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Remember the Monkees? Davy Jones and 'Daydream Believer'? So do I - that's when I
first experienced 'the pull' of music. I was about twelve when I first
picked up a guitar and learned to strum an A minor chord. It was seventh
grade, and in addition to the usual high school fare, we were allowed to
choose an elective class. I chose music, as did a couple of my close
friends, Ronnie and Russ. Although the music teacher (Uncle Dan) tried
his best to teach us how to read music and play properly, we were busy
learning how to copy the bands we liked - Creedence, the Stones and
Santana. It was a friendly competition - Russ would come in one day and
play a Santana lick he had learned. Not to be outdone, Ronnie and I
would go off and learn to play something even trickier to keep one step
ahead of Russ. In spite of our lack of interest (and effort) in the
official curriculum, Uncle Dan was a great source of help and
encouragement. I still remember him and appreciate his investment in me
every time I pick up my guitar. Before long, the three of us decided to
start a band. We recruited a drummer and played at high school dances,
church functions, and our favorite showcase - the annual high school
variety show. To this day I can still see the parents in the crowd
covering their ears when the curtain rose and we blasted out our best
rendition of 'Smoke On the Water'. My little combo amp was no match for
the high school gym, so I'd made use of a device popular at the time -
an Electro-Harmonix LPB-1. Basically a cheesy battery powered preamp,
the device made my ratty little combo amp sound like a LOUD ratty little
combo amp. I figured if one was good, three would be better, and I
plugged them all together in series and let fly. I'm surprised my amp
(and my ears) survived. We formed other bands with other people during
high school but eventually graduated and went our separate ways.
I spent the next several years playing mostly covers in duos, trios,
full bands and as a solo performer. Toward the end of the 70's Ronnie
and I were in the Jacksonville Florida area, pretty much living in the
clubs and partying with some of the members of the southern rock elite -
Lynyrd Skynyrd, Molly Hatchet, 38 Special, and others not as well known.
I had long before sworn off drinking to excess - it had been a practical
rather than a moral decision for me. I had been drunk just once in my
life and gotten commode-hugging sick. Just like everybody else, I prayed
'God get me out of this and I swear I'll never do it again.' I kept my
promise - there's very little in life I hate more than being sick to my
stomach. However, I still smoked a lot of pot and thought I was pretty
smart - I could get the same buzz as drinking without being sick and
having a hangover the next day. Then one night at a party I got a little
extra something in my joint. I don't know what it was or how it got
there, but I suffered through one very long and miserable night. I woke
up the next morning where I'd finally passed out and every muscle in my
body ached from the death grip I'd held all night on the arms of my
chair. I was stunned - I thought these people were my friends. How could
they have done this to me? That was the last time I intentionally got
high, although the experience revisited me several more times over the
next few years.
I moved back to New England and continued playing in cover bands, making
a pretty decent second income from my weekend gigs but enjoying it less
and less. I tried to make up for the boredom of playing the same drab
songs night after night by taking a few creative liberties. I tried a
little U2 Edge style Echoplex playing in the old standard 'Stand By Me'.
I discovered the guitar solo from Steely Dan's 'Reelin' In the Years'
fit very nicely in Eddie Money's 'Two Tickets to Paradise' (in an odd,
polyrhythmic kind of way). One day the leader of the band invited me to
lunch and read me the riot act. He tried to be diplomatic - "Look, I
know you're a good player and you're bored playing this material, but
people want to hear these songs played just like the record. We need you
to stick to the original arrangements." Though I appreciated his attempt
at diplomacy, I was seething inside. Eventually I decided I'd had enough
of the bar scene. I was tired of waking up at noon with a noise hangover
and a pile of sweaty stage clothes in the corner reeking of cigarette
smoke and stale beer. I was tired of tearing down and loading out the
piles of amps and PA gear at 3am in the dead of a New England winter,
all the while keeping an eye open for the frequent and sometimes bloody
fights that often erupted with flying glass after the band stopped
playing. Most of all, I was tired of rehearsing and working at my craft
and putting everything I had into it only to play for people who were
more interested in getting drunk or picking up a warm body to go home
with for the night than they were in listening to my music. I started
searching for a decent day job. Once I managed to land one I quit the
band.
During all this time I considered myself a Christian. I had been raised
in a Christian home and forced to go to church as a kid. I believed in
God, believed the Bible was true, and believed I had accepted Christ.
