benedson

The World is Yours

I've just got the new Ian Brown album, The World is Yours. It's a great album full of political and anti-establishment rants, included within that is, of course, a rant about Church. Whilst i think that musically the album is great, i have to confess to initially finding the lyrics a bit passe. To rant about the church is fair enough, to rant about the war in Iraq is fine but I was initially struck by the naïvety of the rants and their lack of thought through political comment.

This from MusicOMH.com 'Street Children puts forward the rather simplistic idea that people with big houses should open their doors to homeless children and let them live there, while Save Us criticises "those whose eyes are closed to the plight of the African child" - laudable sentiments to be sure, but ones which leave Brown with an even bigger messiah than the likes of Bono'.

However, i also wonder whether there is more going on that initially meets the eye. I wonder if the depth comes through listening to the whole album and the subtle theological messages that are coming out through it. I wonder if it's an anti-established religion rant but one that gives a positive message about Christ and God. For example the song before Street Children is called 'The Feeding of the 5000' which is obviously about the miracle of Christ. In it he describes the two fishes as the spirit and the five loaves of bread as the soul, Jesus is referred to as reaching through the darkness as the king of golden rays. The song that follows is street children that starts with a rant about the wealth of the church. It also has a line that says, 'that if i had a home with 10 million rooms i'd open it up for them'. I can't help but make the connect to John 14:2 ' In my fathers house their are many dwelling places'.

There seems to be a movement that goes like this: Jesus feeds the starving 5000 - the church closes it's doors to the starving millions and keeps it wealth - God opens the heavenly mansion to all people...

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Technorati Tags: Ben Edson, Ian Brown

December 07, 2007 in Music, Spirituality | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Videos...

In Sanctus1 over the past month we've been looking at some of the tough sayings of Jesus. Last week we looked at this saying: it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man to get into heaven. During the evening a used the Hard-Fi video for Cash Machine.

It's really quite a sad video about how we can easily get trapped in the cycle of debt due to the pressures that there are on us to spend, spend, spend...My thoughts at the end of the evening were that we need to develop a culture of contentment.

January 09, 2006 in Culture, Music | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Sinead O'connor and Occulture

I got Sinead O'Connor's new album, Throw Down Your Arms, for Christmas and love it. I've not been into Sinead O'Connor before now, but I really wanted the album as I'm fascinated by her as a expression of post-modern spirituality.

The new album is in collaberation with Sly and Robbie and draw heavily on Rastafarian spirituality, some of you will remember the song 'A Prayer for England' that she recorded with Massive Attack, which was essentially a prayer to Jah. Jah is the name commonly used for God in the Rastafarianism. Rastafari consider Haile Selassie I to have been the religios symbol for Jah incarnate, referring to him by the title of Jah Rastafari. Here are some of the lyrics:


Jah forgive us
For forgetting
Jah help us
We need more loving
See the teachers
Are representing you
So badly
That not many can see you

Sinead O'Connor is a great example of what prof. Chris Partridge calls 'Occulture.' Occulture is a term that Christians have struggled with, because they see the world occult and assume that it refers to all things evil. Occulture is a term that is broader than that, the word 'occult' in the context of this word means the contemporary alternative religious milieu in the West and Occulture refers to the sub-culture that is associated with it. Obvious examples are the X-files, Buffy and Sabrina, i think that Sinead O'Connor is a great example of Occulture. Here are some words from her album sleeve:

"These men were part of a battle fought for self esteem and for the freeing of God from Religion. As such, they are my heroes, my teachers, my masters, my priests, my prophets, my guides and my godfathers."

January 03, 2006 in Music, Spirituality | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Laments

I love the theme of lament on Richard's blog. It's got me thinking about lament and the music that I would pick, and I'm slightly embarrassed to say that I have to go for a Spiritualized track again. If you've not listened to any Spiritualized then I'd really encourage you to do so, their music seems to encapsulate so much about contemporary spirituality.

The track that I'm thinking of as a lament is "Lord Can You Hear Me?" It's somebody crying out to God in hurt and pain...when you're in the pit it's often the case that all you can do is cry out in pain.

Lord, help me out
I'd take my life, but I'm in doubt
Just where my soul will lie
Deep in the earth or way up in the sky

Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, hear me at all?

All my life has left my side
Can't get enough out of life to keep me satisfied
I'm lost about everything
Lord look what state I'm in

Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, when I call?
Lord can you hear me, hear me at all?

December 13, 2005 in Music | Permalink | Comments (0)

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The Trouble with the Straight and the Narrow...

I was in Gloucester on Sunday and went with my in-laws to their local church, the lectionary reading for this week was Isaiah 40: 1-10 and included:

A voice cries out: "In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD,
make straight in the desert a highway for our God."

The vicar started talking about the straight path and from that moment on I was lost as I had these lyrics from Spiritualized going around and around in my head:

The trouble with the straight and the narrow
Is its so thin, I keep sliding off to the side
And the devil makes good use of these hands of mine

And if jesus is the straight path that saves
Then I'm condemned to live my whole life on the curb
On the crossroad to the devil, I'll dwell and I'll count my years

You know that I got a little something I should say
I guess that I'm just so easily led astray
It's alright because I know my own way back home from here

And I don't fall of the wagon you know
I take a dive and go as deep as I can go
Don't hold your breath because I'm coming up slow, this time.

And The trouble with the straight and the narrow
Is its so thin, I keep sliding off to the side
And the devil makes good use of these hands of mine

You know a little problem or two
I guess that I keep on taking a few
I've been told its not the best thing that I can do, right now

And I don't go looking for my sins you know
They come out waiting, and I just get on and go
Don't hold your breath because I'm coming up slow this time

December 05, 2005 in Music | Permalink | Comments (2)

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