Many of my friends and other blogs I read have cool Latin titles... but since I'm only about 10 chapters into Wheelock's Latin, I don't know enough to make a cool title, so for now, this place is called "something Latin".
Pages
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Friday, September 17, 2010
Great Quote from "The Princess Bride"
Vizzini
: HE DIDN'T FALL? INCONCEIVABLE.Inigo Montoya
: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.Monday, August 23, 2010
Great Quote from "Roots"
-- Fiddler to Kunta Kinte, after Kunta Kinte has been whipped to the point of breaking and forced to confess his slave name "Toby". From the 1977 TV miniseries based on the book by Alex Haley.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Thursday, May 20, 2010
More Latin links: Vulgate PDF download & "Modern" Latin
http://eweb.furman.edu/~dmorgan/lexicon/adumbratio.htm
http://eweb.furman.edu/~dmorgan/lexicon/silva.htm
http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/institutions_connected/latinitas/documents/rc_latinitas_
20040601_lexicon_it.html
http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~classics/lexicon.html
http://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocabularium
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
P. T. Forsyth: The Worst Sin is Prayerlessness
Monday, May 17, 2010
Thought-Provoking P.T. Forsyth quote on hell / eternal punishment
From http://cruciality.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/who-said-it-4/
Who said it?
It's been around six weeks since our last 'Who said it?' competition, so probably time for another round (not that we need an excuse or anything). Here's one from the archives:
'Can it be just that God should bring beings into the world unprotected by an infinite armour of foresight against the infinite chances and temptations to wrong, and yet hold them liable to infinite punishment when they had gone wrong? … Punish a man for his sin, that is just; punish him for ages (if in that other world you can reckon time), that may be just; but make no end of punishing him for that sin, reduce him from a man to a devil and keep him there, let him become for ever vile, mainly because he was ignorant to start with, that is not just … Preach the eternal, unappeasable wrath of God upon lost souls and you offer men a devil to worship'.
So, who said it?
The answer is PT Forsyth.
Friday, May 07, 2010
Tuesday, May 04, 2010
Psalm Singing / Psalter links
1650 Scottish Psalter
http://www.swrb.com/newslett/actualNLs/Psalter0.htm
http://www.merrysoul.com/index.html
http://precentorincharlotte.blogspot.com/
Tunes for Trinity Psalter
http://www.lifefebc.com/resources/midipsalter.htm
http://cyberpsalter.tripo.com/
Psalms in Trinity Hymnal
http://swanson.kepler.covenant.edu/psalm/
Tunes & Divisions
http://www.pilgrimcovenant.com/online/ScottishPsalterTunes/recommended_tunes.php
CDs, recordings & samples
http://genevanpsalter.com/music-a-lyrics/2-complete-collections/182-mp3-collections
http://www.shallwesingasongforyou.co.uk/?cat=17
http://presbyterianreformed.org/psalmcds.php
http://www.presbyterianreformed.org/psalmcds.php
The Psalms for Singing: A 21st Century Edition
http://www.crownandcovenant.com/International_Psalters_s/37.htm
Misc
http://thekingdomcome.com/psalmplayer
Psalter.org
John Brown of Haddington's Notes on 1650 Psalter
http://www.swrb.com/newslett/actualNLs/Psalter0.htm
Anglo-Genevan Psalter
Saturday, May 01, 2010
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Six Million Dollar Man opening
Friday, March 12, 2010
Carl Trueman on bad sermons or bad listening
-- Carl Trueman, http://www.reformation21.org/blog/2010/03/slouching-to-bethlehem.php
Monday, March 08, 2010
Open source aids for Classical Greek & Latin
The Alpheios Project has released the first beta version of a set of free reading aids and learning tools for Classical Greek and Latin. The source code is also freely available to developers. The tools are intended to provide unusually convenient lexicographical and grammatical support for anyone wishing to read HTML versions of original Greek and Latin texts, whether online or on a local computer. Pedagogical modules are currently being added for those who wish to learn the language. We are also making available prototypes of several related tools, including a graphical interface for treebank editing that can easily be adapted to different annotation schemes. The reading tools and the initial pedagogical modules can be downloaded from http://alpheios.net The other resources and prototypes currently in development can be accessed at http://alpheios.net/content/resources-under-development It is hoped that these tools can facilitate consultation of original texts by scholars in other fields, provide customized options for students who wish to learn the language through the study of specific texts, and generally promote appreciation of the unique legacy of the classical world. An important feature of the tools is that their architecture was designed to facilitate the rapid addition of other resources, such as lexicons, grammars, and reference materials, and even other languages, especially highly inflected ones where the value of such tools seems especially compelling. To illustrate this flexibility we are also making modules available for Arabic and Chinese; but our design goal was to create an infrastructure that would make the creation of similar tools for any language as easy as possible. We would greatly appreciate comments, suggestions and criticism because the tools are still in active development Yours very truly, The Alpheios Team
Thursday, March 04, 2010
Great quote: "Lord of the Rings" and "Atlas Shrugged"
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Great JMS quotes
Example: a friend of mine from college spent 25 years of her life working in a cubicle for a faceless master on a distant mountaintop. There was very little of her in the work, and she called one day to say what am I doing it for? I've never done anything I wanted to do and it's too late now. Nonsense, I told her. What do you want to do, what are you passionate about? She didn't know. I asked what she likes doing. I like my cat, all pets, she said, and I like taking photos, but I'm not a pro.
