Albums I Listened to in 2020

In an effort to get out of my typical music patterns, I set out in 2020 to listen to as many different albums as possible. Many of these are albums that were new to me interspersed with some old favorites. The project got derailed in the last quarter of the year, but I still got to listen to a lot of great music. I listened to 67 unique albums this year and I’m hoping to hit a hundred in 2021 and hopefully hit 100 unique albums. Anyway, here in alphabetical order are albums that I listened to this past year:

An Advent Mixtape

In the whirling dervish that is Christmas season, music is one of the main things that ground me. I spend a lot of time in late November making different Christmas mixtapes (technically they are playlists but “mixtapes” sounds cooler) for different moods.

My Advent playlist is a little different from the others. It still features carols but it also dips outside to non-Christmas music songs that capture the longing, the tension, and the hope for light in the darkness that marks this time of waiting. Since we are in the midst of that season, I figured that I would share the songs from this mixtape with you.

Whose Peace?

In early June, the killings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and Ahmaud Arbery spurred a group of high schoolers to plan a Black Lives Matter march. They didn't know if anyone would show up. 10,000 people took to the streets that day and lifted their voices in peaceful protest.

Peaceful.

It’s an interesting word in the context of 10,000 people pulsing through downtown Nashville. That show of righteous anger does not really paint the picture of peace. I guess you could split hairs to say that it was non-violent and that is somehow different than peaceful. But the mandate from those young women beforehand was that this would be a peaceful protest. And so it was.

Yet the chant that still rings in my ears six months later is No justice! No peace! Again and again it would ring out; its staccato cadence bouncing off the buildings. No justice! No peace! Each syllable like a punch; a fierce passion jabbed into speech. No justice! No peace!

The second Sunday of Advent is about peace and it’s keeping me up at night. I grew up in a context where the stuff of Christianity was almost all personal. The primary concern was to make sure that your individual relationship with God was in the right alignment. If that personal relationship was right then you could personally experience hope, joy, love. And peace.

Hope Like a Hurricane

I was six years old when Hurricane Hugo tore through South Carolina. We lived in Columbia at the time and so we were spared the storm’s full wrath. My brother, newborn sister, and I all slept in my parents’ room that night. Even as they taped up all the windows in our house, Mom and Dad had exuded a calm that we would be okay and we were. But I remember the howling winds through the night; the sound was like a gash being ripped in creation itself.

I felt vulnerable and small and scared. The world could have come undone.

The tricky thing about Advent is there is more than a little about this time of year that is about the world coming undone. There is an untamed ferocity to the season that we often bury under twinkling lights, sleigh bells, and children’s choirs. The first Sunday—the beginning of a new year in the church—is about hope. Hope for a better tomorrow. A time-displaced hope for the coming Christ child. A future hope for when all things will be made right. But it is all hope with a jagged edge.

The House You're Building

Our family recently moved into a new house. Let me amend that. Our family recently moved into a house that is new to us. The house itself is anything but new; it was built in 1899. Again, it was built not in this century, not in the last century, but the century before that. We moved in right before Halloween. And now that we know it’s not deeply haunted, I am really in awe of the place. It’s like living in a history book. We know that the house was in a fire at one point and that it was rebuilt. We think our bedroom used to be the kitchen and that the kitchen used to be a screened in porch; you can see the exterior brick in there. The floors creak with century’s worth of character as you make your way across every room.

Just think of all that house has seen. It is 121 years old! 1899 was only a few decades after the Civil War. It was nine years before the Model T came out, two and a half decades before indoor electricity was common in homes. Mark Twain was still alive and none of us here were close to being around. The house has been around for world wars and us putting a man on the moon. In that house—built during the presidency of William McKinley—there is now electricity and running water, we drive from it without a second thought, and have video calls with relatives who live hundreds of miles away. It’s kind of mind boggling. I mean, how does something stand the test of time and a literal trial by fire like that? How do you build something to last?

That is the question that is at the heart of our text today. How do you build a life that is going to last? An existence that will stand the tests of time and trials by fire; that will weather life’s storms? This is a familiar passage. If you’ve ever been in a children’s Sunday school class or have gone to Vacation Bible School, you have probably sung the song about the wise man who built his upon the rock. Jesus tells us a story of that astute architect and his less wise counterpart. Both of them built their houses.

This Day

Where do we go from here? That question seems to follow us around. After all, each morning presents new forks in the road. What kind of people are we going to be? Empathetic or hateful? Full of hope or cynicism? Looking our for others or only for ourselves? Those choices profoundly direct the trajectories of our lives and those around us. And each day provides a new opportunity for that.

