Music| My Musings

 

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A few months ago we were tackling the topic about music since it is a very broad and controversial issue in the Adventist world and the world as whole. No one wants to talk about it because they just want to keep things calm or simply have no answers to the nagging questions. We the youth are more on the inquisitive side and we wanna know everything there is to know. From what kind of music to listen to personally as Christians to  what we should be singing on stage in church, from how we should express ourselves while singing to what music should be sang in concerts, from motives of singing to what the big people(church leaders) have to say about it, from what kinds of singers are good to which ones are a-little-bit-too-much or a-little-bit-out-there.

 

It was not until we had wrapped up for the day did I realize that I personally had been doing it all the wrong way. Yeah, the wrong way. During the discussion we discovered that  most of the time we sing just for the sake of singing. In most cases people will approach us  and ask us to sing and  in most  cases we’ll be like “cool. We can do that” and the deal is sealed. We go up on the stage mistakes and all and deliver and call it a day. What we don’t realize  is that there is so much more to just walking up on the stage, grabbing a mike and singing or playing an instrument, giving a polite if not proud smile and walking back down. There is so much more that we haven’t discovered that it took a full 18 years before I fully understood.

 

It could have been easier if it were showbiz because the sole essence of showbiz is to showcase who has the best voice ( which isn’t considered anymore nowadays) and charm and who has  the looks and money enough to pull off all the stunts that the modernized music world has to offer (Think electro music).

 

There is a difference with singing just for show or money and singing for God. Singing for God requires the whole soul. It requires meditation, it requires a strong solid relationship with a loving Saviour so great and magnificent and wonderful that when you sing for Him you are totally wrapped up  in His glory.  When a whole soul is praising God, the music will be significantly different from when one is just singing to show how great he/she is. It will have meaning because the whole person is giving God praise or crying out to Him.

 

We used to wonder why  exceptional music groups like Gaither Vocal band, Hillsong, Women of faith and many more had all that magic of turning ordinary songs into amazing music with meaning that compels people to naturally sing along and memorize. Something most ofus will not encounter in our day to day worship experience  in our respective churches. What we don’t realize is that these people have a strong relationship with their Lord and it reflects through the music they sing.

 

The Max Lucado book drives it home when it says that ‘It’s Not About Us,’ it’s rather about Him. It is His story that we are talking about here. It was never about us in the first place. So if we want to fully give glory to God through music, we have to first take time and fully understand this person we wanna praise(most of the time we don’t even know what we are singing about. Seriously. Just because a song sounds catchy, we immediately fall in love with it). Take time to know Him better and His love for us as His children and His will for our lives so that when we proclaim to the whole wide world about His greatness that’s  tremendous we mean it and it comes from deep within our souls and it is total praise.

 

After grasping this new found information, I realized there is work to be done. A lot of work to be done in me because change truly begins from within. It’s not gonna be easy but in the end I believe it will be worth it. Having fully realized that Jesus is our Savior and His love is so great He came to die for us so we may be free from the chains of sin and proclaiming it without shame or contempt whatsoever, it will be the most amazing thing. I believe when one is transformed by the blood of Jesus Christ, his lifestyle and character change too and will align with the Lords will for his life. I hope you take this journey with me as I am fully seeking the Lord and longing for a meaningful relationship with Him. Just as Hillsong sang, “we are running…chasing after all that You are because all that You are is all that we want…”

 

Image source: Here 

🙂

Sophie

 

 

 

 

Love Is…

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So we all have wondered what love is… and most of us are still figuring it out. I got this from the Bible and I think it gives a clear definition of love:

‘Love is patient and kind; it is not jealous or conceited or proud; love is not ill mannered or selfish or irritable; love does not keep a record of wrongs; love is not happy with evil but is happy with the truth. Love never gives up; and its faith , hope and patience never fail.’   1 Corinthians 13: 4-7 GNB

Have a blessed Weekend

🙂

Sophie

LOL With Catherine Denton

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Our next guest in the LOL series is Catherine, someone who has been personally inspiring ever since I found her blog.  This is what Living out loud to her is:

Hi, I’m Catherine! I love to write, paint and photograph fairies. I’m an avid reader of how-to books, memoirs and children’s fantasy. I get uneasy when there are no books on hold for me at the library. I have a deathly fear of heights which developed late in life and I may’ve had a tiny meltdown hiking through the Grand Canyon (just ask the two old men I croaked to, “Please step away from the edge!”). I love all veggies ~ except beets. I love to relax with a hot bath, new paintbrushes, snuggles, homemade gingersnaps, family, and coffee anything.

I love this concept of living out loud. To me, living out loud is simply: to love extravagantly. It’s going out of your way, sacrificing wants, and reaching out when no one’s reaching in. I have fumbled along and loved hesitantly, conditionally, minimally; but to love extravagantly is something I’m still aiming for.

Four years ago, one of my dearest friends found out she had cancer and after she told me, I busied myself for a few weeks and avoided her. I eventually came back around and apologized for deserting her. She told me she assumed I was dealing with the hard news the best way I knew how. Even in her darkest moment, she didn’t hold it against me or refuse relationship based on my reaction. She loved me in spite of my actions and was willing to hold out her hand when I came back. That’s extravagant.

Her reaction changed my perspective of love. It taught me honesty at a level I had never experienced. It made me realize that living out loud meant grabbing hold of each moment (including the bad ones) and considering those in the moment with you. It meant offering grace and laying out your heart at the cost of rejection.

My friend eventually passed away. I was there beside her in the last months, weeks, and days.  She’d shown me what it meant to be brave in the face of fear. She walked that path ahead of me and put footprints in the sand of where I needed to go. There is a quote I love from Natalie Babbitt in Tuck Everlasting that completely describes my friend, “Don’t be afraid of death; be afraid of an unlived life. You don’t have to live forever, you just have to live.” And she did.

And I want to.

On this pursuit of living out loud, remember to love extravagantly. Go beyond what is expected, reach beyond what is sought, and forgive what hasn’t been asked of you. Don’t be afraid of the unlived life; you have this moment to live it.

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Thank you Catherine for sharing your LOL journey. You can find her blog  here.