Saturday, January 5, 2013

Breath of Heaven -- Amy Grant and Chris Eaton



She was 32 and was having her third child, or she was a teenager and having her first child. Depending on whom you think about when you hear Amy Grant’s and Chris Eaton’s collaborative effort “Breath of Heaven”, you might picture Amy on stage as she sang and recorded this song, or maybe it’s the young girl she would want you to see – Mary, the mother of God the Son. They’re 21 centuries apart, but both have known what it’s like to carry a life inside herself. In 1992, Grant heard the song by Eaton and knew she identified with it, albeit with some revisions. Her own pregnancy, her third with a daughter Sarah, was a gift, so in that way, she and Mary had something in common.

The story of the song’s development can be told no better than to read it at this link: http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=14730
It’s about Mary’s emotions as she was near the time to give birth to the Christ-child. The chorus calls upon God as the ‘breath of heaven’, not something we hear very often (but pictured here in Corrado Giaquinto’s 18th Century The Holy Spirit masterpiece). Is that what it’s like to carry life inside oneself, to feel that you’ve been breathed upon by the very holiness of Him? Believers have the Spirit as a gift, but so often it’s not that tangible, to be quite frank. But with an actual, physical, small life growing inside, that’s another matter. And, to know that, ultimately, He gives life, changes how a young woman might think too. After all, isn’t that part of why we humans consider childbirth so important, that He’s given us something precious? In Mary’s case, her sense of responsibility in bringing the baby in her womb into the world is certainly unique. So, perhaps it takes a woman who has borne life to come part of the way to connect with Mary. It was her third time, so maybe Amy Grant reached out with her accumulated child-bearing experience in this endeavor in 1992.    

The song by Grant and Eaton has served more than one purpose. Grant thinks of it as a prayer for mercy, as she explains in the 2001 book by the same name that she’s authored. It seems to make her reflect on how she connects with the audiences who gather to hear her sing, about how to pray for the masses who need God’s leniency. And, the song is also part of the 2006 movie The Nativity Story, whose screenwriter says he used the song at the start of each day for inspiration while writing the film’s screenplay. A song, a movie, and a book…how many other media might we try to get a handle on God’s breath, this Holy Spirit? Could working in a hospital maternity ward be another medium to get me closer to understanding how God breathes life into human form? How about working for His purpose wherever I am, asking to sense His work in me? Being with other believers, feeling the collaborative, collective surge of worship, is another way we make our small effort to find the breath of heaven, right? At Christmastime, reading, hearing, and seeing the birth story just reminds us that He really inhabits people, and something amazing did happen – and still does happen -- as a result. Hey, did you just take a breath…or was that Him?    

The following link also shows all of the verses and chorus of the song:

See links here for biography of the composers:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Eaton_%28UK_musician%29

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