It has over 5,700,000 YouTube views currently. Enjoy:
[TUBE]SXh7JR9oKVE[/TUBE]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXh7JR9oKVEEdited by: Don Wassall
[TUBE]SXh7JR9oKVE[/TUBE]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXh7JR9oKVEEdited by: Don Wassall
Colonel_Reb said:Tired old White, I'll add that to the list of reasons why I can't stand iPods. I don't like people walking around with cell phones glued to their ears either. You can't even try to communicate with most people listening to iPods. They are often totally clueless about what is going on around them, and they usually seem ticked that you would interrupt their listening to say good morning or ask them a question. It reminds me of one of the original meanings of the word idiot, that being a self-centered (private) individual.ÂÂÂ
DixieDestroyer said:Colonel_Reb said:Tired old White, I'll add that to the list of reasons why I can't stand iPods. I don't like people walking around with cell phones glued to their ears either. You can't even try to communicate with most people listening to iPods. They are often totally clueless about what is going on around them, and they usually seem ticked that you would interrupt their listening to say good morning or ask them a question. It reminds me of one of the original meanings of the word idiot, that being a self-centered (private) individual.
Col.Reb, one of my pet peeves is these mugs walking about with the bluetooth ear piece yapping away. One of my buddies sports that goofy looking earpiece & I always bust his chops about it. It strikes me as very "douchebagistic".
jaxvid said:That really moved me and I have no idea why.
Victory at the food courtarticle said:As I watched the video, I pondered the question of why I, a grown man who is not known for losing his composure, was crying like a baby, and why so many others reacted the same way, both in the food court itself and among the viewers who left comments. Why was this video of an old work of Christian polyphony reaching and moving tens of millions of people, a distinction normally enjoyed by the banal expressions of popular culture?
The first and most obvious answer is that the sheer beauty and reverence of the piece has been moving people to tears since it was first composed...
It was moving to see such beautiful people, from every generation... perform this great work with joy and reverence, but even more moving was its capacity to transform a food court, a trite symbol of our increasingly debased consumer culture, with the glorious praise of God. For a moment that day in November, the militant secularity of modern society fell mute in the face of something it could never produce, nor begin to fathom, a beautiful voice from its repudiated past, insisting on truths that will never die...
...I wept also for the lost world of my childhood. Although the culture of the 1970s, already reeling from the upheavals of the 1960s, was only a pale reflection of the Christian society that preceded it, many elements of that lost civilization were still intact. The Hallelujah Chorus and other similar works were simply taken for granted, an affirmation of a commitment to a Christian culture that permeated the United States, Canada, and much of the western world. But the America I was born into has been swept away, and the Hallelujah Chorus is now a revolutionary act, a defiant gesture in the face of a cynical, "post-Christian"Â society.