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Pope is resigning 2/28/13 (ok to post on politics board?)
DrafterX Offline
#151 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
da Pope has left the building..... Mellow
bloody spaniard Offline
#152 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
God bless and protect Papa Benedict.
May his successor do the right thing & overcome the soulless bureaucracy & the possibly pervasive corruption (sound familiar?).
I'm more of a born again but Mother Church is worth saving & defending.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#153 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
Anyone ever see a tick on a dog?

They can get really big if you let them.
DrafterX Offline
#154 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
poor puppy-dog... Sad
DrMaddVibe Offline
#155 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
Poor church. Pass the offering plate.
bloody spaniard Offline
#156 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Lord, please forgive them. They live for tunes, porn, barbecue, hootch, and cavorting around the Maypole.
They don't know any better than to satiate their senses & crap where they stand. That's the limit to their depth.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#157 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
bloody spaniard wrote:
Lord, please forgive them. They live for tunes, porn, barbecue, hootch, and cavorting around the Maypole.
They don't know any better than to satiate their senses & crap where they stand. That's the limit to their depth.



Wow...it's like you're standing right behind me or something...Gonz
teedubbya Offline
#158 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
Take that Mr. Popeypants
DrafterX Offline
#159 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
DMV wears sailor pants..??? Huh
teedubbya Offline
#160 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
DrafterX wrote:
DMV wears sailor pants..??? Huh


yu didn't know that?
tailgater Offline
#161 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
DrMaddVibe wrote:
Come down off your throne and leave your body alone.Whistle


That's traffic with little Stevie Winwood.

DrMaddVibe Offline
#162 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
tailgater wrote:
That's traffic with little Stevie Winwood.





Shame on you

No...That's BLIND FAITH...with Steve Winwood in it!

www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUW1SGF7bR8


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Faith_(Blind_Faith_album)

Track listing

Original version
On the original Polydor CD release from 1986, two previously unreleased tracks were added, "Exchange and Mart" and "Spending All My Days". These were originally recorded for a never released Ric Grech solo album, and there is no proof that any other members of Blind Faith took part in the recording sessions.[8]
"Presence of the Lord" has the same riff as "I am Free" from the Kinks 1965 album "The Kink Kontroversy" as written by Dave Davies.

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Had to Cry Today" (Steve Winwood) 8:48
2. "Can't Find My Way Home" (Winwood) 3:16
3. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin) 4:27
4. "Presence of the Lord" (Eric Clapton) 4:50

Side two
No. Title Length
1. "Sea of Joy" (Winwood) 5:22
2. "Do What You Like" (Ginger Baker) 15:20



Disc one
No. Title Length
1. "Had to Cry Today" 8:48
2. "Can't Find My Way Home" 3:16
3. "Well All Right" 4:27
4. "Presence of the Lord" 4:50
5. "Sea of Joy" 5:22
6. "Do What You Like" 15:20
7. "Sleeping in the Ground" (Sam Myers) 2:49
8. "Can't Find My Way Home (Electric Version)" 5:40
9. "Acoustic Jam" 15:50
10. "Time Winds" 3:15
11. "Sleeping in the Ground (Slow Blues Version)" 4:44

Disc two
No. Title Length
1. "Jam No.1: Very Long & Good Jam" 14:01
2. "Jam No.2: Slow Jam #1" 15:06
3. "Jam No.3: Change of Address Jam" 12:06
4. "Jam No.4: Slow Jam #2"
bloody spaniard Offline
#163 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Traffic- what a great mellow sound. One of my favorite go to 8Tracks. Brings back memories.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#164 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
bloody spaniard wrote:
Traffic- what a great mellow sound. One of my favorite go to 8Tracks. Brings back memories.



I've been listening to a band called Egg today...very sedate.
bloody spaniard Offline
#165 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
cool

I've gotten away from just chillin' & reading. Kids don't let me. Damn shame too 'cause I used to enjoy it. Became a late night couch tater watching cable.
tailgater Offline
#166 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
DrMaddVibe wrote:
Shame on you

No...That's BLIND FAITH...with Steve Winwood in it!

"


I stand corrected.

