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Standing Stones: Christian Music Icons Remembered

John J. Thompson

CCM Magazine

As we look forward to new music and a new era of proactive cultural engagement by artists of faith, it is important to examine the founding fathers who provided the spark and fuel that got this fire burning in the first place but were themselves extinguished far too soon.

Rushing Wind

Keith Green was an original “teen idol” as far back as the 1960s. Though his mainstream star never fully rose (Some say he was eclipsed by a young Donny Osmond.), his talent as a singer, pianist and songwriter were well honed by the time he reached his 20s in the 1970s. His restless searching and hippie sensibilities found fulfillment in the person of Jesus when Green came to faith at the age of 21. The fire of his anti-establishment instincts was fueled by his gut-level read on the Scriptures and the radical call to discipleship he found in the teachings of Christ and Paul. Green quickly became one of the most important songwriters, artists and teachers of the Jesus Music age, drawing stadium-sized crowds and selling, or giving away, hundreds of thousands
of albums.

Green inspired, entertained, rebuked, comforted and challenged an entire generation of young people, frequently generating as much excitement for his teaching as he did for his songs. His music has influenced several generations of Christian artists while specific songs like “Oh Lord, You’re Beautiful” remain popular congregational worship songs in churches around the world.

Even Bethany Dillon, an artist who wasn’t even born until years after Green’s death, finds inspiration in his legacy. “I remember watching the documentary about Keith’s life, called Your Love Broke Through, and feeling this knot in my stomach. A life that radical makes just about anyone squirm. What an amazing legacy he left; not only of writing songs that stirred hearts toward affection and abandon for Jesus, but of a life that backed all of those songs up.”

Keith Green and two of his children died in a small plane crash on July 28, 1982—25 years ago. His life and work stand as a monument to what passionate faith in God can look like in the life of a sold out disciple. (Visit lastdaysministries.org for more info.)

A Liturgy, A Legacy & A Ragamuffin

In the same year Green passed away, a songwriter from Indiana signed a publishing deal with Reunion Records and quickly caught the Church’s attention with an impressive song called “Sing Your Praise to the Lord,” written for Amy Grant’s Age to Age album. Rich Mullins emerged as an artist in his own right two years later with an unlikely style, an unkempt image and a knack for brutal honesty and self-deprecation that seemed at odds with the well scrubbed visage of “contemporary Christian music.” His songs were truly the stuff of heaven.

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Most Recent User Comments
baronvr
10/24/2007 11:50 AM
I trust that this article is the first in a series. The "ultimate" icon is Larry Norman. Most of the icons mentioned in the article were influenced by Larry.
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