When the Bible speaks of King David singing with his harp, or of Temple worship, what did it sound like. Probably not so different to today’s synagogue cantors, minus the modern instruments and amplifiers. Music for your weekend:
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When the Bible speaks of King David singing with his harp, or of Temple worship, what did it sound like. Probably not so different to today’s synagogue cantors, minus the modern instruments and amplifiers. Music for your weekend:
Mobile phones offer many opportunities. Moses, in AP State, India, has made a photo diary (maybe partly posed) of a chance encounter he was able to use by sharing video clips by Bluetooth with a taxi driver. Here’s an edited version of his story: ![]() “Yesterday when I’m going in auto (taxi), I sat front side beside the driver. While he was driving the auto, he got on the phone. He held the phone while he was driving and speaking to other person – you can see in the photos. ![]() It’s too dangerous – you know that! After finishing his call, I scolded him, saying not to repeat it again. He is muslim, you can see by the muslim threads on the steering wheel. ![]() Then I opened my mobile and started watching video clips. After some time, the auto driver asked me, ‘Is there any blue film in your phone? So please download it into my mobile.’ I said, ‘There is no such films in my mobile,’ then he replied, ‘You are young man, they should be there in your mobile.’ ![]() Then I took his mobile and download two clips into his mobile. His SD card memory was very small so I couldn’t upload more clips in to his phone. I hope that the clips will change him. Amen!” The Mobile Ministry Training Course is back!October’s Mobile Ministry distance learning course went well. The next course starts in January. This 4-week introduction to the uses of mobile technology platforms for Christian ministry requires 4-6 hours of home study time each week. This is an example of the vast opportunities in the Majority World. Watch the two videos below: the first from KioskEvangelism.com (thanks to them for providing the taxi story) – they focus particularly on India and the Majority World. See our other posts on mobile phones and opportunities, and check Mobile Advance, Mobile Ministry Magazine and Kiosk Evangelism. Please share other stories like this, using the ‘Comment’ link below.
Mobile Advance video (also available to download as a 32Mb MP4 file):
Smartphones are proliferating fast, as prices come down. Why bother to buy one? And how are people using them? Tatango have compiled data from Pew Internet research studies to produce this infographic. Check carefully for the missing activity. Yes, you’re ahead of me. Phoning people! Smartphones do so many things that voice calls reflect only a small element of total use. (Pew also offer trend charts on digital use.) Of course, text messaging is particularly age-related, as this infographic shows.
Source: Tatango Mass Text Messaging Apps
Training for mobile ministry
Mobile phones in Majority World
Check our other blog posts on mobiles.
Last known photo of Titanic, leaving Queenstown (now Cobh) 11 April 1912
April 2012 was 100 years since the sinking of the Titanic. There was a big upsurge in books and movies, TV miniseries and documentaries, articles, blogs and social network postings, giving enhanced awareness of this iconic world-changing tragedy, already arguably the best-known accidental disaster of all time. Cameron’s 1997 film was be re-released in 3D. Two TV drama series screened: Titanic: Blood & Steel from the BBC focusing on the build-time and launch; and Julian Fellowes’ Titanic for ITV looked at the story of the crew and passengers. If it were a fictional narrative, we would judge it to be hugely well-crafted, a dramatic arc of the highest order. And yet, like so many movie scripts, we’d see it as implausible or way too formulaic for a true drama: “you couldn’t make it up.” (Reasons for this story’s resonance: 1 | 2) This single-page article (free to reproduce or adapt) suggests ways to use the Titanic story as a starting point for the good news. Article sections: Pictures and filmsHere are evocative and haunting pictures, the only pre-sinking moving film, and survivor interviews:
Still photos, artists’ impressions, video of rescued survivors, 2007 movie stills
Only known moving film of Titanic (plus few cut-in underwater shots)
Fascinating survivor interviews Watch Part 2, and other survivor interviews. The last survivor of Titanic, Millvina Dean (interview), only died in 2009. See also more stills | underwater wreck film | more underwater. Top booksFor a superbly-written and gripping human account of the Titanic story, Walter Lord’s A Night to Remember Lord first caught the Titanic bug in 1926 as a child when his family sailed on the almost identical sister-ship Olympic , which remained in service till 1935. (Incidentally, an account by a crew member of Olympic’s near wrecking when she was off-course in fog and nearly ploughed into the rocky Irish coastline, was published as a letter in The Daily Telegraph some years ago. I have never seen it republished or corroborated. The third sister ship, Britannic, was sunk by a mine off the Greek coast during WW1.)