But you didn't need to post all the links and such.
I'd have taken your word on nothing more than blind faith...
DrafterX Offline
#167 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
Think
I wonder what da Pope had for breakfas...?? Think
bloody spaniard Offline
#168 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
I'm more concerned with what happens to his mantle of infallibility on matters of faith & religious dogma once the new Pope is elected. Confused
I suppose it follows whomever has the title of Pope.

Regardless, I still love the Papacy AND the Church regardless of its perceived shortcomings.
DrafterX Offline
#169 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
well hell... I can't set'em up any better than that... Not talking
bloody spaniard Offline
#170 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
...and PuffyCombs aka PDiddy was a bed wetter and Al Roeker crapped his pants.
How does that go again? Oh, yeah, News at 11.
daveincincy Offline
#171 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
DrafterX wrote:
Think
I wonder what da Pope had for breakfas...?? Think



DrafterX wrote:
well hell... I can't set'em up any better than that... Not talking


I'll take Ex Benedict for $1000, Alex.
daveincincy Offline
#172 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
bloody spaniard wrote:
I'm more concerned with what happens to his mantle of infallibility on matters of faith & religious dogma once the new Pope is elected. Confused
I suppose it follows whomever has the title of Pope.

Regardless, I still love the Papacy AND the Church regardless of its perceived shortcomings.


Help me to understand...is the Pope infallible (always right, never wrong) regarding matters of faith?
bloody spaniard Offline
#173 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Not sure where this infallibility on matters of dogma business started in the Church because I know that Peter (first Bishop/Pope) had disagreements with Paul over various religious matters such as whether Jewish ritualism was necessary for gentiles as a part of the conversion to Christianity.

I have felt that the Pope is really just the highest ranking Bishop. So to make a long story short, even though I halfheartedly accepted his dogma infallibility as a Catholic, I wonder how it "transfers" to another living Pope. Something doesn't sit right with me regarding this. Having said that, certain things have to be accepted on faith not flawed human logic. Perception is frail and may change with time as we "advance". That brings us to the subject of absolutes...
teedubbya Offline
#174 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
I heard Peter and Paul used to fight terribly and Mary would bring in some weed to calm things down... thats where puff the magic dragon came from.

I think bennidict should change his name to Arnold and start pumpin iron.
bloody spaniard Offline
#175 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
teedubbya wrote:
I heard Peter and Paul used to fight terribly and Mary would bring in some weed to calm things down... thats where puff the magic dragon came from.

I think bennidict should change his name to Arnold and start pumpin iron.





You're outrageous again, Bababooey. Just outrageous.

Peter, Paul, and Mary... coincidence?
ZRX1200 Offline
#176 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,661
I laughed, I cried, I learned, I got angry then I got high.


Damn boring thread.

Well except DMVs sailor pants and tailgater not dropping a snopes.com on him.
bloody spaniard Offline
#177 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
LOLOLOLOL! Hey, if you want excitement go to bingo/softshell crab night at the local VFW post.Frying pan
DrafterX Offline
#178 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
Think
I didn't know you could get crabs at the V.... Think
daveincincy Offline
#179 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
bloody spaniard wrote:
Not sure where this infallibility on matters of dogma business started in the Church because I know that Peter (first Bishop/Pope) had disagreements with Paul regarding over various religious matters such as whether Jewish ritualism was necessary for gentiles as a part of the conversion to Christianity.

I have felt that the Pope is really just the highest ranking Bishop. So to make a long story short, even though I halfheartedly accepted his dogma infallibility as a Catholic, I wonder how it "transfers" to another living Pope. Something doesn't sit right with me regarding this. Having said that, certain things have to be accepted on faith not flawed human logic. Perception is frail and may change with time as we "advance". That brings us to the subject of absolutes...


I'm trying not to read too much into your reply, but all that sounds like making something rather simple (a real relationship with Christ/God) into something harder than it has to be.

Jewish ritualism necessary for conversion?
One Pope's infallibility transferring to another? Would that be like my personal beliefs and walk transferring to my son in the event of my passing? (insert semi-sarcasm smiley here)

Since "hypothetical" seems to be the word of the week, let's say, hypothetically, if there was no pope, or none were chosen, what impact/affect would that have on you (anyone) in your own personal "walk" with Christ/God? Should it have an impact? Is a person further away from God, or is God further away from him/her without the Pope, a priest, a minister, etc? Ritualism, religious traditions, rote prayers, etc all seem like "stuff" that can get in the way of a person experiencing any type of real freedom vs. carrying around a lot of religious baggage.

