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182. The sower
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The parable of the sower from Luke 8:4-15, told as a song.
eccleshill john hartley
Christian songs and hymns
John has written a range of hymns, including some Christian lyrics to secular tunes (Match of the Day, Scooby Doo, ...), some songs for solo or small group, some children's songs, some items for 4-part choir, and some hymns for congregations to sing. Some of them get played live at where John is the minister, and you're very welcome to turn up and join in! You can find sheet music and midi-files of many of his songs by , and the songs on this SoundClick site are really only a very small selection of his output. Musically, John is basically a classically-trained pianist who thinks in four-part harmonies and mostly writes for choirs and congregations. He likes lyrics with a strong rhythm and rhyme, and melodies which are singable. John's songwriting first hit the media with a number called "How great is God the Lord Almighty" to the tune of "Match of the Day" (the UK soccer TV programme) in 2002. It was featured on TV news in the UK, and after that success he wrote a few other items: almost all of them (i.e. Christian words set to popular secular tunes), and he began to wonder if this was something he should do more seriously. In 2004 his wife challenged him that if he was serious he should join a critique group: so he found on the net. In February 2005 he took part in a lyric-writing challenge, and felt the need to write tunes to some song-lyrics which would just have remained poems without tunes. The rest is history: he's just passed the 100 mark on writing songs. It's only fair to say that behind this story lies a long period of preparation. John was hopeless at poetry at school, but eventually he learned that poetry consists in trying to say things in rhythmical and rhyming ways without worrying if it sounds daft - in fact, the dafter the better when you're getting started. He has spent many years of ministry trying to write bible passages into dramas, so that children can perform them and bring them to life. And he learned the piano and classical four-part harmony when he was at school. All these things come together in songwriting. Perhaps most of all he's part of CSO, a lively group where people give and receive critiques on each others' songs. Many of John's songs are attempts to put parts of the bible into music: to make them memorable, to allow their meaning to sink in, to turn them into praise, or to explain what they're about in some way. Some of them are rewritings of traditional 'canticles' in meter so that they can be sung, and some of them are more to do with turning stories into songs. John sees songs as an extension of what sermons and dramas do in church services. They allow us see parts of the bible's teaching in a new light. They may scratch where we itch in places that other media don't scratch. They may allow us to respond when other presentations leave us cold. Well, that's where it falls down a bit on a site like SoundClick! The music is written on NoteWorthy Composer (a computer program), exported as a midi-file, converted to a wave file, and then John records himself singing over the top of it on his home computer. Then it gets mixed, reduced to an MP3, and posted up here. Questions about improving the quality have not really been answered yet!! John has no plans to give up his day-job! His Christian songs are at the service of the church, to be used where appropriate to try to bring people closer to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Song Info
Genre
Pop Christian Pop
Charts
Peak #5
Peak in subgenre #1
Author
John Hartley
Rights
John Hartley 2008
Uploaded
June 02, 2008
Track Files
MP3
MP3 1.8 MB 128 kbps 1:56
Story behind the song
A farmer went out and he scattered his seed. Some fell on the path and the birds had a feed. Some fell on the rocks and grew shoots in the air, but in the hot sunshine it died in the glare. Some fell among thistles and thornbush and briar, and as the corn grew it was choked and expired. But some fell on good soil, and once it was grown, the crop was a hundred times more than was sown. Seeing, do you see? Hearing, do you hear? What did Jesus mean? Listen! Draw near! The seed is the word of our God from above, But how will the people respond to his love? The path are the people who don't give a hoot: God's word is ignored and it never takes root. The rocks are the people who come on all keen: they welcome the word, but their faith is extreme. They don't stand the pressures, the heat of the day, and when trouble comes they just wither away. Which ground has God found? Can God make a start when he sows his word into your heart? The thorns are the troubles and cares of this life, and as the faith grows it encounters the strife: the worries of riches conflict with the Word, and threaten to stop the Lord's voice being heard. The good soil is those who are noble of heart: when they hear God's word they allow it to start transforming their spirit and changing their soul. Their fruit is salvation: God's word makes them whole. God's word makes them whole. Words and music copyright © John Hartley 2008. All rights reserved. Based on Luke 8:4-15. Story behind the song I penned these lyrics late one evening after having preached on the parable of the sower in Luke's gospel. I think my mind was probably on the old favourite "The wise man built his house upon the rock" (based on the morning's gospel reading), and I was wondering whether it was possible to put other sayings of Jesus into such memorable songs? In fact this song isn't anything like so memorable, but it's a step on the way. Between the parable and its interpretation is a difficult verse which poses the question of how parables work and why Jesus spoke in them? So interspersed with the narrative of the parable are two questions. Have you heard? What is your heart like? It's my prayer that the hearers might ask themselves these questions - I think that's what Jesus was trying to achieve. John Hartley.
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