Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" (George Harrison)




Welcome to the last Tuesday of 2020!  Was that a celebratory scream we heard or perhaps a sigh of relief?  Regardless of the sound you just made 2020 with its pandemic/election/economic/etc. challenges is ending and 2021 with its hopes of the vaccine/new administration/prosperity/etc. waits on the horizon.  In other words..."Ring out the old, ring in the new...  Ding dong, Ding Dong..."



Welcome to the blog known as Tuesday's Musical Notes!!!  Have you followed us this December?  If you have then you know, we've been doing a tribute to The Beatles and their solo Christmas singles as our featured songs.  Here's what we've seen so far:


Today it's George Harrison's spin on the turntable as we feature his seasonal entry "Ding Dong, Ding Dong".  Released late in the Christmas season of 1974, "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" peaked at #36 on Billboard's Hot 100.  It includes backing instrumentals and vocals from Tom Scott (The Blues Brothers), Ringo Starr (The Beatles), Alvin Lee (Ten Years After), Ron Wood (The Rolling Stones (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Sympathy for the Devil" (The Rolling Stones)), Gary Wright (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Dream Weaver" (Gary Wright)), and Mick Jones (Foreigner (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Cold as Ice"Tuesday's Musical Notes - "I Want to Know What Love Is" (Foreigner)).  

Meant to rival McCartney's "Wonderful Christmastime", "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" didn't quite catch on and is rarely heard on the radio at Christmas, New Year's, or the week that is in between the two. 

Lyrically, "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" features some of the words inscribed in carvings around the home (Friar Park on the Thames) Harrison purchased from Lawyer/Microscoptist Sir Frank Crisp.  Harrison began using the homilies and aphorisms ("...Yesterday, today was tomorrow, And tomorrow, today will be yesterday..." as taken from today's song) in some of the songs that would become the Billboard #4 ranked, Dark Horse album of which "Ding Dong, Ding Dong" is a track. Considering the tumult that Harrison's personal life was at the time, it also expresses the desire to see the dawn of a new year with an optimistic hope for the future, while reflecting ever so briefly on the challenges of the past.  

Speaking of reflecting on the past...


"In September of 1986, the pop group The Bangles scored a number one hit with the song "Walk Like an Egyptian..."

And so it begins!

On February 25, 2008, we were asked to add a musical perspective to our church's newsletter.  The above is the first line from the first newsletter. (That article also became its own Tuesday's Musical Note on September 10, 2013:  Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Walk Like an Egyptian" (The Bangles) About once a quarter we would submit an article to the newsletter that derived its title from a famous (at least famous to me) song and bring a musical and Biblical perspective to that song.  In 2009, that newsletter ceased.  For the next 3 years, songs and Scripture would come to mind.  "Oh, I should write that down." or "Wouldn't that have made a nice newsletter submission." were thoughts that continued to occur. There was an eventual need for an outlet to get them out of my head.  Finally, I decided that I would dedicate part of my week to sending out those thoughts as an email.  We used the newsletter format and titled the email "Tuesday's Musical Notes". (Many of the Musical Notes allude to the rationale behind Tuesday.  Can you find them?  Yup, check the archives to the left) With the encouragement of one of those email readers (thanks again Heath!!!), "Tuesday's Musical Notes, the blog" was birthed in May of 2012 with this gopher-inspired song:  


Today, after 443 blog entries, over 55,000 views, and 8 and 1/2 years, The Notes continues to find readers all over the world.  Thank you so much for your support!!!  

As we anticipate what 2021 may have in store for us, we want to take a moment to review a few highlights from 2020's submissions to Notesland. 

With that, Tuesday's Musical Notes is pleased to present, commercial-free and in its entirety, the 2020 Top of The Notes countdown!!!

"All that you do must be done in love." - 1 Corinthians 16:14  

Every year we take the opportunity to celebrate the top 10 most read Tuesday's Musical Notes from the previous year. These are the Musical Notes that have been viewed the most from the end of November 2019 to the end of November 2020 as tabulated by Blogspot and Google.  


There's much to do so let's get started with the tie at #10.  

