The Right Frame of Mind
He Bought Up the Records
By Rev. Mark H. Creech
(AgapePress) - Not many people are aware of it, and others may
have forgotten about it, but my mother had a distinguished country
music singing career back in the late 1960s and the early 1970s.
Two of her records did very well; her country rendition of "The
Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" went to #9 on the Billboard
charts; and "We'll Sing in the Sunshine," which was originally a
folk tune, reached #24.
Alice Creech was the opening act for some of the most revered
country artists today: Ernest Tubb, Dolly Parton, Hank Williams,
Jr., Charlie Pride, Merle Haggard, String Bean, Grandpa Jones,
Bill Anderson, Tammy Wynette, Loretta Lynn and many more. In
addition to being rated #21 of the top female vocalists of 1972
with a single by Billboard magazine, she was also the recipient of
two ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers)
awards that same year. She even made a guest appearance on the
Grand Ole Opry, when it was previously located in the famous Ryman
Auditorium.
About the time my mother was just becoming a major country and
western celebrity, she decided to surrender her life to Christ and
leave the business so she could be a better mom to my younger
sister and me. I earnestly pray I would always live worthy of the
godly influence and instructions she gave during the years that
followed.
Recently, while attending an Ethics Leaders Conference at the
offices of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the
Southern Baptist Convention in Nashville, Tennessee, I retraced
some of my mother's steps during her days as an aspiring artist in
Music City. I visited the historic Ernest Tubb Record Shop and saw
the stage where my mother often performed on WSM's "Ernest Tubb
Midnight Jamboree."
But the greatest thrill came when visiting the Lawrence Record
Store downtown, where they have a tremendous selection of vintage
vinyl records. You can imagine my delightful surprise to discover
they had all of my mother's recordings -- original labels, jackets
and everything. There they were -- all of them -- ready to play on
the nearest phonograph. Naturally, I bought them up to safely put
them away.
That experience made me think of a profound truth often
forgotten in our day: God has every recording of our lives and
He's planning to play them at the Judgment. He has them all -- the
originals -- everything we ever did; the things others either
never knew or had forgotten about. It's all there and none of it
is omitted. Moreover, there's no spin to it. It's all just the
bare and unadulterated truth about who we really are and what
we've done.
LIFE magazine once interviewed dozens of people to learn how
Americans feel about prayer. One person interviewed was a young
prostitute from White Pine County, Nevada.
"I don't think about my feelings a lot," she said. "Instead I
lie in my bed and think onto Him. I meditate because sometimes my
words don't come out right. But He can find me. He can find what's
inside of me just by listening to my thoughts. I ask Him to help
me and keep me going. A lot of people think that working girls
don't have any morals, any religion. But I do. I don't steal. I
don't lie. The way I look at it, I'm not sinning. He's not going
to judge me. I don't think God judges anybody."
Very few modern notions are more popular than the one that God
judges no one. The problem is, however, that comforting perception
is patently false!
Judgment is as certain as God is holy. The Psalmist says in
Psalm 7:11, "God is angry with the wicked every day." In other
words, as Dr. George Sweeting of Moody Bible Institute puts it:
"God never makes détente with sin." The apostle Paul explicitly
warned: "Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man
soweth, that shall he also reap. For he that soweth to the flesh
shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the
Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting" (Galatians
6:7-8).
Upon proper reflection of our faults and failures, such should
cause every person to tremble, because it doesn't require a host
of sins to condemn and bar us from paradise. As it was for Adam
and Eve, it only requires one -- just one -- one single act of
disobedience to God's law. Yet the records will reveal that all
have failed miserably.
That is -- unless the records are bought up and put away to
never be played. Essentially, this is what Christ did when He gave
his life as atonement for sin on the Cross. He bought up all the
records and forever put them away for everyone who trusts Him for
forgiveness and receives Him as Lord.
My mother will tell you that nothing she sought after before --
riches, fame, success, etc. -- could ever compare to the new life
she found in Christ. Furthermore, let me say if she hadn't made
that decision, I would have never known the grace and goodness of
Christ ... and certainly wouldn't be writing about Him for this
editorial.
Rev. Mark H. Creech (calact@aol.com) is the executive director
of the
Christian Action League of North Carolina, Inc
CG
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