Friday 21 October 2011

Audio conversation with an ex-mormon on Tim Challies site

A conversation on mormonism with an ex-mormon from Tim Challies site. Read the original post here.




Download:  Audio File | 
Our guest on this week’s edition of The Connected Kingdom podcast is ex-Mormon and now Christian author Latayne Scott. She answers questions like these ones:
  • How did you become a Mormon?
  • How were you converted to Christ?
  • Is Mormonism a cult?
  • Can a Christian vote for Mitt Romney?
  • What are the changes in and challenges to Mormonism?
  • How should we evangelize Mormons? Should we invite them into our homes?

Thursday 20 October 2011

BBC Video Reports on Gaddafi's capture and death

A selection of videos from the BBC detailing his capture and death. Some of the content might be disturbing.

Gaddafi killed in sirte

Captor brandished golden pistol

NTC confirms death

Shot in the abdomen says witness

Last hiding place

Incredible clouds over greenland: Photograph


Stratus Clouds, Greenland

Photograph by Bryan and Cherry Alexander
Eight hundred miles south of the North Pole, stalactite-like stratus clouds—churned by 90-mile-an-hour winds—and the light of a bruised dawn paint an apocalyptic portrait over Inglefield Bay. (From national Geographic photograph of the day)


Wednesday 19 October 2011

Listen to John Mark McMillan's New Album free

You can listen to John Mark McMillan's new album for free by going to relevant magazine's The Drop. He's the guy that wrote How He loves us made famous by Jesus Culture. You can find his website here.

Preaching Notes: Matt Chandler (plus the audio of the preach)

In this series popular preaches give their notes and the audio of their preaches to give people an idea of how they speak from the notes, etc.


Preaching Notes: Matt Chandler

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The final preacher I get to feature in this series is Matt Chandler. Matt is the lead pastor of The Village Church in Flower Mound, Texas.
About his preaching notes, Matt said:
I tend to study and read a ton in and around the text and try to memorize what I can of the text, then write out a brief outline that I take into the pulpit with me. I will start to write on the outline certain thoughts I'm having or illustrations I want to use as I pray before our services begin. I rarely look at the outline while I preach. Typing it up somehow sears it into my mind.

Here is a pdf of Matt's sermon, Habakkuk 01: An Honest Conversation
You can also listen to it here.

Capitalism, the state of banking and the 'occupy' protests: Videos

A selection of videos from the BBC on the state of banking in America and the 'occupy' protests.

US Banks suffer from Market Turmoil

Michael Moore - 'Occupy Movement has touched a Nerve'

Toddler run over twice in China as bystanders watch and don't act

A frightening article on the potential reasons that people watched a toddler being run over twice and did nothing to stop it happening.


Toddler incident in China shows 'volunteer's dilemma'

