Is this the world’s worst song?

Answer: Not by a long shot. I heard songs in Mongolia that sounded like a cat screaming in a rusty tin can muffled by a sick and flea ridden donkey sitting on the can.

What does that sound like exactly? Very hard to explain.. except to say that this song (above) is absolutely heavenly by comparison.

I have to say though – the singer in the video has a talent that the Lord would not mind him burying! 🙂

but will he bury it?

No! 44 years after the song was first introduced to the world, he wants you to come up with some lyrics.

If I was Jewish I would say, “oy vey!!!”

This Blog is NOT Dead

Reports of this blog’s demise have been greatly exaggerated!

Thanks for the many e-mails over the last few days asking (with great concern) about this blog. Its heart warming to know that it has come to be a regular fixture in so many people’s lives.

Over the last 2-3 days, thanks to the great talents of a man named JJ Honeycutt, the whole site has been put on a completely different platform which will allow for the audio problems we had to be sorted out. That might still take a few more days to iron out fully, but at least the tools are in place before the final fixing is done.

So the Grim Reaper was never near, even if it seemed that way.

Talking about death, how do you frighten a man who has already died?

Ravi Zacharias explains:

Colossians 3:3 says, “For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.”

HT: JT

A Christian in the Digital Age

“And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it and have dominion…” – Genesis 1:28

The world has changed and there’s no going back. How are we to think as Christians as we adapt to this new technological advanced digital age? Is there a Christian way to think?

At the recent Ligonier Ministries National Conference, Tim Challies was asked to speak on his new book “The Next Story.” Instead of speaking about the book or offering up a summary of it, he took a look at 3 vignettes that help us understand what’s going on in the world around us.

It’s a short but excellent presentation lasting around 25 minutes which I highly recommend: