Funny thing

Funny thing

Talking in a recent post about how unimportant the local repository file name is, suddenly the Internet connection is interrupted. The only thing you can do is to work offline in your shell. You call up all the relevant files by their local repository file name. There we are again.

Understanding Prayer

Understanding Prayer

A: What is Prayer

  1. Acting in the invisible world
  2. Our spirit (the new man in us) is connected with the Spirit of God
  3. Listening first, speaking second
  4. Our spirit (in our envisioning) is not bound to space and time

B: Application of Prayer

  1. Being in sync (spiritual unity) with Jesus
  2. Being in sync with Scripture
  3. Being deeply rooted and daily refreshed in His presence
  4. Praying specifically — informed intercession — not foggy
  5. Praying prophetically–guided by the Holy Spirit
  6. Praying through” (Puritan Prayer Experience)

C: Priority of Prayer

  1. The iceberg comparison
    https://redcamel.blot.im/newfoundland-iceberg
  2. Our personal life and character will slowly resemble the character of Jesus according to our prayer activity
    –> character formation is a prerequisit for powerful ministry
  3. Our ministry will show fruit according to our systematic and specific prayer life

Next Workshop:

–> Wrestling in Prayer (Prayer on the Battlefield)
–> What is the Battlefield?

[https://redcamel.blot.im/pray.txt]

creation

BioLogos: Kathryn Applegate, Justo González on Creation


Theologian Justo González

Justo L. González (born August 9, 1937) is a Cuban-American Methodist historian and theologian. He is a prolific author and an influential contributor to the development of Latin American theology. His wife, Catherine Gunsalus González, is a Professor Emerita at Columbia Theological Seminary, and the two have co-authored several books. Justo L. González was born in Havana, Cuba on August 9, 1937, attended United Seminary in Cuba, received his M.A. from Yale, and then went on to receive his Ph.D. He was the youngest person to be awarded the historical theology doctorate at Yale. González taught at the Evangelical Seminary of Puerto Rico for eight years, followed by another eight years at Candler School of Theology of Emory University in Georgia. Now retired, he also served as adjunct professor of history at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia and at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, Georgia. He is also a retired member of the Rio Grande Conference of The United Methodist Church. ~Wikipedia

See also: Irenaeus of Lyons

back to raw shell texting

back to raw shell texting

It is for sure a feeling of freedom when texting in the shell. You mark the file name in the beginning with an underscore [ _ ] in order not to publish. Later you might delete the underscore. The text is immediately public on the blog. The underscore makes it all possible. One little character. That is the charme of texting in the shell. The more you move in it, the more you will like it.

rediscovering the cli

rediscovering the cli

Crafting text and publishing it after some pruning is an art that needs to be learned. The simplest and most undistracting way is without any doubt the cli. But it takes a while to get to know all the little tricks and commands to take full advantage. Once you know how to move on the cli, you are the fastest and most accurate worker on the info highway.

[Cli stands for command line interface, also known as shell or terminal.]