But the question of where we go from here always seems weightier in moments of great transition. The road seems to bend in dramatically divergent directions. When Joshua was at the end of his days leading the people of Israel, he gathered them together with directions on which road they ought to take.

Now if you are unwilling to serve the LORD, choose this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served in the region beyond the River or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but as for me and my household, we will serve the LORD.

Choose this day whom you will serve.

Reform and Remember

October turns over to November with two significant days that often get buried under a pile of Halloween candy. The 31st is Reformation Day, which remembers Martin Luther nailing 95 theses on the Wittenberg church door protesting the shortcomings he saw in the church of his day. This action is considered the symbolic catalyst for the Protestant Reformation, a movement that dramatically transformed not just the Christian church, but all of Western Civilization.

Then today is All Saints Day. If you want to get into the weeds concerning a church holiday (and I always do), some celebrate All Saints Day as a memory of all the faithful who have gone before us. Others celebrate solely the canonized saints and then remember the rest on All Souls Day the next day. Because of my priesthood-of-all-believers-confessing Baptist roots, I tend towards remembering everyone on the same day. The way I see it, the lessons I learn from St. Francis of Assisi and my Grandma are equally profound and important.

Reformation Day and All Saints Day hold together our past, present, and future. The animating force behind the Reformation is that the church should always be moving forward to God’s calling of us. Since we are all flawed individuals, the Christian institutions are always stumbling in the vocation of loving God and neighbor. Thus we always need to take sober stock of the church’s actions and reform for a more Christlike tomorrow. All Saints celebrates the hope, courage, conviction, and failures of past Christians who can illuminate that way forward.

This Could Possibly Be the Best Day Ever?

I made my way through our dimly lit house this morning in order to get our oldest son up and ready for virtual school. Before I could get upstairs, I saw something stir on the couch. There he was; fast asleep. At first I tried to gently rouse him but he merely just rolled over and continued to snore. Escalation was necessary. I lovingly rubbed and patted his back. I leaned into his ear and made funny noises. I took his blanket and pillow. Nothing.

Finally, I turned on the music playlist I made for him and his brother. Not too loudly—I’m not a monster—but enough to see if it got a response. The first song on the mix is the theme song to Phineas & Ferb, one of his favorite cartoons. At the first word, he shot up. He later admitted that he thought there was an episode on TV and didn’t want to miss it. We got our day started as the playlist carried on with songs about Perry the Platypus and odes to the Star Wars desert planet Tatooine.

But it was the chorus of that first song that has lingered with me:

This could possibly be the best day ever / and the forecast says that tomorrow will likely be a million and six times better / So make every minute count / Jump up, jump in, and seize the day / And let’s make sure that in every single possible way / Today is going to be a great day

We Are All Connected

Long voting lines aren’t that bad if you bring a book. Last Thursday, I found myself in a queue that wrapped around our local library’s parking lot before snaking in and out of the stacks. I had been warned and came prepared because there was no way that I wasn’t going to vote. I read and chatted with my neighbors in line each six feet to the other side of me: a Florida transplant and a Nashville native who recently returned home after being overseas.

It’s funny how connections can spring out of nothing but proximity. All we initially had in common was our place in line, but that was enough to pleasantly pass the time to talk about the state of the world, how different regions have responded to the pandemic, and whether hipsters still dominate East Nashville. In the lulls—as I thought about neighbors and an election that touches so many people—I finished my book. And this is one of the things I read:

All of us, part of the same body.
This is our body.
All of us entangled.

If a doctor tells you that there is something seriously wrong with your leg, you would not laugh and say,
Whatever.
You would be alarmed,
and you would seek help,
immediately.
Because what’s happening in one part of your body
inevitably affects the rest of your body because ultimately you have one
body.

Do This and You Will Live

I make up TV shows in my head all the time. I had this idea for one called God Cops. It would be a normal police procedural, but the crimes investigated were violations of the Ten Commandments.

Just imagine the “Good Cop, Bad Cop” interrogation of a man who allegedly did some work on the Sabbath. Or the precinct’s frustration when someone who used God’s name in vain is back on the street because the judge rules that commandment is more about misrepresenting God than an exclamation. Or a cool, aviator glasses-wearing, mustache-sporting detective sliding across the hood of the car to take down a perp looking covetously at his neighbor’s cow all while a funky guitar riff is punctuated by a blast of horns.

It would have been glorious and would have made so, so many people angry. The inspiration behind this satiric ridiculousness was that people often seem really eager to police religious adherence. It is as if their whole conception at the root of following God is a notion of crime and punishment. You obey the commandments so the Almighty doesn’t throw the book at you and there are scores of people who believe they are deputized to carry that out.