11/22/09

Don Moen Europe/Africa Tour Dates

Nov. 27 – Leave home for UK

Nov. 28 – London, England

Nov. 29 – Tilburg, Netherlands 

Nov. 30 –Netherlands 

Dec. 1 – London

Dec. 2 – London

Dec. 3 – Lagos, Nigeria

Dec. 4 – Lagos

Dec. 5 – South Africa

Dec. 6 – South Africa

Dec. 7 & 8 – South Africa

Dec. 9 –  Accra, Ghana

Dec. 10 & 11 –  Accra, Ghana

Dec. 12 & 13 – Accra, Ghana

Dec. 14 –  Headed Home!

Dec. 15 – Arrive at BNA!

Marriage: Worth Fighting For!

When we are asleep we are most vulnerable to carefully laid strategies of a very real opponent.   A good marriage, which by God's design is the best example of His love for Humanity, is a prime target for a patient enemy.   And there's no such thing as a fair fight with him, the only way we overcome and defeat him is God's way, period!

In my lifetime I've heard enough sermons to fill an ocean and know enough religious jargon to write a dictionary.  All my knowledge and experience did not make me impervious to a plan that gradually killed my marriage.  The greatest miracle I've seen however is the resurrection of my marriage even after we were divorced!   We’re living proof of what God can do with dead stuff.

On the front side of a love relationship it all looks good and we are in a true sense, "blinded by the light" a bit.  It's awesome for sure but the feelings most of us make lifelong commitments by are fleeting and deceiving.  I can make no sweeping statements regarding other’s marriages but for my own, it has been very high and very low too!  Nothing has tried and hurt me more and no other relationship holds the mirror up to me as vividly, where I see the core of my own shortcomings.  What a good marriage will do is illuminate everything that lies within, good and bad alike!  

My wife and I now find ourselves warring, not only for our own marriage but scores of others who are at deaths door as we once were.   That’s certainly not to say we’ve been there done it and have it all figured out now.  We are much more protective, work harder to communicate and listen well, but still have to practice putting some tools we’ve learned to use in order to get through any impasses and over walls we build over time.   We do love each other more and are more committed than ever to doing life and love God’s way because we know first hand it works no other way.

When friends tell me of their deepest darkest hours I can relate much more than I’d care to admit.   I may have never signed on for marriage had I known what I would really encounter.  I remember one counselor saying to me, “you’re in Gethsemane and there’s nothing anyone can say or do to absolve of you of that experience.”  Christ went through it alone and there’s a certain amount of the experience we endure alone, doesn’t mean God has forsaken us though!  There was a time my instinct was to blame God.  I do know this, He’s never ever left me but has allowed me nonetheless to go through hell and back.

Marriage is always worth the fight and you do have to learn to fight for it.  You also have to learn to fight healthily as a couple.  We come into a marriage with a tractor-trailer full of issues and behaviors that we’ve spent our lives with.  We develop survival skills and they are ingrained in our being and guess what-the rest of your married life will be a journey of unpacking that crap and getting beyond an individual, self serving lifestyle.  You are two not one any longer and while you can be selfish and do ultimately whatever the heck you want to, it will not lead you to a whole and holy marriage.  It may well lead you back to alone!

If you have found yourself in a marriage you never imagined you’d be in, welcome!  You are now in the very marriage God would have you be in, there’s no other Best Case scenario for you.  He wants it to work and be healthy and knows what it will take to get you both there.  Though there are times when one of the party opts out as you can’t control another’s choice, you can always do your part-your best!   That’s where the miracle starts.   Healing is not a magic pill or a single visit to the counselor’s office.  It is a process and you can trust God’s process unlike any other!  The one thing you have to do that no other can do for you is Choose.  Resign yourself to surrender your own rights and wants and choose to stay in the fire just as you would stay in the bliss. 

