Monday, August 26, 2013

Reinvigorating Cultures



 
"To See You Again" sung by Ebe Dancel

            I come from the Philippines, we have the ancient tradition of the Harana or serenade, a dying artform in light of the great westernization and technological evolution that is griping the entire world. Despite all this, a part of me believes and knows that music can never be a dying art form in this world; it is merely an unused one. We listen to our favorite musicians and songs day in and day out. We hear them on the radio and expect to hear our favorite melodies. But where is the substance, the live expression in society that music is supposed to create?

            Who is the author of music, of sound, except the one who created the universe? If God created man to have ears and voices of which to sing, then God intended music to be alive, to be an expression of man’s soul. Have you ever asked yourself, why in stories, there is always singing in heaven? The highest seraphim themselves continually sing their praises to God. Once upon a time in many countries, song was used to court and yes, it didn’t always work for the one doing the courting, but it was a beautiful form of expression nonetheless. Now, the Harana itself in Philippine culture is almost completely dead. Long gone are the days when men would sing to try and win the hearts of their beloved and vice versa.

            It is almost completely dead except for the few Filipino masters of this lost art form who keep the tradition alive, masters such as Florate Aguilar and Celestino Aniel from the documentary, “Harana.” In a way, that effort to keep the “Harana” alive even as a musical artifact has re-ignited my own vision of music in the realm of the romantic. The night I envisioned this website, I realized that the “Harana” could live again, by injecting it into the mainstream culture, and into the land cyberspace and media. Besides, practiced art forms are merely reflections of the practices a culture possesses, or a part of its soul. To not see the beauty and utility of a God given gift is to be blind and apathetic to the ideal that God has asked each and every one of us to strive for.

            That brings me to the next point. “Thy Kingdom come, they Will be done, on earth as it is done in Heaven.” If there singing in heaven, then one day, there must be singing on earth, whether it is to God or to one’s beloved, music should never be seen as corny or out of date. We sing at Church do we not? Many of us sing like robots or have learned to sing like robots. And our children sing as robots as well because that is what the culture turns them into, turns us into, not saints, because the greatest utility of a saint is to live love, to show love, to sing love. To express love in suffering, or joy, in gladness, or hardship is the path of love if it performed as such for the love of God. To take a love ballad and offer it up to God, where has that gone? It has been relegated to rote and repetitive practice. And as long as things are that way, the Victory of God in the human soul will never be complete as long as we never learn how to sing.

             We must take the old tradition of the serenade and reinvigorate it and raise it to new life and a higher standard. Gone are the old lyrical styles and standards that those forms of music utilized. But life is such is it not. We have songs so beautiful and amazing that people in the past have never heard. We have technology and advancements today that those before us never were able to experience. God has revealed numerous secrets to his people that are yet to be revealed to many for the benefit of bringing his people even closer to him. If so many advancements are being made in all areas, then the art form of music must be advanced as well. It must be brought back. We must utilize this dying art into what God intended it to be used for, in order to create beauty in the human soul, an entire universe and kingdom unto itself. We do this now, by teaching. That is how I envision this, our future, so let us make it a good one. God bless.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

To Follow Christ




            We have forgotten how to follow Christ, that is why many seem to be losing the battle against evil in the world. Christ said “If you had faith the size of a mustard seed, you would say to the mountain, move and it would obey you.” One night, I was watching the last remaining scenes to “Ben Hur” and it made me remember. It made me remember exactly what I had forgotten. I had forgotten how to love Christ. What do I mean by this? When I was younger, I remember having so much more strength, and grace from God than I do today. It wasn’t until I saw the ending scenes to Ben-Hur that I realized, it was because I had forgotten how to follow Christ. I no longer really loved him, and instead; I had replaced him with myself.

            I had received so much over the years, answered prayers, a wonderful life, good friends, graces and knowledge beyond measure, and how was I living my life? I had forgotten to put Christ first, by slowly forgetting how to love him. To love someone means to follow that person in one’s heart, mind, and soul, and to assimilate them into yourself, and they become a part of you. By doing that, one acquires wisdom, grace, knowledge, the light of truth, and true strength of the beloved. I was starting to become merely a shadow of who I was, the child who loved God. The world had offered me idols and they slowly took the place of Christ.

            There was a time, when I had the courage to say no to those idols. But Satan plays a cruel war on souls, and slowly, the deceptions he places in front of our souls become idols of worship. The world itself is an idol. Friends, encounters, something as small as conversation, they all become idols without Christ. There was a time when I heard more clearly the voice of God, and it flowed more easily through me. And years later, more often than not, it seems I had but the mere memory of that voice. The life of grace in me had been replaced. It had been replaced by the world, a world that at one time, had obviously offered no sense of truth or life. It did not possess the water that would never make one go thirsty again. That water flows only from Christ. To drink of that water means to follow him.

            To follow Christ, we must love Christ more than anything else. We must love him enough to destroy every idol the world puts before us for love of him. We must follow in the manner that a true Christian follows their God, that is to Golgotha and to the cross, but not with sadness, but with joy because there is no greater strength, no greater wisdom, no greater purpose than to possess God in oneself. We do not follow others, we do not follow music, we do not follow our self, and we do not follow the world. We must stand where Christ stood, walk as Christ walked, looked as Christ looked, think as Christ thought, and give as Christ gave, that is to say, our whole heart. And we should deal with the world the way Christ did, that is with true wisdom and love.       

            I had forgotten that truth, and without it, God's Will would have found no purpose with me. If I was born as an only child, with no siblings, It was because my friends were siblings, and that this was, is, and has always my mission, to tell them to love Christ by reminding them how to love him, and by doing that, showing them the path to his Will. That by loving him, we become like him, and we are able to pick up our crosses and while kissing the wood, say to God, “Father, not my will, but thine be done.”