"So combine what you enjoy. Start taking pictures of pets. For free to start, then for money. Point is, follow what gives you joy."
She did. And now she works three days for the faceless master, and two days a week doing what she enjoys, and making a living at it. Within the next year, if she keeps it up, she'll be working full time at what she loves.
Follow your passion. The rest will attend to itself.
If I can do it, anybody can do it.
It's possible.
And it's your turn.
So go for it. It's never too late to become what you always wanted to be in the first place.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Karl Barth's Clarity
While acquaintance with the structure of the Dogmatics is useful, it does not prepare one for the actual experience of reading the text. A main reason is that Barth does not adopt the familiar persona of the impartial academic. He writes not impartially, but as a partisan; he writes as one who is passionately engaged in the very subject matter under discussion. Barth seeks to foster this kind of engagement in the reader as well. He draws the reader into a movement of reflection, examining a theological puzzle from different angles, at times leading him or her down false roads (only so will we understand why they are false), always pressing us forward to some resolution of the problem at hand. Barth will never say in the manner of textbooks: 'Here are two ways of looking at the topic, take your choice.' The nature of what the church proclaims demands clarity. If anything frustrates him in modern theology, it is the tendency one sometimes sees to celebrate doubt and ambiguity for their own sake. Barth believes the Word of God to be an ultimate mystery, but he does not see it as opaque. Because God has spoken clearly in Jesus Christ, we can actually arrive at answers to theological questions. To be sure, our answers — being human — are always contestable; but the best way to see where we have gone wrong is to express our thinking as clearly as possible. This is a key reason why Barth wants to embrace the modern term wissenschaftlich, 'scientific', for Christian theology. All this makes for the curious blend of passion and objectivity one finds in his writing. As Hans Urs von Balthasar writes, Barth is 'passionately enthusiastic about the subject matter of theology, but he is impartial in the way he approaches so volatile a subject. Impartiality means being plunged into the object … And Barth's object is God, as he has revealed himself in Jesus Christ, to which revelation Scripture bears witness' (The Theology of Karl Barth, Ignatius, p. 25).
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Kevin DeYoung's "IDEA" on Preaching
From http://blog.9marks.org/2010/01/one-thing-i-remember-from-preaching-class.html by Rev. Kevin DeYoung
When you come to a passage there are four things you can do: illustrate, defend, explain, apply. I rearranged the order from seminary class so the four points make a convenient acronym: IDEA. Most young preachers, and probably most preachers in general, gravitate toward "explain." We do best at studying the text and communicating what we learned to others. If the passage is especially obscure or controversial, it makes sense to land heavy on the E. But sometimes the passage is relatively simple. In this case, don't spin your wheels on endless word studies that basically repeat with synonyms what everyone can see immediately in the text.
Friday, January 22, 2010
Lou Holtz on Talent, Motivation, Attitude
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
QUOTE: Don Carson on The Pastor as Scholar, the Scholar as Pastor
Don Carson quoting Francis Bacon in last April's address at "The Pastor as Scholar, the Scholar as Pastor."
"Reading maketh a full man; speaking maketh a quick man; writing maketh an exact man."
The Pastor As A Scholar – Don Carson from The Gospel Coalition on Vimeo.
Quote: "Church pews should come with crash helmets and seatbelts"
Why does a Christian radio station bill itself as "safe for the whole family"? Whatever else Christianity is, it certainly isn't that. As Annie Dillard says, church pews should come with crash helmets and seatbelts.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Excellent advice for moving from NT Greek to Classical (Amazon List)
- All Lists & Registries

Products sampled from this guide:
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