Jamie123

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Posts posted by Jamie123

  1. What does it cost to go from the UK to mainland Europe? Like if you wanted to take a weekend trip with the spouse Paris how much would you need to save? Just the travel exspence.

    Probably the best way would be to take the Eurostar and go through the tunnel. The website is Eurostar : Tickets, Bookings, Timetables, fares and offers

    Isn't Glastonbury near Stonehinge? We plan to be in that area near the end of our trip.

    Quite near-ish. We went past Stonehenge on the way. It's strange - I've lived in England nearly all my life, but that was the first time I ever saw it. It is pretty awesome.

    Is that off of Egarley Road?

    Yes - the A361. It's right at the foot of Glastonbury Tor.

  2. Yesterday my wife and I came back from a long weekend away in Glastonbury. (I'm talking about the town, not the rock festival. That's not until summer anyway.) We had a wonderful time - even the car breaking down on the way home didn't spoil it (much)!

    One of the best things we did there was to visit the Chalice Well, which was one of the most beautiful and peaceful places I've ever been. If you're ever there, be sure to spend a few minutes (or longer) just sitting quietly in the sanctuary at the well-head. It's wonderful :)

    [sorry - I meant to post this under "general discussion".]

  3. On the subject of Job, does anyone remember this song by Clay Walker?

    How in this world can we put a man on the moon,

    And still have a need for a place like St Jude's?

    And why is one man born,

    In a place where all they know is war?

    An' a guy like me,

    Has always been free.

    Why do I feel like you hear these prayers of mine.

    When so many oughta be ahead of me in line?

    When you look down on me,

    Can you see the good through all the bad?

    These just a few questions I have.

    [chorus]But I wasn't there the day you filled up the oceans.

    I didn't get to see you hang the stars in the sky.

    So I don't mean to second guess you,

    Or criticize what I don't understand.

    These are just a few questions I have.

    It always makes me cry.

  4. For me, Christianity just seems to work where no other belief system could. Firstly I know that I'm a sinner, incapable of stopping myself from sinning by my own strength. (At least I've never completely succeeded so far!) Secondly there's mind-blowing idea God loves me so much that sent His own Son to die for my sins. (As a non-LDS Christian I probably have a wider concept of the atonement than most people here.) Rather than sit on the fence for ever, I decided years ago to put my trust in Christ.

    A good many aspects of Christianity have bothered me over the years, many of which were stirred up quite recently when I read Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion. I'm not saying I was impressed by every argument Dawkins made, but as he points out the sheer bloodiness of much of the Old Testament (the Book of Joshua in particular) sits uneasily with the idea of a loving God. Even if the stories are allegorical (I'm not saying that they necessarily are) if they are scripture then they must have some deep truth behind them - even the bloodiest bits.

    But I'm no longer being dragged down by things I don't properly understand. Perhaps it will all be explained in the world to come :)

  5. What do you call a man with a plank of wood on his head?

    Edward

    What do you call a man with two planks of wood on his head?

    Edward Wood

    What do you call a man with three planks of wood on his head?

    Edward Woodward

    What do you call a man with four planks of wood on his head?

    I don't know, but Edward Woodward would!

  6. Not inferior.

    Well, Women are not inferior in Paul's point of view.

    No matter what "some scholars" may swear to you.

    Women and men have their place in the hierarchy of heaven.

    God the Angels man and women.

    Not inferior any more then a lieutenant is inferior to a captain.

    I think it depends what you mean by "inferior". That word comes from the Latin inferus = below, beneath. A lieutenant is "below" a captain in the army hierarchy and in that sense is inferior (though he may be a bright upcoming officer destined to be a general, while the captain is an old lag who has never shown any special talent).

    However we also use the word figuratively to mean "of lesser quality" in which sense women are definitely NOT inferior to men!

  7. I would believe the story of a talking donkey.

    I've often wondered about that story, and in particular who exactly Balaam was. Yes - I agree that he seems to have been a prophet of some description - but he's not given much in the way of introduction. The writer seems to expect us to know already who he is, so I wonder if he perhaps appeared in a lot of other stories, popular at the time, but which have since been lost.

