I like my
music loud, heavy, intense and distorted. My favorite bands are Stryper, Bride
and Skillet. In grade 11 I decided to start my own Christian rock band. I had
the look – long big hair down the middle of my back, an earring, tight jeans
and a leather jacket. I began learning to play the keyboard and write music. (The
first song I learned was “Jump” by Van Halen). I now needed a band. After
testing several members I eventually settled on a bass player, two guitarists, a
keyboardist and myself on lead vocals. Unable to find a drummer we ended up using
a preprogramed drum machine. We named ourselves Exhorter!
Hanging with these guys brings back my best High School
memories. We’d setup on the cement pad in front of my house and, since we were out
in the country, crank the music to 11! Playing rock music outside, on a
cloudless summer day, with your best friends, has got to be one of life’s most pleasurable
experiences. Often we’d have weekend jam sessions complete with a sleepover.
The games, laughter, jokes and music bonded us. Sometimes other friends would
come and listen to us. We didn’t do much “touring”, but we did play in few
churches and school gyms. One country church was so old that, once we plugged
all our instruments in, we drained the power out of the building and tripped
the breakers. We had to run an extension cord to the pastor’s manse next door for
extra power. In the end only eleven people came out, but we didn’t care. We would
have rocked the place if it was empty!
During High School I got bolder in my faith. I attended a
small country school with a graduating class of just over 20. Most people’s favorite
pastime was getting drunk at the weekend bush parties. (Even my ten year
reunion was a bush party where people sat around and got drunk. The only
difference was that they looked worse).
I was the only Christian in my class, and one of the few
in the school. Each Halloween the school put on an air band competition. Basically,
this is a competition where you play another band’s recorded music and pretend to
be preforming it yourself. Because it was Halloween I noticed that the songs being
picked were filled with dark messages. Some of them were even satanic. I
decided this was an opportunity to take a stand for Jesus, but through a medium
my friends understood. So I entered the competition and did the Stryper song
“To Hell with the Devil”.
Stryper was the best known Christian metal act at the
time. They were so popular in the late 80’s that they broke into the mainstream.
Songs like “Honestly” and “Calling on You” became the number one requested
songs on MTV, beating out competitors Bon Jovi and Def Leppard. Stryper was the
first metal act to ever have two top
ten MTV songs at the same time. So we’re not talking about cheesy church music.
Stryper was a respectable act that could play as good as anyone.
For the air band competition I dressed in yellow and
black stripes, made a yellow and black guitar frame in shop class, with Isaiah
53:5 plastered along the arm, threw Bibles into the crowd (which the school
later made a rule against) and belted out:
Speak of the devil
He's no friend of mine
To turn from him is what we have in mind
He's no friend of mine
To turn from him is what we have in mind
Just a liar and a thief
The word tells us so
We like to let him know
Where he can go
The word tells us so
We like to let him know
Where he can go
To hell with the devil
After the competition I was called back on stage. I’d won
first place and was handed an Ozzy Osbourne album as my prize. Knowing that Ozzy
sings the opposite of what Stryper stands for, the school started shouting in
jest, “Smash it, Smash it.” Feeling this would be disrespectful I simply
accepted it and later gave it to a friend. I’ve always been against censorship of
the arts, even when I disagree with the message. Plus, I wanted to make a
positive stand and proclaim what I believe, not a negative one of smashing what
other’s believe.
For an encore I chose Stryper’s “Sing Along Song” and,
once again pounded out my love for God:
Lift your voices higher
We want to hear you sing
Let's lift our voices to the King of kings
We want to hear you sing
Let's lift our voices to the King of kings
Whoa-o-o-o Whoa ooo La, La
My win brought with it a lot of bullying. I was never
physically abused, but the verbal taunts became a daily occurrence – especially
with the students one year ahead of me. One girl even put down “Stryper Fans”
as her pet peeve in her graduating year book. My peers were better because I
was able to develop a closer friendship with them, but they never really
understood me. It wasn’t the music I listened to that bugged them, but what these
bands stood for. This, along with refusing to participate in their bush parties
and get drunk and have sex, made me the “Jesus kid”. I didn’t mind most of the
time, but occasionally it got on my nerves. I had long hair, wore the jeans and
leather, loved heavy metal and enjoyed partying like everyone else, but because
I also loved Jesus and chose to be sober and chaste, I became an outsider.
It was my church youth group and the band members from Exhorter
that kept me strong. I lived for the weekends. To be with these friends and play
in my band was where I got reenergized. I endured school. I wasn’t the best at
it. I had no close friends there. And I was constantly teased about being a
“God-follower”. But I never regret going to public school. It’s where I learned
to stand up for my beliefs. I’ve always found it easier to stand up in these
settings than where everyone supposedly thinks the same. That’s where we get
sloppy and lazy. At least that’s true for me. I need to be constantly around
people challenging my faith to keep it vital. I start to slip without that.
