Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Lasers, Alan Parsons, and Facing Your Fears





This installment is a bit of a departure from 19th century evangelist D. L. Moody, who I've been writing about, but I believe he would say a big, fat "AMEN!" to the message here....The "Dynamic Duo for Jesus, Part 2—Ira Sankey" will continue next time! Thanks again for reading...


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Brenda and I took a walk in our neighborhood Sunday afternoon. While in the rest of the country it was chilly and grey, here in Mobile, Alabama it was a perfect moisture-free, seventy-five-degree day. During the walk I was listening, via my new over-the-ear wireless Sony headphones, to a collection of Alan Parsons Project tunes, ones that became a favorite for me in the late-70s. The songs instantly brought me back to my high school days.

I acquired my first car on my sixteenth birthday in 1976—a land yacht-sized ’65 Dodge Polara—which allowed me to venture into the wild, beyond the safe confines of my Orange County, California upbringing. This meant that, aside from commuting back and forth to school and work, I could occasionally venture into Los Angeles, under an hour away, for concerts and cool date spots in and around Hollywood.

One favorite date-destination for me was the Griffith Park Observatory, which sits on Mt. Hollywood, above serpentine Sunset Boulevard that winds its way to the Pacific Ocean. In the observatory itself, where scientists could look into the stars at night through a mega telescope, the public was also given access for special events. These included laser light shows that were projected within the building’s inside dome, accompanied by trippy music like that of the Alan Parsons Project.

Leaning our heads upward against plainly constructed wooden head rests, Parson’s music—along with other quadraphonically mixed selections like David Bowie’s “Space Oddity,” and Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon—would transport dreamers like me through a 3-D light show into faraway galaxies. Ivan Dryer premiered the 45-minute “Laserium” show at Griffith Park in November 1973, but sadly it closed in 2002 (see a video from an actual 1977 presentation below).

A song that stuck with me through the years from those Griffith days is one from Parson’s 1977 I Robot album called "Day After Day (The Show Must Go On)." Listening to this song on my walk Sunday transported me again, albeit from the viewpoint of a 56-year-old, with much of life visible only from the “rearview mirror.”

The lyrics speak of a young dreamer much like me who gazed into the stars, looking to do great things in the future, with a life of hope and promise laid out before him. Ultimately, the song speaks of regret for not taking chances as time continues its unsympathetic journey onward.

I can say that I have followed most of my dreams and have realized many. But I can also say that as I got older, fear became an ever-growing companion, making it increasingly difficult to stretch out into the “wild” and unknown territory. After all, I was (and still am) happily married with kids. As a grown-up, though, one’s mind tends to dictate that it would be unwise to venture out into an unknown wilderness filled with lions, tigers and bears, where risk can lead to failure. Many times it was wise to obey the warning signs, and I’m glad I did.

I have taken many risks in my day, and I don’t regret the failures one bit. Even as I have fallen flat on my face at times, I learned great life-lessons. If it were not for those crazy risks, I wouldn’t have been blessed with a great songwriting career and the chance to travel the world playing music. Heck, if it were not for faith in the face of risk, I would have been too intimidated to ask Brenda to be my bride-for-life back in 1985. Boy, am I blessed that I did!

Those dreamy times at Griffith Observatory helped me to define what I wanted to do with life, which was to create music that stirred dreams in others. I have learned that a good song has great power in provoking the soul.  I also came to realize that the Lord placed a vision for the future in me, one that through music would (and still does) help the church worship and connect to God in a way that only music can. This calling still remains as I continue up the path toward a doctorate in worship—a huge risk, by the way!

The lyrics for the Parsons song are below. I pray that anyone reading this doesn’t miss an opportunity due to the fear of risk...please don’t let a huge blessing pass you by. Apprehension may be the only thing that stands in the way of acquiring those “castles in Spain” that you’ve been dreaming about…


Day After Day (The Show Must Go On)

Gaze at the sky
And picture a memory
Of days in your life.
You knew what it meant to be happy and free
With time on your side...

Remember your daddy
When no one was wiser.
Your ma used to say
That you would go farther than he ever could
With time on your side...

Think of a boy with the stars in his eyes,
Longing to reach them but frightened to try.
Sadly you'd say someday, someday...

But day after day
The show must go on,
And time slipped away
Before you could build any castles in Spain...
The chance had gone by.

With nothing to say
And no one to say it to,
Nothing has changed.
You still got it all to do,
Surely you know.
The chance has gone by...

Think of a boy with the stars in his eyes,
Longing to reach them but frightened to try.
Sadly you'd say someday, someday...

But day after day
The show must go on,
And you gaze at the sky
And picture a memory of days in your life
With time on your side...

With time on your side...
(Day after day the show must go on...)
With time on your side...
(Day after day the show must go on...)
With time on your side...