  8. Anyone else seen this yet? I took the family last weekend, and we all laughed and laughed - I thought it was one of the best animated movies I've seen for a long time. (Well OK - Madagascar 2 was pretty funny as well!)

    It starts with a young bride who gets zapped by a meteorite on the morning of her wedding, grows 50ft tall (like you do) and gets taken to the secret military base where all the other freaks and mutants are kept. Fortunately these "monsters" become the heroes when the earth is invaded by aliens!

    I thought the funniest character was Bob (a sort of parody of The Blob), a blue gelatinous creature who constantly gets himself confused with everyone else!

  9. I heard three different speakers in General Conference say supernal. I had to look it up in the dictionary. Apparently it means heavenly. Is this a new linguistic trend or have people been using that word for a long time?

    It's certainly not a very common word, though I do remember it from a rather lovely carol which I once had to sing the tenor part to:

    Chorus: Past three o’clock and a cold frosty morning,

    Past three o’clock, good morrow masters all!

    Born is a baby, gentle as may be,

    Son of the eternal, Father supernal.

    Seraph quire singeth, angel bell ringeth,

    Hark how they rhyme it, time it and chime it.

    Mid earth rejoices hearing such voices

    Ne’ertofore so well caroling Nowell.

    Hinds o’er the pearly dewy lawn early,

    Seek the high Stranger laid in a manger.

    Cheese from thy dairy, bring it for Mary,

    And not for money, butter and honey.

    Light out the star-land leadeth from far land,

    Princes to meet him, worship and greet him.

    Myrrh from full coffer, incense they offer,

    Nor is the golden nugget withholden.

    Thus they I pray you, up sirs nor stay you,

    ‘Till ye confess him, likewise and bless him.

  10. I have high hopes for my friend. It is sooooo wonderful to watch the Atonement work in someones life. There is definitely a miracle beginning in his life. He is gaining a testimony and really changing. What ever happens during the repentance process, excommunication or disfellowship, he is going to come out of this clean and a true disciple of Christ.

    I know this thread has gone off-course somewhat, and that's partly due to me. I really hope things work out for your friend. Godspeed - Jamie.

  11. If the world was hollow why doesnt all the water from the oceans flow down the holes?

    Gravity is created by mass and by the proximity of that mass (Newton's F=GMm/r^2 law). For a solid earth, gravity would act uniformly towards the earth's center, and decrease as one approached the center. At the center, a person would be weightless, since he would be surrounded by equal concentrations of mass on all sides, whose gravitational effects would cancel out.

    In the case of a hollow earth, the situation is different: The gravitational pull would not necessarily be towards the earth's center, but towards the earth's shell. The direction of gravity would depend on which side of the shell you were on: For someone on the outside the force would be downwards towards the center, while someone on the inside would feel the same force acting outwards. A person who tunneled half way through the shell would feel no gravity at all, since he would have equal amounts of mass on either side.

    Given the symmetry of the situation, the ocean on the outside of the earth would have no more reason to flow into the earth than the ocean on the inside would have to flow out.

  12. A person from Britain is properly called a "Briton". (Americans sometimes shortened this to "Brit".)

    Other countries have different names for us: The French call us - amongst other less complimentary things - "Les Rosbifs" because of our liking for roast beef. (We have no cause to complain, as we often refer to them as "The Frogs".)

    One of the most peculiar names for is "The Poms", used by people from Australia, Zimbabwe and a few other southern countries. I've heard two theories about this:

    1. POM stands for "Prisoner Of Mother (England)", referring to the fact that British immigrants were largely convicted felons, transported there for penal servitude.

    2. "Pom" is short for "pomegranate". The locals named us after this fruit because of our (supposedly) red faces. (I've never thought we had particularly red skin: Maybe we turned red quickly because we weren't used to their fierce sun.

    BTW, "Briton" applies to everyone from mainland Britain, though (as Willow points out) not necessarily from Northern Ireland.