I’m a fighter. You push me. I push back. I’m not saying
this is always what God wants. And I’ve gotten myself in trouble when I should
have turned the other cheek. But fighting comes more naturally to me. The more
my friends teased the harder I stood. They didn’t realize that their efforts
were doing the opposite of making me shut up. I started wearing shirts to
school that had “Love God – Hate Sin” silk-screened on the back. I had a
licence plate on my car that said “God is my co-pilot.” I invited my school
friends to youth events and evangelistic meetings to see groups like The Power Team, (Christian tough guys
who smashed bricks with their heads and then told you about Jesus). And
sometimes my friends would come. I’m sure I was annoying for Jesus at times, but
my classmates could certainly be annoying for not being for Jesus. I took a stand in my school and showed my
friends that I could rock just as hard as they could, (even beating them at their
own air band contests). I could grow my hair longer. (I had the longest hair in
my class). I could party without getting a girl pregnant and remember the party
the next day. I could be a committed follower of Jesus Christ without compromise.
I hope I showed my friends that a Jesus lover isn’t a
crotchety church person who is against everything. I give my parents the credit
for modeling this for me. They never made faith about my outward appearance. They
never commented negatively on my hair or earring or, later, my tattoos. They
were even the ones to buy me my first Christian rock album, “This Means War” by
Petra. They knew it was about the
heart and they were always probing for where my heart was at. My parents even
stood up to these crotchety church people on my behalf.
Whenever you take a stand for Jesus you will get attacked
from outside and inside the church.
While I was standing up for my faith to the point of being bullied at my school,
I was being “rebuked” by some of the older folks in my church for being too
“worldly”. They didn’t get to know me. I just looked worldly to them and I listened to “rock” music. These King
James Bible people would never have made a positive impact on my friends. I
wonder if they even had non-Christian friends.
It was my parents who put them in their place. Mom and
dad were the number one supporters of my band. When an older church guy tried
to discourage our band and even tore down our posters, it was mom who let him
know just where he could stick those posters. She warned him about falling into
a lake with a millstone tired around his neck if he caused one of these
Jesus-loving teenagers, who were spreading Christ’s message in the language of
their peers, to stumble. If he were to do that she might be the first to push
him off the dock!
The Pivas aren’t always the best at turning the other
cheek. We’re fighters. There is a time to turn the other cheek, but there is also
a time to “oppose Peter to his face.” (Gal. 2:11).
Discuss: What are some unconventional ways you have tried to
take a stand for Jesus?
Reading Pastor Stefano’s story which has some rebellious hues, made me smile, I smiled not at his story but at my own, at my frail attempt to be defiant. My story could have the title of “Almost Rebellious” or “Rebellious want-to-be”
ReplyDeleteMy story and Pastor Stefano’s story do not have much in common. Gender, generation and even cultural differences make our stories dissimilar. However there is a part of me that admire the spunk depicted in the Pastor’s story.
The defiance of my youth had to do with music and politics. At age fourteen I decided to be against my parent’s views in these two subjects. My parents listened to country music so, I “liked” Elvis Presley and a Latin-American teen heartthrob named Palito Ortega.
My parents held a democratic political ideal so; I supported the “Tupamaros” which was a rebel group that did much damage to my country in the 70’s.
When all the girls of my age were taking sewing lessons I took guitar lessons.
Having an intercultural marriage, leaving my own country and forsaking the catholic religion by becoming a protestant Christian, could perhaps be misinterpreted as rebellious, but in reality was the plan that God unfolded for my life. So no rebellion there either.
I became a Christian in a Southern Baptist church a very traditional Southern Baptist church. I did not know anything different, I was happy to be able to worship God, to praise Him singing hymns as well as “contemporary” songs. But I always thought that there is so much more about praise and worship than what a hymn book can hold or a praise band can sing. So my rebellious act for which I was both, criticized and commended came in the form of a mini women’s retreat that I asked permission to organized. ”Crescendos of the Heart” was a day event where every one was invited to bring their own expressions of praise.
We are made in the image of God and we are creative beings. The women were asked;”what is that brings you joy, what talent has God given you through which you can praise him? So they brought who they were and what a marvelous thing it was!
There were expressions of praise through art, paintings, poems, ribbon dancing (this one was the most criticized).An older lady came to me and said “I am not an artsy person I just make quilts” Bring your quilts! I said, and she did. It was a Calvary scène all sewn together by her hands, and that was art! The speaker based her talk on the song of Mary (My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,) although some of our deacons did not approve, “Crescendos of the Heart” happened every spring for three years it was a freeing and powerful experience to be able to praise our Saviour with all our being and with the talents he had given us. I know that by doing the event I stepped on some pious toes and I guess mi rebelliousness showed in the fact that I really didn't care about those toes.“Is more important to please God than please men”
Alicia