He laid it right out there in September 2012 – it’d been a
tough time, financially. He needed to exercise his ‘faith’, and believe that he would be uplifted
by mingling and worshipping with others. That was the bottom line for Randy
Gill as he wrote about being “Faithful” in light of the year – probably really
longer than that – that had been challenging him and others. If you’ve ever
been in a trough, listen to what Randy and his friends did to lift each other
out of that miry position.
It had been going on for perhaps three years, Randy suggests,
when he thought about the “Faithful” topic that he and the Zoe group were
bringing together in 2012 in Atlanta, Georgia. Finances had been stretched for
these people, since the economy had sunk and some belt-tightening was
necessary, even wise, for them. (Isn’t it interesting that a dollar [shown
here] might be a sign of wealth, but it still says ‘In God We trust’ on it, right?)
After
all, much of the world was grappling with down stock markets, outta-sight
mortgage payments, and lost jobs too, so why should we be exempt? Part of what may
have seemed like a luxury – conference get-togethers with other like-minded
Christians, their spiritual siblings -- had consequently been choked off temporarily
to keep ministries operating at minimum capacity. But, they were kinda feeling like
skeletons, without the muscles and organs of an otherwise healthy, vibrant body.
Is a conference a luxury, or is it lifeblood? That was the question Randy seemed
to have asked and answered for himself, when he encouraged others to be in
Atlanta in 2012 – ‘come because it had been a rough time’ he
said. Trust in Him, experience Him among us who believe, because He can
overpower all of our struggles. He’s among His people who gather because they revere
Him, no matter what. He surrounds us, like a protecting mountain range (Psalm
125). And, “Faithful” wasn’t just a stray thought, a single song that Randy
wrote. That was the 2012 conference’s theme, and it’s embossed on the Zoe
album, too. A reflection of His constancy.
Zoe means ‘life’ in Greek, and perhaps that’s the basic
ingredient, the DNA of those who are eager to assemble, to be a ‘one another’
church. Life is more than just existing. It’s more than just the skeleton, the
thing we use at Halloween to send a chilling message – this is what something
looks like when it’s dead. Zoe sings its “Faithful” message in plain English,
telling us what life looks like. It’s us, who are motivated by God’s truths,
His mercy and justice that we’ve found in His message – the Bible – that He’s
preserved for us, and that we take to others who feel beaten down, rejected,
and otherwise hopeless. What’s the faith-life say when it runs into a struggle,
a disease that wastes you away to little more than a skeleton, perhaps like in
the last few years? Maybe the last few years reminded Gill that the tough part
is the persistence, the being
faithful, suggested by the phrase ‘let us be faithful, faithful, faithful…’
that Randy employs repeatedly in his composition. Randy doesn’t wrap the
faithful message in a lot of fancy paper. You and I know how faith should
answer. It keeps answering.
See the blog entry for Sep. 12, 2102 at this link for the
composer’s comments on the song’s background: http://zoegroup.org/
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