It would require a book to tell you our whole story but suffice it to say, part of my problem was a serious inability to deal with my own pain coupled with a very real propensity for depression, which made me a self focused human being in order to survive.  So running from pain vs. dealing with it was my way and God let me run till I hit the wall and gave up.  It cost me a lot and I’ve had to painstakingly go back through the muck and mire in my life to relearn how to survive without leaving my wife alone to deal with life.  

You have your own stuff, your own way of dealing or NOT, and you have your own opportunity to flesh it out within your marriage.  If you learn to do it now rather than later you’ll lose less in the process and get to greener grass sooner.  If you neglect, ignore, run, quit, etc. then you’ll carry that caboose right into your next relationship!  It never disappears or just goes away; the crap will always hit the fan, trust me.

There are many great resources and people that can help but God alone can prescribe what you need and you have to be willing to deal with Him first then you’re marriage!   Coming from one who’s dealt with God a long time, there’s no greater grace, strength, mercy, kindness, and friendship anywhere to be found than in Christ alone! 

Marriage: yes it’s worth fighting for!

 

10/10/09

Revive South Africa

December 26, 2009 - January 10, 2010

We are taking 25 of our Revive staff to Magaliesburg, South Africa to serve as staff for a YFC camp led by our dear friend- Rolf Weichardt.  800 kids are coming from all over South Africa- from very diverse and challenged regions.   Many of them live lives that are hard for me as an American to even begin to understand, dealing with AIDS, poverty, war, and much more as a normal part of their world.  Though we'll lead in worship, train, and teach the primary role will be to get to know and love these kids and help them understand Who God is and what He has made them to do in life!  

This is also a great opportunity for our extremely gifted and talented staff to be missional and grow as leaders.   Revive! is about reaching youth and young people with the truth we know will change the course of their lives and helping them mature as Christians in order to fulfill the calling of Jesus to GO into all the world.   These young leaders already understand missions as a way of life in their own back yards and around the Globe.  We are greatly inspired by them and feel honored they'd follow us across the planet to serve!  

Please pray with us as we take on this trip and lead the team.  Each of these college age staffers are raising their funds just as we are so it's a big step for all! 


Don Moen/Mandisa


Event TypeDateCityCountryTimeVenue
Concert10.22.09Fremont CAUS7:00 PMHarbor Light ChurchInfo/Tickets
Concert10.23.09Orange County CAUS7:00 PMOcean Hills ChurchInfo/Tickets
Concert10.24.09Phoenix AZUS6:00 PMPhoenix First Assembly of GodInfo/Tickets
Concert11.08.09Morehead City NCUS6:30 PMGlad Tidings ChurchInfo/Tickets
Concert11.13.09Toledo OHUS7:30 PMPeristyle Theatre at Toledo Museum of ArtInfo/Tickets
Concert11.15.09Toronto ONCA7:00 PMThe Prayer PalaceInfo/Tickets
Concert11.28.09London, United KingdomUKTBADominion CentreInfo/Tickets
Concert12.04.09Lagos, NigeriaNGTBATafawa Balewa SquareInfo/Tickets
Concert12.12.09Accra, GhanaGHTBAIndependence SquareInfo/Tickets
Concert12.13.09Accra, GhanaGHTBAInternational Conference CentreInfo/Tickets
Concert03.06.10Eastern Caribbean FLUS7:00 PMHolland American ms EURODAMInfo/Tickets

9/23/09

Indonesia '09

Have just returned from tour with Don Moen in Indonesia.  This trip we visited Jakarta, Surabaya, and Batam, an island just across from Singapore.   It is my second time there and I found the Indonesians as incredibly hospitable and wonderful as before. 

In a predominately Muslim culture the Christians are a vital and committed minority.  We were there during Ramadan.  Even from my hotel room I could hear the overwhelmingly loud and unforgettable cries of the callers.  Not my first time to hear them but the most impressionable for sure.  

It brought to my mind the importance of the prayers of the saints who worship Jesus, the hope and light of the world!   If we prayed as much as we talked we'd likely see even greater impact in our world.  If we trusted God to reveal Himself to all mankind as only He can, we may be more motivated to spend our time loving others than sizing up and judging.  Which is sometimes the first response to something radically different than we're used too.  

