Posts tagged ‘easter hymn’

May 23, 2011

easter hymn: window in the skies by U2

This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lays down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command you. — John 15:12-14 (ESV)

If I ever have the opportunity to plan an Easter service, it will end with this song. The whole entire congregation singing it together. There’s a good chance we exceed the 4:02 runtime of the album version, however. When a song is this perfect for the occasion — in tempo, in tone, in imagery, in paradigm — you want to dwell in that for a minute.

As a contained Easter liturgy, I love how Window is set up. The first verse calling us to worship,
The shackles are undone
The bullet’s quit the gun
The heat that’s in the sun
Will keep us when theres none
The rule has been disproved
The stone it has been moved
The grave is now a groove
All debts are removed

The second verse as dance,

Love makes strange enemies
Makes love where love may please
The soul and its striptease
Hate brought to its knees
The sky over our head
We can reach it from our bed
You let me in your heart
And out of my head

The third verse as confession,

I know I hurt you and I made you cry
Did everything but murder you and I
Our love left a window in the skies
And to love I rhapsodize

The final verse as a word of hope,

Oh can’t you see what love has done
To every broken heart
Oh can’t you see what love has done
For every heart that cries

Love left a window in the skies
And to love I rhapsodize

You’d be hard pressed to find a better modern Easter Liturgy.

Renew and Restore

May 16, 2011

guest post by adampaul…easter hymn: walk alone by the roots

For this week’s Easter Hymn I invited my man Adam to write the first ever guest post for the site. You should check out his site and follow him on the Twitter. There’s no official video for Walk Alone, but you can check a fan video here.

In the late 2000s The Roots crew took a turn from their usual upbeat and jovial tone to a more harsh and political one. Their 2006 and 2008 albums, Game Theory and Rising Down, were overflowing with criticism and frustration with the Bush administration, and the story their albums told became dark and angry.

But in 2010 they had somewhat of a resurrection – not a resurrection in the sense that their careers were dead and suddenly they were successful again, but more due to their musical sound. Last June, they released their aptly titled How I Got Over which brought back some of their older vibes, but kept their social justice driven mindset. The first three tracks on HIGO are the transition from dark to light; the dark feel is still somewhat present in the minor chords and soft brushed percussion, but the harsh political lyrics have begun to morph into curiosity, philosophy and theology.

This feeling of a “resurrection” is reinforced through the subject matter during these transitionary tunes. Track two is titled “Walk Alone”, and it begins the conversation on the other side of darkness. The song features verses from Truck North and P.O.R.N. and a chorus by Dice Raw, but it’s The Roots’ own front man, Black Thought, who brings it home in the third verse. It starts:

The longest walk I’ll probably ever be on

The Road to Perdition, guess I’m fin’ to get my plea on

I pray these wings strong enough to carry me on

I promise every second felt as if it took an eon

Walking like the lost boys of Sierra Leone

The trail of tears what they got me like a Cherokee on

Between the ears something I require therapy on

For working to the bone like my name Robert Guillaume

 

I go above and beyond, the duty called, truly y’all

Even though they kind of blew me off like a booty call

Asked me if I’m just another moolie or a movie star

Forced to face the music like a graduate of Juilliard

Walk alone, talk alone, get my Charlie Parker on

Make my mark alone, shed light upon the dark alone

Get my sparkle on, it’s a mission I’m embarking on

A kamikaze in the danger zone far from home

If How I Got Over is a resurrection for The Roots, then “Walk Alone” is their Good Friday. In Matthew 26, we find Jesus and his disciples at Gethsemane. Jesus is fully aware that Judas is about to show up and betray him into the hands of the Romans:

Then Jesus went with his disciples to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to them, “Sit here while i go over there and pray.” He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee along with him, and he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.”

 

Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.”

 

It is in Gethsemane that we hear Jesus singing Black Thought’s lyrics as he leaves his disciples behind to watch. His prayers to God are desperate. We are allowed a rare glimpse into Jesus’s humanity here. Jesus is praying for God to take his cup from him: I pray these wings strong enough to carry me on.

