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Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion

Created on: 03/31/09 01:33 PM Views: 515 Replies: 10
Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, March 31, 2009 08:33 AM
Any thoughts about your faith or Easter?
 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, March 31, 2009 03:22 PM
When I was a kid our church,Trinity Lutheran, had their sun rise service at the Drive Inn theatre on Bow...it was very cool you could sit in your car and hear the singing and the sermon and if you were actually in the choirs, you had to stand up on a flatbed trailer. I always liked that early morning religion...We still went to church later so we could wear our easter hats...I always got new panties in my easter basket from the bunny and Peeps.
 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, March 31, 2009 05:22 PM
Willie, wouldn't that be the Crest Drive Inn? Easter was a real occasion growing up in my church. Always got a new Easter dress, purse, shoes and sometimes a hat. After I had my girls, my mother would buy the Easter dress and shoes for Paige and Whitney when they were little. She got such joy from doing that. She passed away when Paige was 10 and Whitney was 3 and I always think about her on Easter and miss her. I also remember the Baptist hymn we would sing on Easter Sunday "Up from the Grave He Arose"

Christi

 
Edited 03/31/09 06:34 PM
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, March 31, 2009 10:25 PM
Yes I think that was the name...Easter was a very special time for us too...Love the songs, and Up from the grave was one of my favorites to..and He Lives...I don't know how my folks did it getting us up early like that I have only been able to get my kids up real early for sun rise service a few times over the years...just a different time era...
 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Thursday, April 2, 2009 02:49 PM
OK - I will drop in here. Y'all said we could be provocative, so let's see. I was part of that ol' time religion scene for many years. As you well know I still love the music. But I never found the nourishment for my soul in a church service. And with all due respect, I had trouble with the intermediary, the preacher figure, between me and God. It took many years to find my spiritual side, my belong place as it were - and I found it in Nature. I guess I am what is called a Pantheist. I find God, the Power, the Spirit in the wind, the rivers, the hills, in the faces of people, in insects- everywhere and everything. I believe that the people of the Bible walked this earth, but the Bible has been compiled by and interpreted by man - is it the word of God? Man's fingerprints are all over it, so I read with reservation. What I don't take with reservation is my direct experience and communication with the Supreme Power, God. When we are in sync and "talking" one on one there is no opportunity for miscommunication and I need no interpretor. I ask for guidance or solace or peace and the directions are clear. My greatest days are those when I am out in God's world and feel his presence in the wonders of Nature. It doesn't have to be in the woods of Scotland, it can be in my little courtyard in Houston. All I have to do is be open and loving and at peace...

Reeves

 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Thursday, April 2, 2009 08:32 PM
Amen Brother Reeves, I too also feel closests to God when I am outdoors smelling the flowers ,the dirt, grass, hearing birds, wind in the trees, waves on the water, and just looking at the majesty of the clouds...what's up there I am not sure but it is a wonder to look at...and I always feel a peace wash over me...Many times when times have been rough I have to be outside to get my thoughts in order....I think that is why I fell in love with Mi, we are out side so much, the weather is just right for being outside especially in the summer and fall...sometimes I am out from sunup till way after dark...I have always beleived even when I was a child that God is in nature
 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, July 14, 2009 11:25 AM

Jimmy Barnett is the kind of classmate who not only listens well and has the ability to make you laugh, but also makes you think philosophically about life and its meaning.  I just want to share one of his commentaries that he occasionally sends out:

 

Mixtures
 
Once we ate from the tree of knowing good with evil, our world became a place of compounds and mixtures. You will not find beauty without ugliness, joy without sorrow, pleasure without pain. You cannot invent a thing that will provide benefit without threat of harm, or a man on this earth who does only good without fault.

Wherever you will find one form of good, you will find another sort of evil. And where that evil does not lie, another will take its place. Rare it is, so rare, to find pure and simple goodness in a single being.

Therefore, do not reject any thing for the harm it may render, nor despise any man for the ugliness within him. Rather, use each thing towards the purpose G-d conceived it for, and learn from each man all he has to offer.

 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Saturday, February 27, 2010 07:37 AM

Saw this on a blog I frequent and got quite a laugh out of it:

The Great Debate

About a century or two ago, the Pope decided that all the Jews had to leave the Vatican. Naturally there was a big uproar from the Jewish community.

So the Pope made a deal. He would have a religious debate with a member of the Jewish community. If the Jew won, they could stay. If the Pope won, the Jews would leave.

The Jews realized that they had no choice. So they picked a middle aged man named Moishe to represent them. Moishe asked for one addition to the debate. To make it more interesting, neither
side would be allowed to talk. The pope agreed.

The day of the great debate came. Moishe and the Pope sat opposite each other for a full minute before the Pope raised his hand and showed three fingers. Moishe looked back at him and raised one finger. The Pope waved his fingers in a circle around his head. Moishe pointed to the ground where he sat. The Pope pulled out a wafer and a glass of wine. Moishe pulled out an apple. The Pope stood up and said, "I give up. This man is too good. The Jews can stay."

An hour later, the cardinals were all around the Pope asking him what happened. The Pope said, "First I held up three fingers to represent the Trinity. He responded by holding up one finger to remind me that there was still one God common to both our religions. Then I waved my finger around me to show him that God was all around us. He responded by pointing to the ground and
showing that God was also right here with us. I pulled out the wine and the wafer to show that God absolves us from our sins. He pulled out an apple to remind me of original sin. He had an answer for everything. What could I do?"

Meanwhile, the Jewish community had crowded around Moishe.

"What happened?" they asked.

"Well," said Moishe, "First he said to me that the Jews had three days to get out of here. I told him that not one of us was leaving. Then he told me that this whole city would be cleared of Jews. I let him know that we were staying right here."

"And then?" asked a woman.

"I don't know," said Moishe. "He took out his lunch and I took out mine."
 

        

 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Saturday, March 26, 2011 03:37 PM
 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Tuesday, December 13, 2011 07:49 AM

If only....

 
RE: Gimme Dat Ol' Time Religion
Posted Thursday, December 15, 2011 08:59 AM

I grew up in a small Babtist church that preached "hell, fire and brimstone".  The Bible speaks alot about heaven and hell, but for anyone here on earth to presume to know what the eternal God Father knows about someone else's heart and soul is wrong, in my humble opinion.

Christi