Coming in at #10 of the most viewed Tuesday's Musical Notes in 2020 is the only tie of 2020.  These Notes were back to back entries on the 1st and the 8th of September. The first is one of two movie songs in our year-end countdown. Surprisingly, they just happen to both be from the movies of the world's favorite spy, Bond, James Bond.  Tying for #10, From the 2006 motion picture Casino Royale with Daniel Craig in his first outing as James Bond is:


The second is a classic from the Commodores with Lionel Ritchie on lead vocals that celebrates relaxing as much as you can. It is the first of 3 "Commandment" songs that make 2020's countdown.  Here celebrating the Sabbath is the Commodores with "Easy".
 

Typically, Tuesday's Musical Notes features popular music from our formative years of the 80s.  Every once in a while we step away from those classic charts and expand our musical horizon by tasting from another decade or another genre.  Such is the case of the Musical Note that ranks at #9 in our year-end countdown.  Here is a walk down the New Age musical mile with a hit from a pioneer of the genre, Kitaro.


For most of 2020, Tuesday's Musical Notes has been adventuring through the great stories of the Bible. We are firmly convinced that there are never enough conversations about these incredible narratives of how God moves in mankind's life.  We began our excursion in the book of Genesis on April 19, 2019, with Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Beginnings" (Chicago)  Since that time we have gone through the books of Genesis and Exodus.  

As we have made our way, we've explored some passages in great detail. The Notes featured a different song for each of the Ten Commandments.  Beginning August 18th and running through October 20th, Tuesday's Musical Notes explored the commandments in a way that you probably never experienced in Sunday School. (Umm....yes that's another archive plug.  You know what to do!!!)  Three of those ten explorations made this year's annual countdown. We've already seen the Sabbath celebrated at #10, the other two "Commandment" Notes are at #8 and #7.    

At #8, is the second James Bond song as well as the second film song featured in this year's countdown.  Before we take a look at #8, we are reminded that movie theaters were struck especially hard with the pandemic this year and thought it would be interesting to see what the final box office totals might be.  Here as a TMN extra, are the top-grossing films of 2020 as tabulated by Box Office Mojo:


It would appear that the only new thing under the sun in Hollywood this year was the #2 1917.  Interestingly all of the other films are either sequels, remakes, or based on established characters. Hmmm...  

And now on with the countdown...

“‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’  This is the great and foremost commandment.  The second is like it, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’  Matthew 22:37-39

The 8th most popular blog for 2020 is based on the 6th Commandment and taken from the 16th movie about super-spy James Bond.  Here is Gladys Knight with the title song from the 1989 EON productions film "License to Kill".


Number 7!!!

Not to be left out of the Musical Notes based on commandments is the 8th command that God gave to the Israelites at the base of Mt. Sinai, "Do Not Steal"  The Musical Note based on this command comes from a band that includes a couple of Red Hot Chili Peppers in their recipe from time to time.  Here is Jane's Addiction with "Been Caught Stealing", number 7 on our annual Tuesday's Musical Notes countdown.


The top 6 spots in our countdown all come from the first two months of 2020. Must have been a hard winter...  Kicking off our top 6 is this blog from January 28.  It is from rapper MC Hammer and is something that The Notes suspect and hope that many people did this year..." we've got to pray just to make it these days..."


The views keep getting larger as the blogs keep going higher...

Before we reveal the top 5 Musical Notes for 2020 we'd like to reintroduce you to some of the favorite blogs since that beginning time of Tuesday's Musical Notes we eluded to earlier. Every time a Musical Note is read an angel gets his...no that's not right.  Google keeps track each time a Musical Note gets read from the archives.  You read 'em.  Google counts 'em.  We count 'em down.  These are the most popular Tuesday's Musical Notes of all time as of today.   Please think of it as our request and dedication to the readers who love the blog about music and The Messiah.  We write, "Dear readers of Tuesday's Musical Notes..."


That was our look back at the favorite Tuesday's Musical Notes of all time.  Dedicated to our readers from all over the world.  Miss one of them?  Click on the link and you'll be instantly transported to the land of percussion and prophecy, sounds and signs, notes and Numbers...well you get the picture.  Take a look!

