When the Creator-God speaks, there is no compromising. With that in mind, you either live what’s inside of you or you don’t. Perhaps that’s what Mark Hall and his song collaborator Steven Curtis Chapman were essentially saying as they provided a musical reminder for themselves and some young people that “The Word Is Alive”. Mark and his group, Casting Crowns, could have been in Daytona Beach (see its seal here) when they cut an album called The Altar and the Door, which was released in August 2007; its focus was inspired by some troubling information that Mark read about how people were trying to ‘ride the fence’, so to speak, and were not taking the right way of living beyond the traditional Sunday worship space. Did the focus of The Altar and the Door provide some echoes in what Mark and Casting Crowns sang about Him being the Word, about how He cannot be disregarded or diminished?
Mark Hall was one of the youth pastors at the church when he found to his dismay some entries in MySpace (a social networking forum that began in August 2003) from some of the teens he knew that sharply contrasted with the Christian lifestyle. These young people were really trying to live in two separate worlds – a phenomenon that Mark pointed out was not unique to youths. It’s easy to feel guilty and share at the Sunday altar what’s going on and how God should motivate a person’s daily life, but what happens between the altar and the door is the crux of the matter. Some of the lyrics that Mark and Steven wrote sound as if they were recalling some scriptures that make God-in-the-flesh too real to overlook, even for a moment, so perhaps the theme of the album provided the subtext for ‘The Word is Alive’, though neither composer explicitly says this. Take for example the title words of the song they wrote – ‘the Word is alive’ sounds so very much like what John wrote on multiple occasions, that He really lived, and really was/is God (John 1:1, 14; and 1 John 1:1). Lest anyone forget how profound was this Word, try on what John saw on Patmos: He is dressed in a robe dipped in blood, and his name is the Word of God (Revelation 19:13). If that one verse isn’t enough, try reading the entire 19th chapter – and especially verses 11-21 -- to capture more of just who He is, and how terrifying and breathtaking He can be, especially to those who oppose Him. Perhaps this and what the Hebrews writer said (Hebrews 4:12) was what drove home the point for Mark and Steven – that the Word’s living and active, and mortally dangerous for those who don’t accept who He is. Did Mark’s youth group hear that when he sang ‘And it cuts like a sword through the darkness’ (chorus). Did they understand also that the ‘world and its glories (including that stuff on MySpace) will fade’. Make very certain you are on God’s side, 24/7.
Mark and Steven also included a spoken portion in the song – maybe it helps emphasize the word that God spoke? – that underscores the diversity of individuals and episodes that worked over centuries to produce the bible and its core message: that Jesus and how He points to the God of the universe is the focus. The bible…it’s hard to appreciate how rare it was once upon a time, in centuries past. But now, do you and I take it too much for granted? And, does that translate into some ho-hums about His presence now? Don’t look at the mere surfaces of what He’s done, but go a little deeper, and then go even deeper. This book that He’s preserved for me has unmined truths, ways to look at Jesus that can fascinate and inform me anew, if I’ll just spend time in it. That’s how one keeps renewing the vision of Him, by finding something new about Him every day. What Mark and Steven and Casting Crowns have done is but one more reminder that this Word is still watching and waiting for me to keep on coming. Get used to hearing His voice, and what He has to say to you.
See information on the album on which the song appears here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Altar_and_the_Door
See information on the graphic-seal here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Seal_of_Daytona_Beach,_Florida.png …This work was created by a government unit (including state, county, and municipal government agencies) of the U.S. state of Florida. It is a public record that was not created by an agency which state law has allowed to claim copyright and is therefore in the public domain in the United States. The graphic-seal can be found inside this document: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daytona_Beach,_Florida


No comments:
Post a Comment