I was just scanning through songs randomly and ran across Rich Mullins song
entitled Boy Like Me Man Like You. What an honest look at Christ from a
human side... I just love that song. Anyway, I got to thinking about Rich.
I was just a baby Christian when he was killed back in 97. I remember
feeling such a loss, and I don't even think I had one of his CDs then,
but his sincerety just proceeded his music. In our recent talk on things,
and how we ought not seek treasure or things in this world, I read this
article with genuine envy of this man. I've read this before but it still
speaks so loud to me. Here's a bit on Rich. I wish I would have had the
opportunity to sit and talk with Rich. I don't know of one Christian
artist/writer today who lives as such... some I know have places in
Franklin TN, a fancy higher end of Nashville area, quite a different look
than Rich's. The lyrics he sung he took serious for his life. He
definitely lived the Matthew scripture I posted the other day. Here is the
text...
The following is taken from an interview of Rich Mullins by Brian Quincy
Newcomb of CCM Magazine in June of 1992. Ironically, the words to his favorite
songs say that he wants to "go out like Elijah."
RM: My favorite song that I've ever written is "Elijah." It was like
another breakthrough. I wrote it around the time when John Lennon was shot.
He was
a big hero of mine, and my great-grandma died about the same time. I began
thinking about the influence both of those people had on my life, and they were
dead. These two people would never know the impact they had on me; John
Lennon I'm sure wouldn't care to know, but my great-grandma, I never got to
tell
her. But then I realized I don't have to tell her. She didn't do what she
did to have some kind of an impact on me, she did what she did because that's
who she was.
And I'm going to be dead someday too. That's the first song where I forced
myself to dig under a lot of the cliches of the Christian faith. I wrote a song
that said, "You know, someday I'm going to die, and I wanna die good."
Prior to that I would have tended to write, "Someday I'm going to die and I
will
be resurrected," which I also believe.
Just as Rich talked about the impact of people on his life during that
interview, hundreds of people today tell how much Rich meant to them:
Artist Michael W. Smith speaks about his beloved friend: "[His] life and
music impacted me more than anyone I know," said Smith. "He had the ability to
take the mundane and make it majestic. Nobody on this planet wrote songs
like he did, and I feel we've lost one of the only true poets of our industry.
I love Rich Mullins...and no one will ever know how much I'll miss him."
Bob Thornton (KTLI Wichita): "Rich used to come into the station quite a
bit. He had friends who worked here and all of us knew him, so he would drop in
when he was in town. He would just walk in the lobby and call out to any
staff that was around, 'Who wants to go to lunch? I haven't got any money!'
That
was Rich. He never had any money...
As I got to know him over the years, it was because he literally gave
everything away. He really didn't have anything. I've spoken with the lady
who was
house-sitting his Navajo reservation home. She went over on Sunday [after
the accident], and she said 'There's nothing here.' Rich just didn't collect
things. A few musical instruments, a jacket...
So, Rich was just really about giving himself 100% of the time and even
when it came down to something simple like, 'I haven't got any money for
lunch,'
it was probably because he had given everything he had to somebody that had
needed it the day before.
Rich was passionate about living life to full and enjoying all of God's
blessings. In several of his writings, he has encouraged readers to take
the time
in life to enjoy even the little things, because, everything is from God,
whether big or small.
"Like Thoreau, I love to suck the marrow out of the bones of life," Rich
Mullins has said. "People want to know God's will for them. In one of his most
explicit statements on the subject, Christ said, 'I come that you might
have life and have it abundantly.' One day it won't make any difference how
many
albums I sold, but I will give account of my life to God. What I think
He'll be most pleased with is to see that we truly lived, that we were the
person
He created us to be."
On September 19, 1997, Rich Mullins met face to face with the "Awesome God"
he was so desperatly in love with. He was killed in an automobile accident on
his way to a benefit concert in Kansas. Although Rich Mullins is gone, his
music and legacy of compassion and service to others lives on today.
