Print While the pen remains mightier than the sword, neither bears quite the same dynamic power as the spoken word.
Print Affirmations of faith are varied across cultures and traditions. How one articulates what is central or core to their belief system varies depending on a countless range of factors -- age, gender, knowledge, experience, and so on. Here the Psalmist breathes in and breathes out what is foundational to the tradition.
It is an air of life, a breath of heaven, and a breeze that coalesces with the hearts and minds of the people of God. The Psalmist speaks the word that calls to mind that which is already known -- God is the source and preserver of all.
The God who creates is the one who creates possibilities when none are evident. The God who gives laws provides them to people so that they might flourish in every way that a human being can flourish. The one who is an ever-present help is the one who can give certainty to people who live in places that are uncertain, unhealthy, and latticed with threats to their own security.
Sound of waves commentary verses are breathed out that speak of a familiar reality that is somehow beyond familiarity.
The Lord reigns and the world is a secure place on which people may thrive. Yet the experience of the world suggests that it is anything but secure or be regarded as a place for thriving.
For people of any age there is always the common song of war, rumors of war, and threats to human stability and thriving. Here the Psalmist utters five short stanzas of affirmation about God and the order of the world in which people live. Yahweh is melek -- king. For people in contemporary North America the notion of a king may not resonate well.
It brushes against our ears like rough sandpaper and may not offer a depth of comfort. A democracy is not envisioned here.
It is the clear order of a king that has everything in control. One might also conceive of the garment as the entire creation that this creator king has made -- full of majesty and armed with strength.
The one who sets planets in orbit around suns and suns in their courses around galaxies is surely one who is strong enough to deal with the day-to-day events of the people of God.
What difference might it make to anyone that God is robed in majesty and armed with strength? The Psalmist makes a declaration that assures uncertain feet that the ground on which they walk is secure. Perhaps this is enough to face the trials and difficulties associated with the present or foreseeable future.
It can breathe confidence into uncertain hearts. Anyone who has spent time near or on the ocean knows something of its strength and the audible volume of waves as they crash on the shore. The sound can be deafening. Generated by wind and tidal movement ocean waves can reach great heights before colliding with shorelines.
The weight of an average wave is massive. The weight of water is approximately 8 lbs. And when water is moving at 30 or 40 miles an hour … the heaviness of water turns deadly.
Imagine 1, pounds hitting you at that speed, and each cubic yard of water as another 1, pounds bearing down on you.
The destructiveness of a tsunami is not just one runaway car, but a fleet of them. The ocean or sea would have been a place of threat from a force greater than any foreign army. It was stronger than any one person or army of persons.
The threat of death could echo in the waves as they crashed on the shore. Their sound could cause fear to rise and knees to weaken. But here the writer is intent on reflecting on the voice of the waves themselves.
What do they say?In the first part of the poem the 'island man' wakes up to the sound of the waves, in what we suppose to be, a beautiful beach. "Morning/And the Island man wakes up/to the sound of a blue surf.". Commentary: Neil Armstrong reporting the roll and pitch program whitch puts Apollo 11 on a proper heading.
+ Play Audio (/ Kb wav) Image left: Smoke and flames signal the opening of a historic journey as the Saturn V clears the launch pad. Radio systems need a transmitter to modulate (change) some property of the energy produced to impress a signal on it, for example using amplitude modulation or angle modulation (which can be frequency modulation or phase modulation).
Radio systems also need an antenna to convert electric currents into radio waves, and radio waves into an electric current.
An antenna can be used for both transmitting . Morse Code is “the usage of sound waves through electrical transmissions, which created the term telephone. The term applied to any device used in sending sound over a distance (Chou, A).” It wasn’t until when William Gray invented the payphone.
Oct 31, · Best Answer: the person without the headphones will hear the sound in a time of time = distance/speed of sound = m/m/s = s the sound heard by the person listening to radio will travel as a sound wave 17m to the microphone, then make a round trip of 74, km as a radio wave traveling at the Status: Resolved.
English Commentaries: Contact Us: Sr: Code No. Title: Download MP4: Download MP3: Healing Rajyoga Going Beyond Sound: Child of GOD: Heart To Heart Conversation Friendship-Trust-Love Waves of Stilliness - Sis Meera & Sis Denise: