Tuesday, March 15, 2011

S4theD: Day 6














Jackson
sung by HEM


We got married in a fever, hotter than a pepper sprout,
We've been talkin' 'bout Jackson, ever since the fire went out.
Jackson, gonna mess around,
We're goin' to Jackson,
Look out Jackson town.

Come on down to Jackson; go on and wreck your hell.
Play your hand you big-talkin' man, make a big fool of yourself,
In Jackson, see if I care
We're goin' to Jackson; go on comb your hair!

When they find me down in Jackson I'll be dancin' on a Pony Keg.
Follow me 'round like a scalded hound,
Tail between your legs,
In Jackson, baby that's a fact,
We're goin' to Jackson ain't never comin' back,
Ain't never comin' back, ain't never comin' back.

We got married in a fever.
We got married in a fever.

Monday, March 14, 2011

S4theD: Day 5 (No Lyrics)



Enter Sandman
a variation of a Metallica song
by Apocalyptica


Click Here to Play Song





Saturday, March 12, 2011

S4theD: Day 4

Twang
by George Strait


When I get off of work on Friday
After working like a dog all week
I go to meet the boys for a cold one
At a little joint up the street
They got a jukebox in the corner
Full of old country tunes
Feed it five dollars worth of quarters
Is the first thing I always do

'Cause I need a little twang
A little hillbilly bending on some guitar strings
Some peddle steel whining like a whistle of an old freight train
To get that foot stomping honkey tonkin' feeling going through my veins
I need a little twang, twang, twang

Well, I like a lot of kinds of music
I try to keep an open mind
Depending on the mood to strike me
If I'm gonna stay till closing time
So when I wanna lift my spirits to get me feeling worth a dang
I know I'm gonna have to heart it
'Cause I gotta have some Hank to hang

'Cause I need a little twang
A little hillbilly bending on some guitar strings
Some peddle steel whining like a whistle of an old freight train
To get that foot stomping honkey tonkin' feeling going through my veins
I need a little twang, twang, twang

I need a little twang, twang, twang

Friday, March 11, 2011

S4theD: Day 3












Great Gettin' Up Mornin'
by Mahalia Jackson


Fare ye well, fare ye well
Fare ye well, fare ye well
fare ye well
Well in that great gettin up morning
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
In that great gettin up morning
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
In that great gettin up mornin
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Well, in that great gettin up morning
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Let me tell ya bout the comin of judgement

(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Let me tell ya bout the comin of judgement
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Let me tell ya bout the comin of judgement
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Let me tell ya bout the comin of judgement
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
God going up and speak to Gabriel
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
God goin up and speak to Gabriel
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Pick up your silver trumpet
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Pick up your silver trumpet
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Blow your trumpet Gabriel
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Blow your trumpet Gabriel
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Lord, how loud shall I blow it
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Lord, how loud shall I blow it
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Oh, to wake the chirrun sleepin
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Oh, to wake the chirrun sleepin
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
fare ye well,fare ye well
fare ye well,fare ye well
fare ye well
(repeat)
They be comin from every nation
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
They be comin from every nation
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
On their way to the great carnation
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
On their way to the great carnation
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Dressed in a robe so white as snow
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Dressed in a robe so white as snow
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Singin, oh, I been redeemed
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
Singin, oh, I been redeemed
(fare ye well,fare ye well)
In that great gettin up morning
(fare ye well,fare ye well)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

S4theD: Day 2

Babylon
by David Gray


Friday night I'm going nowhere
All the lights are changing green to red
Turning over TV stations
Situations running through my head
Well looking back through time
You know it's clear that I've been blind
I've been a fool
To open up my heart
To all that jealousy, that bitterness, that ridicule

Saturday I'm running wild
And all the lights are changing red to green
Moving through the crowds I'm pushing
Chemicals all rushing through my bloodstream
Only wish that you were here
You know I'm seeing it so clear
I've been afraid
To tell you how I really feel
Admit to some of those bad mistakes I've made

If you want it
Come and get it
Crying out loud
The love that I was
Giving you was
Never in doubt
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now
Babylon, Babylon, Babylon

Sunday all the lights of London
Shining, sky is fading red to blue
I'm kicking through the Autumn leaves
And wondering where it is you might be going to
Turning back for home
You know I'm feeling so alone
I can't believe
Climbing on the stair
I turn around to see you smiling there
In front of me

If you want it
Come and get it
Crying out loud
The love that I was
Giving you was
Never in doubt
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now
Let go your heart
Let go your head
And feel it now

Babylon, Babylon, Babylon, Babylon, Babylon

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

40 Days of Lent, 40 Days of Song

In the spirit of adding on for the season of Lent, not just taking away or fasting, I have decided that one of the things I am going to add is a quiet moment of musical reflection for each of the next 40 days. Several years ago--in the slower days of life--I sent out to a small group of family and friends what I came to call the S4theD, the Song for the Day. My intention then was to pause in the middle of my day and play whatever prominent, inspiring, or fantastical song came to mind that day with the lyrics in front of me, and to share that fun by sending song and lyrics out to my small group. The exercise became, for me at least, a revelation of just how little I listen to the message of songs and how caught up I became in the catchy tunes.