Christian popular-culture writer Steve Turner has written a new book The Band That Played On, the compelling story of the Titanic band members. (You may have read Turner’s excellent biography of Johnny Cash, or his other music/religion related books.) Also recently published, a biography of White Star chairman Bruce Ismay giving new insights into the life of a frequently reviled and major player in the story: review. For more background and research, many other books There is an encyclopedia-style website with exhaustive coverage of topics at Encylopedia Titanica. Spiritual parallelsThe Titanic story is full of redemptive parallels for conversation starting face-to-face or on Facebook, or to use in articles, webpages, blogs, video shorts, or sermons and talks. Now is the time to start planning them! Down the years, Christians have found ways to reflect on truths from the story – examples: Wisconsin Christian News | Sermon Central. Although a valuable starting point for evangelism, it must use a sensitive outsider-friendly jargon-free tone. It was, of course, a metaphorical ‘perfect storm’, with a large number of factors contributing to the disaster. Had even one of them been different, tragedy might have been averted: no binoculars for the lookouts, no moon, abnormally windless calm sea gave no visible white water at the base of the iceberg, minimal crew training, inattention to six clear ice warnings that day, disregard by the nearby Californian of rocket signals. Plus the design: watertight compartments not high enough, only a single-skin hull below water level, and insufficient lifeboats. (Structural modifications were made to the part-built Britannic as a result of the sinking, and retro-fitted to Olympic, which within two weeks sailed with enough lifeboats and rafts for all.) Each of these elements can illustrate aspects of Christian truth: living in the light, being aware of spiritual dangers and their subtle invisibility, being teachable rather than self-sufficient, etc. The rescue of the survivors by Cunard’s Carpathia, captained by Captain Rostrom (a Jesus-follower), was by contrast a masterclass in good emergency planning, execution and seamanship. Many parts of this epic resonate with spiritual parallels. The overweening pride and lax corporate culture of White Star Line and its executives in pursuit of ‘gold and glory’ (matched by much of Edwardian high society of the time), its attitude to third-class passengers and mean-spirited treatment of the crew even by the standards of the time (for example their pay was, incredibly, stopped from 2.20am on 15 April, the precise time she sank), design compromises to increase payload or passenger convenience, the oblivious passengers sailing to disaster, the many acts of sheer stupidity or naivety, selfishness or quiet heroism. It could also be said to prefigure the collision course that the smug European nations had set themselves, entering just two years later into a war of unbelievable horror; and of course every other national and international mess that mankind has inflicted on itself before and since. Perhaps the most resonant parallel is for the individual person – the folly of sailing through life, trusting in the wrong things, ignoring warnings, with mistaken me-centered priorities, unprepared and ill-equipped for tragedy or death: lives built on sand. SermonCentral draws together the many biblical passages and themes that reflect this. The actions of Christians such as passenger John Harper, band member Bob Bateman, and rescuer Captain Rostrom are also inspiring examples of selfless behavior motivated by faith. In the fictional 1997 film, we see the clear spiritual parallels of Jack laying down his life for Rose, who also thereby escapes permanently from the unwanted entrapment of the caddish and narcissistic Cal. With a new name, she has effectively died to her old life. Not, maybe, that she deserves it, but that’s what grace means! Fact check and more ideasBe careful not to quote exaggerated supposed facts or urban legend (or even a bizarre conspiracy theory or two) in relation to Titanic. Fact-check everything! It is not true, for instance, that she was officially claimed by the makers to be ‘unsinkable’. Neither was she dramatically larger than any other ship – her sister Olympic was already in service, virtually identical in