The Killing Tree (Music Post)

Good Friday

When meditating on Good Friday, my thoughts turned to this song. I feel that it does a superb job of expressing the sacrifice of Christ artistically. There is no way to find life but through death. The death of Christ and our death in the shadow of his cross. Please enjoy this song and contemplate it’s message. I have included lyrics for your convenience.

The Killing Tree Lyrics

All alone in an evil dream I see myself up high
And it’s me over you with my arms spread open wide
I try to run from the place I know that I can be set free
Come away come away there’s a sweet voice calling me
To the killing tree

I look around at all the faces who are passing me
And I run try to run with nails in my feet
All the time I was building castles on a sandy beach
Leading you, leading you to a place I’d never been
To the killing tree
Come on

I know what you’re asking me and I don’t wanna give
‘Cause it’s safe and I know ’cause I’ve been here all these years
All the precious pain I hold without it there is fear
And I’m afraid when you say that you’ll get me outta here
To the killing tree
Come on

Come away to a place of healing

So now I run to you and I move from night to day
For to live I must die and there’s still no other way
I was alone in an evil dream but you took my place up high
Now it’s you over me with your arms spread open wide
On the killing tree
Come on

© Paul Colman Trio (PC3)
New Map of the World

via http://jmnz.us/1f1XL4A

Azaliah (Acoustic Cover) Dead Come to Life

I Don’t Usually Do This

BUT… my sister and her friend’s band, Azaliah (pronounced like the flower) have entered a contest and need hits so they can win it. So yes, I’m using my power over all 10 of you who read this blog to ask for hits—crass, boorish views.

Hopefully you like it. If not, that’s ok too. Thanks for listening!

via http://www.wetalkofholythings.com/2013/09/azaliah-acoustic-cover-dead-come-to-life.html

Blog Tour For N. D. Wilson

Blog Tour

I have been invited to receive a free copy of N. D. Wilson’s book: Death By Living and to participate in the Blog Tour for the piece. The Blog Tour, which is a week when bloggers will post their reviews of the book, will take place from August 26-30. My review is scheduled for August 30, so stay tuned for that. (But I give you permission to browse to other sites until then. No sense letting all the interwebs go to waste.) I just got my copy of the book yesterday.

Not only did I get a free copy of Death by Living, I received an additional surprise. Included in my package from Thomas Nelson Publishers was a copy of N. D. Wilson’s first book, Notes From the Tilt A Whirl! I got two books for one review, score! The thought did cross my mind that since DBL is the follow-up to NFTTAW that I’d be lost, but I never complain about free books. In fact, I’m grateful for them.

I googled Notes From the Tilt A Whirl to see what to expect and ended up with a few YouTube videos. I’ve embedded them here for your enjoyment. The interview is pretty good. I like the way N. D. Wilson thinks.

Notes From the Tilt A Whirl Trailer

Interview: Why Tilt A Whirl?

via http://www.wetalkofholythings.com/2013/08/blog-tour-for-n-d-wilson.html

I Wanna Win!

I don’t wanna get paid to lose. I wanna win!
…Thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 
1 Corinthians 15.7 NASB

The Quote

The Scripture

1 Corinthians 15 is the obligatory Sunrise Service portion of scripture. It rings out on every Easter morning. Death is swallowed up in victory. Yes. We follow the winner. Call us Christians bandwagon fans, but we know that in the ultimate game of life and death, we choose to side with the One who has kicked Death in the butt.

Death is swallowed up in victory.
The picture is amazing here. Death—Mighty Death—is swallowed up. Consider: how big does one thing need to be in order to swallow up another thing? Twice as big? Three times? I, as a 5-foot, 10-inch individual, need to cut a little 6 oz. steak into pieces in order to chew it before swallowing.

Sometimes we picture a grand struggle, where Jesus labored and fought and scratched and clawed before finally wrenching the keys of Hades from Death. But 1 Corinthians 15 tells us that His greatness was big enough to swallow death, much like a human swallowing a bug. Almost, as if, by accident. With little to no effort comparatively. And that victory has been secured and passed on to us. It is in this vein that John Donne penned the following:

72. “Death be not proud, though some have called thee”

DEATH be not proud, though some have called thee
Mighty and dreadfull, for, thou art not so,
For, those, whom thou think’st, thou dost overthrow,
Die not, poore death, nor yet canst thou kill me.
From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee, 5
Much pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow,
And soonest our best men with thee doe goe,
Rest of their bones, and soules deliverie.
Thou art slave to Fate, Chance, kings, and desperate men,
And dost with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell, 10
And poppie, or charmes can make us sleepe as well,
And better then thy stroake; why swell’st thou then;
One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally,
And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.

To the victor goes the spoils. Christ, The Victor, has defeated Death and now lords it over him by granting the victory to us. You may ask, why do you capitalize this term: Death? Isn’t that something that just happens to us at the end of this life? The answer is no. This is not the death that was defeated. What was defeated is the active force that infects all of humanity. It is the Death that springs up from within and corrupts the activity of mankind, causing all of us to fall short of the glory of God. (Romans 3.23) Without Christ’s victory we would have no hope—neither in the next life nor in this one.

The Application

To live the Christian life with a defeated attitude is like being paid to lose. It’s like Nacho Libre getting a paycheck to be some loser’s punching bag. Don’t be Satan’s punching bag in this life. God has much more for you than just a home in heaven, He wants you to make a difference in this life. Strengthen yourself by abiding in His Word. Let that Word influence your thinking and activities. Then you will see victory in your life, the victory that glorifies God because He has provided it to us.

via http://www.wetalkofholythings.com/2013/06/i-wanna-win.html

Wearing Stretchy Pants

Chancho, when you are a man you wear stretchy pants in your room, it’s for fun. 
When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child.
But when I grew up, I put away childish things.
—1 Corinthians 13:11 NLT

The Quote

The Scripture

Paul, in the seminal chapter of love, begins his conclusion in verse 8 with the statement that love never fails. There is never a circumstance in which true love comes up short. Selfishness and impurity are sure to falter if even virtues that are good and just fail. Even the gifts of the Holy Spirit fail, but love never does because love is an expression of the divine nature.

It is implied that we should strive to perfect this divine attribute in our own lives. That is why Paul continues the concluding argument in verses 11 and 12. He says that we need to grow in love and mature in our spiritual walk. Some things are acceptable for children in the faith, but are disgraceful for mature spiritual Christians to partake in. By that same token, there are certain things that no one should expect a spiritual infant to partake in which a man nearing their spiritual prime must do.

Life is expressed in seasons. We have beginning, middle and end seasons—all of which have their individual rites of passage and milestones. Despite this progression in maturity one directive remains: we are to continually put off the Old Man and put on the New Man—the New Man whose life has been reinvigorated by the Lord Jesus. This is God’s expectation regardless of which stage you find yourself in your spiritual journey.

The Application

What are you learning from scripture that needs to be applied to your life today? Maybe you are struggling with something you know scripture condemns as wrong. Maybe you are struggling with a question of doctrine or grappling with the philosophical implications of scripture. Know that the process of learning questions those things which you think you know. Sometimes what you thought you knew turns out to be false. Sometimes what you thought you knew is confirmed.

Just because your traditional spiritual life is different does not make it right or wrong. Sometimes, as with Ignacio, when we get older we wear stretchy pants in our room. Sometimes, when informed by the wisdom that comes from experience, we will undergo a dramatic change in our position on certain things.

The acceptance of that fact is called maturity.

via http://www.wetalkofholythings.com/2013/06/wearing-stretchy-pants.html