The song title says pretty much what Anthony Brown and Pat Barrett wanted to say in 2013. Do you have “Joy”?, they must have asked themselves, and if you said yes, how would that look? Though they haven’t said so explicitly, the name of their band and the premier album for their music that included this Joy song may help describe that emotion, to visualize joy in action. And not only that, for Joy shines through gloom because of the source of that light that exudes something that puts those it inhabits on another plane. It doesn’t matter if you’re in Atlanta (see its seal here) where Anthony and Pat probably were when they created this song, or any other place on the planet. Joy puts all of us in the same place, as long as the womb of that emotion is a certain one – a miraculous one.
They called it Housefires, perhaps because Anthony and Pat wanted to express metaphorically what an exuberant people would look like to the rest of the people around them if they were on fire for the God who saved them. This name they chose for their group must have really resonated with what they wanted to communicate, for the first album and nearly every one after that (9 of the total 10 albums by late 2023) likewise contain this name. Perhaps they envisioned a fire a bit like what happened for the Apostles on the Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit came to inhabit them (Acts 2:3). Or, perhaps when they thought about the joy part of their lives, they remembered what that Hebrews writer said (12:18-24); that the place was no longer Mount Sinai where the presence of God and the appearance of Moses’ lit-up face reminded them of the fire of God’s wrath, but instead ‘Mount Zion’ where ‘the joyful assembly’ of many thousands of angels are gathered in that place. And so, these two songwriters could sing confidently the first lines in their song – that ‘beauty’, ‘true love’, and ‘freedom’ lead to unbounded ‘joy’, overcoming ‘brokenness’, ‘pain’, captivity, and ‘mourning’. It’s not a surface-level happiness, but one that is ‘down deep in my soul’. Freedom, security in His love and salvation, and being connected to His great heart – those cannot be expressed in any way suitable if not in ecstasy.
Ecstasy might be a more impressive word, but what Anthony and Pat sought for the Atlanta church where they ministered in 2013 was something more easily sung and grasped. Something that would coax a crowd really feeling it to put their hands together in complete joy…that is what they seemed to be after. Can you imagine it? You might be limited to your imagination (for now) when you read what that Hebrews writer said – the thousands upon thousands of angels, after all! – but give yourself a preview and be present where a group sings this. (There is a link below for that purpose, at least online.) Be on the mountain for a few moments, and don’t think it ends when the song is over. Churches and believers in joyful assembly happen all over this planet every week. Go find one.
Read about the band here: Househttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housefiresfires - Wikipedia
Watch/listen to the band perform Joy here: Housefires - Joy (feat. Tony Brown and Pat Barrett)
See here for image of Atlanta seal and its public domain status -- File:Seal of Atlanta.svg - Wikimedia Commons This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 50 years or fewer. This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1928.