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Japanese Music - Utada Hikaru - Indescribable FeelingsJapanese Music - Utada Hikaru - Indescribable Feelings
from YouTube :: Tag // utada
October 31, 2008

Created by Özkan Şimşek oezkan1969@hotmail.com oezkansimsek@hotmail.com Berlin Kreuzberg Germany www.fortuna2008.com www.oezkansimsek.com www.malatyali-ibrahim.com Author: OezkanSimsek Keywords: Japanese Music Utada Hikaru Indescribable Feelings Added: October 31, 2008
Christian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube videoChristian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube video
from Revver - hip, hop Videos
October 07, 2008

Author: AndrewcBain Added: Mon, 06 Oct 2008 20:33:51 -0800 Duration: 240http://Psalms.pbwiki.com [Keywords: christian music video star spangled banner us national anthem karaoke hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ rock rap hip hop jazz videos band i want it that way worthy is lamb shout lord casting crowns does anyone hear her psalm 23 this is your life backstreet boys top usa awesome my redeemer lives team hoyt in alone sing a long lyric baby got book lyrics religious switchfoot psalms karaoke]
Song of Solomon Christian Karaoke praise song worship videoSong of Solomon Christian Karaoke praise song worship video
from Connolly & Messmer in Second Life
October 02, 2008

