Psalm 140 [Halleseni] is the latest track from the forthcoming Revenant Psalms, Vol. IV.
Use this link for streaming this and other tracks: https://songwhip.com/timslemmons
And here it is on video:
Curating the biblical and Reformed theological traditions in order "to make the Word of God fully known"
Psalm 140 [Halleseni] is the latest track from the forthcoming Revenant Psalms, Vol. IV.
Use this link for streaming this and other tracks: https://songwhip.com/timslemmons
And here it is on video:
There is some overlap between these two channels, but time does not permit consolidating them. If you like the Psalms settings or other guitar pieces, you know the drill: like, bookmark, subscribe, and share.
https://www.youtube.com/@timslemmons8474
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVQ-nVtSS1mawJCInwDacAA
Many thanks.—T
P.S. Also, please note whether playing a video registers in the YT play count. Color me suspicious.
... we have this summary statement from Karl Barth's colleague on the Divinity faculty at the University of Basel:
Luther becomes a reformer because he cannot reach the assurance of salvation in the system of the Roman Catholic church; Oecolampadius becomes a reformer because, in the Roman Catholic church, he does not find the new creature in Christ sufficiently realized. For Luther it is about justification; Oecolampadius says in connection with 1Thessalonians 4:3, “God’s will is our sanctification.” With Luther, faith stands in the foreground, with Oecolampadius, that which flows from faith, the “piety,” the “sanctity,” the “charity,” both individually and in the totality of the “mystical body of Christ.” Luther represents a Christianity more strongly characterized by Paul, Oecolampadius by John.
—Ernst Staehelin, Breakthrough to the Reformation, pp. 128-129.
In case you were ever wondering what it means to belong to the Reformed tradition, this, I would suggest, is what it originally meant.
... which makes saving faith in the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ important in the extreme.
... a version of which would seem to make good sense today in a seminary town.
Here is the second single released from the forthcoming album, Revenant Psalms, Vol. IV.
You can select your favorite streamer here: https://songwhip.com/timslemmons/psalm-74-habbeth-labberith
Here is a link to the eight-song playlist for the newly released Revenant Psalms, Vol. III.
Here is where you can stream or purchase it through your favorite streaming service:
https://songwhip.com/timslemmons/revenant-psalms-vol-iii
Psalms rendered on this volume are:
Psalms 7, 61, 94, 101, 102, 136, 141
NB: The even more newly-released Psalm 73 is the first single from the (Lord willing) forthcoming Volume IV. More on the way ...
"The God of peace be with you all."
Stream or purchase Psalm 73 [Asaph's Dance] at:
https://songwhip.com/timslemmons/psalm-73-asaphs-dance