We will increasingly stand out by avowing faith in One True God through Jesus, even deemed fanatical and narrow minded.  Our responses are the best opportunity for a testimony to true found hope.  We'll be known more by love than outspoken criticism of things we don't agree with or understand.  Though there's a time to speak up I honestly believe we are in a time where we would do far better to close our mouths and simply live out what we say we believe and let the proof be in our action.  

It is easy to criticize and judge and that spirit accomplishes very little good for the sake of God's Name.  What translates in any culture is Love in spite of all.   While I listened to the sound of the callers calling literally millions to prayer, I was convicted to pray that Christians everywhere would rise up and pray for our world with more compassion and mercy as The Lord Himself does without fail.  

So this is both a personal confession of my own need to pray first and leave judgement to the real Judge, and also a call to all who know Jesus to pray that God be revealed to our fellow humanity in these years.  

May we attest to truth by earning a right to speak up and when given the opportunity, do so with saltiness and light-for our words are truly powerful!

8/9/09

From Within

Article by:  Tom Lane

We used to live a world where hymns and a few choruses were what we had and largely deemed acceptable for use in worship services.  But for the past 15 + years we’ve seen an influx of songs as God once again, like in times past, turned the heart of his people back to himself.  Now there are more songs than ever and most churches have the top CCLI list in constant rotation.  All that’s a good thing and it’s amazing how God has used some of these songs and the leaders who’ve written them. 

One thing I’m personally passionate about is seeing the indigenous expression of any people group arise from their own creative community.  It is powerful to be around the world somewhere and all be able to sing the same song in many languages.  Used to be no matter where I went it was almost always 90-99% songs from the west that had been translated.  Hardly ever would I hear a worship song written from within.  As I’d get to know the musicians I’d find out they had volumes of music of their own just that little of it was ever used in their church.  So a long time ago I started asking Why? 

There’s always been a bit of a rub between musicians and the church.  We’re historically very good at building boxes to put stuff in and anything outside the comfort zone is awkward.   A brief look into history paints the picture of an ongoing struggle for artists and musicians in the church family to find their place or their voice.  So it’s nothing new!

What I do hear is the discontent from both sides; the artists/worship leaders and the leadership who are looking out for their people.  Both are scared to push the envelope too much for many different reasons.  Can’t cover all of the reasons here but would like to talk about what we can do to encourage the new, unique, fresh, innate, creativity that should be flowing from the ground up in the Church.  And being that we’re a diversely gifted group, thankfully it’s going to look different from one body to another. 

Which leads to another?  Why do we primarily look outside first?  I understand not every church has a writer in the midst and by all means we use what we have available.  But we should always be looking for it within and mining for it, even if it takes years to see the fruit.  We tend to be importers more than exporters yet every church has something to give away.  Again I get it but should and does it have to stay that way?  Some of you have long been determined to change that and are doing a wonderful job.  For others it’s still in the infancy but hopefully we can agree on the need. 

Some things we can do if we are willing to make some room.

1.     Plant some seeds: It starts young needless to say.  Begin making an investment now into your future leaders and artists.  Buy a sound system and donate a room, somewhere The Yoots can come make some noise.   Try not to attach a bunch of strings either, let’em run free a bit.  The point at this stage is not to only have them replicate what our older folks are doing.  In the next 10 years it’s gonna shift again and we may not recognize much of what is now our normal.  That’s OK!  Many well known bands/artists have come from the church, unfortunately not many stay in the church.  Some of that has to do with our own inability to allow and provide for an environment of true friendship to grow up in.  We need to embrace the apprentice mentality; lead and instruct yes, but don’t tie their hands behind their backs, prohibiting them from being the unique bird they are.

