Welcome To Our Blog!!!

Welcome To Our Blog!!!

Friday, September 25, 2015

What if We Treated Our Salvation Day Like Our Birthday?

After giving a birthday greeting to an acquaintance, I had a thought  what if we celebrated the day we got saved like our birthday? What if the merit was just as great and the esteem just as high? Our birthday is a special day that is recognized throughout all the world in different cultures and traditions. Our birthday stands out as a part of us written and marked in the scrolls of time. Our birthday represents our first moment and day of life on earth. Our salvation is just as important, but because it is represented as an inward change that eventually displays as outward it's often not as celebrated. It is often not as celebrated and recognized because it's eternal. However, as we come to know God we realize eternal correlates with mortal. Without eternal we could not be the mortal humans that we are today.I believe if the day of our salvation beat relentlessly in our breast, and was remembered like  our birthday, we would never forget God. We would never return to the old habits that he saved us from. We would never go backwards,but we would always progress. Our destiny's would be accomplished and man and woman would live to their fullest potential. Everyone as a Christian has potential that can rocket through the sky , to the moon higher and higher and explode so mighty that many can see. We can all leave this world with an impact that figuratively speaking rocks the every foundation of this earth! However, that only happens by pressing on in Christ, I urge you to press on but, never forget where God brought you from, for that is the very force that God will use to promote you to where you wants you to be!!!!

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Rivers and Robots Interview

Speaking of music recently, I had the honor to do an interview with  an amazing and dynamic Christian Indie/worship band called Rivers and Robots.For all those Christian Indie or Worship or just music lovers this interview is for you! Sit back and get ready to be empowered, inspired and moved.
( CP=Me (A Christian Sister Perspective) J=Jonathan Lead Singer, of Rivers and Robots)

I always like to begin with how an artist came to have faith, before reflecting on the aspects of their faith through their music.

CP: How did you come to know the Lord( salvation story) and how did this tie in with your love for music?

J: I grew up in church (my dad is a pastor) and spent a lot of time in church meetings, listening to worship music. I come from a very musical family and learnt piano, guitar and a couple of other instruments when I was growing up. I ended up playing bass in the church worship team, and later drums. We're a small church, and so I just filled in wherever there was a gap. Doing that gave me a really good understanding of how each of the instruments work within a band though!

It wasn't until the age of 15 that I really started to take my relationship with God seriously. Until then I just believed in God, and that I was going to heaven, and that was mostly it. But at age 15 was when I finally realised that there was so much more to God than I had realized, and I started to develop a real relationship. Around the same time I started to ask God where he wanted me. I had read that we were all different parts of one body and I wanted to know what my part was!

A week or so later I was in a worship time, and felt so much love for God I thought I was going to explode, and I was trying to figure out what else I could do to just express worship and what I was feeling, and in that moment I felt God say "this is why I made you", and I knew from that point that worship was what I was meant to be doing. I spent a year just worshiping at home before I was brave enough to get up in front of anyone and sing but eventually I started to lead worship at church.

CP: How did you form a band?

 J: Out of those time worshiping at home though, these songs would come out and I'd start recording them and saving them on my computer. A year or so later, God told me that this was what he was calling me to as well, not just leading worship in church, but writing songs that are all about who He is, and that help others to worship in a different and creative way. The kind of songs I was writing didn't always fit in church, so I would record them and put them out online.


Eventually I started to put albums together and when I was 18 I released the first Rivers & Robots album "The Great Light". It was pretty rough, and all recorded and mixed at home in my bedroom. I was still figuring out how to do this creative worship thing, and by the time I did my second album I had a lot better idea of what I was meant to be doing. You can still hear the beginnings of it in my first album, but there was some definite moments that I would go back and change if I did it again.

The second album, Take Everything, was still recorded in my bedroom, but this time I had a lot clearer vision of what these songs were meant to be, and I made it much more God-centered and worshipful. That album started to do pretty well online, and by the time I finished it in 2012, I met these 3 guys that became great friends, and were also great musicians. I took a weekend out to pray about it all and the more I prayed the more excited I got, so I sent out an email and all 3 came back and said yes! We spent a year learning how to play the songs from Take Everything live, and then worked on some new songs together. It was my first time working with other musicians, my first time recording somewhere that wasn't my bedroom, and my first time letting other people to come in and help with the mixing and mastering. But it's a much better sounding album for it! We released All Things New in 2014 as a free download, which did really well and spread by word of mouth. So that's how it all started!

CP:Very inspiring to see how everything started out!Entering into the Christian music scene is huge. Some Christian artists have been pressured to compromise, as the Bible says how the mighty have fallen. Keep My Fire Burning lyrics are deep and real. As new  music opportunities arise what is your anchor to keep you rooted and grounded in God and the purpose behind your music?
  
J:  There's certainly pressure in the christian music industry to conform to a certain style or sound, and we've had lots of great opportunities come along that just weren't the right fit for us. The thing that keeps us rooted is prayer, and coming back to the things God has spoken. God gave us a few clear prophetic words at the start of the band and a few big verses that have meant a lot to us, we often come back to these things in big decision moments to see if it lines up. But with every opportunity we take on we're learning to pray about it, no matter how big or small it is. We're aware that God is leading us as a band, and we don't want to try and take over at any point and start making everything happen by ourselves. We're learning that not every opportunity that comes along is necessarily from God, and sometimes, particularly the more people hear about you, you start getting invites to all sorts of things that aren't where God wants you. So we simply ask God about each opportunity that comes our way, and wait for a confirmation that we should or shouldn't do it.