length, size and design. Titanic’s gross tonnage was only slightly higher, and she had several enhancements in luxury. However both ships were indeed 50% larger than any other ship in service, and built to a new level of sheer luxury. Nor is the tragedy now the highest maritime loss of life, either in peace-time (4,386: Doña Paz) or war-time (9,300: Wilhelm Gustloff). As for cumulative maritime Atlantic losses, remember with horror, shame or perhaps forgiveness (depending on your ancestry), the most shocking casualty list of all – the estimated 2.2 million abducted Africans traveling the slavers’ euphemistically-named ‘Middle Passage’, who died en route or were dumped alive over the side because of poor health. Could you use the Titanic story? Articles, blogs, youth groups, services? Post a video clip on your Facebook page and start a discussion? How about a whole themed Titanic meeting for outsiders, with film extracts, videos, poems, music, and more?
Please share other redemptive parallels, online resources, or other comments, using the ‘Comment’ link below.
Here are some new stories – and an incredible video – that illustrate the leverage of social media:
And now for something completely off-topic. But. Totally. Mindblowing. Swan Lake like you never saw it before. Ever: Except that it is not totally off-topic, because it also illustrates the power of social networking: you may well ‘Like’ this page, or post the YouTube video on your own blog, site or Facebook profile, email the link of this page or the YouTube page to your friends, or ask workmates or family to gather around to view it. Very possibly your ‘word of mouth’ will ultimately enable thousands of new people to watch this clip. All because you think it is worth sharing. The Swan Lake story is a traditional folk-style tale with remarkable resonance and themes worth pondering. For instance, how we can be tricked into selling our souls to the wrong cause. How redemption comes to the imprisoned swans only through the death of the hero and heroine. These are eternal themes worth thinking about.
Before the Internet and YouTube, this was impossible – that a small-church wedding video could go viral, and then become the storyline for a major TV series: see The Office, the Wedding and the Power of the Internet – a blog posting from Mark Roberts. Look too at how the world of advertising has changed in 20 years. A comparison chart was featured at Barcelona’s Chiringuito and was picked up by Ministry Marketing Coach, where Kerry Bural comments, “Each of these mediums and technologies (plus many more) represent potential connection points that could and should be leveraged for reaching people. Do churches and ministries have a baseline understanding of these and other mediums? Is the complex nature of communication on your radar?” Pastor Ralph Wilson is an expert on marketing, and his Web Marketing Today website and newsletter have been online for an amazing 15 years. As an anniversary offer, he is giving away some of his ebooks that are normally pay for. Although some of his writings apply only to business marketing, many principles also apply to Christian ministries and web evangelism, so take the chance to grab the offers. And is the Internet affecting our civility? asks SiteReference. The vast range of mobile phone ‘apps’ (small downloadable programs, usually free) is creating new opportunities. Church Marketing Sucks blog asks whether churches need to develop their own apps. Kindle launch
OurChurch blog gives some valuable insights and links about the nature of evangelism within social networking channels. What will social networking look like in five years time. OurChurch has brought together three experts – John Saddington of ChurchCrunch, Kem Meyer of Granger Community Church and Matt Farina of Geeks and God podcast. Here are their thoughts. See these interesting maps of which social networking sites are used in different countries. Internet World Stats now include percentage internet penetration rates for different countries. SiteProNews explains How Twitter is Teaching Business the Lost Art of Conversation. World Missions 101 gives resources for those who are advocates for world mission. World Bibles provides links to audio bible recordings or where to buy print Bibles, in 2000 languages.
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