These songs opened my eyes to many points of view, and even helped ask questions and through them I found answers.
At age 7 I was baptized into the Southern Baptist denomination. In 1972 my parents divorced, and in 1973 we moved from
After I became a Seventh-day Adventist, I watched the movie on A&E. I accepted the fact that the humanity of Christ was presented in the presentation, but the divinity question wasn't presented. I understand this, I accept this, and from this I have a better understanding of His humanity. "Simon Zealotes/Poor
Christ tells the crowd that they don't know what power is, they don't know what glory is. They have heard of the miracles, but they missed out on the lessons of love and compassion He was trying to teach them. Jesus was not interested in building an earthy kingdom. I look at what
I see the Christian church today making the same mistake the Jews made during that time. It saddens me to hear someone on the radio addressing a Christian audience to stockpile weapons, ammunition, and food, and to prepare for whatever happens next as the Luciferians prepare for the day of Satan's personation of Jesus Christ. I see too much blood being shed in the months ahead when something finally snaps. I think on that day in
The album The Trumpet of Jesus was the last record Russ Taff recorded with The Imperials. The title cut, "The Trumpet of Jesus," impacted me with a lyric that I have never forgotten, and I would say it comes to mind at least once a day. "Hate only hears what it can, but love can hear it all." There is a lot of hate in this world. People don't want to hear other people's problems because they got too much they are dealing with in their own lives. People are watching out for "number one," and a lot of hurt and heartache boil over into some pretty tense situations. Hate hears what it can. "What did you say about me?" Love hears it all, and offers a shoulder for people to cry on. Love can handle the drama that hate pushes aside. No one wants to listen. No one wants to love. No wonder there is so much hatred and drama in our lives. We don't want to hear anything more about it. That is the difference between a Christian who walks the walk and talks the talk, and the rest of the world. A Christian will listen. Everyone else turns up the volume of their iPods and walk on by.
Larry Norman, often credited as the father of Christian rock, wrote a song that is simple enough. He looked at Christ through some very interesting lenses, and gave us the song, "Outlaw." He paints Jesus as an outlaw, a poet, a politician, a sorcerer, and yet his conclusion is that Jesus Christ is the Son of God who came to be a servant and to free us from sin. It is a very poignant song that, when I close my eyes, allows me to see in Christ His humanity and His divinity. The images that come to mind will take me to the point of tears.
I think that is one of the problems with contemporary music today, Christian or otherwise. Nothing touches us anymore. We don't think, we don't feel, we are just lost in the beat and the drone of meaningless drivel. I think we lost our minds back in the '90s, and by the end of 2010 I think we will have lost our hearts. We are losing ourselves, but we aren't losing ourselves in love.
Rich Mullins had this talent for painting pictures with his lyrics. "Calling out Your Name" and "The Color Green" both explode in colorful images of a creation that can only lead a receptive heart to praise God. Driving around
I went through a phase at the end of the 1980s where I explored Christian metal. The band Messiah Prophet spent a lot of time in my audiocassette player. There were two songs by MP that I couldn't get enough of. One song began with this simple acoustic guitar intro, then blows up in your face like a Claymore mine. "Battlescars." It isn't about combat in the world. It is about the war we fight with self, the internal battle between doing what we know is right and resisting the evil that dwells in our hearts. It is about putting on the nature of Christ, and it ain't easy. It is a war, and we do get scarred by it.
I can't speak about the effects music has on people. I only know how music affects me. There is some music that drives me nuts. There is some music I can relax to. It is hard to find good, solid Christian music that helps me relax. I've listened to "Adventist-approved" music and all I hear in my head is a ticking time bomb. It pushes all the wrong buttons in me. Thing is, I'm into the lyrics of a song. What is the message of the lyrics? Turning my back on contemporary pop music is easy. They got nothing to say. However, they got a lot to hide behind the drum machine.
Before I discovered Messiah Prophet, there was Styper. Say what you will about those guys, they knew how to turn their guitars inside out and make them sound good in the process. Michael Sweet recorded one of my favorite songs titled "Real" after the band broke up. It is a song of encouragement, strength, and a reminder of just how real Jesus Christ was, is and always will be.
My song of confession is “Worlds Apart” by Jars of Clay. The two-fold meaning shows how far from the truth of God we live our lives, as well as serves as a plea to God to take apart the worlds of our own creation so that we can experience the world God is preparing for us. The life I live on earth is not the life I want to live, and the world in which I live is not the world I want to live in. The Bible is not for people who want to continue living in this world, but is for people who desire to live forever in the atmosphere of heaven. In order for me to live in the atmosphere of heaven, then my world must be taken apart. I am worlds apart from my God, and it is my prayer that I might be closer to Him. Jesus Christ takes my world apart, and He brings me closer to the world I want to live in.
The first Christian music video I saw that touched me was “Most of All” by Glenn Kaiser. I emailed him and asked him about this song. He told me it was based on his personal conversion experience. I listen to a lot of music. Some of it is just entertainment, lacking depth, lacking meaning, lacking anything that connects with me. This song is personal. It connects with me. Kaiser sings it like he believes it because it happened to him. It is his story. This song is about me, too.
I’ve been an SDA for nearly 19 years. I refer to it as my “long, strange journey.” I’ve been places I never thought I would go, and seen things that only appeared to me in dreams or in movies. I never thought that I would preach a sermon in
I hear Peter and Mary Magdalene in Jesus Christ Superstar watching from a distance as Christ carries the cross to the place of the skull where He will be crucified. Peter has denied Christ three times, hurling curses at the people questioning him just before the cock crows at sunrise. Mary is still figuring things out about Jesus, the Man who spared her from a stoning and whom she anointed with her tears and her hair. They both are on the edge of a mystery, on the verge of understanding it, and yet, they miss it. They ask that question that I have asked a few times myself: “Can’t We Start All Over Again?” So close to the answer, and yet so far that it frustrates me.
No, we can’t go back to the beginning. But yes, we can start fresh from where we are now. There is still hope for us to get it right before the end. Jesus has faith in us. We will do greater things than He did, but only if we believe in Him.
ten songs:
Simon Zealotes/Poor
The Trumpet of Jesus
The Outlaw
Calling out Your Name
The Color Green
Battlescars
Real
Worlds Apart
Most of All
Can’t We Start All Over Again
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