Thoughts on LPYC Choir Tour – Day Four – The Roots of Theology, Part 1

This is one of a set of blog entries inspired by the 2014 tour of the Living Proof Youth Choir (LPYC) of Christ UMC in Plano, Texas.  It isn’t meant to be a summary of the tour, but a set of reflections prompted by events on the trip.

I’m still learning WordPress.  The entry I posted on LPYC Day Three was actually an earlier draft.  I made one small but significant change near the end.  I said, “While in Chicago, what we sought, we found.  What we summoned, found us.  We beckoned lovely and made the most of our time here.”  Here’s the change:  In Chicago we found what we didn’t know to seek and learned that God finds us better things than we know to summon.  With a buildup like that, I need to get on with it . . .

track and field image

Day Four (Tuesday) started with me driving the van to our first stop.  We travelled in a bus and a van, and it was my group’s turn to ride in the van.  Becca was riding shotgun and reading that day’s devotional.  She said, “We’ll have a lot of discussion on this one tonight.”  We discuss the devotional each evening as an entire choir, right before lights out.

Natalie wrote this one, the same Natalie who sings Christ has Broken Down the Wall.  Here’s the devotional, reprinted with her permission.  (Thanks, Natalie!)  Something to know before you read:  running track is an important part of Natalie’s life and she will be attending college on a track scholarship.

“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” – Hebrews 11:1

When I think of faith, the first thing that comes to my mind is the phrase, “Don’t stress, God has a plan.  Trust that God will pull you through this plan and you’ll become stronger because of it.”  We have all heard this familiar saying so many times throughout our lives, and it’s comforting to hear that bad situations will be in God’s hands.  But let me ask you, does it really comfort you to hear that it was God’s plan all along to put a bad situation or circumstance in your life?  Personally, I very much dislike the phrase “God has a plan” because I don’t believe that my God would kill the innocent, disease the good, split up parents, and more.  God didn’t just plan to cripple me for almost a month with severe arthritis, which I still have. . .  He just doesn’t do that!  It’s absurd to think that part of His plan is to make your life harder than it needs to be.  Yes, I will say that it is likely that you will be inspired, learn something, or become physically and mentally stronger because of a bad situation.  Your faith in the Lord might even become stronger, but His intention isn’t to strengthen your relationship with Him by giving you a tough time.  He will always love you and give you the opportunities that you need in your life no matter what.

 Now let’s go back to about the seventh or eighth grade and talk about the poem that we have all read by Robert Frost called “The Road Not Taken.”  In this poem, Frost is presented with two paths.  Just by skimming through it, you would conclude that he chose a path that was less traveled, making you think that he chose the one path that would make his life easier.  He makes you think that he knew which path was better for his life!  However, if you further analyze the piece, you figure out that both paths are equally worn, and Frost really had to choose his path by complete chance, not knowing which path would be easier, and not knowing what struggles would lay ahead.

What I take from this poem is that we are free to choose, but we will never know what we are actually choosing.  Our life “path” is determined by choice and chance, God has nothing to do with it, because He gave us our free will.  Bad things happening in our lives are just a part of life.  We should always try to use those bad situations to our advantage by finding a way to become stronger, and use God to our advantage by strengthening our faith with Him, because He is the one who you will find comfort in, and never the one you should take out your anger on.  He didn’t plan your struggles; it was chance.  Take the time to thank Him for the fact that you have free will in your life, and can trust in Him even when you do not know what lies ahead.

I am assembling a list of phrases I want to truly understand before I graduate seminary.  “God has a plan for your life” is near the top.  Are those terrible things part of God’s plan?  As Becca read, I thought about my mother.  I thought about how important her family was to her and how much she loved being a grandmother.  Yet in three years’ time, I became someone she thought she knew, but wasn’t sure.  She would go from being uncertain about having grandchildren to not knowing if she had any.  In finding care for her, I met a lot of people like her.  If God had a plan, why did it lead here?

Natalie’s work crosses over from devotional into theology.  The discussion that evening included “How can you question God?”  In our discussion, we recapitulated the Book of Job.  Job insisted on questioning God; his three friends insisted he shouldn’t.  But it’s the Book of Job, not the Book of Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar.  God says to them, “You have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has.” (Job 42:7)

Theology starts when someone pulls us from the comfort zone of pre-packaged Sunday School answers, challenging us to look harder and think better.  That’s one of the roots of theology.  There is another, involving another comfort zone, which happened that evening.  Stay tuned.

Image is 09 State Track 0314 by el_gallo on Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.  Natalie is not in the photo.

Thoughts on LPYC Choir Tour – Day Three – The Bean

This is one of a set of blog entries inspired by the 2014 tour of the Living Proof Youth Choir (LPYC) of Christ UMC in Plano, Texas. It isn’t meant to be a summary of the tour, but a set of reflections prompted by events on the trip.

