26 September 2016
Wally and the Praising Groupe/United Galway Presbyterian Methodist Church/Harvest Sunday
itpc062411a.AVI
irvinetpc.org/
Irvine Taiwanese Presbyterian Church/
A:Londonderry Air-Handbell
Back to Church Sunday Church of Ireland / Methodist
Jesus Christ is Lord (Cork)
Jesus Christ is Lord (Cork)
First Presbyterian Church of LaGrange, Indiana
HistoryInYourOwnBackyard.com
Established in 1844 the First Presbyterian Church of LaGrange, Indiana is one of the oldest churches in the county. The current structure was built in 1882.
Shotime Productions Choir - St Mulrose's Church, Kinsale, Ireland
Shotime Productions Choir
St Mulrose's Church, Kinsale, Ireland
March 30, 2016
Fr Alec Reid and the Peace Process of Ireland
Father Alec Reid, C.Ss.R. (born 1931, died 2013) was an Irish priest noted for his facilitator role in the Northern Ireland peace process.[1] Born and raised in Nenagh, County Tipperary,[2] Reid was professed as a Redemptorist in 1950, and ordained a priest seven years later.[3] For the next four years, he gave Parish Missions in Limerick, Dundalk and Galway (Esker), before moving to Clonard monastery in Belfast, where he would spend almost the next forty years. The Redemptorist Monastery at Clonard stands on the interface between the Nationalist Catholic Community and the Protestant Shankill Road.[4]
In 1988, Reid delivered the last rites to two Royal Signals corporals killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), the 'Corporals killings', after they drove into a Republican funeral. A photograph of his involvement in that incident became one of the starkest and most enduring images of the Troubles. In the late 1980s, Reid facilitated a series of meetings between Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams and Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) leader John Hume, in an effort to establish a 'Pan-Nationalist front' to enable a move toward renouncing violence in favour of negotiation. Reid then acted as their contact person with the Irish Government in Dublin from a 1987 meeting with Charles Haughey up to the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998. In this role, which was not public knowledge at the time, he held meetings with various Taoisigh, and particularly with Martin Mansergh advisor to various Fianna Fáil leaders.
Reid moved to Dublin was involved in peace efforts in the Basque region of Spain. In January 2003, he was awarded the Sabino Arana 2002 World Mirror prize, by the Sabino Arana Foundation in Bilbao, in recognition of his efforts at promoting peace and reconciliation. Reid and a Methodist minister, the Rev. Harold Good, announced that the IRA had decommissioned their arms at a news conference in September 2005.[5]
He was involved in controversy in November 2005 when comments he made during a meeting in Fitzroy Presbyterian Church concerning the Unionist community in Northern Ireland. Reid said: You don't want to hear the truth. The reality is that the nationalist community in Northern Ireland were treated almost like animals by the unionist community. They were not treated like human beings. They were treated like the Nazis treated the Jews.[6][7] In an interview with CNN, Reid claimed that The IRA were, if you like, a violent response to the suppression of human rights.[8]
He received the 2008 Gandhi Foundation International Peace Award together with Reverend Harold Good.[9]
On 4 July 2008, Fr Reid was made an Honorary Graduate of the University of Ulster and made a Doctor of the University (DUniv) in their Summer Graduation ceremonies, in recognition of his contribution to the Northern Ireland peace process.[10]
On 19 April 2009, Fr Reid was awarded the Reflections of Hope Award by the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum.
On 22 November, 2013, Fr Reid died in a Dublin hospital.
Kilkenny Presbyterain Church
Kilkenny Presbyterian Church Outreach Outreach during Kilkenny Arts week.
New Presbyterian church organ
The Eagle River Presbyterian Church got a new organ in October, 2017. The church will hold a free community concert May 17, 2018 at 7 p.m. at the church. In this video, listen as organist Michael Wright plays the new instrument, an Allen 5000 the church bought from an organ company in Washington. (Star video by Matt Tunseth)
Guide me o thou great Jehovah .. Indian bottom association
BB Display 2012 Part 6: Company Section UV Lights March
6th part of 5th Carrick (Woodlands Presbyterian Church) Boys Brigade Display. Company Section (1st-6th Year) do their marching with a cool visual twist, UV lights.
Bevington Organ 2
Fr Richard at the Bevington Organ in St Mary’s Church Hay on Wye
Love lifted me by Febz DCM Dublin
Love lifted me with DCM Fil -Irish praise n worship team Dublin Methodist Church
Galway Cathedral Lookin' Up as Organ is Tuning Up
Looking up at the ceiling of the fine architecture of Galway's cavernous Cathedral - as the church's organ player tuned up. Nice sounds!
Sabbath Worship in Sligo, Ireland
There are Seventh-day Adventists in Sligo. Here is evidence of them worshipping together in a small side hall of the the Sligo Presbyterian church on Sabbath, 31 October. There is more space for you to join! Find us on Facebook, or call our leader, Shupai at +353871120238.