2.     Venture a go at it: In addition to learning the top 20 CCLI, begin to prioritize the incorporation of new songs from your own people.  To do that you may need to educate both your writers and your people. (There’s a seminar a minute for just such!) For sure we need to become less critical and people pleasing in worship.  Of all places there should be a safe and welcoming atmosphere in the church to receive what’s coming from one of our own.  Instead of an immediate judgment of its worth in comparison to our favorite worship song or leader.  It will be clumsy, messy, and not always good, but are we at least making room to try it?  See it as tapping a well; in time if you keep priming the pump you’ll have water coming from your own cistern!

3.     Build community and friendship locally/regionally: When we pool our resources and band together the impact is deeper and wider.  Though we normally want to see it as our own thing, in truth we’re only a part of THE Church in our cities, no one of us has or owns the domain.  Think about starting a local or regional gathering on a regular basis to exchange, encourage, and inspire each other.  Pray and worship beyond your differences and ask God to be at work within your own area through your creative community.  Great things have started that way and we all share it the benefits.

More than ever the world needs to see a band of united Christians loving and embracing our own well.  Unfortunately the road is littered with too many that have witnessed the opposite of unity and run the other way.  Sadly, many of those are some of the most creatively gifted the world’s ever known.

The work starts at home, it comes from within.  We can only give away that which we have, so let’s go get it!

 

Help Your Leader Lead (Tidbits For The Band!)

Article by:  Tom Lane

One of the benefits of playing with the same band a long time is familiarity.  The ebb and flow is more natural because you've evolved together and predict more instinctively where the others are going.  When you have a revolving team it's not as easy to rely on your second nature totally. Still most do rely on what we're accustomed to and treat every situation the same.  One reason I think we hear often that it's more rigid and performance like than worship leading is because we approach it like we do most bands.  Everyone plays what they want to play, ultimately dictating how and where it goes in spite of who's leading.  

As a Worship Leader one of the hardest things for me is when I know the band is paying no attention to where I am trying to lead or go.  Not that it's about me, but it is about leading worship and not simply getting through the songs.  If I have the opportunity to rehearse the band, we can work on what I need them to and not to do.   But if I don't, quite often I have to settle for the way it is and work within the limitations by changing what I do to fit them.  I don't let it hinder me from worshipping or leading but may do fewer songs with the band and more alone.   I liken it to being driven down the track like a train, not much you can do to stop it once it's barreling on.  That may make no sense to some but others will know exactly what I mean.     

I'll unpack it some just to help give some insight to what a band can do to hinder a leader without even knowing it.  First I'll preface by saying it's the leader's responsibility to lead and instruct and not just presume that everyone's there to meet his or her needs.  Nor is it a solo venture, if you've invited a band to join you, now it's a team!   Also, a Pro may make it sound better the first time but sounding good isn't always what it's about.  The seasoned talent may well miss the point entirely if the goal is simply to execute the song with skill and excellence and not support the leader.   

Speaking from my perspective and experience here only; I have been a support player for many artists and leaders and I have also been a worship leader most of my life, two different roles completely.  When I lead I set the pace, though I love guitar and it's my instrument, I approach it differently when I lead because I most need the team to follow me.  To do that I typically lead with an acoustic, which helps to provide more of the constant tone overall, whether it's rhythmic or subtle dynamics.  

So the first struggle typically comes with the Drummer.  (Don't worry, gonna pick on everybody here equally, and I've been the culprit too at some point!)  We're cruising along the track with the song and we reach a point where in spite of the way we may have rehearsed it or learned the song I feel led to back off the intensity or dynamics to let the people be more heard, wait, or pray etc.  You can't always give a cue in the middle of singing and leading, and instead of being cued in (*leaders instrument should be predominate in the drummers mix!)  to my guitar and watching, the drummer plows on.  I'm now locked in to having to go the drummer’s way instead of where I may intend to go.  If I fight back for tempo or rhythm it would just embarrass one or both of us, extremely frustrating will say!  I don't mean this critically but that's a sure sign of maturity level as a player. The more experienced tend to remain very attuned throughout a song which frees a leader to lead worship and not just the lead the band down the track.  Make sense?  You can still hold the fort down, keep time, but also learn to give time back to the leader by paying attention!  Then you're best friends forever!