While all those things will likely hold true for the current exercise of S4theD during this Lententide, the main goal I have is to simply pause on a daily basis. Pause and recall a tune that God used to carry my heart and mind through a difficult time. Pause and reflect on lyrics that remind me of a dear friend. Pause and relish the fact that there is both a hope and a future. My goal is simply to pause and see what becomes of the act.

Float On
by Modest Mouse


I backed my car into a cop car, the other day.
Well he just drove off, sometimes life's ok.
I ran my mouth off a bit too much, oh what did I say.
Well you just laughed it off, it was all ok.

And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on any way, well.

A fake Jamaican took every last dime with a scam.
It was worth it just to learn some sleight-of-hand.
Bad news comes don't you worry even when it lands.
Good news will work its way to all them plans.
We both got fired on exactly the same day.
Well we'll float on good news is on the way.

And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, alright.
Already we'll all float on.
No, don't you worry, we'll all float on.
Alright, already, we'll all float on.
Alright, don't worry, we'll all float on.

Alright already we'll all float on.
Alright already we'll all float on.
Alright don't worry even if things end up a bit too heavy.
We'll all float on...alright. Already we'll all float on.
Alright already we'll all float on, ok.
Don't worry we'll all float on.
Even if things get heavy, we'll all float on.

Alright already we'll all float on.
(Alright)
Don't you worry we'll all float on.
(Alright)
All float on....

Monday, February 28, 2011

Thomas Smythe Day

On this day in 1901, G.K. Chesterton wrote one of his most profound works. In just over 1,500 words Chesterton is able to capture at once man's restlessness with this fallen world and his longing for home. In just over 1,500 words he weaves together a narrative that is at once allegory and plain-'ol-just-how-it-is realism. In just over 1,500 words Chesterton chides the rebellious nature of our human hearts while simultaneously calling us towards the beautiful goodness and truth our hearts rebel against. In just over 1,500 words Chesterton spins us a yarn of simplistic depth, and I for one am eternally grateful.


Homesick At Home: The Story of Thomas Smythe
by G.K. Chesterton


One, seeming to be a traveler, came to me and said, “What is the shortest journey from one place to the same place?”

The sun was behind his head, so that his face was illegible.

“Surely,” I said, “to stand still.”

“That is no journey at all,” he replied. “The shortest journey from one place to the same place is round the world.” And he was gone.

Thomas Smythe had been born, brought up, married, and made the father of a family in the Smythe Farmhouse by the river. The river enclosed it on three sides like a castle: on the fourth side there were stables and beyond that a kitchen-garden and beyond that an orchard and beyond that a low wall and beyond that a road and beyond that pinewood and beyond that a cornfield and beyond that slopes meeting the sky, and beyond that—but we must not catalogue the whole earth, though it is a great temptation. Thomas Smythe had known no other home but this. Its walls were the world to him and its roof the sky.

This is what makes his action so strange.

In his later years he hardly ever went outside the door. And as he grew lazy he grew restless: angry with himself and everyone. He found himself in some strange way weary of every moment and hungry for the next.

His heart had grown stale and bitter towards the wife and children whom he saw every day, though they were five of the good faces of the earth. He remembered, in glimpses, the days of his toil and strife for bread, when, as he came home in the evening, the thatch of his home burned with gold as though angels were standing there. But he remembered it as one remembers a dream.

Now he seemed to be able to see other homes, but not his own. That was merely a house. Prose had got hold of him: the sealing of the eyes and the closing of the ears.

At last something occurred in his heart: a volcano; an earthquake; and eclipse; a daybreak; a deluge; an apocalypse. We might pile up colossal words, but we should never reach it.

Eight hundred times the white daylight has broken across the bare kitchen as the little family sat at breakfast. And the eight hundred and first time the father paused with the cup he was passing in his hand.

“That green cornfield through the window,” he said dreamily, “shining in the sun. Somehow, somehow it reminds me of a field outside my own home.”

“Your own home?” cried his wife. “This is your home.”

Thomas Smythe rose to his feet, seeming to fill the room. He stretched forth his hand and took a staff. He stretched if forth again and took a hat. The dust came in clouds from both of them.

“Father,” cried one child. “Where are you going?”