We won't stop till we reach the top...

Without a doubt, one of the greatest drummers of all times was Neal Peart of the band Rush.  He, Geddy Lee, and Alex Lifeson made up the trio that many would say were the hardest working band in history.  With 19 studio albums, 11 live recordings, 11 greatest hits collections, and 10 box sets of their music, it is very easy to see why they would be given that moniker. Their single  "Working Man" from their debut, the self-titled record Rush also happens to be the feature song that comes in at #5 on our countdown.



Sadly, Neal Peart died in 2020.  He was only one of many musical artists that lost their life in 2020.  In Memorium here is Tuesday's Musical Notes salute to musicians who passed this year...


Not profiled in the above video is one musician whose death continues to leave a large impact on the lives of those who knew her.  On June 23rd, Tuesday's Musical Notes remembered our dear friend Carrie Taylor.  Here's James Taylor...


"Greater love has no one than this, that a person will lay down his life for his friends." John 15:13

The number 4 most read Tuesday's Musical Note comes to us oddly enough from February 4, 2020, when we were just beginning to feel the impact of some of the "Changes" that were coming our way due to the coronavirus.  It would also be the first musical note after yours truly had quadruple-bypass surgery. Changes indeed!!! Thanks if you prayed.  Doing great!!!


February was the best overall month for the readership here at Tuesday's Musical Notes!  All of the top 4 blogs came from the 2nd month of the year and all were written during the recuperation period of the aforementioned heart surgery I had on January 30. (Happy Birthday Justin!) 

Coming in at #3 is the classic by a man you don't mess around with.  Here's Jim Croce's April of 1972 #8 hit...


Tuesday's Musical Note is read around the world in places like The United Kingdom, Portugal, Canada, Poland, Ukraine, Russia, Germany, France, and an "Unknown Region" as Google describes it.  We want to thank those readers as well as readers from our #1 country for reading The Notes, the United States.  We hope you enjoy our weekly encouragements, challenges, and thoughts about music and how it can apply to our eternal condition.  There is a place at the bottom of each Musical Note for comments, so please share your thoughts.  We'd love to hear from you!!!

“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him will not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but so that the world might be saved through Him." John 3:16-17

2 songs are left.  One is from the band who can't say no.  The other is from the ultimate vagabond.  Which one will reach the #1 spot? Let's find out as the countdown rolls on...

At #2 comes the classic hit from the Progressive Rock band Yes.  It would be their highest charting song (peaking at #13) until 1983's #1 smash - "Owner of a Lonely Heart" from the 90125 album.  It comes in at #2 and is the second song by Yes featured as a Musical Note (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Changes" (Yes))  Here is the #2 Tuesday's Musical Note based on a song from the 1971 album Fragile by Yes.


#1!!!

"Beloved, let’s love one another; for love is from God, and everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God.  The one who does not love does not know God, because God is love.  By this, the love of God was revealed in us, that God has sent His only Son into the world so that we may live through Him.  In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.  Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.  No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God remains in us, and His love is perfected in us.  By this, we know that we remain in Him and He in us because He has given to us of His Spirit.  We have seen and testify that the Father has sent the Son to be the Savior of the world. Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God remains in him, and he in God.  We have come to know and have believed the love which God has for us. God is love, and the one who remains in love remains in God, and God remains in him. By this, love is perfected with us, so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment; because as He is, we also are in this world.  There is no fear in love, but perfect love drives out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love.  We love because He first loved us.  If someone says, “I love God,” and yet he hates his brother or sister, he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother and sister whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen.  And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God must also love his brother and sister. - 1 John 4:7-21


We mentioned earlier that Tuesday's Musical Notes is currently basing its blog on a chronological look through the Bible and its great stories.  One of the most memorable of those stories is about a lad clad in a coat of many colors.  A young man whose dreams would get him into trouble of insurmountable odds only to see the God he served, use those troubles for the salvation of His chosen people.  That story is of course about Joseph, the ultimate "Dreamer"...The story about an ultimate vagabond, by a group of ultimate vagabonds, is the #1 viewed Tuesday's Musical Notes.  From February 25, 2020, here is Supertramp with "Dreamer"...


