Partners
- Acts 29
- Al Mohler
- Alpha and Omega Ministries
- Andrew Peterson
- Art&Seek
- Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America
- Audience of One
- Banner of Truth
- Bible @ Logos.com
- Bible Gateway
- Building Tomorrow’s Church
- Caedmon’s Call
- Calvinistic Cartoons
- Center for Global Strategies
- ConvergeUSA
- Crossway Books
- Derek Webb
- Desiring God
- Desiring God
- Desiring God
- Desiring God Resource Library
- Faith Interface
- Founder’s Ministries
- Founders Journal
- Founders Ministries
- Founders Press
- Gaelic Athletics Association
- GodBlogCon
- Grace To You
- Greater Europe Mission
- Greater Europe Mission
- Greater Europe Mission
- I will build my church … in Ireland
- Indelible Grace
- International Mission Board
- Internet Monk
- Ireland (Wikipedia)
- Ireland – The World Factbook
- Ireland.com
- Irish Culture and Customs
- Irish Proverbs
- Irish Rugby
- Josh Harris
- Lark News
- Ligonier
- Ligonier Ministries
- Ligonier Ministries
- Midwest Center for Theological Studies
- Mission Arlington
- Mission::Ireland
- Modern Reformation
- Monergism
- Monergism Books
- Monergism MP3′s
- My Christian Blogs
- New Attitude
- New Attitude
- New Reformation
- No Compromise
- No Compromise Ministries
- Noise Trade
- P&R Publishing
- Pandora.com
- Pandora.com
- Photographic Poetry
- Puritan Publications
- Pyromaniacs
- Reach Records
- Reformed Academic Press
- Reformed Baptist Academic Press
- Reformed Baptist Fellowship
- Reformed Baptist Fellowship
- Reformed Baptist Seminary
- Reformed Praise
- ReformedBooks.net
- SBC Voices
- Sermon Poetry
- Skybridge
- Soli Deo Gloria Publications
- Song Henge
- Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Sovereign Grace Ministries
- Sovereign Grace Music
- SWBTS Bloggers
- t4g
- Tabletalk
- Texas Area Association of Reformed Baptist Churches
- The Boar’s Head Tavern
- The Celtic Language Team
- The Cross Movement
- The Devotional Christian
- The Gospel Coalition
- The Gospel Coalition
- The Institute of Reformed Baptist Studies
- The Jonathan Edwards Center
- The Onion
- The Rabbit Room
- The Rabbit Room Store
- The Rebelution
- The Resurgence
- The Sacred Sandwich
- The Square Peg Alliance
- The Upstream Collective
- Theological Pursuits Bookstore
- TheResurgence
- Tim Challies
- Timmy Brister
- Together for Adoption
- Together for the Gospel
- Tom Ascol
- Tom in the Box
- Veritas Forum
- Voddie Baucham
- Voddie Baucham Ministries
- White Horse Inn
- World Magazine
- World Magazine
- www.IrelandMission.com
- YouVersion
Tag Archives: Life
Happy New Year!
Sermon Poetry – “I Once Dead, I’m Now a Saint”
Sermon Poetry, 11 October 2009
Sermon Title: “Resurrected and Reconciled to Worship”
Sermon Text: Ephesians 2:19-22
Preacher: Pastor Larry Vincent
I once was dead, I’m now a saint
In Christ I’m made alive
No growth exists where death is king
In Christ does life now thrive
In Christ, the Jew and Pagan live
His Grace is large and wide
So all who do believe in him
Might live in Jesus Christ
In Christ the Gentile and the Jew
Are saved and made as one
We are the Church, the Bride of Christ
The Body of the Son
Of every tribe and race and tongue
Are men and women saved
To glorify our God above
And worship all our days
United are the Father’s Own
In Christ our hearts remade
To join the worship of the Lamb
By Him our souls are saved
The Groom is Alive
She was then freshly twenty, her eyes warm and friendly
When her husband went off to war
His nation had called him, his conscience compelled him
He had left and her heart was torn
He was gone for a year, she shed many tears
Always thinking today he would die
Then a sound down the hall, there he stood proud and tall
Her husband, her love, was alive!
Her groom was alive! Her groom was alive!
She thought she had lost him, she feared he had died
Her groom was alive! Her groom was alive!
She had ached for her darling, she shook and cried
But now he could hold her, her groom was alive
For years they’d been married, their love ever sharing
A picture of Christ and His Bride
One night they went driving, the ice sent them sliding
They rolled down the mountainside
She woke in a daze, her sight filled with haze
Her darling was still, by her side
But then his head stirred, her heart did a turn
Her husband, her love, was alive!
Her groom was alive! Her groom was alive!
She thought she had lost him, she feared he had died
Her groom was alive! Her groom was alive!