Rich Mullins was born on October 21, 1955 in Richmond, Indiana. He began
playing the piano at age four and gradually became proficient on guitar and
hammered
dulcimer, as well. Mullins sang in his high school choir and then went on
to attend Cincinatti Bible College. While going to college, he worked in the
youth ministry at a local church. Rich was "discovered" in the summer of
1981 when he was touring with Zion Ministries, a group that toured the country
and led praise & worship meetings at many retreats. Amy Grant began
recording some of his songs, including "Sing Your Praise to the Lord."
PHOTOS/richmullins-america
Rich released his first solo album, titled Rich Mullins, through Reunion
Records in 1986. From there he released eight more albums before his death.
During
his life, Mullins was nominated for twelve Dove awards. His most famous
songs include "Awesome God," which in 1989 was voted one of the top three songs
of the decade by the Christian Research Report, and "Sometimes By Step", in
addition to eight other number one songs.
Rich Mullins is known for his beautiful lyrics and emotion-filled music,
but to many people, he was so much more than that. He was a man with a deep
commitment
to Christ and a heart for God's people. In 1995, after completing his
degree, Rich pursued one of his greatest dreams and moved to Tse Bonito,
New Mexico
to teach music to children on Indian Reservations. He desperatly wanted to
bring them the gospel of Christ through music and art and drama. Although he
was only able to do this for two years, his dream of showing compassion to
the Navajo nation lives on today. His family and friends founded The Legacy
Of A Kid Brother Of St. Frank, which has full-time missionaries, interns,
and volunteers serving the Native American youth.
PHOTOS/richmullins-songs
Since his death in 1997, three (3) more albums have been released by
Reunion Records:
1) The Jesus Record - In loving tribute, this double CD features a
remastered demo tape of 10 songs Rich recorded just days before his tragic
death. It
also includes performances of those songs by Rich's Ragamuffin Band,
Michael W. Smith, Amy Grant, Phil Keaggy, and more.
www.christianitytoday.com/music
2) Songs 2
Delve deeper into Rich's impressive catalog of songs. This best-of
collection gives greater insight into the theology of a man whose love for
Christ was
boundless. Includes "Where You Are," "The Just Shall Live," "Growing
Young," "Brother's Keeper," and more. www.christianitytoday.com/music
3) Rich Mullins: Here in America
After over two years of compiling and assembling a diverse collection of
rare audio and video masters, Rich Mullins: Here In America came into
being. Featuring
a 60-minute audio CD and a full-length DVD, Here In America is a virtual
scrapbook of sights and sounds that take you beyond the music and into the
heart
of one of Christian music's most interesting and intriguing artists.
"Although he died at a relatively young age, Rich Mullins left behind an
incredible legacy in music. But, more than just music, Rich also left us a vast
treasury of homespun wisdom culled from the scriptures and a lifelong
pursuit of God." notes Dean Diehl, sr. vice president/general manager,
Reunion Records.
"Here In America preserves both the words and the songs of a man I believe
was in many ways a prophet for our times."
The audio portion includes live recordings taped between 1984 and 1987,
during the early days of Rich's career. A highlight of the audio includes
Rich teaching
a crowd "Awesome God" for the first time, written just a few days prior.
Here In America includes original BMG song demos such as "The Lord's
Prayer" and
"Never Heard the Music," both of which have never been released and a live
version of "None Are Stronger," which has not been released before either.
www.christianitytoday.com/music
PHOTOS/richmullins-windsofheaven
Albums:
Here in America (2003)
Songs 2 (1999)
The Jesus Record (1998)
Canticle of the Plains (1997)
Songs (1996)
Brother's Keeper (1995)
A Liturgy, a Legacy, and a Ragamuffin Band (1993)
The World as Best as I Remember It, Vol. 2 (1992)
The World as Best as I Remember It, Vol. 1 (1991)
Never Picture Perfect (1989)
Winds of Heaven … Stuff of Earth (1988)
Pictures in the Sky (1987)
Rich Mullins (1986)
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