http://ImputedRighteousness.com http://ChristNotDavid.com [Keywords: christian music video star song of solomon songs karaoke bring the rain hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ who am i rock rap hip hop jazz videos band i want it that way worthy is lamb shout mercyme lord casting crowns does anyone hear her psalm 23 switchfoot this east west is your life i can only imagine top usa awesome my redeemer lives team hoyt in alone sing a long lyric baby got book lyrics religious psalms karaoke christian i can only imagine mercyme mercy me psalm casting crown bring the rain homesick praise you storm lifesong] IS THE SONG OF SOLOMON ABOUT CHRIST AND THE CHURCH? Here's an excellent quote... "Origen and Jerome tell us that the Jews forbade it to be read by any until he was thirty years old. It certainly needs a degree of spiritual maturity to enter aright into the holy mystery of love which it allegorically sets forth. To such as have attained this maturity, of whatever age they be, the Song of Songs is one of the most edifying of the sacred writings. Rosenmuller justly says, The sudden transitions of the bride from the court to the grove are inexplicable, on the supposition that it describes merely human love. Had it been the latter, it would have been positively objectionable, and never would have been inserted in the holy canon. The allusion to "Pharaoh's chariots" (So 1:9) has been made a ground for conjecturing that the love of Solomon and Pharaoh's daughter is the subject of the Song. But this passage alludes to a remarkable event in the history of the Old Testament Church, the deliverance from the hosts and chariots of Pharaoh at the Red Sea. (However, see on [672]So 1:9). The other allusions are quite opposed to the notion; the bride is represented at times as a shepherdess (So 1:7), "an abomination to the Egyptians" (Ge 46:34); so also So 1:6; 3:4; 4:8; 5:7 are at variance with it. The Christian fathers, Origen and Theodoret, compared the teachings of Solomon to a ladder with three steps; Ecclesiastes, natural (the nature of sensible things, vain); Proverbs, moral; Canticles, mystical (figuring the union of Christ and the Church). The Jews compared Proverbs to the outer court of Solomon's temple, Ecclesiastes to the holy place, and Canticles to the holy of holies. Understood allegorically, the Song is cleared of all difficulty. "Shulamith" (So 6:13), the bride, is thus an appropriate name, Daughter of Peace being the feminine of Solomon, equivalent to the Prince of Peace. She by turns is a vinedresser, shepherdess, midnight inquirer, and prince's consort and daughter, and He a suppliant drenched with night dews, and a king in His palace, in harmony with the various relations of the Church and Christ. As Ecclesiastes sets forth the vanity of love of the creature, Canticles sets forth the fullness of the love which joins believers and the Saviour. The entire economy of salvation, says Harris, aims at restoring to the world the lost spirit of love. God is love, and Christ is the embodiment of the love of God. As the other books of Scripture present severally their own aspects of divine truth, so Canticles furnishes the believer with language of holy love, wherewith his heart can commune with his Lord; and it portrays the intensity of Christ's love to him; the affection of love was created in man to be a transcript of the divine love, and the Song clothes the latter in words; were it not for this, we should be at a loss for language, having the divine warrant, wherewith to express, without presumption, the fervor of the love between Christ and us. The image of a bride, a bridegroom, and a marriage, to represent this spiritual union, has the sanction of Scripture throughout; nay, the spiritual union was the original fact in the mind of God, of which marriage is the transcript (Isa 54:5; 62:5; Jer 3:1, Eze 16:1-63; 23:1-49; Mt 9:15; 22:2; 25:1, Joh 3:29; 2Co 11:2; Eph 5:23-32, where Paul does not go from the marriage relation to the union of Christ and the Church as if the former were the first; but comes down from the latter as the first and best recognized fact on which the relation of marriage is based; Re 19:7; 21:2; 22:17). Above all, the Song seems to correspond to, and form a trilogy with, Psalms 45 and 72, which contain the same imagery; just as Psalm 37 answers to Proverbs, and the Psalms 39 and 73 to Job. Love to Christ is the strongest, as it is the purest, of human passions, and therefore needs the strongest language to express it: to the pure in heart the phraseology, drawn from the rich imagery of Oriental poetry, will not only appear not indelicate or exaggerated, but even below the reality. A single emblem is a type; the actual rites, incidents, and persons of the Old Testament were appointed types of truths afterwards to be revealed. But the allegory is a continued metaphor, in which the circumstances are palpably often purely imagery, while the thing signified is altogether real. The clue to the meaning of the Song is not to be looked for in the allegory itself, but in other parts of Scripture. "It lies in the casket of revelation an exquisite gem, engraved with emblematical characters, with nothing literal thereon to break the consistency of their beauty" [Burrowes]. This accounts for the name of God not occurring in it. Whereas in the parable the writer narrates, in the allegory he never does so. The Song throughout consists of immediate addresses either of Christ to the soul, or of the soul to Christ. "The experimental knowledge of Christ's loveliness and the believer's love is the best commentary on the whole of this allegorical Song" [Leighton]. Like the curiously wrought Oriental lamps, which do not reveal the beauty of their transparent emblems until lighted up within, so the types and