Palmer St. Podcast: Stability, Direction and Meaning

Peter Gabriel captured the sentiments of our time back in the year 2000 in the song Downside Up:

I looked up at the tallest building
Felt it falling down
I could feel my balance shifting
Everything was moving around
These streets so fixed and solid
A shimmering haze
And everything that I relied on disappeared

(Refrain) Downside up, upside down
Take my weight from the ground
Falling deep in the sky
Slipping into the unknown

All the strangers look like family
All the family looks so strange
The only constant I am sure of
Is this accelerating rate of change

By contrast, in this chapter Paul challenges us to stay focused on Jesus.  God brings stability, direction and meaning to the intentionally Christ-focused life.

Titus 2.mp3

Titus 2.pdf

Titus 2.pptx

Copernicus said…

To know the mighty works of God, to comprehend His wisdom and majesty and power; to appreciate, in degree, the wonderful workings of His laws, surely all this must be a pleasing and acceptable mode of worship to the Most High, to whom ignorance cannot be more grateful than knowledge.*

  • Nicolaus Copernicus (Mikołaj Kopernik) was a Renaissance astronomer and the first person to formulate a comprehensive heliocentric cosmology which displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.
  • Copernicus’ epochal book, De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), published just before his death in 1543, is often regarded as the starting point of modern astronomy and the defining epiphany that began the scientific revolution. His heliocentric model, with the Sun at the center of the universe, demonstrated that the observed motions of celestial objects can be explained without putting Earth at rest in the center of the universe. His work stimulated further scientific investigations, becoming a landmark in the history of science that is often referred to as the Copernican Revolution.
  • Among the great polymaths of the Renaissance, Copernicus was a mathematician, astronomer, physician, quadrilingual polyglot, classical scholar, translator, artist, Catholic cleric, jurist, governor, military leader, diplomat, and economist. Among his many responsibilities, astronomy figured as little more than an avocation — yet it was in that field that he made his mark upon the world.**
*I first came across this quotation in The Language of God (2006) by Francis Collins pp. 230-31.
It is also in quoted in Poland: The Knight Among Nations (1907) by Louis E. Van Norman, p. 290; which can be found online here: http://openlibrary.org/books/OL20436595M/Poland_The_Knight_Among_Nations
**The biographical information is copied from: http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Nicolaus_Copernicus

Palmer St. Podcast: Gabriel’s Seven Assertions

For Christmas 2011: Gabriel’s Seven Assertions about Jesus
This is the story of Christmas with a focus on Gabriel’s announcement to Mary.

Christmas 2011.mp3

Christmas 2011.pdf

Christmas 2011.pptx

Palmer St. Podcast: Setting Things in Order

“Organized religion ‘will be driven toward extinction’ in 9 countries, experts predict.” So read the headline of CNN’s Belief Blog earlier this year. People today are feeling less and less comfortable with “Organized Religion.” The Apostle Paul, if he were here, would not be one of them. In fact, for him, the churches on the island of Crete were not yet organized enough. The reason he left his assistant Titus there was to set things in order.

Titus 1.mp3

Titus 1.pdf

Titus 1.pptx