Second struggle and most obvious is the Bass Player.  Nothing stands out like a sore thumb worse than a wrong note on a bass, just hangs there like a hair in a biscuit!  There are two things I deem very important here, play the right notes and play less than you think you should.  Right behind that would be to work with your drummer and not against.  Obvious as it is, bass and drums are the foundation.  If the two are in sync with me as a leader I can still drive without the feeling of having to pull everyone along the track.  Everything else then becomes more bearable. Another tidbit I've seen employed by some very in-experienced players, and it makes them actually seem more experienced is; if you don't know what you're supposed to play, don't!   We'll all think you're brilliant, trust me!

Third on my rung of groove busters is, (my own tribe) the Guitar Players.  Most noticeable to me is when it comes down dynamically at some point and I'm trying to allow for some space or even better transition to another song.  Rather than lay back and listen to where I may be going the impulse is to play what I'm playing or add to it, now I'm locked in again unless they give me back the space to move.  Not expecting mind readers but it helps immensely when a player listens and compliments versus hinders, which is what happens a lot.  It's one thing if you're playing a decided arrangement just as you've rehearsed it and that's the intent, such is the case for most services.  But there are leaders who, when accompanied by a team of sensitive players, can go outside the arrangement and even into totally unplanned places seamlessly with no train wrecks.  (Hard to believe I know!) That's a great moment!  And it's not reserved only for pros or very experienced, again just by simplifying and listening more to what a leader is doing you can become a great follower and supporter.  Textures and pads create more freedom and space and come across as tasteful, that's what gets you asked back more often!

OK, Keyboard Players.   Here again the role varies with the situation.  In my case I'm not depending on the keyboard/piano to lead or carry a song because I do that when I lead.  In that scenario a more meat and potatoes approach is best.  Block chords and pads provide more color and texture than conflicting rhythmic oriented parts.  Until you assess what the leader is already providing, less is the way to think.  One beautiful note sustained can be otherworldly, the wrong sound or too busy a part can be annoying.   The wonderful thing is there's room for us all to explore and be unique, it's just the time and place that's key.  Also the frequency range you normally play within covers a lot of ground already, so a chord creates more fullness and a note adds more texture.  On the other hand if you are in a situation where you carry the band and/or lead from keys it's a different thing, then you're the glue and have to establish the tone and direction.  That may mean more rhythmic and melodic playing.

For Auxiliary Players, it's harder and maybe more frustrating because unless there's room made for you, you often make your own.  The more seasoned the player the better that works usually. There are teams, and I've played with them, that just put any and every one on the stage with no parts written out, or road maps of any kind.  It's one big party and parts are left to the discretion, or lack there of, of each player.  It can be anything from wonderful to torturous!  Unless you've learned to improvise and have the chops to do it, not a bad idea to here again, keep it very simple.  Think melody more than riffs and runs.   A melody is like a picture--last's a lot longer!   It's a good thing to rehearse some spontaneity as well so when the time comes and there actually is a space you're more apt to be prepared for it.   Since there's not normally as much room created for auxiliary instrumentation I encourage some feature spots built around a players particular ability or some time set aside from the service to explore and just play.  (Why should the guitar players have all the solo fun?)