allegories of Scripture, "the lantern to our path" [Ps 119:105], need the inner light of the Holy Spirit of Jesus to reveal their significance. The details of the allegory are not to be too minutely pressed. In the Song, with an Oriental profusion of imagery, numbers of lovely, sensible objects are aggregated not strictly congruous, but portraying jointly by their very diversity the thousand various and seemingly opposite beauties which meet together in Christ. The unity of subject throughout, and the recurrence of the same expressions (So 2:6, 7; 3:5; 8:3, 4; 2:16; 6:3; 7:10; 3:6; 6:10; 8:5), prove the unity of the poem, in opposition to those who make it consist of a number of separate erotic songs. The sudden transitions (for example, from the midnight knocking at a humble cottage to a glorious description of the King) accord with the alternations in the believer's experience. However various the divisions assigned be, most commentators have observed four breaks (whatever more they have imagined), followed by four abrupt beginnings (So 2:7; 3:5; 5:1; 8:4). Thus there result five parts, all alike ending in full repose and refreshment. We read (1Ki 4:32) that Solomon's songs were "a thousand and five." The odd number five added over the complete thousand makes it not unlikely that the "five" refers to the Song of songs, consisting of five parts. It answers to the idyllic poetry of other nations. The Jews explain it of the union of Jehovah and ancient Israel; the allusions to the temple and the wilderness accord with this; some Christians of Christ and the Church; others of Christ and the individual believer. All these are true; for the Church is one in all ages, the ancient typifying the modern Church, and its history answering to that of each individual soul in it. Jesus "sees all, as if that all were one, loves one, as if that one were all." "The time suited the manner of this revelation; because types and allegories belonged to the old dispensation, which reached its ripeness under Solomon, when the temple was built" [Moody Stuart]. "The daughter of Zion at that time was openly married to Jehovah"; for it is thenceforth that the prophets, in reproving Israel's subsequent sin, speak of it as a breach of her marriage covenant. The songs heretofore sung by her were the preparatory hymns of her childhood; "the last and crowning 'Song of Songs' was prepared for the now mature maiden against the day of her marriage to the King of kings" [Origen]. Solomon was peculiarly fitted to clothe this holy mystery with the lovely natural imagery with which the Song abounds; for "he spake of trees, from the cedar in Lebanon, even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall" (1Ki 4:33). A higher qualification was his knowledge of the eternal Wisdom or Word of God (Pr 8:1-36), the heavenly bridegroom. David, his father, had prepared the way, in Psalms 45 and 72; the son perfected the allegory. It seems to have been written in early life, long before his declension; for after it a song of holy gladness would hardly be appropriate. It was the song of his first love, in the kindness of his youthful espousals to Jehovah. Like other inspired books, its sense is not to be restricted to that local and temporary one in which the writer may have understood it; it extends to all ages, and shadows forth everlasting truth (1Pe 1:11, 12; 2Pe 1:20, 21). "Oh that I knew how all thy lights combine, and the configurations of their glorie, Seeing not only how each verse doth shine, but all the constellations of the storie."-Herbert. Three notes of time occur [Moody Stuart]: (1) The Jewish Church speaks of the Gentile Church (So 8:8) towards the end; (2) Christ speaks to the apostles (So 5:1) in the middle; (3) The Church speaks of the coming of Christ (So 1:2) at the beginning. Thus we have, in direct order, Christ about to come, and the cry for the advent; Christ finishing His work on earth, and the last supper; Christ ascended, and the call of the Gentiles. In another aspect we have: (1) In the individual soul the longing for the manifestation of Christ to it, and the various alternations in its experience (So 1:2, 4; 2:8; 3:1, 4, 6, 7) of His manifestation; (2) The abundant enjoyment of His sensible consolations, which is soon withdrawn through the bride's carelessness (So 5:1-3, 6:3, So 7:1, (3) Effects of Christ's manifestation on the believer; namely, assurance, labors of love, anxiety for the salvation of the impenitent, eagerness for the Lord's second coming (So 7:10, 12; 8:8-10, 14). CHAPTER 1 So 1:1-17. Canticle I.-(So 1:2-2:7)-The Bride Searching for and Finding the King. 1. The song of songs-The most excellent of all songs, Hebrew idiom (Ex 29:37; De 10:14). A foretaste on earth of the "new song" to be sung in glory (Re 5:9; 14:3; 15:2-4). Solomon's-"King of Israel," or "Jerusalem," is not added, as in the opening of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, not because Solomon had not yet ascended the throne [Moody Stuart], but because his personality is hid under that of Christ, the true Solomon (equivalent to Prince of Peace). The earthly Solomon is not introduced, which would break the consistency of the allegory. Though the bride bears the chief part, the Song throughout is not hers, but that of her "Solomon." He animates her. He and she, the Head and the members, form but one Christ [Adelaide Newton]. Aaron prefigured Him as priest; Moses, as prophet; David, as a suffering king; Solomon, as the triumphant prince of peace. The camp in the wilderness represents the Church in the world; the peaceful reign of Solomon, after all enemies had been subdued, represents the Church in heaven, of which joy the Song gives a foretaste."
"Indescribable""Indescribable"
from Metacafe - Today's Videos by Metacafe
August 31, 2008

