Probably the best music film ever made…….probably posted here about it before……….sometimes it’s worth repeating yourself though!
How’s your communication?
In person, on twitter, on facebook? How’s your communication? What does it say about your heart?
“Is the general tone of a person’s communication carnal, worldly, irreligious, godless, or profane? Then let us understand that this is the state of their heart. When a person’s tongue is extensively wrong, it is absurd, no less than unscriptural, to say that their heart is right.”
JC Ryle from Expository Thoughts on the Gospels: Luke volume 1, [Carlisle, PA: Banner of Truth, 1986], 192, 193.
Love is making it’s way back home….
This is wonderful……in every possible way!
Josh Ritter – Love Is Making Its Way Back Home from Josh Ritter on Vimeo.
Introduction to 31 Proverbs….
This Sunday evening we will be launching a bible reading project called “31 Proverbs”.
The challenge is to read a chapter of Proverbs each day in March; that’s 31 chapters in 31 days! We’re hoping that everyone will join in as we seek to do this together. As well as learning and growing, we will build accountability and partnership into our bible reading.
During March, we can interact with each other here and on twitter (@read31proverbs; #31proverbs).
It will be great to see what God will do when we read his Word! So why not come along on Sunday evening and bring a friend.
Don’t forget that The Oasis will be open with buns and coffee after the service!
Spurgeon “On Religious Grumblers……”
“WHEN a man has a particularly empty head, he generally sets up for a great judge, especially in religion. None is so wise as the man who knows nothing. His ignorance is the mother of his impudence and the nurse of his obstinacy; and though he does not know a bee from a bull’s foot, he settles matters as if all wisdom were at his fingers’ ends – the Pope himself is not more infallible. Hear him talk after he has been at a meeting and heard a sermon, and you will know how to pull a good man to pieces if you never knew it before. He sees faults where there are none; and if there be a few things amiss, he makes every mouse into an elephant. Although you might put all his wit into an eggshell, he weighs the sermon in the balances of his conceit with all the airs of a born-and-bred Solomon. If it be up to his standard, he lays on his praise with a trowel; but if it be not to his taste, he growls and barks and snaps at it like a dog at a hedgehog. Wise men in this world are like trees in a hedge; there is only here and there one. When these rare men talk together upon a discourse, it is good for the ears to hear them; but the bragging wiseacres I am speaking of are vainly puffed up by their fleshly minds, and their quibbling is as senseless as the cackle of geese on a common. Nothing comes out of a sack but what was in it; and as their bag is empty, they shake nothing but wind out of it. It is very likely that neither ministers nor their sermons are perfect – the best garden may have a few weeds in it, the cleanest corn may have some chaff – but cavaliers cavil at anything or nothing, and find fault for the sake of showing off their deep knowledge. Sooner than let their tongues have a holiday, they would complain that the grass is not a nice shade of blue and say that the sky would have looked neater if it had been whitewashed.”
From ‘The Complete John Ploughman’





