Thursday

Plink Plank Plunk! By Leroy Anderson! Directed By Arthur
Fiedler & The Boston Pops!



We're 'T&H':
EXPLORE!!!

4 comments:

  1. It was with great anticipation that I began viewing
    the videos by Professor Howdy on YouTube and
    his two Blogs!

    The Professor is simply amazing at retelling an
    old story in a contemporary manner with exquisite
    Classical Music accompanied with H.D. Photographs
    & sprinkled with alluring, charming, classy and
    bewitching Video Clips! Rather than containing
    simply one music selection, the Professor includes
    up to four popular music sensations on each video!

    The High Definition photographs were beautiful
    beyond words and supplemented with those was
    the most heavenly music one will ever hear! With
    a creative genius' ability to carry us around the
    globe and to fall unrestrainedly in love with every
    beautiful creature shown, the Professor lifts &
    relaxes not only our spirits but our emotions as well.

    Now with some 250+ videos available, one can
    enter the world of musical enchantment similar
    to Narnia or Middle Earth with spell bounding
    emotional attachment to each world musically
    presented. Of special note while viewing each
    musical video, it is often nearly impossible at times
    to determine whether a photograph or video is
    being used during a particular segment.

    Each pulchritudinous video tells it own allegorical
    fifteen minute novel with statuesque and emblematic
    awareness! Remember that his Music Videos are
    defined as theater of the mind!

    Part of the Genius also in these opulent & ostentatious
    videos are not only in the Transitions that change
    beautifully in slow motion but the charmingly, daintily,
    delicately & delightful photographs & videos that
    ameliorate the musical narrative!

    Only one with low intelligence quotient or attention
    deficit will not be relaxed, cheered & entertained by
    these astounding video novelettes. Medical studies
    have shown that these videos even lower one's
    blood pressure when needed.

    This magic world may be entered through the
    portholes of the Wardrobe, Narnia, YouTube,
    FaceBook or the Professor's Blogs! Enjoy the
    musical adventure (and be sure to click the
    proper buttons below the screen to view with
    your computer's full screen). Oh, and his Videos
    when viewed on Apple's new iPad are simply
    astounding!

    Phillip T. Yarborough
    Professor Emeritus
    Harvard University
    And Entertainment
    Editor for Time Magazine

    +++

    When these music videos are posted
    to YouTube, YouTube reduces the
    resolution or pixels by 86%. Our plan
    is to continue posting beautiful
    music videos on YouTube & Vimeo
    but to offer for sale DVD's that
    contain 100% of the beauty of
    the videos that can be enjoyed
    on either a computer or TV.

    To Order any Music Video:


    ILoveProfHowdy.Com/Order-Music-Videos.php

    ReplyDelete
  2. According to the Pew Forum’s U.S. Religious Landscape Survey, 57 percent of self-identified Evangelical Christians agreed with this statement: “Many religions can lead to eternal life.”

    Think about the staggering implications of what you just heard: 57 percent of Evangelicals believe that many religions can lead to eternal life!

    Yet Jesus Himself was very clear. "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). Either Jesus was right, or he was wrong. What Christians, Muslims, and Jews say about the person and work of Jesus Christ can’t be reconciled. They may all be false, but they cannot all be true.

    It’s called the law of non-contradiction -- it goes back to Aristotle: If proposition A is true -- that is, if it conforms to reality -- then proposition B, making a contrary claim, cannot be true as well.

    If nearly six out of ten Evangelicals don’t believe the most basic tenets of the faith, it’s no wonder the Church is losing its influence over the culture. Because what we believe affects how we live.

    Even a secular columnist for the New York Times understands this! As I explain on today’s Two Minute Warning video commentary, which you can watch at ColsonCenter.org, David Brooks recently wrote “The religions that thrive” historically have “communal theologies, doctrines and codes of conduct rooted in claims of absolute truth.” And those beliefs translate into acts of mercy and love: the kind that Brooks himself witnessed from conservative Christian missionaries reaching out to AIDS victims in Africa.

