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Jt:Thanks for making my point for me.
Oh, I see. You set me up
to prove your point which is that noone actually knows for sure what
anyone else is saying - and to
prove this you write an
obtuse sentences with no ending? This may be so out there in Babel but
in the Kingdom of God we
speak Kingdom language and
there is no doubt. Let God be true and every man a liar....
Jt: By the way, no offence intended but,
has anyone ever told you that your offspring are.........
My offspring are what
Lance? Why do you assume everyone knows what you mean all the
time?
I have no idea what you are
talking about.
Sorry you have
decided to leave Debbie but I think I understand - What I don't
understand however is in what way you perceive Bruce Cockburn to be
Christian. I didn't know who he was so I enquired at his
website and found the following:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Over the course of three decades, Bruce Cockburn's ability to distill political
events, spiritual revelations and personal experience into rich, compelling songs have made him one of the
world's most celebrated artists. And, as the title of his 27th studio
album, You've Never Seen Everything, suggests, few musicians have been
as curious, probing or provocative as Cockburn.
Written mostly over the last three years, the album's 12 songs
reflect Cockburn's
deepening frustration with a world out of balance. "We're confronted
with great darkness as a species right now, as spiritual creatures on this planet," says Cockburn. "I don't
think it's hopeless, and I don't want this album to make people feel
hopeless. But I think we've got to call a spade a spade."
Songs like the tense opening "Tried and Tested," the hypnotic "All
Our Dark Tomorrows" and, especially, the swirling jazz of "Trickle Down"
represent some of
Cockburn's angriest and most political songs since his "Call it Democracy" and "If I Had a Rocket Launcher"
classics of the mid-1980s. "You look at war and environmental problems and you look at
what's causing them and what's preventing us from solving them and the
trail always leads to human greed,"
says Cockburn. "Somebody's getting paid to keep it that way or make it
worse. Everyone's wondering what it all means and what we can do about
it."
Cockburn's solution comes through in some of the most powerful songs
of hope he's ever written: the joyous "Open," the euphoric "Put It in
Your Heart" and the gorgeous closing "Messenger Wind." Says Cockburn:
"What I see happening in the face of all this darkness is something new in human spirituality,
openness, some sense of our common
destiny. We've got to keep nudging ourselves in the direction of good
and respect for each other."
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Nothing on this website
suggested he is a follower of Christ and the above sounds more political
than anything. Noone who sees God as sovereign and still on the throne
is concerned about any of the above since the world has been "out of
balance" since the fall and He is able to handle both environment
and take care of human greed; I don't see "human spirituality" and
Christianity as one and the same. Do you?
Well, folks, it has been genuinely fun "meeting" you all, but I
don't really have time to continue my participation on TT, much as I
would like to. The huge investment of time has not been without a
return, but there are other things I need to give the time to! So I'm
off. Thanks for the welcome and interaction; some of you have been
very encouraging and mind-expanding. For those who remain on the list,
here's a song by one of my favourite Christian artists, Bruce
Cockburn:
When thoughts rush by
and your signals seem to fly
keep it open
keep it open
some will lag behind
but we needn't be unkind
keep it open
keep it open
and help me keep mine open
too
sun stoned in the
east
in our eyes let there be
peace
keep it
open
keep it
open
and help me keep mine open too
Debbie
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