robot with a heart

sad songs about joy

October 16, 2009, 12:49 am

i’ve noticed recently on some new worship albums that sometimes there’s this weird song on the album that has very positive lyrics but a very minor and almost depressingly sad melody.

i noticed this way back in march when i bought Page CXVI just to check out some redone “hymns”. there’s this song on it called “joy”. i recognized the song from Psalty that i listened to in car rides as a kid or in sunday school. (if you don’t know who Psalty is, thats fine… now that i look at him he’s kinda scary. christians are crazy sometimes). the original song as i knew it can be found in this youtube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9wc8IFparU

the remake in the Page CXVI album sounds pretty depressing. i sent it to my brother and a few friends familiar w/ the original song to see what they thought and everyone was like “this is so depressing. i almost wanna kill myself listening to this”. you could listen for yourself below (sorry i couldnt find a better youtube recording):

on the new matt redman album “we shall not be shaken” there’s a song called “my hope” which is based on the hymn “on christ the solid rock”. the original hymn is a pretty victorious sounding song (if you don’t know the song you can find countless recordings/versions of it on youtube). redman’s remake is embedded below:

i’m posting about these songs because i think i’m beginning to understand the point these guys are trying to make in singing these songs in the manner that they do. while these songs can often be applied in a celebratory way, singing about the joy and hope we have in christ, i think the truths these words convey need to be heard even more when we’re in the valleys of life… when we don’t feel like celebrating or being “happy”… when the normal melodies of these songs would frustrate us or even make us angry that such a happy sounding song could exist when the world seems perpetually grey and gloomy in our eyes. it makes the truths we need to be reminded of more… receivable.

i miss leading worship

June 24, 2009, 5:03 pm

it’s been a while since i’ve led worship at church.

last night was the first tuesday in a while that i dropped by RWC’s tuesday late night prayer meetings. i didn’t stay too long but in the short time i was there i retreated to a room on my own w/ a guitar because i found the bigger room with everyone else a bit too distracting… and the music was weird… (jeremy’s fault… but not his fault it was on shuffle). it’s been a while since i went to a room on my own and pulled out a guitar and just worshipped… and about half-way through i wished i could’ve shared that time with others.

controlling god

January 26, 2009, 6:07 pm

From The Silver Chair:

[Eustace speaking to Jill...] “I can’t help wondering, can we – could we -?”

“Do you mean, do something to make it happen?”

Eustace nodded.

“You mean we might draw a circle on the ground – and write in queer letters in it – and stand inside it – and recite charms and spells?”

“Well,” said Eustace after he had thought hard for a bit. “I believe that was the sort of thing I was thinking of, though I never did it. But now that it comes to the point, I’ve an idea that all those circles and things are rather rot. I don’t think he’d like them. It would look as if we thought we could make him do things. But really, we can only ask him.”

At a particular youth retreat (though this could have happened at almost any of the retreats) I served at in the past year, there was feedback from a particular youth concerning the way one of the evenings was conducted. he said something like “they did the whole dim-lighting-soothing-music-emotional-manipulation thing… i didn’t like that at all”. on that particular evening, i sat in with one of the guys small groups having discussions and a lot of them expressed similar disdain for the practice: “it was weird”, “why did they have to do that?”, “i just didn’t like it.”

I often share only half-jokingly that worship leaders are masters at emotional manipulation. Worship leaders know what songs can get people excited, what songs can stir emotions of guilt, what songs can “create” devotion. We can ask people to hold hands, to change their posture, to respond with well-known call and responses (i.e. God is good? all the time…), etc. Yes, I do understand that true transformation can only be done by God, but often times, the imitation looks very very similar–similar enough that I think people settle for it.

I know I have.

Yes, I’ve done it before. I’ve grown from it I think but honestly the temptation to “create” worship is always there. This isn’t post isn’t “confessions of a worship leader” so I’ll stop myself on that here. I just want to say that being one who’s been on the giving side before, it makes me extra alert when I’m on the receiving side of worship. When things get intense, sometimes it’s clearly a God thing (I don’t know how to explain it, but if you’ve been there, you just know), but other times it’s not so clear and I stop and ask myself “What’s really going on here?”

I’m worried this post will be read as just another one of those anti-emotion rants as I’m trying to craft this post but that’s not what I’m trying to do. I understand that music is an aid to worship; it has it’s purpose. Nor am I attempting to define when music is “too much”. I don’t like being fooled or tricked. I doubt anyone does. But I think many times in churches and retreats and whatevers, we trick ourselves.

I doubt there are many worship leaders or pastors out there who create the atmosphere with bad intentions. I also doubt few people who read this would say anything like “I want the imitation, don’t give me the real thing.” But I think both ministers (including worship leaders) and people in the congregation often do our own version of “draw a circle on the ground – and write in queer letters in it – and stand inside it – and recite charms and spells”. There are unwritten formulas we go through to make us feel close to God or make it look like God is “moving in our midst”. God does work even in our messed up formulas but I’d just challenge people to just stop and ask “What’s really going on here?”, “Why am I doing this?”, and “Who am I really doing this for?”

the end.