And there you have it.  The ten most-read posts of Tuesday's Musical Notes for 2020. Before we sign off on this year's countdown, we'd like to leave you with this personal note.  If you believe in Jesus Christ for your eternal salvation, love.  If you allow Holy Spirit to guide the steps of your life, love.  If God is preparing a place for you to be with Him forever, love.   In this past year, we have seen the results of a lack of love by so many people.  I am convinced that if believers would love others the way Jesus loved others while He walked on this earth, we could change everything.  Yes, there will be detractors, deniers, and down-right haters, but many others would embrace your tangible efforts to show them love.  Tuesday's Musical Notes exists to encourage the love of Christ to everyone.  If you'd like to know more about His love, please let us know.  Leave us an email address in the comment section with your questions and we'll do our best to see what answers may lie ahead for both of us.  

In other words..."If I speak with the tongues of mankind and angels but do not have love, I have become a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.  If I have the gift of prophecy and know all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.  And if I give away all my possessions to charity, and if I surrender my body so that I may glory, but do not have love, it does me no good." - 1 Corinthians 13:1-3

That does it for us for 2020.  We look forward to visiting with you again in 2021 as we continue to explore the great stories of the Bible.  (Leviticus and Numbers are next...where do we go from there?!!!).  Have a great New Year's celebration and as always...

'Til Tuesday,
Serving HIM by serving You
randy

Tuesday's Musical Notes is a production of Cross & Kin Entertainment.  All of the comments expressed were those of the writers of Tuesday's Musical Notes and should be considered for their relevance in your everyday life.  Due to covid and the uptick in Christmas Card mailings, your package could be delayed in its delivery.  No animals were harmed in the writing of this blog.  Action figures sold separately.  Avoid temperature extremes and store in a cool, dry place.  See ya next Tuesday!!!

POST CREDIT SCENE

Fade to scene:  Moses is standing outside of an elaborate, but hand made large tent.  He slowly turns towards the entrance and hears THE voice..." Close immediately to black, screen card reads "Tuesday's Musical Notes continues January 5, 2021..."

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" (John Lennon and Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band with the Harlem Community Choir)



 So this is Christmas...


Welcome to the Tuesday before Xmas!!!  You've just been welcomed to the best blog about Christmas on the internet...we accept that we are biased in this opinion, so read along and judge for yourself.  Thanks for stopping by!!!  Welcome to Tuesday's Musical Notes!!!

Here at Tuesday's Musical Notes we oftentimes find tidbits of things that can be deemed controversial.  While never our intention to create heated debate, we want to make sure that proper and balanced analysis is given where possible.  So...let's get this out of the way, shall we?  Here we go!

There are a few folks who don't like the whole X at the front of the season's greeting and innumerable songs during the holidays.  There is a rationale, however, that is very respectful of the birth of Jesus.  Here's an interesting article to stimulate discussion at your next Xmas gathering...


For today's Musical Notes, we will use the X when appropriate (as in specific song titles and quotes), and Christ when appropriate (which we feel He usually is).  

So this is Christmas...


"Happy Xmas (War is Over)" was released in December of 1971 in the United States.  Due to a dispute with the music publisher, Northern Songs, it wasn't released until November of 1972 in the United Kingdom.  The song was not an initial success, due to its late in the "Christmas" season release and peaked at #42 on Billboard's Hot 100, but has become a standard around Christmas with its numerous covers receiving significant downloads and airplay.

Written as a result of Lennon's peace activism, "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" is one of several protest songs against the United States' involvement in the Vietnam war from the era.  It's "feel good" tone was something Lennon had experienced with the success of his hit single "Imagine".  He decided to carry that attitude into his Christmas Single, thus creating the "happy protest" song.   This seemed to engage many more folks than some of the other more "in your face" conflict songs of the late 60s.   It also matched the mentality of peaceful demonstrations of Lennon and Yoko's "bed-ins" in March and May of 1969.  To support all of these efforts,  Lennon and Ono bought billboard space in 12 prominent US cities that proclaimed "War is Over! If you want it - Happy Christmas from John and Yoko".  While the slogan wasn't new to the era, it became associated with John and Yoko by incorporating it into their song of the season.    

