The Sound of the Calling

Worship the Lord with gladness.
    Come before him, singing with joy.
Psalm 100:2

Acoustic-Guitar-Player.jpg

As I type these words my oldest son, edging ever closer to 16, is singing a worship song from this mornings worship set at church.While this would elate any faith filled father, to get full perspective I need to walk through what I have known for over 13 years.

God made it clear that Andrew had a gift of music.  That passion started more as an intrigue.  When Drew was the lone child in the house, daddy time was spent perusing through the local music store.  I was a youth pastor with love for music and enough ability to know I had no ability to actually play an instrument.  But still loved to pretend I one day would.  So I would hold the guitar and his little hands would strum the strings.

So my prayer became that every ounce of love I had for harmonies and melodies would translate to talent in my oldest.   God faithfully answered that prayer. Andrew with moderate to fairly good ability plays percussion, keyboard and guitar.  Most of the latter two self taught courtesy of YouTube.  But what I had known for so long also knew God would have to speak clearly to Andrew.
So after some prompting from our pastor and encouragement from dear old dad, 2 weeks ago Andrew took to the stage guitar in hand. In all honesty, right now Drew just sees himself as a player in the band.  He using the gift and talent in a Sunday setting.  What I know as a dad is what Paul wrote to Timothy, a young pastor:
For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands.  2 Timothy 1:6

 With every strum and every chord played by Drew, I believe that is what is happening.  The love discovered in the a little music store in Tennessee and prayers I prayed is being fanned into a flame. The classic King James says “stir up the gift” inside you.  Our responsibility is to do the stirring, not God’s.  God has clearly imparted the gifts and talents inside of us. God has made clear to each what the gift is.

Maybe you don’t recognize it as this.  Maybe you write it off as just a skill you have.  But I promise you, it is a gift.  And one that needs stirred up.

I think it is no coincidence that the very next instruction Paul gives Timothy is that God did not give him a spirit of fear.  Paul clearly wanted to remind young Timothy that God gave the gift not the fear.  The reminder was and should be a punch in the spiritual face.  When we let fear or intimidation have the control our gifts get put on the shelf.

So to my oldest son:
Fear will come and knock at your hearts door.  Fear will whisper lies that tell you that you are not good enough.  My reminder as Paul told  Timothy fan the flame, stir up the gift, keep strumming the strings and singing the songs. Every chance you get to play, sing and make a joyful noise to the Lord do it.  It will fight back the enemy called Fear and release the power of God’s anointing on your life.

To everyone else, including me:
The sideline of life is no place to stay when God has put something inside of you. It is a season of putting your gift, talent and calling out there for the world to see and God to use.  Fear is the punk that has kept you hidden.  Fear is the liar that has held back not just what you could give, but the impact you were called to make for Jesus.  So blow on the embers of the spark God has put inside you. Let what seems like a small passion God make a big difference with.

 And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them. Romans 8:28 (emphasis mine)

Four Other "Fathers"

“There are 2 guarantees in life: death and your worship pastor will sing Good, Good Father on Sunday.”
Jon Crist, Comedian

I really make no apologies for my tension with Christian music. It is a love-hate relationship that has existed since I first heard Carmen sing “The Champion”.
I am firm believer that the Church should be an epicenter of art – musically, visually, audible and in life. As believers we need to be constantly creating our generations Sistene Chapels in the world. So I get slightly frustrated when great art from the body of believers gets overplayed.
I am HUGE fan of Chris Tomlin.  Chris’ influence on worship music in the Church as indelibly left a mark and reshaped music in the Sunday service. The Passion movement brought life to my weary chorus singing soul in the critical years of college and Chris Tomlin was a huge part of that.
But if you have heard it once, you’ve heard Chris Tomlin’s version of “Good, Good Father” a zillion times played on Christian Radio. So in the spirit of “art” here are Four More Fathers — or at least versions of the hit song.
Housefires hf ii.jpg
Sometimes to find something great you have to get to the source. Housefires is a worship band out of Grace Midtown Church in Atlanta, GA.  Members Pat Barrett and Tony Brown are the craftsmen of the chords and lyrics of the anthem Good, Good Father.
The original cut of the song is found on Housefires ii (2014)album.  It is a raw, gutsy acoustic driven live version.  It has a vibe that Pat and Tony invited you into their living room to share a chunk of their heart with you. The passion from which the lyrics ring out from the vocals tell you that this is more than words penned and paired with chords, but heartfelt letter ripped from the journal of the artists.
The opening verse “I have heard a thousand stories” cuts to the chase of this passion filled cut of the song.
voices.jpgVoices of Lee
Not going to lie – I am an alum of Lee University, so my opinion is slightly biased. Voices is an all A Cappella choir that has been featured on everything from Good Morning America to the White House to the first season of the NBC show “The Sing Off”.   Voices takes on the worship song on the A Cappella Worship (2016).
Oh sweet goodness! Voices of Lee typically classic style is modernized in this all vocal version of the song. The vocal melodies melt like butter on a hot Tennessee biscuit. The blended melody, harmony and beatbox are near perfection on this smooth rendition of the song. A ridiculously warm male lead vocal is followed by the soul punch of female voice just crushing the tag “perfect in all of your ways.”  And wraps with a full choir bolstering the goodness of the father.  Ya’ll this is good!
Even if choir a cappella is not your cup of coffee. You have got to give it a listen.
wm.pngWorshipMob
Buckle your seatbelts.  WorshipMob is a collective of 70-80 worship leaders from 30 different churches joining forces to create some incredible mashups of worship songs.  Their 9 minute YouTube version is a just a snippet of the 37 minute free flowing worship session dropped on digital video and into the interwebs.
I actually found WorshipMob by accident and so glad I did. This multi-voice melody mix with moments of free worship is heart melting and soul filling. I recommend you spin this version with some time to engage the “Good, Good Father”.  If you dare, take on the entire WorshipMob mix of this song blended with about 4 others.
Anthem Lightsal cover.jpg
If covers are your thing, the boys of Anthem Lights have you covered.  Quite literally.  The boys released their rendition on the album “We God You Covered, Vol 1” (2016).  Anthem Lights is a faith based foursome who has made a name for themselves covering mashups on YouTube.  They have re-imagined everyone from Taylor Swift to your favorite Boy Band.  The band is most widely known for their yearly mashups of the “best of…”
The quartet brings heartfelt harmonies to the song as to be expected from the group.  Primarily backed by just piano, the song has a raw harmonic soulful vibe that carries through.
I would say they covered pretty well.
Simpy said, he is a good, good father no matter how it is covered.  And this song is great artwork for the Church.
 

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