See...I'm trying not to read too far into it, but it seems to me that some people (not all, and not you specifically) would feel lost/abandoned if they didn't have the pope, a priest, a minister, a physical church building. Not that there's anything wrong with priests, ministers, or a church building, as I think all of those play important roles for teaching and personal growth, and coming together as a community is also very important (I'm not a "church hater").
DrafterX Offline
#180 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
Imagine there's no heaven...
It's easy if you try...
No hell below us...
Above us only sky..
Imagine all da peoples living for today.... Whistle Whistle
teedubbya Offline
#181 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
DrafterX wrote:
Think
I didn't know you could get crabs at the V.... Think


lobster too. the same color as the popes $2000 shoes
tailgater Offline
#182 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
ZRX1200 wrote:
I laughed, I cried, I learned, I got angry then I got high.


Damn boring thread.

Well except DMVs sailor pants and tailgater not dropping a snopes.com on him.


I'm not a big snopes guy.

Hell, I can't even google fast enough to know who sings a song.
Is it live, or is it tailgater? Memorex has nothing on me.

DrafterX Offline
#183 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
teedubbya wrote:
lobster too. the same color as the popes $2000 shoes



I heard he's not allowed to wear the red shoes anymore... he's wearing some brown ones a mexican gave him.... Mellow
daveincincy Offline
#184 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
DrafterX wrote:
Imagine there's no heaven...
It's easy if you try...
No hell below us...
Above us only sky..
Imagine all da peoples living for today.... Whistle Whistle


That reminds me of a sermon I listened to titled "Imagine." The pastor references John Lennon. Fwiw, here's a summary of that sermon...a link to audio/video files can be provided if you'd like (it's a good one).

As Hebrews states, faith is the substance of anticipated things, the conviction about things not yet visible. Faith becomes a type of vision that we have about the future. John Lennon had faith. A faith that saw a world that was free from wars, religion, and countries. As Christians, we have faith in Jesus that points towards a future free from wars, religion, countries, pain, sin, suffering, and death. However, the question that remains is this: how do we keep the faith when we face an unfixable situation?

Nothing determines the quality or direction of life than the faith one holds. For a parent of an autistic child, it can be extremely difficult to have faith when seeing that child struggle with life and become angry, frustrated, and depressed. It becomes infuriating, frustrating, and sad for parents to watch. This process of living life while facing an unfixable situation causes massive grief for all involved. What then, in the middle of that grief, does faith look like?

It can be easy to give up when facing unfixable situations. It can be easy to become cynical and angry when facing unfixable situations. Yet, God calls us to have peace and gentleness. There are essentially two outcomes when facing a difficult situation—a person either can follow in faith or a person becomes angry, bitter, and hostile towards this world. As Christians, to follow in faith, is to remember the story that we live in.

Whenever an unfixable situation comes up, it is natural for people to picture the consequences of that situation. This is especially true around election time when it seems that one half of the country is preparing for heaven and the other half is preparing for Armageddon, only to reverse roles when the next election comes around. The way to keep faith in an unfixable situation is to remember the story that God has promised to us. We must picture the world the way that God sees it, and not the way that we might see it.
God paints us a vivid picture of the future. There won’t be nationalistic tendencies that lead to wars between nations. There won’t be a lack of food for anyone. There won’t be sickness, despair, or death. Yet, when facing our situations in life, we sometimes get sidetracked and begin to see the future as something that is dark and dreadful. A parent can begin to see no hope in the future when their child has autism, and they can miss the mark of where the future is headed.

This vision that God gives us of the future is central to our faith. To hold faith during difficult times, we must remind ourselves over and over again of where God is taking us. Regardless of cancer, disease, war, famine, and depression, we have a God who is lovingly guiding us to the promised land of a new heaven and new earth where no more tears will fall. We must imagine what that looks like when we stare at the ugliness of this world. Instead of imagining what the future looks like because of the ugliness, we imagine what the world looks like in spite of the ugliness.