The single was produced by Phil Spector and was the seventh single Lennon recorded apart from The Beatles. Five of his seven singles went Top 40 with "Instant Karma" and "Imagine" both peaking in the Top 10 at #3.

From 1963-1969 The Beatles' sent Christmas recordings to fans (please see Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Christmas Time (Is Here Again) (The Beatles)).   "Happy Xmas (War is Over)" would be the first Christmas flavored single by one of The Fab Four to be released apart from those "Beatle People", Flexi discs of the late 60s.  (December 2020's Tuesday's Musical Notes is featuring all of the solo Christmas songs in case you haven't noticed. George Harrison's is next week!  As always, Stay Tuned!!!)  

Despite John and Yoko's and many other's best efforts to give peace a chance..., the reality was that the Vietnam war wouldn't be over for another 4 years after the release of "Happy Xmas (War is Over)".  Official US involvement ended on  April 30, 1975.  "A very merry Easter..." (March 30, 1975) just doesn't have the same zip to it I guess...

So this is Christmas...


"...He shall bruise you on the head, and you shall bruise Him on the heel.."  The last time I checked, a head injury is much more severe than a heel injury.  So begins the prophecies of Jesus coming into the world to save mankind from their sin, their wrongdoings, and to save them to an eternity in the presence of God.  

It also begins the Biblical narrative of the war between God and satan.  The Bible is also very clear that this war is over, as the song goes, and that God is triumphant over satan, sin, and death.  Let's continue...

So this is Christmas...


and


The One who would bruise the head of the enemy comes to bear the sins of all men.  He serves as the ultimate and only sacrifice by which man can be forgiven of those sins and have a hope of being with God when they pass from this life.  The Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, and Prince of REAL Peace arrives to bring Light to the darkness of a broken world.  He lives the life of a normal man, though He does nothing wrong Himself.  He is broken, despised, and rejected in battle after battle, yet He never capitulated His perfect love for those who were the administrators of His pain. Because of His victory in those battles, the war is over...if you want it.

So this is Christmas...


Jesus comes as the One who would bruise the head of the enemy for the near and the dear one, the old and the young.  Jesus comes as the Prince of Peace. Why don't we give Peace a chance?   Jesus comes as victorious King from battle after battle for weak and for strong, for rich and the poor ones, the world is so wrong.  Jesus comes as the light in the darkness of a broken world for black and for white, for yellow and red ones, He stops all the fight.  

So this is Christmas...


"It...is...finished!"  With this triumphant proclamation, Jesus once and for all declared that the war was over against satan.  After this shout of exultation, Jesus died.  He was placed in a tomb and three days later took the ultimate victory lap as He came back to life and was seen by many of His followers.  In all of this, Jesus made sure that we have the power to win the skirmishes that we face in this life by His redeeming love.  

So this is Christmas...


"...War is over if you want it, war is over, now."  "So this is Christmas.  We get to choose.  Jesus is waiting.  He is the Good News.  A very Merry Christmas, and a happy New Year.  It could be a good one, without any fear." 

You see dear friend.  The war for your eternity can be over today. That presence you are sensing is God, the Holy Spirit, drawing you to Himself.  The peace and goodwill that you desire for this season and your life are waiting in the presence of Jesus.  He has the best gift you could receive this Christmas, The Gift of salvation.  But, He won't force it on you. It must be something you accept freely by saying "YES, I BELIEVE".  Truly, the war is over...if you want it...war is over...now...

Give Peace a chance...  

'Til Tuesday

Serving HIM by serving You,
randy
<><

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reggae" (Paul McCartney)












You know Country and Hip Hop and New Age and Disco.  New Wave and Celtic and Bebop, Flamenco.
But do you recall?  The most "Island" music of all?  

"Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reggae" was the b-side no one knows.  And if you ever heard it, you would even say "no prose?"  All of the other Beatles had a Christmas song with words.  Paul chose to just play guitar, his a voice that no one heard.  Then one Tuesday early morn, on the net they say.  "Reggae Christmas on the blog?" "Let's keep reading, we're agog!"  Then all the readers loved it though not sure about the rhyme.  You're sure of simply having a wonderful Christmastime!"


Each of the Beatles had a Christmas single.  Some had more success than others. (more on George and John's to come...in The Notes of Christmas Yet to Come!!!) Ringo actually had the only Christmas full-length record.  (Go back to last week's blog)  Paul's Christmas single, "Wonderful Christmastime".  (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Wonderful Christmastime" (Paul McCartney)) actually did pretty well on the charts and becomes an earworm every year at about this time.  

Very little is known about the B-side to McCartney's November 16, 1979, Christmas single.  This flip-side, "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reggae", joins the multitude of renditions of the seasonal favorite about the proboscis challenged reindeer, originally recorded by Gene Autry.  (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" (Gene Autry))  Like its A-side, Paul McCartney plays all of the instruments.  Unlike it's A-side, it gets very little airplay and has never been covered by anyone.  That is what makes "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reggae" so unique.  It joins that cadre of Christmas songs that wind up as filler or trivia questions during the season, but yet has a charm that is actually rather endearing.  It is unique also in that its Reggae style, is not usually the jingle bell jingle associated with Christmas.

Rudolph's biggest liability became Santa's biggest asset so the story goes.  After years of being labeled as peculiar, by the end of the song, Rudolph was being hailed as special. After years of scorn and shame by those around him, Rudolph rose above all the "noise" ridicule and allowed nothing to dissuade him from the task set before him.  He did what he was called on to do, despite his past.

In some ways, the story of Rudolph can serve as an example to us.  The believers the apostle Peter challenged in his first letter to the churches certainly seemed to be reminded of their "special" status.  


Tuesday's Musical Notes began a few months ago going through the Bible and reviewing some of the great stories that are included within its covers.  We started at Genesis and have made our way so far through the book of Exodus.  Please take a few minutes and peruse the offerings of the last few months as we have followed the story of Jesus through the Bible.  You can find these "early Bible" blogs on the left-hand side of your screen...thanks for checking them out!

This week, we flash forward in our story of the Israelites to the letters of the New Testament.  (Let's face it, the Leviticus and Numbers portions of the story of the journey to the Promised Land really don't fit well with the birth narrative of Jesus, so we'll fluctuate the next couple of weeks and get back to it in January...)  

Much can be said of the encouragement we can receive from the story of a reindeer with a red nose. But there is a much more important story to tell during this season.  It is the story of One who is calling US to be the peculiar ones.  His name is Emmanuel, God With Us,...Jesus.  Peter tells us that we are going to be like Jesus in that as we call on His name, the people of the world will reject us.  As we rid ourselves of malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander we begin to transform our lives into lives that can be used to tell the Gospel and make disciples. (Note we are to go and tell, not judge and yell) 

What is the Gospel?  It is the good news that Jesus is God and came to dwell with us in the physical manifestation of a baby who was born to a virgin.  He was raised as a carpenter's son, and lived a perfect life.  His purpose was to be the once and for all sacrifice for the wrong things we do in this life.  To fulfill this purpose, He was wrongly accused of blasphemy by the "religious" leaders of His time and was humiliated, tortured, and crucified in the most horrendous form of capital punishment ever devised.  He took our place on that cross and bore the sin of every person who has ever lived.  He was taken and placed in a borrowed tomb, where 3 days later He physically came back to life and was seen by many of His followers.  He ascended to heaven in the sight of His disciples to fulfill His other purposes, to prepare a place for those who believe and serve as a mediator on our behalf before God.  In His place, God in form of Holy Spirit came to earth and began drawing people to Himself.  This is the Gospel.

But, we do have a choice to make.  Will we accept this Good News and allow Holy Spirit to being transforming our lives?  Will we observe this Christmas differently as a "special and peculiar" one whom God has called?  The choice is up to us...
   