Finally, Singers; thankfully-to God we all sound beautiful!  To human ears however, not all sound good and sometimes it's just plain bad.  Not judging hearts here just the musicality.  A choir is another element; I'm going to speak more to a group of background singers on a team. Part of my job is session singing.  We come into a studio with 1 to 6 singers and normally it's more like 3, and we listen to a song and arrange parts that hopefully embellish the song.   We use headphones and most singers prefer to leave one ear off and that's to be able to blend in the room and not over compensate pitch or tone wise.  So in my book, monitoring and hearing well are a must to even begin to sound good.   Though some leaders and situations intentionally stack a bunch of singers on melody and have them sing from start to finish, that's not the way I prefer it.  Mainly for flexibility and dynamics reasons, the more singers the harder it is manage unless you've had the time to rehearse arrangements.    What I encourage is, knowing the sections of songs and building as you go as opposed to singing on every section.  Determine quickly and ahead of time if possible the parts and the form for the song.  By that I mean, verse, chorus, verse, bridge, chorus etc.  Make notes for each section-what you're doing or not.  Makes it easier to let the leader set the pace and compliment tastefully and dynamically.  In a choir, a director would prepare and cue you regarding dynamics but in a team/band setting it's much less controlled that way, which some interpret as total freedom.  Again, our worship is beautiful to God and He sees the heart, but we do have a choice of when and when not to pipe up, step out, cover up, get in the way, etc.   I'll also say this, when there's a gifted singer who exemplifies taste and discretion my normal instinct is to ask them to do more!  It's just the opposite though if they're clearly not accustomed or geared to be a team singer.

Let me encourage you in this way; instead of being overly sensitive or insecure about your abilities, be honest and teachable.  Until you've had the benefit of time with a particular leader, think and listen first.   Until you know what to do, go slow and do less.  These are not hard and fast rules to abide by, nor is worship leading all about the leader as I said.  Just some things that may help you understand more what helps and hinders a leader as he or she is trying to focus on aiming for God's heart and not only getting through the song!

 

 

Be Salty!

Article by:  Tom Lane

Ever feel like you’re losing your saltiness as a player?  We are creatures with habits and sometimes they’re hard to break.  That includes using the same 4 chords we learned years ago in every song, playing the same exact riffs and lines, etc.  It also applies to attitude and behavior; we burn out, feel entitled, deserving, get bitter, jealous, envious, you name it.  

Without a doubt we have developed a whole doctrine around the musical portion of worship and leading.  In some ways we’ve become so people conscious we’ve removed the fun and freedom right out of it.  We can certainly over police it to the point you almost need a seminary degree and an appointment from on high to be on some teams.  I’ve written a lot about the heart and will say again that’s where it starts and what God alone sees!  So that’s the good news and hope for us all.  What I’d like to address here is more the playing with excellence and skill part of the equation.

The level of musicianship has been improving in the Church the past 10 years and we now have a crop of young talents playing circles around some of us old guys.  I was teaching a seminar for guitar players not long ago and heard a 13-14 year old kid playing in the hall during the break-almost asked him to come teach the class!  Putting aside competition, which is not what it’s about, we can become too comfortable and satisfied with where we are.  And reach the point we stop learning or even trying to be better.  I never want to diminish or judge another’s efforts or heart to serve in worship.  The hope is that you’ll read and feel inspired to simply do what you can to become the best player and help to your team that you can.

5 tips to sharpen your skill:

1.  Improve you chord and scale knowledge:  With good reason most worship songs are simple and have just a few chords.  Still every chord can be played in more than one way or position and inversions are good to study and know for that reason.  It’s not simply knowing a bunch of chords, but playing the same chord different ways.  A chord is made up of a triad; root, third, and the fifth.  Inverting it just means playing the triad in a different position e.g. third, fifth, root.  There are many resources for you to learn inversions and it will help make your parts more interesting for sure.  Also helps you voice your chords opposite what other players are doing which is more like layering than duplicating.  Scales help you develop better dexterity and facilitate melody.  Try singing and playing a scale at the same time as an exercise.  The more scales you know and can play with ease and freedom, the more second nature it becomes allowing you to contribute more readily.

2.  Improve your reading skill:  While good that most worship songs are easy enough to follow along with just by reading the words with chords above them, many have no idea how to follow a real chord chart.  Even if you’re not a schooled reader you can follow a chart if you can count.   By chart I mean a road map of the arrangement, as it’s supposed to be played.  With bars, rhythmic notations, repeats, time signature, etc.  There are books galore with charts of your favorite songs.  The difference is your following along every bar and not blindly hoping you place the right chord over a lyric you may not know.  Many with good ears just rely on hearing once then repeating which is fine; again we’re not being legalistic.  But it is frustrating when players “hunt and peck” around.  Till they learn a song it sounds like a mess and even if they know the song they never play it the same way twice.   Especially if you hope to work as hired player, reading will always help!