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Writer(s): Eric Woolfson, Alan Parsons

Thursday, January 5, 2017

A Dynamic Duo for Jesus: Moody and Sankey—Part 1









Evangelist Dwight Lyman Moody and song leader Ira David Sankey became one of the great evangelistic teams of the nineteenth century. Together this unlikely pairing of a former shoe salesman and government worker, respectively, would help change the world for Christ—an influence effecting evangelism and the church to this day.
 In 1873, D. L. Moody and Ira Sankey were invited to Britain to conduct evangelistic crusades. In advance of the first meeting there, Moody requested Sankey compose an announcement, which read:

D. L. Moody of Chicago will preach, and Ira D. Sankey of Chicago will sing, at 7 o'clock P. M. tomorrow, Thursday, and each succeeding evening for a week, in the Independent Chapel. All are welcome. No collection.[1]

Less than fifty persons, sitting as far away from the pulpit as possible, attended the first meeting of the week in London, England. The next night there were about two hundred in attendance. Britain witnessed the power of the gospel presented by Moody and Sankey over two years of meetings, the turnout of which swelled to an astounding twenty thousand by the time they ministered at Agricultural Hall, London, in 1875.[2]
The Moody/ Sankey team, functioning between 1871 and 1899, personified the fervor expressed in the passionate missionary motto of the day that Moody helped coin: “evangelization of the world in this generation.”

D. L. Moody

Moody expressed the love he had for his birthplace, when he said, “The quiet days at Northfield [Massachusetts], how I long for them!”[3] Born there on February 5, 1837, Moody’s upbringing was marked by the sudden loss of his father Edwin, then a forty-one-year-old bricklayer, when Dwight was only four-years-old. His mother, Betsy, was left alone with a family of seven boys and two girls (twins were born after the husband died) to care for; the resulting hardship made an indelible impression on the young Moody.
Another thing that had a deep-rooted effect on young Dwight was when his older brother ran away from home and did not return for several years. In a sermon that Moody often preached, he recalled the summer night when a scruffy, dark-bearded man knocked on the door of his aging mother’s house. As the door was opened, the mother was unable to recognize the stranger on the front porch. When the stranger’s tears began to flow, the face of her long-lost son came into memory, and she invited him in. He could only answer, saying, “No, no…I can not come in until you forgive me.”[4] Moody said, “She took him to her heart at once; she made him come right in; she forgave him all and rejoiced over his coming more than over all the other children that had not run away.”[5] His own mother’s heartbreak stirred in him a desire to see other wanderers “come home” in his evangelistic crusades.
             Moody attained the equivalent of only a fifth-grade education. He left Northfield for Boston at the age of seventeen to sell shoes for his uncle. It was there that he attended a YMCA, visited a Sunday school, and was converted at the age of eighteen. 
His life-purpose was the proclamation of the Gospel through various enterprises, which to some observers seemed to exceed the limits of his ability. But, as his son William would later recall, “…in all these cases…the results have not only surprised his advisers, but have far surpassed even [his own] expectations.”[6]
Moody was a humble, God-reliant man, but also full of confidence. He stood alone many times while considering an endeavor, even against the objection of a venture by friends. However, he always trusted the counsel of beloved Emma, his wife of 37 years.[7]
Chicago, the city that would become his home as an adult, shaped Moody in tremendous ways. The great Chicago Fire of October 1871 destroyed his own home and displaced thousands of people—killing hundreds. This desperate reality shook him to the core, and propelled him into a focused ministry that would engage him until his death in 1899.
Moody helped establish many techniques that were necessary for the great evangelistic ministry that God provided in the England, Scotland, Ireland, and throughout America. He was thought to have reached one million persons for Christ (without television, the Internet, or radio) during his ministry, and he would do this in partnership with a music man just a few years younger—and almost as ambitious—Ira David Sankey.

A Consummate Team

D. L. Moody and Ira Sankey were an indomitable team comprised of two diverse individuals that worked effortlessly in tandem. Sankey recalled in his biography that at a meeting in Norfolk, Virginia, after singing a number of hymns, and just before Moody was about to take the pulpit, the local church pastor stepped up to say: “I want to make a little explanation to my people; many of my members believe that Moody and Sankey are one man, but brethren and sisters, this man is Mr. Moody, and that man at the organ is Mr. Sankey; they are not one person, as you supposed.”[8]
The Moody/ Sankey partnership started locally in Chicago, but was to blossom into a global enterprise. In 1872, Moody took a trip to England on behalf of the YMCA. It was there that he felt called to minister to the masses, first in England and then in America.[9] Following a two-year campaign in Britain, between 1873 and 1875, with Sankey again at his side, the duo’s popularity was brought to the attention of the whole world.[10]


Part 2—Ira Sankey—next time!




[1] Ira David Sankey, Sankey’s Story of the Gospel Hymns and of Sacred Songs and Solos (London: The Sunday School Times Company, 1906), 19.

[2] Mark Galli, 131 Christians Everyone Should Know (Nashville: B & H Publishing Group, 2010), 71.

[3] William Revell Moody, D. L. Moody By His Son (New York: Fleming H. Revell, 1900), 531.

[4] D. L. Moody, “Moody’s Prodigal Brother,” The Evangelical Herald, March 27, 1919, 3.

[5] Ibid.

[6] William Revell Moody, 505.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Sankey, 80.

[9] Justo L. Gonzalez, The Story of Christianity, Vol. 2: The Reformation to the Present Day (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1985), 254.

[10] Donald P. Hustad, Jubilate II: Church Music in Worship and Renewal  (Carol Stream, IL: Hope Publishing, 1993), 234.