By Joachim Krueger, Special to CNN
October 18, 2011 -- Updated 1922 GMT (0322 HKT)
A screen grab of an incident on a China street where a toddler was run down shows a rescuer finally helping her
A screen grab of an incident on a China street where a toddler was run down shows a rescuer finally helping her
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Joachim Krueger says video of a toddler run over twice in China has shocked, horrified many
  • He says we wonder why it took so long for someone to help and ask are people in China callous?
  • He says what researchers call "volunteers dilemma" not unique to China; cites NY case
  • Krueger: "Bystander effect" sometimes less when a group is needed, as in United Flight 93
Editor's note: Joachim I. Krueger is professor of psychology at Brown University who studies self-perception and social perception. He is the editor of Rationality and Social Responsibility.
(CNN) -- A security camera video of a toddler being run over twice on a street in China has swept across the Web in recent days and has drawn a chorus of horrified denunciations. How, we wonder, could so many passers-by have so callously ignored the girl's plight?
As humans, we are horrified when we learn that a person in distress is not helped, even when, as in this case, many potential helpers are present. Our horror increases if the person is victimized in a particularly vicious or careless way by fellow human beings. Our horror is further heightened when we learn that the victim is helpless and the kind of person who normally stimulates our instinct to aid and protect.
Our spontaneous reaction is to say: "Had I been there, I would have helped; what is wrong with these people?" If an incident occurs in a foreign country or culture, it is easy -- maybe tempting, as we grapple with something so baffling -- to conclude that the particular culture is to blame, that it is being callous, uncaring or egotistical.
It is true that cultural differences exist in many aspects of human behavior, and many of these differences are not trivial. But in the Chinese incident, in which the small child was gravely injured before someone finally carried her away, it would be too facile to think that apathy in the face of others' suffering is a signature of the local culture.
First, the public outcry and outrage within China was quite the same as what one would see in other countries. Second, there have been, of course, similar cases in other countries. Indeed, there was the torture and murder of Kitty Genovese in Queens, New York, in a 1964 street attack. Early reports, which may not have been entirely accurate, indicated that many people listened to or watched the attack and did nothing to stop it, and so a media blitz followed . Commentators asked: What is wrong with New York City, what is wrong with these times, and what is wrong with the particular neighborhood?
China: Hit-and-run video sparks outcry
Psychologist explains 'bystander apathy'
Good Samaritan laws in China
The incident spawned research on the so-called bystander effect: a set of brilliant experiments conducted by John Darley and Bibb Latané, who showed in their 1968 study that as the number of bystanders goes up, the probability of any individual bystander intervening goes down. This is so because each bystander is trying to solve a so-called "volunteer's dilemma." If everyone responds, the cost could be high and the volunteers might get in each others' way. It would be best if only one bystander responded, the thinking goes. If this is so, it is reasonable to ask who it will be and why it should be me.
Since the original experiments, many studies have explored the bystander effect. Recently, I was part of a research team brought together by Peter Fischer of the University of Regensburg, Germany. We surveyed the existing scientific literature and statistically integrated the findings from 105 data sets. We found that the bystander effect is quite robust, that it has declined somewhat in magnitude over time, and that there are certain conditions under which it disappears or is even reversed.
For example, in a situation in which several bystanders need to band together to overwhelm a perpetrator, they will be more likely to act collectively than to act alone. The heroic effort of the passengers on United Flight 93, which was suspected to be in line to strike a Washington target on 9/11/2001, comes to mind.
It is these extreme cases, the callous injury of a helpless toddler and the heroic revolt of ordinary people in the face of terrorism, that capture our attention. With a bit of luck, most of us will not find ourselves in such existential situations.
We must ask ourselves, however, how we will respond in more mundane situations that present us with fellow human beings who are in need. Will we help or hope that someone else will?

Tuesday 18 October 2011

Get the Efterklang Film 'An Island' by Vincent Moon and pay what you like

Get the efterklang film 'an island' and pay what you like for it just follow the link for downloads. 


I've put a little review of it with some videos below.









Before Peter Broderick played on Thursday they showed a video made by Vincent Moon with the Band 'Efterklang'. The film was called 'An Island'. If you can see it I'd recommend it. (watch the clips at the bottom of the post for an idea of what it's like)

There's no plot the band just go to an Island and explore. The opening 5 minutes is on the back of a small motorboat in the predawn half-dark and the monotonous drone of the engine until it abruptly cuts to darkness and complete silence ... they wander through an old factory banging pipes and recording the sound of walking through waterlogged water ... one member stands in the forest, sunlight coming through the trees like sunbeams through water, and listens to static-y classical music on a hand held radio ... they ride the five band members on the back of an open back pickup truck through a forest singing and keeping the beat with claps ... they walk along a path through the trees reminiscing about meeting each other as children.

Interspersed they play a few of their songs in some found spaces. And these few songs are really wonderful.

Here's 2 teaser trailers to get an idea of the film. I'd really recommend seeing it.

I watched in quiet wonder, an unhurried adventure in our Father's world, so grateful to Him for the moment. Watched people being human, and them join Him in being creative, the sound of their clapping and singing bringing a different kind of beauty to the forest. We were made in His image, and even though the image has been marred, we still get glimpses of what was lost. And that was mirrored in the half-dark club i sat in, listening, seeing beauty, knowing that meanwhile in the desert the sand shakes with mortar fire and 800 in ivory coast lie still never to wake.

the film opening ...



one of the songs 'Alike'

Videos from Peter Broderick's concert in Poznan (Pod Minoga)

Here are a few videos from Peter Broderick's wonderful concert in Poznan.

Piano Songs 1-2




My Father's Song


Happy Birthday to Tobiasz & I'm not at Home


Hello to Nils

Video: What is sound to me?

Interesting video on what people think of sound.

Worldview of C.S. Lewis in Voyage of Dawn Treader (Book vs. Film)

The Worldview of C. S. Lewis and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
The Worldview of C. S. Lewis and The Voyage of the Dawn Treader avatar

Peter Kreeft lectured for the Richmond Study Center at St. Giles Presbyterian Church (January 14, 2011) on the worldview of C.S. Lewis, comparing the movie and the book for The Voyage of the Dawn Treader. You can listen to the audio or watch it below.