However, I also knew the way I was living wasn't consistent with what
the Bible taught or with what I said I believed. It was easy to deal
with as long as there were friends and activity, but in the wee hours
when I was alone with my conscience the guilt gnawed at me. To quote
some of my own lyrics:
There's an emptiness that fills the night
from last call to morning's light
and a still small voice in an aching head
just me and my demons in this empty bed
One night I was just too tired to go on fighting it. I was scared of the
consequences, but I prayed 'God, I know I'm not living the way I should
be. I don't want to go on like this anymore, but I don't have what it
takes to change, and I'm scared. If I'm going to change, then you have
to help me - I can't do this.' That was it. No flashing lights, no
angelic choirs, no sudden warm flood of peace. But I knew I'd turned a
corner. It was a small change, but over time small changes can make a
huge difference. I'm not going to tell you that it was easy. It wasn't,
and it still isn't. Anybody who says that building a relationship with
God, following the Lord and being obedient to the commands of Scripture
is easy is either lying or living in a fairy-tale world. But He has
always been there to carry me when I've come to the end of my abilities.
I have to laugh when people tell me Jesus is just a crutch for the weak.
Don't kid yourself - Jesus isn't a crutch, He's a stretcher.
I've come to realize the truth of what Scripture has said all along -
there's absolutely nothing of any eternal value in me. I have nothing to
offer God. Worse than that, I've built up a mountain of spiritual debt
that I can never pay off. God is sovereign. What that means is this: He
makes the rules and, like it or not, I either obey them or pay the
consequences. Breaking His rules is called 'sin' and the Bible says the
payment for sin is death. We're talking a double dose here, physical
death and spiritual death. Nobody gets to Heaven on their own merit -
again, the Bible says everybody has sinned and fallen short of God's
standards. Mother Theresa, Martin Luther King, you, me - nobody is good
enough. But that's where the stretcher part comes in - yes, we're all
short of the standard, and the penalty for falling short is death. But
the Bible also says the free gift of God is eternal life - forgiveness
through Jesus and what He did on our behalf. God understands I'm
incapable of living up to His standards. Truthfully, sometimes I don't
even want to. I like doing things my way. Jesus lived that perfect
standard to which none of us can measure up. He submitted to an unjust
and undeserved death by Roman crucifixion - He paid that death penalty
so I wouldn't have to. What do I have to do? Nothing - the Bible says
it's 'the gift of God'. What do you do with a gift? You accept it.
That's all. That's what makes it a gift - if you have to do something to
get it, it isn't a gift, it's a paycheck. That's where Biblical
Christianity differs from all other religions, and it's also the central
point of the whole Heaven/Hell question.
The end of the story (so far) is a little harder to explain. I guess
it's kind of like petting a dog that's been beaten and mistreated all
his life - when you first reach to pet him, he thinks he's going to be
hit again, and cowers in fear. But if you keep at it, keep petting him,
showing him love, and don't hit him, eventually he learns he can trust
you and stops cowering. He learns to love you and you've got a loyal
friend forever. It's a flawed analogy because God doesn't look at us
like dogs, but stay with me here. I guess in a way I used to cower
before God. I grew up in a fire and brimstone kind of church, and I kept
looking over my shoulder, half expecting God to rain judgment down upon
my head. When I started actually reading what the Bible says about Him
instead of just listening to everybody's opinion, I started to
understand the rest of the story. I've learned I can trust Him. Yes,
He's righteous, and holy, and will not tolerate my sin. There is a real
Hell, and a lot of people are going there. But God is also loving and
merciful beyond my words to express, and actually paid my penalty
Himself. I deserve Hell, no if's, and's or but's. No, I've never
murdered anybody and by human standards I'm probably a pretty nice guy.
Certainly I am in my own eyes :-) But nice guys don't go to Heaven.
Forgiven guys do. This isn't cheap grace by any stretch - it's free to
me, but it cost Him dearly. Knowing this, and knowing that I'm forever
free of the bondage I used to be in, I can't help but want to do
something in return. Not to pay for His gift - that's not only absurd,
it's impossible. I want to obey Him, I want to please Him, and I can't
help but praise Him as well.
That brings us to the present day - I'm still writing music, singing and
playing guitar. I still love to do it, more than I ever have. I'm
singing love songs to Someone who I've discovered to be both the source
and object of my songs, and enjoying it more than I ever have before.
I suppose by now some of you are having
a good laugh at my expense - check it out - another brain-dead Jesus
freak posting his ignorance on the 'Net for all to see. I can live with
that - Jesus isn't for everybody. But on the other hand, if you've read
this far, maybe you've got a nagging conscience like I had and would
like to get that monkey off your back. I know what it feels like to be
there. I'm no theologian or pastor, but I'll do what I can to help you
find the peace that I've found.
Thanks for listening.
Lance |
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