Here are just a few of God's creations I've put together to go with "Indescribable" sung by Chris Tomlin He truly is an amazing God!
Jeff HuertaJeff Huerta
from Deal or No Deal
October 15, 2008

Find out what it's like to make the biggest "deal" of a lifetime!
Christian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube videoChristian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube video
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
July 22, 2008

http://Psalms.pbwiki.com [Keywords: christian music video star spangled banner us national anthem karaoke hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ rock rap hip hop jazz videos band i want it that way worthy is lamb shout lord casting crowns does anyone hear her psalm 23 this is your life backstreet boys top usa awesome my redeemer lives team hoyt in alone sing a long lyric baby got book lyrics religious switchfoot psalms karaoke] Useful Quote about the book of Psalms... "Psalms 1 and 2 are often called the gateway to the Psalms. They belong together for many reasons not least the blessed s at the beginning and end. Just as with the Sermon on the Mount, the blessed s tell us exactly who is in on what s about to be discussed. In the Sermon on the Mount, the blessed s tell us who s in the kingdom which Jesus describes. In the Psalter, Psalms 1 and 2 tell us who s in on the worship of the living God. And who is the blessed man?? Well He is an ish - a representative man. In fact He is the Man. This is an audacious claim. (I rarely even claim to be a man!) Verse 2 says He is a night-and-day Bible-meditator, which makes Him a king (cf Deut 17:18-20; Josh 1:8). Verse 3, He is also like a tree (think Branch or Root or Vine - kings are described like this). Not only this but He can make others become prosperous (causative hiphil stem). This one Man, this definitive Man, is contrasted in v4 to the many wicked. The Psalm does not begin by comparing righteous people to wicked people but rather The Righteous Man is contrasted with the wicked masses. Then (presumably through the Man/Tree-of-Life causing many others to prosper like Him) we hear about other righteous ones (v5-6). When we turn to Psalm 2 we see the Man given more names. The LORD s King (v6) is here called Anointed One (Messiah, v2), and Son (v7). Though He is raged against, He will be poured out on Zion (v6) and publicly vindicated by the Father (v7) before claiming universal rule. (v8-9) All must love and take refuge in Him - both Judge and Saviour. (v10-12) Here is the gateway to the Psalms. We ought not to rush into the Psalter without stopping here and asking who is welcome in the Psalter. And the answer is: Blessed is the Man and Blessed are all who take refuge in Him. We must be rightly related to Christ to be welcome in the worship of the living God. He, supremely, is the Scripture-meditating, righteous, flourishing, tree-of-life-like Worshipper. But as Calvin comments on Psalm 22:22, He also is the heavenly choir-master who tunes our hearts to sing God s praises. Now what implications does this have for how we read the rest of the Psalter? Well one big help we have received in this, the gateway, is that we ve been introduced to the four main characters in the Psalms. Here we have: (1) the LORD; (2) the Christ, the Blessed Man; (3) The Righteous who take refuge in Him; and (4) The Wicked who oppose Him. All the Psalms are about the interaction of these four groups. In some, like Psalm 1, the Blessed Man is shown before the LORD and then the righteous and the wicked are contrasted. In some, like Psalm 2, the righteous complain to the LORD about the wicked and then He reminds them about the Blessed Man, Christ. In some we have simply the words of Christ. In others we have the words of the LORD to Christ. In some we simply have the words of sinners like us taking refuge in Him. But all of the Psalms are about the inter-relation of these four groups. And they all work together to speak to us of Christ. Let s be alert to that as we read the Psalms, they are related to Christ."
Christian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube videoChristian Karaoke Praise Song Psalm 3 worship youtube video
from Most Recent
July 20, 2008

Author: AndrewcBain Added: Sun, 20 Jul 2008 18:40:02 -0800 Duration: 25http://Psalms.pbwiki.com [Keywords: christian music video star spangled banner us national anthem karaoke hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ rock rap hip hop jazz videos band i want it that way worthy is lamb shout lord casting crowns does anyone hear her psalm 23 this is your life backstreet boys top usa awesome my redeemer lives team hoyt in alone sing a long lyric baby got book lyrics religious switchfoot psalms karaoke] Useful Quote about the book of Psalms... "Psalms 1 and 2 are often called the gateway to the Psalms. They belong together for many reasons not least the blesseds at the beginning and end. Just as with the Sermon on the Mount, the blesseds tell us exactly who is in on whats about to be discussed. In the Sermon on the Mount, the blesseds tell us whos in the kingdom which Jesus describes. In the Psalter, Psalms 1 and 2 tell us whos in on the worship of the living God. And who is the blessed man?? Well He is an ish - a ...
Christian Karaoke Non-Sloppy praise song worship music psalmChristian Karaoke Non-Sloppy praise song worship music psalm
from Revver - hip, hop Videos
June 15, 2008