“Home,” he replied.

“What can you mean? This is your home. What home are you going to?”

“To the Smythe Farmhouse by the river.”

“This is it.”

He was looking at them very tranquilly when his eldest daughter caught sight of his face.

“Oh, he is mad!” she screamed, and buried her face in her hands.

He spoke calmly, “You are a little like my eldest daughter,” he said. “But you haven’t got the look, no, not the look which is a welcome after work.”

“Madam,” he said, turning to his thunderstruck wife with a stately courtesy, “I thank you for your hospitality, but indeed I fear I have trespassed on it too long. And my home—“

“Father, father, answer me! Is not this your home?”

The old man waved his stick.

“The rafters are cobwebbed, the walls are rain-stained. The doors bind, the rafters crush me. There are littlenesses and bickerings and heartburning here behind the dusty lattices where I have dozed too long. But the fire roars and the door stands open. There is bread and raiment, fire and water and all the crafts and mysteries of love. There is rest for heavy feet on the matted floor, and for starved heart in the pure faces, far away at the end of the world, in the house where I was born.”

“Where, where?”

“In the Smythe Farmhouse by the river.”

And he passed out of the front door, the sun shining on his face.

And the other inhabitants of the Smythe Farmhouse stood staring at each other.

Thomas Smythe was standing on the timber bridge across the river, with the world at his feet. And a great wind came flying from the opposite edge of the sky (a land of marvelous pale golds) and met him. Some may know what that first wind outside the door is to a man. To this man it seemed that God had bent back his head by the hair and kissed him on the forehead.

He had been weary with resting, without knowing that the whole remedy lay in sun and wind and his own body. Now he half believed that he wore the seven-leagued boots.

He was going home. The Smythe Farmhouse was behind every wood and beyond every mountain wall. He looked for it as we all look for fairyland, at ever turn of the road. Only in one direction he never looked for it, and that was where, only a thousand yards behind him, the Smythe Farmhouse stood up, gleaming with thatch and whitewash against the gusty blue of morning.

He looked at the dandelions and crickets and realized that he was gigantic. We are too fond of reckoning always by mountains. Every object is infinitely vast as well as infinitely small.

He stretched himself like one crucified in an uncontainable greatness.

He felt like Adam newly created. He had suddenly inherited all things, even the sun and stars.

Have you ever been out for a walk?

The story of the journey of Thomas Smythe would be an epic. He was swallowed up in huge cities and forgotten: yet he came out on the other side. He worked in quarries, and in docks in country after country. Like a transmigrating soul, he lived a series of existences: a knot of vagabonds, a colony of workmen, a crew of sailors, a group of fishermen, each counted him a final fact in their lives, the great spare man with eyes like two stars, the stars of an ancient purpose.

But he never diverged from the line that girdles the globe.

On a mellow summer evening, however, he came upon the strangest thing in all his travels. He was plodding up a great dim down, that hid everything, like the dome of the earth itself.

Suddenly a strange feeling came over him. He glanced back at the waste of turf to see if there were any trace of boundary, for he felt like one who has just crossed the border of elfland. With his head a belfry of new passions, assailed with confounding memories, he toiled on the brow of the slope.

The setting sun was raying out a universal glory. Between him and it, lying low on the fields, there was what seemed to his swimming eyes a white cloud. No, it was a marble palace. No, it was the Smythe Farmhouse by the river.

He has come to the end of the world. Every spot on earth is either the beginning or the end, according to the heart of man. That is the advantage of living on an oblate spheroid.

It was evening. The whole swell of turf on which he stood was turned to gold. He seemed standing in fire instead of grass. He stood so still that the birds settled on his staff.

All the earth and the glory of it seemed to rejoice round the madman’s homecoming. The birds on their way to their nests knew him, Nature herself was in his secret, the man who had gone from one place to the same place.
But he leaned wearily on his staff. The he raised his voice to heaven.

“O God, who hast made me and all things, hear four songs of praise. One for my feet, because they are sore and slow, now that they draw near the door. One for my head, because it is bowed and hoary, now that Thou crownest it with the sun. One for my heart, because Thou hast taught it in sorrow and hope deferred that it is the road that makes the home. And one for that daisy at my feet.”

He came down over the hillside and into the pinewood. Through the trees he could see the red and gold sunset settling down among the white farm-buildings and the green apple-branches. It was his home now. But it could not be his home till he had gone out from it and returned to it. Now he was the Prodigal Son.