Day Three (a Monday) ended in Chicago at The Bean. Its real name is the Cloud Gate, but no one calls it that. It’s the large reflective sculpture sitting in Millennium Park. The tour logo is “My Life is in Your Hands” written into the outline of The Bean.

bean overview

Travelling to The Bean was a pilgrimage for me. Two years earlier, I heard Amy Krouse Rosenthal speak at TEDxSMU 2012. In June 2008, she posted a video to You Tube called “17 Things I Made”. She showed 17 things she made, then asked people to join her at The Bean at 8:08pm on 8/08/08 to make an 18th thing. She’d be carrying a yellow umbrella.

She expected 40 people to show up. There were 400.

She filmed the event. They made all kinds of things. They made a grand entrance. They made new friends. One guy got a bunch a flowers and passed them out to passersby, so he made their day. The goal was to beckon lovely. There is so much ugly in the world, it was time to focus on lovely, to beckon lovely. They tried to make the most of their time here.

At 9:09am on 9/09/09, Amy returned to The Bean to help people have a lovely day. She gave directions to tourists, gave away gifts, and brought a musician to serenade passersby. It was a lovely day. She made the most of her time here.

At 10:10pm on 10/10/10, Amy called everyone back for another Beckoning of Lovely at The Bean. They shared ten special moments. They found the flower guy from two years ago and gave him flowers, making his day. They jumped for joy. They concluded by listening to a classical quartet play Vivaldi while someone blew thousands of bubbles into the air. They made the most of their time here.

At 11:11 am on 11/11/11, Amy held the final Beckoning of Lovely at The Bean. The theme was: We Are All One. (The video is 11:11 long.) They sang Happy Birthday to all those with birthdays that day, including a phone call to someone whose 11th birthday was on 11/11/11. One of the attendees proposed to his girlfriend. They passed out pillowcases and markers; you were to make a new friend and get them to sign your pillowcase. Amy called up women who had travelled the farthest to get there, gave them matching necklaces, and told them to always keep in touch with each other – and they do. They all made the most of their time here.

Amy took the yellow umbrella she always carried to Beckoning of Lovely and hid it in the bushes in the park.

Amy was at TEDxSMU on 12/1/12. She told us someone named Angela found the yellow umbrella and is holding on to it. She then issued a challenge. According to the Mayan calendar, the world was going to end on December 21, 2012. That gave us ten days, from 12/12/12 to 12/21/12, to Beckon Lovely and Save the World. We all got little yellow PostIt pads and were told to leave little “Beckon Lovely” notices wherever we went. In those ten days, we were to add something lovely to the world and make the most of our time here, hopefully inspiring others to do the same.

Amy left us with this thought: What you seek, you will find. What you summon, will find you.

At 7:55pm on 7/14/14, I arrived at The Bean with LPYC and chaperones. The Bean is the perfect public sculpture because you don’t look at it, you interact with it. I took a selfie with myself.

selfie with myself

Interacting with The Bean means interacting with each other. Everyone was taking photos with friends, pulling people together for photos, and photographing their reflections. We made friends with man who had a lizard. We saw a group of dancers there for a photo shoot. We saw what kind of bizarre reflections of ourselves we could create. As the sun set, we took a group photo in front of The Bean.  

david with lizard

It was fitting to start three amazing days in Chicago visiting what is for me a place to connect with others and focus on what is most uplifting. While in Chicago, what we sought, we found.  What we summoned, found us.  We beckoned lovely and made the most of our time here.  

Totally true fact: I looked around in the bushes for a yellow umbrella. Just in case.

Encore: Thoughts on LPYC Choir Tour – Day Two – Owning the Music

As I’m working on (yet again) restarting this blog, I thought I’d bring back a series I wrote in 2014 about a youth choir tour, originally published in July 2014.  Enjoy.


This is one of a set of blog entries inspired by the 2014 tour of the Living Proof Youth Choir (LPYC) of Christ UMC in Plano, Texas.  It isn’t meant to be a summary of the tour, but a set of reflections prompted by events on the trip.

Tour Day Two was a Sunday.  The choir sang for the two worship services at First & Calvary Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Missouri.  Their program is a worship service, with hymns, responsive, readings, and corporate prayers in between the songs.  The pastor introduced us, then turned the worship hour over to LPYC.

I attended most of the rehearsals the week before the tour.  Rehearsals recall the old saying that if you like sausage, you shouldn’t watch anyone make it.  Trey, the director, spent his share of time telling the youth to stop talking and put away their phones.  It takes effort to pull a group of high schoolers’ voices into a choir.  Going into the tour, I felt that they knew the music well, but as I was listening to them that Sunday morning, I heard a level of mastery I didn’t hear in the rehearsals.  There’s knowing the music and there’s owning the music.

At the second service, the choir added hand motions to Praise His Holy Name.  It started in the guys’ section and rippled over to the girls’ section.  They loved the song, felt comfortable playing with it, and so they had a little fun.  This was, of course, as much a surprise to their director as it was to everyone else.  But when you own the music, you can make things happen.