We imagine the world as God says it will be. We must imagine ourselves as the image of our loving God. Imagining this God who came to earth out of love, forgave us in our sinfulness, restored us, and defeated the evil forces of this earth—only then will we find faith. We imagine the fulfillment when everything will be purposed harmoniously under Christ. This harmony will have no more wars, no more famine, no more autism, and no more death. Living in this Kingdom story is the only way to keep faith when facing an unfixable situation. We keep pursuing no more wars, no more disease, and fixes to the problem of this world, but we aren’t discouraged by the results that we might find. We aren’t discouraged because God has already set in the motion the ultimate fixing of this Universe.

Faith is the substance of anticipated things, the conviction about things not yet visible. We only need to look around a short while to see that the world can be an ugly, disheartening place. It is easy to be fearful, disheartened, and angry. Frustration is the name of the game when trying to change this world. Yet, there is hope in the story that God says will come true. When we put our focus and heart into that story, we can have faith in the midst of the unfixable world we live in. We imagine this world the way God is going to rebuild and redeem it. We imagine and have faith.


bloody spaniard Offline
#185 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
daveincincy wrote:
I'm trying not to read too much into your reply, but all that sounds like making something rather simple (a real relationship with Christ/God) into something harder than it has to be.

Jewish ritualism necessary for conversion?
One Pope's infallibility transferring to another? Would that be like my personal beliefs and walk transferring to my son in the event of my passing? (insert semi-sarcasm smiley here)

Since "hypothetical" seems to be the word of the week, let's say, hypothetically, if there was no pope, or none were chosen, what impact/affect would that have on you (anyone) in your own personal "walk" with Christ/God? Should it have an impact? Is a person further away from God, or is God further away from him/her without the Pope, a priest, a minister, etc? Ritualism, religious traditions, rote prayers, etc all seem like "stuff" that can get in the way of a person experiencing any type of real freedom vs. carrying around a lot of religious baggage.

See...I'm trying not to read too far into it, but it seems to me that some people (not all, and not you specifically) would feel lost/abandoned if they didn't have the pope, a priest, a minister, a physical church building. Not that there's anything wrong with priests, ministers, or a church building, as I think all of those play important roles for teaching and personal growth, and coming together as a community is also very important (I'm not a "church hater").




First of all, my apologies for calling you a Church hater, Dave. Sorry. I get worn out by attacks on the Church. Some warranted, some not. We have been warned that in the final days right will be wrong and wrong will be right. The truth will be hard to determine.

Peter wanted basic Jewish tenets (circumcision, etc.) as a precursor to Christianity. Paul said "circumcision" of the heart and mind was enough. The Law (10 Commandments) should not supplant the ultimate sacrifice on the cross which superseded all and made it much easier for salvation if we would just accept the gift.

I don't know about the infallibility issue and its "transfer", Dave. That's my dilemma. As I said I was born & raised a Catholic. My wife was baptized a Greek Orthodox. Both Churches make the sign of the cross (in different directions) and consider themselves closer to the center of true Christianity & closer to God than the other. The bureaucracy is important in that it guides & props the sapling but as you said it also complicates the message of salvation and repetition of the same 4 or 5 Gospels make it appear as though the Church is not vibrant and wants to avoid "controversy" at all costs. You are not encouraged to read all of the Bible unless you have assistance otherwise you may misinterpret the message. That is just plain wrong IMHO. Our faith should reverberate with positive light not lie like a rotting carcass full of bureaucrats. I agree with you on that.
teedubbya Offline
#186 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
DrafterX wrote:
I heard he's not allowed to wear the red shoes anymore... he's wearing some brown ones a mexican gave him.... Mellow



does he still get to $hit in the woods?
daveincincy Offline
#187 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
bloody spaniard wrote:
Peter wanted basic Jewish tenets (circumcision, etc.) as a precursor to Christianity. Paul said "circumcision" of the heart and mind was enough. The Law (10 Commandments) should not supplant the ultimate sacrifice on the cross which superseded all and made it much easier for salvation if we would just accept the gift.


I agree with you (and Paul).

bloody spaniard wrote:
I don't know about the infallibility issue and its "transfer", Dave. That's my dilemma. As I said I was born & raised a Catholic. My wife was baptized a Greek Orthodox. Both Churches make the sign of the cross (in different directions) and consider themselves closer to the center of true Christianity & closer to God than the other. The bureaucracy is important in that it guides & props the sapling but as you said it also complicates the message of salvation and repetition of the same 4 or 5 Gospels make it appear as though the Church is not vibrant and wants to avoid "controversy" at all costs. You are not encouraged to read all of the Bible unless you have assistance otherwise you may misinterpret the message. That is just plain wrong IMHO. Our faith should reverberate with positive light not lie like a rotting carcass full of bureaucrats. I agree with you on that.


