Saturday, August 21, 2021

God's Wonderful People -- Lanny Wolfe


This was the scene in 1974, Salt Lake City, in what is known as the Salt Palace (see picture). Lanny Wolfe was 32 years old, and he was feeling something like a warm blanket come over himself, as he thought about “God’s Wonderful People”. It wasn’t a one-time occurrence for Lanny, a songwriter who had grown accustomed to this sensation, and knew what to do with this moment. He wasn’t seeking attention, but really reveled in that moment, that he was just one of the crowd. Lanny didn’t need the stage to feel the music flow inside, and he didn’t need to know everyone in the crowd on a first-name basis to have this warm feeling. These were the people with whom he felt a visceral sense of belonging, a sense of contentment at the same time that he felt overwhelmed. With all of these impressions flowing in his being, is it any wonder that a song soon emerged?

 

Lanny Wolfe had shared many times with crowds not unlike the one where he found himself one night in Utah in 1974 (or about that time), as a result of his chosen profession. He had been part of bible college music departments in California and in Missouri by the mid-1970s, and would go on to the same role in Mississippi for the next nearly 20 years, and then on to worship director positions in Texas, Florida, and Indiana after that. All the while, Lanny was building ‘family’ memories, so perhaps in 1974 it’s not a stretch to say that he was already conscious that his part in the kingdom was a gift, one which gave him a deep sense of devotion to the Giver. Perhaps that was most evident when the 10,000 people sang together at the conference where Lanny found himself, something that would have struck a special chord in his musical being. Lanny was off to one side, in some bleachers that were not central to the events in the Salt Palace. Did that allow him to more easily observe the assembled, to identify some people’s faces, and to recall his own personal history with them? Lanny says the good and bad times with these people were part of what he imagined, both in the past and what he expected would come about in the future. Celebrations and lamentations, it didn’t matter, because Lanny knew he could depend on this family to be present in his life no matter what the circumstances. All these thoughts welled to the surface, so the speak, and Lanny did not ignore what was happening – in fact, he’d used many similar episodes to concoct new songs. He already had the chorus for ‘God’s Wonderful Family’ written by the time he returned to a nearby motel, and remembers distinctly sharing it with two people who had been part of his musical family. Some people take pictures to remember special moments, and others like Lanny compose musical portraits to commemorate those times.  

 

The song chorus he wrote while sitting in Salt Palace was probably really the only way for Lanny to express adequately what was going on in his head and his heart that evening in Utah. He already had the pictures in his mind of people there, so all he needed were sounds and musical notation to capture and take to another level what was spinning inside himself. He dedicates this song, and another similar one named ‘God’s Family’ (see blog entry for June 26, 2021), for someone he considers pretty special in his life – someone named George. ‘George’s Song’, which Lanny writes on the front page for these two song stories, refers to his childhood/teenage-days pastor, George Chambers. But Lanny hastens to add that many, many people are part of his ‘family’ of believers. It seems as if they’ve helped keep Lanny rooted, in touch with himself and his role in the family. Sound familiar? It’s great to be in a family!      

 

 

See this site to obtain the book “More than Wonderful”, where the story to the song is found: https://paradigmmusic.net/

 

Author’s biography is here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanny_Wolfe

 

Source for the picture: Salt_Palace_-_West_Temple_entrance_-_12_September_2012.JPG (2392×3528) (wikimedia.org)

 

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