Author: AndrewcBain Added: Sun, 15 Jun 2008 01:06:09 -0800 Duration: 101http://Psalms.pbwiki.com [Keywords: christian music video star spangled banner us national anthem karaoke hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ rock rap hip hop jazz videos band worthy is lamb shout lord casting crowns does ...
Christian Karaoke Non-Sloppy praise song worship music psalmChristian Karaoke Non-Sloppy praise song worship music psalm
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta)
June 10, 2008

http://Psalms.pbwiki.com [Keywords: christian music video star spangled banner us national anthem karaoke hillsong praise worship songs song God who am i Jesus Christ rock rap hip hop jazz videos band worthy is lamb shout lord casting crowns does anyone hear her psalm 23 this is your life top usa awesome my redeemer lives team hoyt in alone sing a long lyric baby got book lyrics religious switchfoot psalms karaoke] Useful Quotes about the book of Psalms "One essential reason for this internal completeness of the Psalter is that Christ is the central figure in it, as He is in the entire Word of God. Every book, indeed, of the Old Testament is intended to lead directly or indirectly to Jesus Christ. But in this respect the Book of Psalms stands preeminent among the entire thirty-nine."
Left Outside AloneLeft Outside Alone
from YouTube :: Recently Added Videos
May 13, 2008

No description. Author: cpicon92 Keywords: indescribable Added: May 13, 2008
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Indescribable by Chris TomlinIndescribable by Chris Tomlin
from Christian Pop/Rock/Alternatives
December 06, 2007

music from Chris Tomlin posted 2 months ago.
Contemporary Service - IndescribableContemporary Service - Indescribable
from Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church
September 14, 2006

Sunday, September 3, 2006
An Indestructible HopeAn Indestructible Hope
from questcast: Quest's Weekly Podcast
April 16, 2006

Easter is the day we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus. Lead Pastor Pete Hise wants you to know the hope that changes everything for you and your eternity ! You won't want to miss this very special day, as we launch new services and cap off the day with a great Easter picnic. Come discover the indescribable hope that can define your future and erase your past.
An Apparent DefeatAn Apparent Defeat
from questcast: Quest's Weekly Podcast
April 09, 2006

The crucifixion seemed to be the end. Jesus died, and it seemed to be over. But it wasn?t - it was the beginning of life and victory! Don?t miss this week as lead pastor Pete Hise explores the real meaning of Palm Sunday.
A Breathtaking PrecedentA Breathtaking Precedent
from questcast: Quest's Weekly Podcast
April 02, 2006

Jesus was mistreated, beaten, stripped, mocked, and put to death. Yet even in the midst of that torment, Jesus? heart for people never wavered. This week lead pastor Pete Hise looks at the conversation Jesus had with the criminal crying out for help next to Him. Listen and be changed by the Man who even today loves like this.
A Lasting ImageA Lasting Image
from questcast: Quest's Weekly Podcast
March 26, 2006

This week lead pastor Pete Hise begins walking us through the last day of Jesus before the crucifixion. You won't want to miss the picture he'll paint of Jesus confirming His place as the Messiah - not only the savior of people, but also the One who will return for His people someday.
A Willing SurrenderA Willing Surrender
from questcast: Quest's Weekly Podcast
March 19, 2006

Our Easter series kicks off this week with a look at the fully wiling heart Jesus had when he was willing to do whatever God asks. - even to death! Transformation Pastor Helen Musick wants us to have open hearts to God?s will for us, just as Jesus did.



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