CSO concerts at Morton Arboretum, June 2013

http://www.cso.org

British Museum Blog – Crucifixion of Christ

http://blog.britishmuseum.org/2013/03/13/london-a-world-city-in-20-objects-the-crucifixion-of-christ/

A HYMN FOR TODAY – God Himself Is With Us

A HYMN FOR TODAY – God Himself Is With Us

God Himself is with us
Let us now adore Him,
And with awe appear before Him.
God is in His temple,
All within keep silence,
And before Him bow with reverence,
Him alone,
God we own;
To our Lord and Savior
Praises sing forever.

God Himself is with us;
Whom angelic legions
Serve with awe in heavenly regions.
“Holy, holy, holy,”
Sing the hosts of heaven,
Praise to God be ever given.
Bow Thine ear
To us here;
Hear, O Christ, the praises
That Thy church now raises.

O Thou fount of blessing,
Purify my spirit;
Trusting only in Thy merit,
Like the holy angels
Who behold Thy glory,
May I ceaselessly adore Thee,
And in all,
Great and small,
Seek to do most nearly
What Thou lovest dearly.

6.6.8.6.6.8.3.3.6.6 – Gerhard Tersteegen, 1729
trans. Frederick W. Foster and John Miller, 1789

Tune: ARNSBERG – Joachim Neander, 1680

#186 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012

Reaching Upward

Ben Hall talks about helping others to “Reach Upward”

Footnote 6 — Atheist Delusions

Footnote 6 — David Bentley Hart, Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2009), pp. 222-223.

“Can one really believe – as the New Atheists seem to do – that secular reason, if finally allowed to move forward, free of the constraining hand of archaic faith, will naturally make society more just, more humane, and more rational than it has been in the past?  What evidence supports such an expectation?  It is rather difficult, placing everything in the scales, to vest a great deal of hope in modernity, however radiantly enchanting its promises, when one considers how many innocent lives have already been swallowed up in the flames of modern ‘progress.’  At the end of the twentieth century – the century when secularization became an explicit political and cultural project throughout the world – the forces of progressive ideology could boast an unprecedentedly vast collection of corpses, but not much in the way of new moral concepts….The process of secularization was marked, from the first, by the magnificent limitlessness of its violence…The old order could generally reckon its victims only in the thousands.  But in the new age, the secular state, with all its hitherto unimagined capacities, could pursue its purely earthly ideals and ambitions only if it enjoyed the liberty to kill by the millions.”

A HYMN FOR TODAY – The Feast of Love

A HYMN FOR TODAY – The Feast of Love

Savior, as we eat Your supper,
We are joined with those apart,
Joined in memory and worship,
Near in worthiness of heart.

Holy ones throughout the ages
Also join us as we sup –
Saints united, past and future,
Sharers in the bread and cup.

All Your church is one in worship,
One in heart with You above,
Tasting one eternal sharing
As we keep the feast of love.

 

8.7.8.7 – M. W. Bassford, 2001

Tune: C.E. Couchman, 2001

#353 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012

 

THE FEAST OF LOVE explores the implications of the Lord’s Supper and the universal church. Because all Christians are one when they partake of the one bread, we share the Lord’s Supper with Christians everywhere and from every time. (1 Corinthians 10:15-17; Jude 12)

Curmudgeon’s Quotations – via WordPoints

Collection of Curmudgeon’s Quotations – via Gary Henry’s WordPoints

Curmudgeon’s Quotations

A HYMN FOR TODAY – Ask Me What Great Thing I Know

A HYMN FOR TODAY –  Ask Me What Great Thing I Know

Ask me what great thing I know:
What delights and stirs me so?
What the high reward I win?
Whose the name I glory in?
Jesus Christ, the crucified,
Jesus Christ, the crucified.

Who is He that makes me wise
To discern where duty lies?
Who is He that makes me true
Duty, when discerned, to do,
Jesus Christ, the crucified,
Jesus Christ, the crucified.

Who is life in life to me?
Who the death of death will be?
Who will place me on His right,
With the countless hosts of light?
Jesus Christ, the crucified,
Jesus Christ, the crucified.

This is that great thing I know,
This delights and stirs me so:
Faith in Him who died to save,
Him who triumphed o’er the grave:
Jesus Christ, the crucified,
Jesus Christ, the crucified.

7.7.7.7.7 – Johann C. Schwedler, 1741
tr. Benjamin H. Kennedy, 1863

Tune: REDHEAD 76 – Richard Redhead, 1853

#106 in Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, 2012

As with some other modern hymnals, “ye” changed to “me” also personalizes the hymn

20th Century Death

iib_death_wellcome_collection_fullsize (2)http://infobeautiful3.s3.amazonaws.com/2013/03/iib_death_wellcome_collection_fullsize.png

Today in History, March 15th