Friday, April 12, 2013

Let's Think About It

"Lean with it, rock with it. 
When we gonna stop with it?
Lyrics that mean nothing, we were gifted with thought. 
Is it time to move our feet to an introspective beat?
It ain't the speakers that bump hearts
It's our hearts that make the beat."

My sentiments, exactly, Twenty | One | Pilots. 

As I said in the last blog, music is important to me. I love how good music can be so complex. It's not just something that makes you want to dance around a room but also real poetry that makes you think. Good music, in contrast to things like Rebecca Black's Friday, is thought-provoking, moving us more deeply than just physically.

When my friends came to Africa for a visit, one of my top requests (along with coffee and cereal) was good music. It was a great request, too, because my friends have impeccable taste. They introduced me to what quickly has become one of my favorite bands: Twenty | One | Pilots.

Seriously. They're awesome, but with darker tones to their songs, it's not a band that would likely be on typical Christian radio stations. Still, their lyrics openly talk of many Christian themes: a loving God, the hopeless state of man, need for salvation from a higher being, the battle of the flesh against faith, the battle in every person's mind, restoration of broken people, and so on. For me, it's been a worshipful few days constantly hitting the "repeat" button on my iPod.

One of the things I appreciate about their music is the plea to make thinkers of us. They draw lyrics from a lot of dark places of over-thinking, depression, and fear, but they also speak into these dark places. They sing a certain hope to broken people. They encourage people to seek truth, even in the darkness.
I appreciate that.

As good music should, it made me think. What message is our Christian music sending? What message are we, as the Church, sending? Is it bubblegum versions of a happy wonderland of life in Jesus? Is it, "trust Jesus and never face darkness again"? Is that really the whole truth? Are we skipping ahead in God's epic?

We're all guilty of it, myself included. It's easy to hang things on a "happily ever after," because in reality, there is one. But, are we really at the end of the story, the "happily ever after," or are we just at the rising action, where the story gets interesting? Sometimes, I get the feeling our gospel leaves out the needed complications of the story. Sometimes, our message seems to lead members of our own fellowship to hide the very struggle that makes the Good News great: salvation for broken people in a fallen world.

Let's think about it. Let's be brave with our music and our lives. Let's not run from the dragons of the world or help them to hide. They like the shadows. They're just going create havoc if we don't acknowledge them. Let's face them, instead, armed with Christ as our Excalibur. Let's tell the true and truly good story. Jesus isn't just salvation for once and done. He's salvation for the everyday. He's the Light of the World, able to illuminate the darkest of places.

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