We all have a past.  That past forms who we are in the present and it informs what we will do in the future as we are called to salvation and then called to works that will show that salvation and spread the Good News.   

God has chosen each one of us for specific roles in telling others about Jesus. We then assist Holy Spirit in helping them, and ourselves in the process, grow as His disciples.  That's right!  The God who created everything has chosen you to be His emissary to the world.  He has called you special and has given you everything you need to succeed in the jobs in which He has called you. Despite what may be in your past.  Our biggest liability can be used by God to reach others who struggle in the same area.  Our most oppressive enemy will stumble on the living rock of Jesus as we place our lives in His hands.  Our biggest failure can be a tool for us to use as God transforms us out of the darkness into His marvelous light. A red nose greatly pales in comparison to marvelous light!

'Tis the season for believing and that's just what Holy Spirit is calling us to do as we are chosen by God to be his special people.  

Or as the song might go...

Then one very special morn, Jesus came to say, "Just believe in what I tell, I'll prepare you very well."  Then all believers went out, telling everyone who'd hear, "Jesus has come to save you, there is nothing you need fear!  There is nothing you...need....fear!!!"  

'Til Tuesday,

Serving HIM by serving You,
randy
<><

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Tuesday's Musical Notes - "I Wanna Be Santa Claus" (Ringo Starr)



 



Welcome to Tuesday and another Christmasy edition of Tuesday's Musical Notes, the blog where Christmas music meets contemplatable musings all tied up in pretty paper, pretty ribbons of blue...or red or well, you pick your paper... 


Since its inception, Tuesday's Musical Notes has loved exploring the season of Christmas and the music that accompanies it.  Go check out the December archives on the left to see if your favorite Christmas melody has been given "The Notes" treatment!  Also, we rarely solicit comments, but if you have a thought or conversation you'd like to begin, our comment section is available at the bottom of the blog, we'd love to hear from you anytime!!! 

Many years there is at least 1 album or artist that becomes the favorite Christmas album for the holidays.  Retailers struggle during the lead up to Christmas week, to keep up with the demand for that particular album.  Who will it be this year?  Dolly? Mariah? Pentatonix, Carrie. Leslie Odom Jr?  Of course, with streaming capabilities in many markets, the demand for physical units becomes less of a problem this year...sigh, remember the days when you paid for something that you could actually hold in your hands?...but I digress.

Sometime in October, the deluge of Christmas music begins to pour out into the marketplace.  Singles and full-length albums of Christmas standards, and new music wishing to become a standard, are released to the public in the hopes of having 4th Quarter success.  (Somewhere in midst of all the "Jingle Bells" and Red-Nosed Reindeers we lost the musical Message of Christmas, but more on that at a later date).

With this myriad of seasonal songs, a few will tend to fall through the cracks and not get noticed (Didn't know about Leslie Odom Jr's (simply titled The Christmas Album) until this week!!!).  While these "second 10 or 20"  offerings for the season are good albums and certainly deserve a listen, sometimes the timing or the marketing just doesn't quite live up to some of their compatriot's seasonal selections and they quickly fall into next year's Christmas cutout bin.  Such was the case for Sir Richard Starkey's Christmas album from 1999. 

Who you may be asking is Sir Richard Starkey?  You might know him better by his Beatle name...Ringo Starr.


Even though it received strong reviews, I Wanna Be Santa Claus did not light up the Christmas music world.  (It would be swallowed up in the sales phenomenon that was Kenny G's Faith album (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Auld Lang Syne" (Kenny G Millineum Mix))).  

Ringo's Christmas album was a 50/50 split of perennial standards and original songs and featured several celebrity guest artists (as so many of Ringo's albums do) including ELO's, Jeff Lynne, Aerosmith's Joe Perry, and former Eagles band member Timothy B. Schmit. 