I have a real problem with what I underlined. ....and I am happy that you followed it up with the part that I highlighted (and the sentence following). ThumpUp My parents were brought up Catholic, and I remember going to the Catholic church up until I was about 6 or 7. My dad has an interesting story about an experience he had, and a conversation that followed with a priest regarding that experience (and no it doesn't involve anything sexual in nature)...it's actually more of a testimony. What the priest told my dad goes along with what I underlined in your above quote. What my dad experienced was, we'll call a "prompting" of the Holy Spirit, the priest downplayed and tried to dismiss. In other words, the priest was telling him it was nothing....really? For me to try and tell the story, and it's a pretty good one, does a big injustice, but it's an interesting one that took him (and us) out of the Catholic church...not that there's anything wrong with being Catholic. It's not about denominations. But I find that disheartening to hear that people would not be encouraged to read the bible...as if the priests have the ultimate say/translation of the scriptures. If anything it's a way for the priests/ministers to manipulate the people...and keep anyone from experiencing true freedom. I have a problem with that in any church. Then what you have is a church building filled with "rotting carcasses" (no life) both in the pews and behind the pulpit IMO.

As for your "dilemma," you should pray about that and see why that "doesn't sit right" with you, and if it should even be a concern at all. (just a thought)
bloody spaniard Offline
#188 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
I'm going to do just that, Dave. I've always accepted the infallibility on dogma w/o question. The idea of an infallibility being transferred between living Popes is not necessarily a deal breaker (all things are possible through God) for me but I find it perplexing. It's above my brain pay level. lol

You know, it really isn't as hard as we (followers) make it.
It gladdens me that you and I are pretty much on the same page.
I just hate to see the Pope lowered to a Nazi pedophile and the Church a willing accomplice.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#189 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
bloody spaniard wrote:
I just hate to see the Pope lowered to a Nazi pedophile and the Church a willing accomplice.


Sorry I offended you. I pretty much call it the way I see it. The guy did wear the Nazi uniform. They guy was in charge of the whole pedophile scandal and we see how that worked out. He swept the issue under the rug just like Joe Paterno did at Penn State. It's who he is. The Cardinals saw fit to elevate him to Pope. I don't know about how you'd vote in that instance but there is no way I could cast a vote for a guy like that. Now, there are "accounting irregularities" at the Vatican and he's taking a powder when the heat is getting hotter and being allowed to walk away...scot free...at the Vatican...free from prosecution.

At the heart of it all is the Church...with all of it's parishioners and believers...paying for it all with their devotion, money and time. That's the part that's got to hurt. I'm starting to really understand why I didn't convert to Catholicism now more than ever. The bewilderment that clouded me sent me on a journey that took me to Buddhist temples, Jewish synagogues, Evangelical Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, Southern Baptist, non-denominational churches and the one that stands out in my mind forever is a church in Kansas where almost the entire congregation was speaking in tongues and dancing around like in the Blues Brothers complete with chickens running around and a guy handling a snake!...I figured I wasn't worthy to be there because I had NO IDEA what they were saying. They were happy doing it though and I was for watching them. Maybe that's all I was supposed to pull from it.

It doesn't sway me from some form of believing that Jesus Christ is my Lord and Savior. After reading about the Gnostics and early Roman literature he exisited. The words in the Holy Bible of His are inspiring and I feel that as I've aged the very same words have taken on a more complex meaning. They're simple enough so that a child can understand them and deep enough that have Philosophers scratching their heads. It's like a hammer and nails. Give them to a child and he can build something. It won't be pretty, but it'll get done. Give the same stuff to a master carpenter and he'll build a masterpiece. A real heirloom to be passed down from generation to the next. I've taken a lot of what I've learned and folded them into what works for me. Right now I don't attend a church. We read the Bible about 3 times a week though. We've done some Zondervan workbooks that we bought at a Christian bookstore and it brought a deeper meaning to some of the passages. It's what works for me, and it won't for anyone else. I can't explain it and this is about as deep as I'm going to go about my personal faith here on the forum. If ya want...call me...I'll tell ya more about it.