3.  Learn to construct parts:  Yes, less is more sometimes, but you can be tasteful and inventive without stepping on an arrangement.  Take a song and think about it in sections.  Do something different in each section.  It helps to first listen to what everyone else is doing, and then find your voice within the mix.   An intro may mean a riff or melody for a guitar or solo inst., pad for a keyboard player, and nothing for the bass player.  Decide ahead of time, which player if any, will take the fills for the verses-great way to incorporate all the band members and not hinder others playing.   Instead of an “All Skate” approach to a song where all guns are blazing from the top to bottom, leave spaces and holes.  Find your parts for the sections, commit them to memory and/or chart them and get used to playing them that way every time for a season.  Tweaking as you go to fine tune and building from there.  I promise if you come up with one cool line, even a single note part that’s tasteful-that’s what others will remember most.

4.  Spend time with your gear:  The better you know your instruments and gear the more prepared you are and you’ll spend less time taking up “valuable” time to tweak.  An example for guitar players is; if you use effects; experiment at home with running your time-based effects (delays, modulation efx, verbs) through your effects loop.  It’s quieter and sounds different than putting them in the chain with your distortion and overdrive pedals.  You may find you like it and get better tone.  Google “Effects Chain!” 

Keyboard players almost need a rocket science degree to operate some synths.  As you learn your particular synth, create 5-10 staple sounds and store them in a performance patch so you can recall them live at the touch of one button instead of tweaking on the fly.  

Bass players, learn the difference in application between a fretted and fretless bass.  They’re not necessarily interchangeable for every song.  Fretless is a bit like slide for guitar players-not everyone can do it well.  Intonation is key.  Practice first!   Buy a compressor and learn how to use it, it’s the main effect you’ll see used by most bass players. 

Drummers, can’t say enough how helpful it is to most drummers I know, to understand electronics, computers, and be able to use them live as adeptly as you use your sticks.  It’s a matter of using technology to your advantage and making you even more useful to the team in many cases. 

5.   Study Up!  Pick two players who do some of what you’d like to do better and study them for your homework.  Find out what you can about their influences, learn to play some of what they play till it sounds like them.  I’m not saying we become copycats but we can learn from others.  Ask one of your friends or a good player you have access to spend 5 min, 30 min, or 1hr-just one time and show you 5 things they work on or do well.

Finally, sometimes we actually need to take a break from the routine to refresh. It can be a healthy pattern to develop and makes room for others to grow as well.  Prayer and Google; also wonderful tools of the trade I think.  Add back some salt to your playing, you’ll never regret it!

8/8/09

More Than A Songwriter

Songwriters provide a backdrop for living and help shape the church and culture.  With this influence we have an even greater responsibility to steward the talents we're given by God for a purpose!   Where we may miss it is, understanding who we are and what we're called to in the first place.  Instead of leading the way we're often following the paths of others proven successes.  And what writer doesn't want success?   But we are indeed supposed to be leading. 

To know where we need to go we must know from where we come.   If we believe what we say we do about the hope and glory of our God through faith in Christ, then we have to first accept and acknowledge that the call is to Him and His bidding.  In the days of Chivalry Knights rode and fought in the name of their king.  They carried his permission, authority, power, and backing.  Our King, the King of Kings has clearly commissioned us to carry this hope filled, good news gospel to the dying world we live in, with Love as the underlying motivation and attitude of heart.   We are living modern day priests, servants, and examples-endowed with the Spirit of Almighty God.  We're not simply looking to replicate movements of the past or camp out on history, we are moving towards an end.  Our King will return and again has forewarned us to watch and wait, all the while being prepared for His coming.   