She ached for her darling, she shook and she cried
He could again hold her, her groom was alive
The Cross had been empty, their hearts had been breaking
For two tough and lonely days
Their hopes had been shattered, when his blood fell and splattered
They walked in a mournful daze
But on the third day, the stone rolled away
The tomb was all empty inside
Their joy was returned, their hearts flared and burned
Their Savior, their Love, was alive!
The Groom is alive! The Groom is alive!
My sin crucified Him, with Love Jesus died
The Groom is alive! The Groom is alive!
I ache for my Savior, I shake and I cry
My Savior is with me, the Groom is alive!
Movie Review – “Up”
Well, they’ve done it again.
Pixar’s latest animated masterpiece, “Up”, is nothing short of breathtaking. The characters are relatable and reliably well-developed; the story is unique and involving; the mixture of humor and drama is almost perfectly blended and the visuals are (as expected with Pixar’s animation) absolutely stunning.
The story basically follows the interactions between a man named Carl Fredericksen and a little Wilderness Explorer named Russell as they experience imaginative adventures together in a remote corner of South America.
Specifically, the story begins with an especially moving sequence of a young Mr. Fredericksen and his adventurous and vivacious wife Ellie as they experience their life together. This sequence is made powerful and moving through the absence of any audible dialogue, with a well-chosen and touching chronological montage of the Fredericksen’s married life. In a very short time you’re permitted and invited to experience the joys and heartaches of life as they are married, as they purchase and refurbish their home, as they cope with the grief of not being able to have children , as they grow old together, as Ellie gets sick and finally as Ellie passes from this earth.
Without his Ellie, Carl is left with loneliness, her memories and their old house. Seeing him in such a state is truly sad because of the sweetness of their lives together. She completed him and when she left, the best part of him left with her.
Carl ends up losing the house and when developers are threatening to take him to a retirement home and bulldoze his house, he literally up and floats away in it! The movie continues in typically brilliant Pixar fashion with Mr. Fredericksen accidentally taking Russell on his floating house with him. During their journey, they meet a brightly colorful Snipe named Kevin, a silly talking dog named, appropriately, Doug, and a particularly bitter childhood hero of Carl’s, Charles Muntz.
Two things about this movie stood out in my thinking. First is the power of memories. Both Charles Muntz and Carl are men unable to let go of his past. Muntz, the great explorer that he was, once discovered a massive bird skeleton only to be written off by the public at large as a fraud and a cheat. Carl had lived, loved and lost the one person in the world he wanted to love. Muntz’s existence consisted solely of finding that large bird and clearing his name, in hopes of regaining something of his former glory. Carl’s was landing his house next to Paradise Falls (as his wife had once dreamed) in memory of her. Yet it is only Carl who can let go of the past. When he runs Russell off and ends up finding his wife’s old Adventure Book, he realizes that before her death she had filled up the “stuff to do” pages from yesteryear with images of her and Carl from throughout their time together. At the end of these pictures she thanks him for the adventure and tells him its ok to move on. It was only then that Carl is able to finally say goodbye to his dear wife and realize that there was a sad little boy who loved him and needed him. Muntz died in his bitterness. Carl found a son and a new reason to live.
I’ve rarely seen such a loving, tender, potent and poignant expression in cinema of the long-lasting, patient and persistent love of a husband and a wife for each other. Carl and Ellie loved each other deeply. They completed each other. They stuck with each other, through the good times and the bad. Their story truly is beautiful, yet sharply bittersweet.
Pixar has once again hit it out of the proverbial park and I cannot encourage you enough to go see this film.
Clinging to Grace
When life’s strongest waves beat down on my shores
And when I am drowning as floods overflow
And when it seems like I’m sep’rate from God
It’s then the Lord His great mercy shows
Chorus:
I’m clinging to Grace, as Jesus holds me
My God and My Savior, my All-Loving King
Because of His mercy, my heart’s been set free
His praises forever, forever I’ll sing
When I am ignored, rejected and scorned
My friends disappear, and leave me alone
When life is so cold, and lonely and dark
My God by His Grace loves me from His Throne
Chorus
When fire from hell nips close at my heels
When I can’t see love, and wish I could die
With confidence gone, despair closes in
It’s then that I’m shown my Savior most High
Chorus
Oh come soon the day when Heaven I’ll see
I’ll bask in His love, the warmth of His Grace
My eyes will behold the Savior of Love
Most precious of sights, my Jesus’ Fair Face
Chorus
Posted in My Writings, Poetry, Songs
Tagged God's Grace, Jesus, Jesus Christ, Life, Savior, Suffering
Don’t Waste Your Life Mix
“Don’t Waste Your Life” by Lecrae from the new Rebel album, with clips from the “Don’t Waste Your Life” sermon by John Piper.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Posted in Music
Tagged Death, Evangelism, God's Glory, John Piper, Lecrae, Life, Missions, Responsibility

