![]() ![]() There are 8 episodes in this series and each episode runs for approximately 8-10 minutes. If the video series is being facilitated in a group setting, we recommend that the group leader view the video beforehand and be aware of the participants’ circumstances and readiness in reference to the specific theme of each video episode. ![]() ![]() If viewing the video for personal reflection, in light of your own experience of suffering and heartache, you may wish to have someone support you in the video experience. This video series is not intended to be definitive in its perspective or insights on these critical questions and concerns, but rather a stimulus for personal reflection and/or group sharing. Each episode concludes with a list of relevant songs and music that offer comfort, support and hope, and suggested reading of Fr Richard’s books, by way of depthing the themes and issues raised in the video series. Each episode invites time for personal reflection, which can flow into group faith sharing if desired. The group enjoyed their greatest success with the release of their debut album, The Promise (2000). The groups line-up consisted of Nate Cole, Jason Perry, Jeremy Mhire, Nathan Walters and Gabe Combs. Richard Leonard poses the questions and offers some key points for reflection. Plus One was an American Christian pop boy band which formed in 1999, disbanded in 2004, and briefly reunited in 2014. Good luck finding the nog in August though.This video series asks the hard and challenging questions about suffering and heartache and where God is in it all. And as a gift for you, we’ve assembled 65 Christmas songs so incredibly catchy, you just might want to listen all year round. But festive cheer has found its way into pop, hip-hop, R&B, metal, punk, indie… you name it. There is, of course, something of a Christmas canon: ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ and ‘Fairytale of New York’ are great songs… which is good, as inevitably you’re going to hear them about a million times this holidays. But even more cynical later generations of pop have produced plenty of gold. There are plenty of keepers from the ‘40s-‘70s heyday of the Christmas record as an art form. Love them, hate them, or just accept them as a sort of immutable fact of life, Christmas songs are a thing, and as December 25 gets inexorably closer and closer they’re a thing that becomes increasingly inescapable.Īnd although there’s been a fair amount of disposable novelty rubbish written over the years, the reality is that a lot of Christmas songs are bangers. ![]()
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