The other major thing that keeps us rooted is our one-on-one times of worshiping and praying at home. We talk a lot about living a lifestyle of worship, and really the times that we get on a stage and sing our songs are just an overflow of what we do at home. Our friend James runs a ministry called Prayer Storm, and he often says that it's one of the most tragic things to have a growing ministry but a shrinking heart towards God. As our ministry grows it's important that our relationship and intimacy with God is growing at the same time.

CP: What are your aspirations for your music is this something that you guys currently do full-time?
 We're working towards going full time as a band. Two of us are already full time, and one of us is part time, but we're in the process of setting up our own non-profit organization to help us do more with the band, as well as helping other artists to do creative worship and give them a platform to share what they do.

CPI love that your songs are surrounded by scriptures and that you've given away music for free. The new album is full of great songs.Could you tell me the story behind Light Will Dawn and In the Family?

In The Family is one of the few songs I wrote that started with a lyric. I tend to start with music first and lyrics come later, but for song God was speaking to me about being in the family of God and the relationship that we have to Him. I knew that I wanted to write a song with the line "I'm in the family now" in it, and I sat at my piano and the song just came together. Verse 2 took a while to write, and we actually went to recording with it unfinished. In the middle of doing the vocal recordings I ended up sitting down with my notepad and writing something out just before we recorded it.

Light Will Dawn is one of the few songs that was a co-write. I tend to write most of the songs myself, I just never learnt how to do it with other people well. But our bass player Nathan sent me an idea for a song, and it fit really well with something I was already writing. So I ended up writing the verses, and the tag near the end of "You are really coming back", and I used Nathan's song for the chorus and the last tag. It just seemed to fit together well. A lot of our songs are written about the second coming, and this one is no different! It's a song about Jesus coming back and the hope of the light that he will bring in the midst of darkness.

CP: Another artist that I love to worship to is Misty Edwards she brings you into the presence of God and worship.What are some fellow worship artists that inspire you and artists that maybe you'd like to work with or had the pleasure to work with?

 J:We love Misty Edwards as well! I went to IHOP in Kansas City a few times for their one thing conference, and there's so many great worship leaders and artists there. We're also friends with United Pursuit who are writing great songs at the moment, and we're slowly getting to know a lot of other creative worship bands around the UK and beyond. Part of the reason we set up our Set Sail website is to share some of these artists that we like. We also put together a Spotify playlist of indie worship bands that we're regularly updating.


CP: Besides being incredibly talented musicians, what are some other hobbies/things that you guys enjoy doing in your spare time?

J:When we're not doing the band stuff we love going to gigs (Manchester is great for that!), watching movies, eating chicken and doing some of our other creative hobbies. I'm a graphic designer too, and our guitarist Dave is a video editor. We all have our little side projects and things we enjoy as well as playing music.


CP: Lastly, I  saw you guys mention tea and cakes.  I'm from the U.S and have quite a sweet tooth,I have seen in times pasts the custom of  tea times, is there still such a tradition? What are you guys favorite tea and cakes? 

J.:Tea is still a big deal in the UK, we maybe don't have the traditional 'tea time' quite so much, but it's rare that I go more than a few hours without having a cup of tea. Every now and then we go traveling somewhere where they don't do tea, and it's just not right. People shouldn't have to live like that.

Well that's the interview! It's refreshing to hear from musicians who are just as passionate about their personal walk with God as their music.Our relationship with God is more important than anything in this world.Thank Rivers and Robots  for doing the interview and may the Lord bless you.

To get their recent cd or for more information check them out here:http://riversandrobots.com

Photo Credits: http://riversrobots.bandcamp.com



Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Why I Will Not Watch the VMAS


Call me boring,old fashioned,judgmental or religious, but I was a bit disappointed when a Christian publisher posted a article concerning the ‪#‎VMAS‬ (secular music awards a.k.a a freak show)and actually encouraged Christians a little to watch it.

Secular music is one of those quiet topics that creep in the background of Christianity. I was blessed enough to be raised in a home where I was taught the difference between Christian and Secular Music. The one you listen to as a Christian the other was  music that sinner's listened to. Now this is not to judge, maybe you were never taught this,but as we grow in Christ we must become more Godly. The VMAS is a flat out freak show and something that was surely cooked up by the devil. The news pictures  and even some Christian publisher's broadcast this show proudly. A Christian organization broadcasting news actually encouraged viewers to watch the VMAS! A show that a 30 year old guy said made him uncomfortable and blush.

A program that is an affront to God. No, I haven't watched the #VMAS before, but I don't have to,to see what it's all about. The article from the "Christian" publisher title mentioned hope,the only hope in the secular music world is a spiritual awakening ,that their lost and they need to be saved. The only hope is to leave the secular industry and pick up their cross and follow God not fame.Having said all this,I wonder how we as Christians can comfortably sit back and enjoy the very thing that displeases and dishonors God? God calls us to come out from among wickness and be separate.I conclude with the words of the great psamlist, I will set NO wicked thing before my eyes.‪#‎StandforTruth‬ ‪#‎SetApart‬ ‪#‎Godlylife‬

 Images by:Google

Written By: