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Name: Christopher
Country: United States
State: Ohio
Metro: Newark
Birthday: 5/26/1984
Gender: Male


Interests: Jesus. Music. Friends.
Expertise: Music (it's a neverending learning process).
Occupation: Student of the Ministry
Industry: Making disciples of Christ


Message: message meEmail: email me
Website: visit my website
AIM: xcpagerunx
MSN: embrace_the_eternal@hotmail.com


Member Since: 6/13/2003

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.Ascending.Zion.
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Nickelodeon Used To Be Good
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Pro-Life Feminism
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I am ruining my country!
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I used to hate cell phones, now I hate Norma Jean
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News Team Assemble !!!
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- Christians who don't effing swear -
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whoa whoa whoa whoa. this is not my batman glass.
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Monday, July 09, 2007










I'm back in town kids.


Saturday, June 30, 2007

Chris Page Returns!





Thats right folks! I'll be returning to Newark permanently between the dates of July 8th and 11th.



Be prepared!



HaYAYAAAAAA!!!


Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Currently Listening
Twilight
By Future of Forestry
Sanctitatis
see related

Bigfoot here we come!

Ok, this is no joke, Andy and I may go Bigfoot hunting this summer in Perry county. We have a friend that has a cabin down there and he has had a few "experiences" in the woods there. Naturally, being the investigators that we are, Andy and I jumped at the chance to hunt this elusive ape. We're planning on bringing a video camera and try and take some photos as well. So if you're in Perry county and see Andy and Chris sneeking around in the woods, pay no attention. This is going to be awesome!

 

Here's our target!

Bigfoot


Saturday, May 26, 2007

Happy Birthday to me!!!!

I'm 23 today!

 

 

 

 

Oh yeah, and I graduated on Thursday! I now have a Bachelors in Biblical Studies!

 

 

 

 

Also, I just got an email with this article and it totally spoke to me; so here's the article! If you disagree with it, then please, provide scripture (I'll tell you rght now, you won't find any).

 

Pentecost Sunday: It’s Nothing to Be Ashamed Of
What happened in the upper room in Acts 2 was not some trivial episode in church history. So why do we downplay it?

 

A few weeks ago a reporter from USA Today asked if she could interview me about the misunderstood subject of glossolalia, or speaking in tongues. Since I had talked with this woman before and I knew she handled matters of faith with sensitivity, I readily agreed to answer her questions. Besides, I’m not afraid to tell anyone that I have a prayer language.

 

The article ran in the newspaper this week, just a few days before Christians around the world planned to celebrate Pentecost Sunday. It mentioned a recent scientific study of the human brain and how it is affected when people pray in tongues.

 

“Aside from Jesus’ death and resurrection, the Holy Spirit’s outpouring on the day of Pentecost was the single most important moment in history.”

 

Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania monitored the brain waves of Christians who prayed in tongues and compared them to the brainwaves of Buddhists who meditated and Catholic nuns who prayed the rosary. The results showed that the Christian prayer language had a unique impact on the body, essentially shifting brain waves into an “off” position.

The researchers concluded that when people engage in glossolalia, the frontal lobe of the brain that normally monitors speech and body function slips into low gear. The man who led the research team, Andrew B. Newberg, told USA Today: “Our findings are very consistent with what people say they are feeling—that they are not in charge of what is happening and are experiencing an intense sense of themselves in relation to God.”

 

I won’t hold my breath for this report to be published in Psychology Today or The American Journal of Medicine, but it certainly offers a skeptical world one more reason to ponder the claims of the Bible. It also gives the American church—which has restricted, feared or even demonized the Pentecostal practice—another reason to reconsider our desperate need for the Holy Spirit’s miraculous, unexplainable work.

 

Aside from Jesus’ death and resurrection, the Holy Spirit’s outpouring on the day of Pentecost was the single most important moment in history. Yet we treat it with a take-it-or-leave-it attitude. Crowds pack churches on Easter, but how many times have you seen everyone show up to celebrate Pentecost? (Especially when it falls on Memorial Day weekend when many folks go on vacation!)

 

Pentecost was God’s big coming out party, a grand inaugural celebration accompanied by wind, fire and ecstatic, supernatural speech. It was heaven’s wondrous way of announcing that the Lord had chosen not only to dwell inside His redeemed people but also to mantle them with otherworldly power. When the early disciples were filled with the Spirit they were not embarrassed to speak in their new heavenly language. They raised a holy ruckus that eventually shook an empire.

 

Yet today many Christians have developed a defensive posture about tongues. Southern Baptists actually outlawed the practice among their missionaries last year. Some fundamentalists still teach that the Pentecostal experience is nothing more than religious hysteria.

 

And, worst of all, some modern charismatics and Pentecostals who prefer seeker-friendly worship and user-friendly sermons have stopped offering prayer for the baptism in the Holy Spirit at their altars. They don’t want to offend the crowd by encouraging anything too weird or embarrassing. They prefer church to be neat, orderly and rational. They want a faith that can be controlled.

 

They don’t realize this is the fundamental reason God gave us the gift of tongues in the first place: To shift our frontal brain lobes into neutral and get us out of the driver’s seat so He can take over.

 

When I pray in my spiritual language, my mind yields to a higher authority. I don’t know what I’m saying, yet the Holy Spirit prays through me and releases His anointing. It makes no sense in the natural, yet when I pray in tongues I override the limitations of reasoning and shift into a powerful spiritual dimension.

 

Speaking in tongues is a precious gift, one that the modern church has despised and devalued. We shouldn’t be apologizing for it. It’s time we renounced our intellectual pride and embraced the wild, unpredictable and unexplainable power of Pentecost.

 

 

 


Monday, May 21, 2007

Currently Listening
The Physics of Fire
By Becoming the Archetype
Fire Made Flesh
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HEY!!!!

I shall be home this weekend (25th) through the following weekend! Hopefully if I get the job at State Farm, I will be able to move home permanently by the end of June! YAY! If you have any sort of friendly relationship with me, I will probably be calling you, otherwise, give me a calllll!!!!!!!



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