"Therefore every teacher of the law who has been instructed about the kingdom of heaven is like the owner of a house who brings out of his storeroom new treasures as well as old."  (Matt: 13:52)  

As Christian Writers we have; a mandate to live, a story to tell, a role to play, a responsibility to steward, and a future to look forward to and prepare for!   Our context is the community of believers of which we are a part, each serving a distinctively different purpose according to the gifts and talents we have.  But the Call is not to hold up away from the world in seclusion as creative hermits.  We are to be very much involved and present within it- just not of it!  We don't worship its way, we don't do life its way; we don't copy - we create!   Resident within us is the beauty of the One True God who made the earth and stars and the same power that raised Him from the grave.  We have a new song to sing!

We also have a choice to aim for targets that are of human design or to fulfill a divine destiny we were made for.   For many gifted people this is a huge challenge as their dreams are in contrast to what they're called to do and often win out over God's plan A.  There's absolutely nothing wrong with our works and expressions being promulgated to places of renown or importance.  What matters is WHO does the promulgating or promoting.  Chasing success at any cost will surely cost more than we ever imagined.  History proves God can make us famous in an instant if He decides to, also that He can take it all away as fast is it comes.   We want to be found being about His business; "faithful in the little," which is the fastest track to being ready for success His way.   

The first question we have to answer rightly is; who’s glory are we doing it for?  Laying down our burdens and dreams at the Cross of Jesus is daunting because it usually requires having our fingers pried off of things dearest to our hearts.   I've always loved the analogy of a wild horse being bridled.  Once tamed and harnessed, all of its innate strength and power is at the control and direction of the skilled rider.  In our case God is the most merciful Master we could ever hope to be fully surrendered to.  Once harnessed, our talents, our gifts, our entire being; are now in the hands of the Supreme Archer.  He can and will fire at will-all of the arrows in the quiverthat are able to be fired.

Where do you want to be?  Where do you want to go?  What do you want to do?  There's freedom yet immense responsibility with the Lord.  We can ask what we will but we must ask in His name.  We can go wherever but He directs the steps ultimately.  We do anything but not all things are profitable and worthy in His eyes.   The other side of free will is consequence.  We will reap what we sow and it comes down to choosing Christ first in all things.  No one can make us read and understand the road map we've been given in His word.   But if we do seek the Wisdom of God that it contains He will faithfully, and miraculously really, open our spiritual eyes and give understanding.  Because he gives gifts and doesn't take them back He will also allow to "Go Your Own Way," and many do.

Daniel when called to interpret dreams for the king,  was neither dumbfounded nor speechless.   He boldly spoke the right words as given by God directly to him through His spirit.  We should not be void of what to say whether on our platforms or the streets.  Who knows why but the God of all Creation has chosen to speak ordinary and simple folk.  We too are seers and prophets but need to re-discover what that means.  We need less style and personality and more humility and confidence in God.   We need to believe that He is still at work in this way.  And if He uses us at all, a good attitude to adopt is that of Balaam’s ass; absolutely astonished and still a donkey!  

Are you inspired to live and create?  Are you well inside?   Do you need help?  Welcome to the party!  To the degree we can walk with God intimately and maintain spiritual and physical wellness we can live and create healthily.  Reflecting a Glorious God.    It is possible to become who and what we are made to be!  It's not hocus pocus magic, but a work done only By His Spirit.  Takes years to make our messes and hence time to fix them.  If we are choosing every day to pursue our own desires void of His Spirit then we can't honestly expect to be absolved of consequences. Worship in spirit and truth starts with honesty, if we are honest about our condition then there's hope for restoration and revival in our hearts then the world!

The future is not a fantasy; God holds it firmly and has a plan for good and not for evil.  The question is, will we receive His outstanding gifts, surrender our talents and ambitions, and follow Him-having counted the cost and taken up our own crosses?  Not everyone wants to do it this way, but for those that will, life and creativity make much more sense!  

Be more than just a good Songwriter.  Be yielded in the hands of your Creator first and He may astound you with what He does in and through you.