He came out of the pinewood and across the road. He surmounted the low wall and tramped through the orchard, through the kitchen garden, past the cattle-sheds. And in the stony courtyard he saw his wife drawing water.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Saturday, January 22, 2011

My Life Is Complete

My life is complete. For now that is. All of the music I’ve been without for the past two years is now safely back in one place…on my new Mac. The beauty of the world, the paragon of technology, and yet to me, what is this quintessence of perfection? I’ll tell ya…the quintessence of perfection! I’ve been missing both Mac and music so much so that I find all I want to do is scroll through my iTunes and play every song I had forgot I possessed. Ok, I admit, I’ve actually been doing that very thing for a few hours now. So I thought I’d share some of the music I’ve been listening to with great joy, along with a little shout out to the people who led me to the artist or song:

Russians by Sting
Chess by Andersson-Ulvaeus (Thank you Wilbur!)
The Roar of Love by 2nd Chapter of Acts (Thank you again Wilbur)
99.9 Percent Sure by Brian McComas
The Servant Way by Buddy Greene
OLE! by Bouncing Souls
Still Fighting It by Ben Folds
Losing Grip by Avril Lavigne (Thank you Bri!)
Green Into Gold by Angie Aparo
Kingdom Come by Cold Play
Babylon by David Gray (Thank you Dave!)
All My Ex's Live In Texas by George Strait (Thank you Der!)
Stupid Mouth Shut by HEM
The Curra Road by Jim Fidler
Cry Me A River by Justin Timberlake (Thank you JoJo!)
The Frog Prince by Keane
Doulos by Kemper Crabb
The Land of Ice and Snow by Led Zeppelin
Unwell by Matchbox Twenty
Glory To God In The Highest Chant by Nuns Of St. Paisus Orthodox Monastery (Thank you world!)
I Feel Home by O.A.R. (Thank you Misha!)
Samson by Regina Spektor
Hoppípolla by Sigur Rós
I Will Follow by U2
Little Bird by The Weepies (Thank you Jesse!)

Monday, January 17, 2011

Servanthood

My first notions about what it means to be a servant were synonomous with what it means to be a slave. Both of those terms have taken on different and ever changing meanging for me over the years, but I still more often than not find myself linking servitude with bondage.

As a Bible study with my sister has coincided with the start of reading the Bible through in a year, I've been met once again with the opportunity to think through the meaning of servanthood. I've only begun to think, but the thoughts that are being connected have left me with a clearer picture on the meaning of the phrase "water is thicker than blood".

R.C. Sproul says in his book, Five Things Every Christian Needs to Grow:

The motivation for Christian service is love for God. We serve not to earn salvation, but because Christ already has purchased salvation for us....We should be motivated to serve Him out of joy for what He has done for us, not out of grim obligation or as a means to gain heaven.

Elsewhere Sproul points out that God wants us to "invest in the future" and use our gifts "for the sake of the kingdom".

What a perfect Old Testament example God gives us in the story of Abraham's servant Eliezer. It is assumed that Eliezer is the one whom Abraham charges to find a wife for Isaac from his own land and his own kindred. It is said in Genesis 24 that this servant is the oldest of Abraham's household and in charge of all that Abraham possessed. These citings alone show that Eliezer was a faithful and trusted servant. Could Eliezer have been with Abraham since he and his family lived in Haran or even since Ur? Whether or not Eliezer had been with Abraham that long one thing is certain, he had an extensive family history and knew exactly what Abraham meant when he was charged to find a wife from among Abraham's land and kindred. It's pretty safe to assume that Abraham didn't give his servant a quick family history lesson and tutorial along with all the viable prospects for his son's marriage and then send Eliezer off hoping he'd get the job done right. No, if Eliezer was the most trusted and oldest of Abraham's household he most likely knew Abraham quite well. He probably could recite Abraham's family liniage all the way back to Adam. He could more than likely rattle off Abraham and Sarah's 4th-cousins-twice-removed without batting an eye. He probably could finish Abraham's sentences before Abraham himself could. He seems to be that kind of servant that defies all modern notions of what servants are supposed to be. Could he have bordered on friend?

The one place in all of Scripture where Eliezer's name is actually mentioned shows us that he was more than servant, more than friend. Genesis 15 says that Eliezer was heir to all that Abraham possessed. Before Ishmael. Before Isaac. When all hope of having a blood heir, a son, seemed lost, Abraham counted his most trusted, most faithful, longest standing member of his household as his heir.

The interesting thing is, Genesis 24 comes after Genesis 15. Common sense, I know. But when you look at it in terms of true servanthood we are reminded that Eliezer wasn't motivated by any prospective inheritance. The birth of a son to his master Abraham didn't deter him from his duty and purpose, rather it motivated his duty and purpose. He cared so deeply for his master that he was motivated to invest in the future, to use his gifts of service for the sake of the kingdom.

What a picture of selfless servanthood. What a picture of our role as servants of Christ, heirs of His great and precious promises.