I Wanna Be Santa Claus is the only full-length, solo Christmas project released by any member of the Beatles.  As a group, they produced the fan club songs we referenced last week (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Christmas Time (Is Here Again)" (The Beatles)).  Paul McCartney, (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Wonderful Christmastime" (Paul McCartney)), John Lennon, and George Harrison (Tuesday's Musical Notes - "The Light that has Lighted the World" (George Harrison), Tuesday's Musical Notes - "Got My Mind Set on You" (George Harrison)reserved their seasonal celebrations to Christmas singles.  Ringo's Christmas album sets him apart from his Fab Four brethren even though the album never charted and sales were low despite receiving good reviews from critics.   

Ringo's motivation for being Santa Claus is so he can give all of the toys away, ride in the sleigh, and make every dream come true.  That sounds pretty close to the job description with which Santa has been labeled through the years.  One qualifier that Ringo however never places on his being Santa is the judgment of the behavior of folks over the course of the year. The "naughty and nice" list is nonexistent in Ringo's Christmas economy.

But Santa does have his list and he checks it twice, just to find out who's naughty and nice, as the song goes.  How does Santa come to the determination of who is "naughty" or "nice"?  For that matter, how do any of us measure what is good, bad, naughty, nice?

Rest assured friend, there is a benchmark, a guide to what is good and bad in our world.  It comes from the One who created the world, it's called the Bible.  All of the rules, the laws, the commands in the Bible are given for us to have a moral, ethical, and spiritual code by which to live and interact with others that make up the only race, the human race (everything else is culture and melatonin).

For example, The Book of Leviticus - New American Standard Bible/The Amplified Bible/King James Version of the Bible parallel is the initial set of laws given to the children of Israel as they began their new nation.  Leviticus gets into the specifics that were laid out by the ten commandments given to the Israelites in the latter part of Exodus.  God gave them these instructions to provide the boundaries which they would need to establish their government and to keep them as the "peculiar" people He desired them to be.  Although these laws were given to a people of ancient history (3000-4000 years ago) many of the rules of Leviticus still apply and have been used in establishing our own legal system.  

In reading Leviticus, you quickly see the specific nature of the laws that were given.  Remember the context in that this 3rd book of the Bible was given to a group of folks who had been slaves their entire lives.  The only rules they had previously were given to them by their Egyptian taskmasters.  Now they were free and to avoid another "Golden Calf" moment in the life of their nation, God provided rules for them.  

When Jesus came, He fulfilled all of the prophecies of the Old Testament.  When Jesus came, He fulfilled the law.  This means that Jesus not only satisfied the requirements for prophecy, but He came to show what the true meaning of love is by giving His life as a satisfaction for the price of our sin, our wrong-doing. The Letter to the Roman church, chapter 6 - NASB/AMP/KJV He also drilled down all of the laws from the Old Testament (which men had perverted) into 2:  Love God and Love everybody else.  Even though some of the laws given in Leviticus seem archaic and not applicable to us, they provide us with tangible ways of showing the love that Jesus will speak of in the Gospels The Gospel of Jesus written by the Tax Collector - Matthew, Chapter 22, verses 34-40 NASB/AMP/KJV., The Gospel of Jesus written by Mark, chapter 12, verses 28-34 NASB/AMP/KJV.  

The laws of Leviticus and in the remainder of the Bible are for our individual use. They aren't given for us to serve as Santa Claus be determining who is bad or good, nor are they intended for us to interpret for other folks, mete out on other folks, or to use to judge other folks.   Holy Spirit uses these laws to convict US individually of the sin that so easily besets US. Not as a tool for us to convict others.   The Letter to Hebrew Christians, chapter 12, verses 1-3 NASB, AMP, KJV  Our challenge this Christmas season is to resist the desire to wanna be Santa Claus determining who goes on the "naughty or nice" lists and love as Jesus commanded in Matthew and Mark.     
Holy Spirit's job is to convict. He doesn't need our help in that role.  As believers, our job is to tell the Gospel and make disciples by engaging, encouraging, and edifying, as well as coming through for everyone as we exist in one another's lives every day, bringing Christmas cheer.  

"It's a waltz, it's a waltz and I'm happy!!!"

'Til Tuesday,

Serving HIM by serving You,
randy