2016, Christchurch Cathedral (Church of Ireland), Waterford, Ireland
Virtutes Instrumenti Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Christchurch Cathedral (Church of Ireland), Waterford, Ireland
The first cathedral to stand on this site was built in 1096 by the Vikings, who had recently converted from paganism to Christianity and affiliated themselves with the Archbishop of Canterbury. It was he who appointed Malchus as the first Bishop of Waterford, in fact one of the first in Ireland.
Less than one hundred years after its construction, the Cathedral hosted an event which would change the course of Irish history forever, with the marriage of Strongbow, an English knight, to an Irish princess named Aoife in 1170. This political union granted Aoife’s father, the deposed King of Leinster, troops from England to reclaim his throne and ensured Strongbow would inherit his kingship upon his father-in-law’s death.
By 1210 the Normans had taken control of Waterford and built a new Medieval Cathedral. This was expanded through the years to include side chapels dedicated to leading Waterford figures such as James Rice, who served as city mayor 11 times in the 15th Century. The base of one of the pillars of this Norman Cathedral still remains and has been opened up for viewing.
In the 18th Century, the progressive City Corporation of the time came to regard the Norman Cathedral as rather old-fashioned and recommended to the Bishop that a new one be constructed. Bishop Chenevix resisted this proposal, and it is said that a ruse was devised to encourage his change of mind. As he was walking through the Cathedral some rubble was strategically dropped in his path, close enough to shock the clergyman, who was soon found to support the construction of a new church. The Gothic Norman Cathedral was torn down in 1773, or rather blown down, as the building was so strongly constructed that the use of gunpowder was required in its demolition.
Construction on the new Cathedral began in in 1773 and was completed in 1779, at a total cost of £5,397. It was designed by John Roberts, whose imagination had given shape to much of Georgian Waterford. Roberts also designed the Roman Catholic Cathedral in Barronstrand Street, giving Waterford the unique distinction of being the only city in Europe where the Protestant and Catholic Cathedrals were conceived by the same man.
Architecture
This cathedral has been described by architectural historian Mark Girouard as the finest 18th Century Ecclesiastical building in Ireland. It was built in the Neo-Classical Georgian style which was de rigueur. Roberts was fond of this style, reminiscent of Ancient Greece and its elegance was in contrast to the ornate Gothic interiors of most of the churches in this time. The spectacular stucco plasterwork ceiling is very similar to what could be seen in many 18th Century palaces and stately homes across Europe.
What you see today varies slightly from this original construction, as a disastrous Organ Gallery fire in 1815 devastated the magnificent Elliot organ and much of the surrounding woodwork. The cathedral was closed for three years for repair and reconstruction. Some further improvements were deemed necessary in 1891 by Sir Thomas Drew, a leading architect of the time. The square pews and galleries were removed and the ground floor windows blocked up. A new case was built for the organ and it was taken down from its gallery and squeezed into the left-hand corner of the Cathedral. In 2003 the organ was restored and a new gallery was built to house it in its original position.
The Tetragrammaton
YHWH the holy and unutterable name of God
Given central place on the reredos behind the altar is the Tetragrammaton the letters YHWH, the holy and unutterable name of God in the Hebrew Bible. This roots the faith of Christians in the biblical tradition of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
The James Rice Tomb and the Camino
James Rice tomb
Cadaver Monument ‘I am what you will be; I was what you are now.’
James Rice was Mayor of Waterford eleven times during the 15th Century. In 1481 he built a chapel to house his tomb in the original Norman cathedral. It is a fine example of a cadaver monument, depicting the horror of death and the glory of saints. Weather damage has taken its toll down the centuries and made the Latin inscription quite difficult to read. Rice wished that his tomb be a reminder of the briefness of our earthly lives and the transient nature of fame, wealth and power. The tomb displays a badly decayed corpse, crawling with worms and with a frog feasting on the stomach. A section of the inscription reads, ‘I am what you will be; I was what you are now.’ The figures of saints can be seen on the sides of the tomb.
Rice walked the Camino pilgrimage twice during his lifetime and his tomb became a starting point for Waterford pilgrims as they embarked upon their journey to Santiago di Compostela.
On Any Given Sunday: Orlando Presbyterian Church
Sunday is for church. It's been that way for the members of the small congregation of Orlando Presbyterian Church when they were part of the large First Presbyterian Church, and it's still true now.
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Eagle's Wings
Eagle's Wings
Cover of Eagle's Wings by Hillsong
First Presbyterian Church of Springfield
April 7, 2019
Lead Vocals - Anna
Piano & Backup Vocals - Megan
Drums - Nate
Rev. David Crooks
Question 1
The Church of Ireland, Reformation
David Ouchterlony's Carol Cantata part 3
I got the Sears wishbook the other day so if Sears can push it,so can I.This Christmas Cantata was recorded at Timothy Eaton Memorial Church in 1977.(I joined the choir the following year.)It's based on music from all over the world.The organ is called a Great Organ built buy Casavant. part 3 of 3