I Saw What I Saw

Posted August 30th, 2007

This Video was produced for Sara Groves by our good friends at Fearless Films. The footage was taken from a recent trip Sara took to Rwanda - accompanied by International Justice Mission - to visit communities that were affected by the nightmarish genocide that took place in 1994. The song is beautiful… so listen closely to the words too.


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Keeping Me Informed

Posted August 24th, 2007

Here are some services that are keeping me informed in an era of Globilization:

BBC World Service
Chicago Public Radio (91.5 FM/WBEZ)
America Abroad Media
Global Exchange

Treehugger
National Geographic

The ONE Campaign
World Health Organization
Campaign to Stop Global AIDS

LifeHacker
A List Apart

International Teams
Word Made Flesh
Stop the Traffik
Voice of the Martyrs
refugeehighway.com

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iSmoke

Posted August 21st, 2007

So many great “i” products coming out of the Apple Marketorium … this one’s probably my favorite:


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Creation’s Creativity - Day 2

Posted August 07th, 2007

This originally came to me via Swainlife:


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Creation’s Creativity - Day 1

Posted August 06th, 2007

God gifted his creation with the ability to, themselves, create! If you think about it, this is such a beautiful testimony of the beauty and mystery of us having been created in “his own image”.

These last couple of weeks I’ve been struck with the creativity that surrounds me all day long. Objects crafted, built, painted… words spoken, written, sung… problems determined, investigated, solved… images discovered, captured, displayed…

I’ve decided to try my best at a daily post. One creation of God’s creation each day… for however long I can keep it going :)

On July 16 Dawn and I celebrated our 8th wedding anniversary by heading to downtown Chicago and spending most of the day walking around Michigan Ave and enjoying the amazing works of art at the Chicago Art Institute.

When it comes to paintings, I probably enjoy 18th-19th century European art the most… particularly the realists of the 19th century - although I would never consider myself schooled on this subject… meaning, art ;). I just love the style, the colors, the techniques, and subject matters of a lot of the pieces that were produced then.

One particular painting that caught both of our eyes was The Song of the Lark by Jules Breton. I This is a pretty well-known painting… but this was my first time seeing it. I was struck by the brilliance of the setting sun. Unfortunately the print below doesn’t do the real thing much justice. I probably spent 10 minutes staring at the woman’s face… imagining what it was exactly that she was hearing, seeing… the relief her skin must have been feeling as the sun’s intensity was wearing thin late in the day…

Song of the Lark by Jules Breton | 1884 | Chicago Art Institute

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