 

Never has there been or ever will be a more unjust execution. A man with no sin is about to be brutally beaten and marched to his death. In Black Thought’s lyrics we get images of child soldiers and displaced Native Americans as people unjustly forced to walk. But Jesus can relate:

 

Isaiah 53:7-8

 He was oppressed and afflicted,

   yet he did not open his mouth;

he was led like a lamb to the slaughter,

   and as a sheep before its shearers is silent,

   so he did not open his mouth.

By oppression and judgment he was taken away.

   Yet who of his generation protested?

 

We even get a glimpse into the triumphal entry. Jesus was just celebrated less than a week before – people thought he was the dude who would save them from the Romans – but now he’s about to be arrested and murdered for nothing. Comparing Jesus to a booty call? Sketchy territory here. But the concept is a valid one – treasured one day, tossed to the curb the next.

 

“Walk Alone” finishes with a nod to God’s plan: Jesus is on a kamikaze mission to shed light upon the darkness of the world. The Roots (knowingly or unknowingly) have mimicked the story of holy week in this verse. Jesus alone is the one who saves us from darkness. While the Roots are working their way out of the darkness themselves, they do so in the same way that God does it for the world: through the journey of Jesus Christ.

-apc.

April 25, 2011

easter hymn: jesus walks by kanye west

It all started as a joke. I walked out of my office on Thursday and announced to anyone who was around that I was pumped for my solo at church on Easter morning. And then I proceeded to bust into the chorus of Jesus Walks. Chuckles and head shakes all around. Nobody’s shocked. Everyone’s amused.

Once I had that out of my system, it was time to get back to work. I retreated back to my office, set Jesus Walks on repeat and continued with the project I had been working on. But the more I listened to the song, the more it made sense. It really is an Easter hymn. The imagery. The themes. Even the theology of the song. Certainly some of the language and the fact that Kanye carries a lot of baggage keeps me from actually being able to sing it in church.

But this site ain’t no church.

Easter is not just one day. You knew that, right? Of course you did. Because you know that on the liturgical church calendar Easter Sunday kicks off a seven week Easter Season that runs all the way to Pentecost.

Here’s an idea: What if we spend time exploring music that embodies the themes of Easter today, and each of the next six weeks? It’s an idea inspired by a talk my friend Aaron gave last month about art and the prophetic witness in worship. It’s an idea inspired by my crazy notion to someday write a dissertation or teach a class on the Theology of Hip-Hop. It’s an opportunity for me to see if such an exploration will be received by the community as refreshing or heretical.

(Jesus Walks)
God show me the way because the Devil trying to break me down
(Jesus Walks with me)
The only thing that that I pray is that my feet don’t fail me now
(Jesus Walks)
And I don’t think there is nothing I can do now to right my wrongs
(Jesus Walks with me)
I want to talk to God but I’m afraid because we ain’t spoke in so long

To the hustlers, killers, murderers, drug dealers even the strippers
(Jesus walks with them)
To the victims of Welfare for we living in hell here hell yeah
(Jesus walks with them)

29And Levi gave a big reception for Him in his house; and there was a great crowd of tax collectors and other people who were reclining at the table with them. 30The Pharisees and their scribes began grumbling at His disciples, saying, “Why do you eat and drink with the tax collectors and sinners?” 31And Jesus answered and said to them, “It is not those who are well who need a physician, but those who are sick. 32“I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.”–Luke 5.29-32 (NASB)

Yeah. ‘Ye nailed that, lyrically. But I love the visuals in this version of the video just as much, if not more. Jesus never leaving ‘Ye. Faithfully pursuing him. Going places that the church won’t go and manifesting power through images that amount to modern-day accounts of the stories we read in the Gospels.

There’s very much a sense of the embodied Easter there. A question of what difference it makes in this life if Jesus really did conquer death and everything that encompasses. A question of how well the community is doing ministry like Jesus did ministry, and amongst the types of people Jesus ministered to. You may bristle, or you might find yourself invigorated, but I’m convinced there’s a prophetic message in the art here. And I’m convinced we can find other prophetic messages if we listen intently enough.

Renew and Restore

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