Blech.
What is it about this topic that every song written about it makes me want to plug my ears? This is the thrid time in three pastors I’ve had to deal with this topic in worship. And all the songs out there are terrible. Yuck.
Maybe I’m not looking in the right place, but I feel as though I keep up with all the newest stuff and doing this job for the last 5 years has made me very familiar with the older stuff. Still… nothing.
Is it the songwriters’ inability to understanding the HS properly? Is it that most have a hard time understanding the HS’s role so everyone is afaid to even try to write a song about it? Or is it that all songs written about it musically seem cheesy? It’s so frustrating.
I’m just whining. It comes quite naturally to me.
I’ve been pondering a little about why I write here.
Never too great at the handwritten journal, I was skeptical when I decided to start on online journal. That was three years ago (on zorpia.com) and true to form, I didn’t keep up with it. I wrote enough, I guess, but I just wasn’t consistent. Blogger.com made the process exponentially easier, so yea for them.
As I peruse other blogs, most seem to have a theme and purpose. The writers have a specific reason for writing in the first place. Is it weird that I don’t have that?
I’ve looked back at my history as a writer and there is no identity. I’ve not taken writing seriously. Sometimes I enjoy it, most of the time I loathe it. Often times I only wrote because there was massive amounts of junk inside me I had to get out. I don’t write for any other reason that to sort that junk out. It doesn’t do any good inside me, so I feel as though spewing it all over is better than it taking space up in my heart and mind.
Now, I’ve turned into “blog girl”. In random parts of my day – driving, reading, talking with friends, watching TV – I’ll catch myself thinking about what I will write about next. What is that? Isn’t that weird? I think it’s weird.
My identity is something I feel I’m always searching for. Which I also think is weird. Why must I have a definition in the first place? Does it make me feel as though I belong to something and that, in turn, makes me feel whole? Like it’s okay for me to be here, my existence is acceptable if I know what my “job” is?
That is the great pursuit, isn’t it? The search for reason, purpose, the “one thing” Jack Palance speaks of in City Slickers. The great pursuit of happiness, something we think we can only find outside of ourselves. That sucks, because I want to be an island. I’m sick of looking for happiness in other people and other things. I’m never gonna find it there because that’s not where it is.
Yep, that’s right. I know where it is. And I chase after it every day. Sometimes I have to grab a cup out of someone’s hand and toss the cold water on my face. Sometimes I have to make a pit stop to refuel and change my tires. Sometimes I get pulled over because I was going too fast. But it’s chasing nonetheless. That is my definition – chasing. Come what may, I will chase after what I should; I will chase after what I want.
I need to stop blogging. It makes me think way too much about things.
What I’m listening to: The sound of my TV in the other room.
If you’ve read this blog for a while you know I’m a worship leader. In a “happy with the status quo” “family-reunion” type-of church that I grew up in, love, am not afraid to be disillusioned with, and a church that is trying to work it’s way out of a hole we’ve dug.
Believe me, I’ve thought about leaving my church. Anyone who is passionately devoted to Christ and works/volunteers in a church most likely has. I’ve thought about leaving lots and lots of times. Why don’t I? Why should I? I can fill notebooks and notebooks with reasons for both.
About a year ago it felt like do or die time. I was trying to push something forward and to me, it was D-day. Either we go forward or I leave. I never threatened anyone with that, but the thoughts were in my head. I would never issue an ultimatum like that. It’s just not in me. When a tiny glimmer of hope appeared – that we as a church could go forward with the blessing of church leadership (minus a pastor) I stayed and I fought. But some didn’t. Some left and if affected me in a way I truly didn’t expect. I actually got angry. And I don’t get angry.
I’m fairly flexible, (I admit I like things done a certain way.) But it takes a lot to anger me. There was only one other time I got angry at someone from our church and that’s just because their display of selfishness was so grand I couldn’t take it anymore. But when certain people choose to leave the church, that’s not ultimately what I was angry at. I was angry at their lack of determination.
There are many valid reasons for leaving a church, just as there are invalid reasons. In one case, the reason a person left our church was (he said) because we didn’t have vision, which is a good and solid reason to leave. But I believe it’s just as good a reason to stay.
I had a vision; so did the other members of church leadership. (And actually, so did the person who left. It was the same as ours.) We failed to communicate it well to the church body, which lead to a poor (and little to no) execution. But we didn’t give up. We brushed ourselves off and tried again. I stuck it out – not just because God wanted me to, but because I believed God would use me to change things. I stayed to fight for what God’s plan was for our church. I stayed because I didn’t want to be a quitter.
Yes, that was harder to do than leaving. Leaving’s easy. Leaving means you get to find the church you want, the church that does the kinds of thing you enjoy, the church that makes you happy. Notice how many times the word “you” was written in the last paragraph.
Is it fight or flight reflex in some people? Maybe I’m just hard-wired to fight and others are wired to flee. But here’s what I asked myself: how can you affect change without staying and trying to make that change? Especially when the lack of desired change is the reason you want to leave?
The answer is: You can’t.
We shouldn’t be afraid of change, but we are. That why it’s tough and takes a while. I guess I’d rather say that I tired and failed than to say I never even tried in the first place.
What I’m listening to: Butterfly Boucher’s Flutterby
I’m obsessed with lists.
100 Most Shocking Moments in TV, Top 10 Videos of All Time, 100 Best Movie Quotes… I love them. I love sitting uselessly to click off my own personal choices and yelling “HA!” when mine makes the list. I love being right.
The latest list? AFI’s 100 years, 100 cheers . Cute, yes, but now they are just searching for shows to fill the summer time slots. With my house guest at some company dinner she was required to attend, I could watch without guilt of being considered a geek and yell at the TV all I want.
So here’s the list
I have no trouble admitting I haven’t seen all the movies on this list (Seriously, who’s seen Breaking Away?) and not even all that are in the top ten. There are now several more movies I want to see, but that’s normal for me. But here’s what really chaps my hide: There is NO WAY The Color Purple should only be number 51. Forest Gump, The Sound of Music, The Wizard of Oz were all higher on the list. Are you kidding me? I’m not knocking those movies (although I really do hate Forest Gump) – there are inspiring in their own way, but seriously? How can you compare those stories to a story of a woman in the early 1900s who, after enduring years of abuse from her husband, dares to leave him? At that time, in that place, under those conditions, nothing made me cheer harder that Celie never lost the spirit inside her. I can’t even say that number ten on the list Saving Private Ryan was more inspiring than The Color Purple . And Whoopi Goldberg? Genius.
This is the downside of being list-obsessed. How irritated I get when they are wrong.
Interesting fact: Sydney Poitier is in a whopping five movies on the list. That’s impressive. Not that Don Cheadle didn’t do an amazing job, but imagine a younger Poitier in Hotel Rwanda (#90) … tears…
What I’m listening to: Soundtrack to The Secret Garden (Original Broadway Cast) Now this should be on the list!