    There is a remedy for this situation -- a remedy that an Augustinian monk by the name of Martin Luther discovered back in the sixteenth century. The Church in Luther’s day wallowed in its own corruption, sold indulgences, and refused to allow people to read the Bible in their own language. Luther compared the state of the Church to the Babylonian exile of the Israelites, when God punished Israel for disobeying God and worshiping false idols.

    So what did Luther do? He went back to the teaching of the apostles, the faith entrusted to the saints once for all. He studied the works of the ancient Church fathers, who wrote at a time when the Church’s faith was marked by unity. He studied the early councils of the Church. In short, he recovered the orthodox faith.

    This led to a Reformation that transformed not only the Church, but Western society and culture as well.

    This is why I wrote my book, titled The Faith: Given Once, For All. It’s about the essentials of the faith that all true Christians have always believed -- the minimum, irreducible, non-negotiable tenets of Christianity, without which one cannot be a true Christian, and without which the Church cannot be the Church.

    I am convinced that this is what people need to defend and live the Christian faith these extraordinarily challenging times. So I urge you to purchase a copy of The Faith -- you can get it at BreakPoint.org. And by the way -- all the royalties go to the ministry of BreakPoint and Prison Fellowship.

    The Church needs to know what it believes, why it believes it -- and why it matters.

    ReplyDelete
  3. A few weeks ago a friend sent me something he thought I would enjoy reading -- something that had been published nearly 30 years ago by Ronald Reagan. I found it so moving, I wanted to share it with BreakPoint listeners.

    In 1983, then-President Reagan sent an unsolicited manuscript to the editors of Human Life Review, who published it in a small book. It was a heart-felt plea to the American people to recognize the sanctity of life of unborn babies -- and to never give up working to protect them in law.

    Reagan reminded readers that neither the American people nor our legislators had ever had a chance to decide if they really wanted to legalize abortion through all nine months of pregnancy: That’s still true today.

    Nor is abortion a right guaranteed by the Constitution. Reagan wrote that Roe v. Wade was “not the first time our country has been divided by a Supreme Court decision that denied the value of certain human lives.” The Dred Scott decision affirming slavery has that dubious distinction.

    He wrote of the great need to clearly frame and present the issue of abortion -- just as abolitionists exposed the terrible truth about slavery.

    And what is the real issue? Reagan asked. “The real question today is not when human life begins,” he wrote, “but What is the value of human life? The abortionist who reassembles the [torn-apart] arms and legs of a tiny baby to make sure all its parts have been [removed] from its mother’s body can hardly doubt whether it is a human being.”

    And in 1981, Senate hearings on the beginning of human life involved many medical and scientific witnesses who agreed, based on scientific evidence, “that the unborn child is alive, is a distinct individual, [and] is a member of the human species.”

    So “the real question,” Reagan wrote, “… is whether that tiny human life has a God-given right to be protected by the law -- the same right we have.”

    Reagan quoted Lincoln, who wrote that “nothing stamped with the divine image and likeness was sent into the world to be trodden on.” He quoted sociologist William Brennan, who warned: “The cultural environment for a human holocaust is present whenever any society can be misled into defining individuals as less than human and therefore devoid of value and respect.” And he quoted Malcolm Muggeridge, who said that “Either life is always and in all circumstance sacred, or intrinsically of no account; it is inconceivable that it should be in some cases the one, and in some [cases] the other.”

    How right these men were.

    In order to bring back protection for the unborn, which involves fighting the powerful abortion lobby and activist judges, Reagan said, quoting Mother Teresa, we must become “a soul of prayer,” In fact, we must be like William Wilberforce and his friends, who, Reagan recalled, prayed for decades for the end of British slavery. “Let his faith and perseverance be our guide,” Reagan wrote.

    The Gipper would be pleased to know that, thanks to the ceaseless efforts of many Christians, more Americans now call themselves prolife than ever before.

    Come to our website, BreakPoint.org, and we’ll tell you how to get a copy of this wonderful little book, Abortion and the Conscience of the Nation.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Classical Music fits beautifully
    into your everyday life...


    Music Videos are defined
    as theater of the mind!


    Create yours now...
    You know how!





    Sad? Lonely? Worried?



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    You are Welcome to Share


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    On Facebook/Twitter/Blogs/etc.


    With Those You LOVE!

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