Sorry though.
bloody spaniard Offline
#190 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Doc, you're one of the few botl who truly intrigue me & whose friendship I value.
Great speaking with you.
Herfing

Hopefully, the new Pope will take on the bureaucracy and at least publicly attempt to make some needed changes in how miscreants and deviates are handled.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#191 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
bloody spaniard wrote:
Doc, you're one of the few botl who truly intrigue me & whose friendship I value.
Great speaking with you.
Herfing

Hopefully, the new Pope will take on the bureaucracy and at least publicly attempt to make some needed changes in how miscreants and deviates are handled.



You're pretty awesome too!

One can only hope. There is a massive mess and the World is on fire. Now is the time for leadership not quitters. Let's hope there are qualified candidates the Cardinals offer up.
DrafterX Offline
#192 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
I heard they're having a tough time because they wan to make sure nothing will come out of the closet after the election.... Mellow
DrMaddVibe Offline
#193 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
DrafterX wrote:
I heard they're having a tough time because they wan to make sure nothing will come out of the closet after the election.... Mellow

Frying pan
DrafterX Offline
#194 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
well that's what I heard..... Mellow
teedubbya Offline
#195 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
DrMaddVibe wrote:
You're pretty awesome too!

One can only hope. There is a massive mess and the World is on fire. Now is the time for leadership not quitters. Let's hope there are qualified candidates the Cardinals offer up.


LaRussa?
frankj1 Offline
#196 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,252
DrafterX wrote:
well that's what I heard..... Mellow

how come I never hear nothin'?
frankj1 Offline
#197 Posted:
Joined: 02-08-2007
Posts: 44,252
DrMaddVibe wrote:
Shame on you

No...That's BLIND FAITH...with Steve Winwood in it!

www.youtube.com/watch?v=mUW1SGF7bR8


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Faith_(Blind_Faith_album)

Track listing

Original version
On the original Polydor CD release from 1986, two previously unreleased tracks were added, "Exchange and Mart" and "Spending All My Days". These were originally recorded for a never released Ric Grech solo album, and there is no proof that any other members of Blind Faith took part in the recording sessions.[8]
"Presence of the Lord" has the same riff as "I am Free" from the Kinks 1965 album "The Kink Kontroversy" as written by Dave Davies.

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Had to Cry Today" (Steve Winwood) 8:48
2. "Can't Find My Way Home" (Winwood) 3:16
3. "Well All Right" (Norman Petty, Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, Joe B. Mauldin) 4:27
4. "Presence of the Lord" (Eric Clapton) 4:50

Side two
No. Title Length
1. "Sea of Joy" (Winwood) 5:22
2. "Do What You Like" (Ginger Baker) 15:20



Disc one
No. Title Length
1. "Had to Cry Today" 8:48
2. "Can't Find My Way Home" 3:16
3. "Well All Right" 4:27
4. "Presence of the Lord" 4:50
5. "Sea of Joy" 5:22
6. "Do What You Like" 15:20
7. "Sleeping in the Ground" (Sam Myers) 2:49
8. "Can't Find My Way Home (Electric Version)" 5:40
9. "Acoustic Jam" 15:50
10. "Time Winds" 3:15
11. "Sleeping in the Ground (Slow Blues Version)" 4:44

Disc two
No. Title Length
1. "Jam No.1: Very Long & Good Jam" 14:01
2. "Jam No.2: Slow Jam #1" 15:06
3. "Jam No.3: Change of Address Jam" 12:06
4. "Jam No.4: Slow Jam #2"

which album cover did you get? I have the Rated G version.
DrafterX Offline
#198 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,582
Think
Buckwheat Offline
#199 Posted:
Joined: 04-15-2004
Posts: 12,251
teedubbya wrote:
I didn't know anything about this (the prophesy) until you brought it up. I had to look it up. Remember?

It's bigotry to make fun of Catholics but quite fine to make fun of muslims.


I'm pretty sure that you guys are confusing bigotry with xenophobia. And Christian Cable is a joke and Pope Francis has been a great Pope. One of the best in years. Angel
DrMaddVibe Offline
#200 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
frankj1 wrote:
which album cover did you get? I have the Rated G version.



The ORIGINAL one!!!!
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