Two days later, LPYC sang at New Kingdom Church, an African-American church on Chicago’s West Side.  When they sang Praise His Holy Name, the energy level in the room, high to begin with, doubled or tripled.  When you own the music, you can make things happen.  Instead of ending the song, Trey kept it going.  It was guys only, then girls only, with the piano, without the piano, then going down to a whisper and back up to a shout.  The choir agreed it was their best tour experience ever.

When you own the music, you can make things happen.  When you own the music, the message follows.

A few years ago I sent a survey to our clergy asking how long it took to prepare a sermon, where their ideas came from, who their preaching heroes were, etc.  I was especially interested in how long it took to pull a sermon together.  I thought the more experienced preachers would take less time, and when it comes to pulling the text of a sermon together, that’s true.  But the process of sermon preparation changes with experience.  All pastors read the scriptural text two to three weeks before that Sunday and then mull over the passage, looking for the message they need to bring out.  Experienced preachers know how to dwell in the scripture over that time.  It becomes a part of them.  They learn how to be open to the insights God brings over that time.  They learn how to own the scripture and it shows in their preaching.  They’ve found their voice and are confident in it.

I’ll talk about Glenn Burleigh’s Order My Steps in a later post, but let me say now I woke up each morning with “Order my steps in your Word” running through my head.  In my morning devotional time, I pondered what it meant to “walk worthy, my calling to fulfill”.  When you own the music, the message follows.  It’s a part of you like nothing else is.  That’s why we sing so much of our theology.

I’ve looked on iTunes for recordings of Keith Hampton’s Praise His Holy Name, Mark Miller’s I Believe, and Glenn Burleigh’s Order My Steps that are as good as what I hear from LPYC.  I haven’t found them.  I am, of course, completely biased, but I can’t imagine these songs coming from anyone else.  That’s the other part of owning the music and the message, you’re part of a bond.  I’ll have more on that later.

Great things happen when you own the music.  Greater things happen when you own the message.

Thoughts on LPYC Tour 2014 – Day One

This is the start of a set of entries inspired by the 2014 tour of the Living Proof Youth Choir (LPYC) of Christ UMC in Plano, Texas. It isn’t meant to be a summary of the tour, but a set of reflections prompted by events on the trip.

The first stop on the tour is Springhill, an assisted living facility in Neosho, Missouri.  This tour will take us to St. Louis and Chicago and back.  We will sing for churches, for a children’s ministry, for a homeless ministry, and for places like Springhill.

The choir program includes Christ has Broken Down the Wall by Mark Miller. It works the way most powerful songs work, with a simple melody and simple words. It starts with a solo voice:

Christ has broken down the wall. Christ has broken down the wall. Let us join our hearts as one. Christ has broken down the wall.

The soloist this year is Natalie, who sings as if the song was written for her. I can’t listen to this song without feeling the tears, and they start when Natalie starts. By the end of the tour, Natalie will sing through her own tears.

We’re accepted as we are. We’re accepted as we are. Through God’s love all is reconciled. We’re accepted as we are.

Lately I’ve spent a lot of time in assisted living facilities. It’s a place where your limitations seek to define you. As my mother’s dementia worsened, her needs became greater than our ability to respond. My sister and I placed her in a facility that cares for Alzheimer’s and dementia patients, where she lived until her death last April. The same week as her death, my father suffered a severe stroke. He’s recovering well, but he now has to learn to live with a set of physical limitations. He’s living in a facility that can assist him with those tasks he can no longer do safely. I associate these places with limitations, with finitude.

The people here live with finitude. The rest of us know in our heads that we’re finite, but we’re able to go for long stretches without thinking about it. In this setting, I listen to a song that tells me how we’re all accepted, limitations and all.

Cast aside your doubts and fears. Cast aside your doubts and fears. Peace and love freely offered here. Cast aside your doubts and fears.

The idea for this entry came from this verse. It seems that life saves some of its biggest challenges until you’re frailest. Your limitations remind you of what you can’t do. You’ve lost friends and loved ones. It takes a lot of courage to grow old. You get to see those who embrace life even at this stage.

We will tear down the wall. We will tear down every wall. God has called us one and all. Christ has broken down the wall.

They sing this verse with such conviction that I believe they will be the ones to do it. The words change from “we will tear down the wall” to “we will tear down every wall”. The singers may be young, but they understand finitude. There are those with chronic health problems, those who have family members with chronic health problems, and those whose parents have divorced. There are those who bring themselves to church; whose families don’t share in the faith they have found. Being a teenager means wanting greater independence, but not being able to claim it just yet. These singers know about walls.

After the choir sings, the students visit with the residents.  They get along so well, everyone smiling and laughing.  The residents share their stories and the students are eager to listen.  There’s a joke that says grandparents and grandchildren get along so well because they have a common enemy. These high school students and these elderly residents have finitude in common. It’s another reminder of how important it is to have each other, how much we really need each other, how important it is for us to connect with each other.

After all, it’s “WE will tear down the walls.”

This link goes to a video of the song being performed on a previous choir tour. You will see that year’s choir performing at churches, visiting the residents of a nursing home and a homeless ministry, and having some fun.