Christian Song Anniversary: “Sometimes by Step”—1992

RichMullins

Rich Mullins (1955-1997)

By 1992, Rich Mullins had stood in the limelight as a Christian songwriter and singer for over a decade. Others had recorded his songs. Most notably, Amy Grant (Sing Your Praise to the Lord and Doubly Good to You). His best-remembered song is Awesome God, which CCM Magazine placed at the top of the list in its book, 100 Greatest Songs in Christian Music. Twenty-five years ago, Christians were discovering Sometimes by Step.

Good choices

The song Sometimes by Step crawled before it could walk. It became Rich’s most successful song from the album The World As Best As I Remember It, Volume Two. But it began in embryonic form the year before. For the 1991 album The World As Best As I Remember It, Volume One, a child started the simple chorus titled Step By Step as both the opening and closing tracks.

Rich’s friend Beaker wrote the original chorus. Rich later tweaked it and expanded it to create the full song. (Compare the lyrics for Step by Step and for Sometimes by Step)

He explained the song in an interview for CCM Magazine. Rich said that life’s biggest problem is that it’s so “daily! But every day we have the chance to make the right choices, one at a time, step by step.”

From baby steps to giant steps

Life sometimes seems to move slowly. It can feel monotonous, predictable, non-productive. But on those same-as-the-day-before days, we make choices that matter. In Sometimes by Step Rich connects our spiritual walk with Abraham. The patriarch took millions of steps during the years he waited for the son God promised. He kept walking and trusting.

Abraham was patient. We also know him as a man of prayer. The first chorus of the song says, “I will seek You in the morning.” The second chorus adds, “And step by step You’ll lead me.” Abraham walked that kind of faith. Rich Mullins admitted to walking it. Every Christian needs that level of prayer and patience.

The first and the final chorus share the phrase, “And I will follow You all of my days.” That statement of faith becomes the key phrase, repeated over and over in the final chorus. Rich understood that it must daily be the renewed resolve of every Christian’s heart. One we constantly confess to God while taking the giant step in a life of baby steps.

Since 1992

Rich lead as he followed God. He wrote and sang meaningful, straight-forward lyrics about Christianity, which he believed and lived. His honesty touched those who heard his songs. His lyrics and life influenced his peers.

In 1995, Rich moved to Arizona to teach music to children living on a Navajo reservation. That seemed to fit his sense of humble service to God.

His voice and pen have been silent for the past 20 years. Rich died in a car accident on September 19, 1997. The impact of Rich’s steps, following God, lives on.

The Road Ahead:

  1. Are you facing the frustration of one more same-as-the-day-before day? Don’t despair. Each day you mark off on your calendar gets you one-day closer to the change you need. Focus on the best choices you can make this day. One at a time. Restate your faith to God: “I will follow You all of my days.”
  2.  No matter where the path leads, God is using it to get you to where you need to be. He’s always working behind the scenes in ways we can’t see right now. To fully prepare for whatever this day holds (clear path or muddy) start the day by seeking God. Then, end the day by thanking Him.

Further Fuel: Psalm 37:23; Proverbs 3:5-6Matthew 16:24.

 Hear Rich Mullins sing Sometimes by Step on YouTube.

Christian Song Anniversary: “Blessed Be Your Name”—2002

Matt Redman at Dettingen an der Erms (Germany)_December_2010.jpg Photo by Labjunkie.

Matt Redman in Germany, 2010. Photo by Labjunkie.

What worships songs does your church sing the Sunday after a severe natural disaster or a numbing act of violence? Usually, ones that speak of trusting God. But how many songs acknowledge life at its worst while professing reliance on God?

“Blessed Be Your Name” by Matt and Beth Redman does. [Full lyrics]

When Matt and Beth married, they already knew life could be difficult. By the end of 2002, they’d watched the devastation of September  11, 2001, and they’d read the book of Job. The song that flowed from them afterward is as a statement of true faith.

Pain and Suffering

Christians aren’t exempt from suffering. The bridge of the song emphasizes that truth with words from the mouth of Job. Following his successive loss of livestock, servants, and children, Job didn’t curse God. He fell to the ground and worshiped the giver and taker of life.

“And he said, “Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return. The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord” (Job 1:21, NKJV).

Of course, we prefer the song’s celebration of God’s blessings. The phrases, “Where Your streams of abundance flow” and “When the sun’s shining down on me” clearly depict God’s best for His followers. We welcome “Every blessing You pour out.”

But our faith doesn’t prevent us from admitting that we live through other aspects of life. We can all relate to “When I’m found in the desert place,” and “On the road marked with suffering.”

The song’s overall tone is one only God’s followers can understand: that we can trust Him no matter what happens. The chorus repeatedly ascribes blessings to God’s name, concluding with, “Blessed be Your glorious name.”

Since 2002

“Blessed Be Your Name” caught on quickly. Worship leaders and worshipers alike embraced the song’s honesty. It remains relevant year after year as national tragedies outdo previous ones and as Christians continue to know “the desert place” as well as “streams of abundance.”

In 2005, “Blessed Be Your Name” was named the Dove Award winner for Worship Song of the Year. From then to now, Matt Redman has received 11 additional Dove Awards and two Grammys.

Worship songs wax and wane in popularity. However, 15 years after it was written, “Blessed Be Your Name” is still listed among the top 20 songs churches report singing most often, according to CCLI.

The Road Ahead:

  1. When facing your life’s worst situations, do you question God? Or do you rest in faith that the One who knows every minute of the future still loves you and has everything under control? The next time the sun doesn’t seem to be shining down on you, sing or pray your way through the song’s lyrics.
  2. God doesn’t only give. He also takes. He takes our confessed sin, surrendered worries, fears, pride, and habits. He wants to remove from our lives anything we substitute for Him. What’s in your life right now that you should want God to take in exchange for the blessing He’d like to replace it with?

Further Fuel: Matthew 5:45; II Corinthians 12:9; Matthew 16:24-15.

 Hear Matt sing “Blessed Be Your Name” on YouTube.