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In a year that saw a wave of new
musical talent flood the Christian music scene, MercyMe
emerged as the top-selling new artist of 2001 and continues to
be strong in 2002. After taking home two Dove Awards at the
2002 ceremonies, they have emerged from the independent music
scene as one of the most influential bands of this year. With
their hit song "I Can Only Imagine," more and more
people are falling in love with the band and their national
debut album Almost There. Enough so that the record was
certified gold.
Truth be told, MercyMe isn't
really new. The five guys that make up the acoustic pop worship
band have been travelling together for seven years, recording
six projects in the process. After years of playing camps and
churches, the band got the attention of the folks at INO
Records. With the release of Almost There, a whole new
audience has been introduced to "I Could Only Imagine,"
a song that has become the band's career hit. MercyMe sat down
to talk about that powerful song and the priority of worship.
Q: Where does the name
MercyMe come from?
Bart: I was working in
a church in Florida as a youth intern, which means I really
didn't do much other than staple stuff. I'm from Dallas and
every time my grandmother would call-she would call me any time
of the day-I'd be home answering the phone. She was like, "What
do you do all day?" and sarcastically I would say, "Well, I'm
trying to chalk off the next year to spend time finding a band
name." And she said, "Well mercy me, why don't you get a real
job?" I thought, "Wait a minute. That's the perfect name." That
kind of freed up my year but that's where the name came from.
Q: As a band, do you
see yourselves more as worship leaders or artists?
Mike: Definitely
worship leaders, first and foremost. We enjoy doing concerts
and stuff too but we really feel that everything that we do
needs to lead to a point of worship. That's what we were
created to do so it's real easy to get to that point.
Q: What do you see as
your mission as a group? What do you hope to accomplish?
Robby: Our biggest
goal as a band is to know God and to make Him known. That's our
mission as people. Our mission as a band is to hopefully enter
into God's presence and as we do that, we draw and bring other
people that are in the audience with us. That's what a worship
leader does. They don't just say, "Go there and do that." They
actually lead them. They actually go there first and then
people follow. And so that's what our goal is, to lead people
and not just say, "Go there."
Q: Do you have a
principal songwriter?
Mike: Bart, our lead
singer, writes 99% of the lyrics. Nathan, our bass player, also
has written a couple of songs for us and we all pitch in a
little bit. Musically, it's usually a team effort. There have
been a few songs where Bart's been inspired and written at home
on his own on his piano, but for the most part the band all
pitches in for music and Bart writes most of the lyrics.
Q: Bart, what inspires
you lyrically?
Bart: It's more or
less life experience. I don't know if it's fortunately or
unfortunately, going through a lot of different things in life,
tragically or good times or whatever. My father passed away of
cancer when I was 18 and I realized a lot of students, more
than I thought, could relate. It's not really about having all
the answers. It's sharing your feelings. You have two choices
when tragic stuff happens. You either run from God or hang on
to Him with both hands, and fortunately I found myself hanging
on more and more, and through all this finding a more
passionate love for Christ. I think that you write about
whatever consumes your heart.
You've got some bands—Christian
or not—that are political bands, or write love songs or
whatever. Christ consumes us. We would always write about
Christ because it's who we are. People ask, "Do you have to try
to write like that?" No, it pretty much comes naturally. That's
all we're about. Right before I got married, I wrote about my
wife a lot and being in love. Being worship leaders, Christ is
such a huge part of us that it shows up in our lyrics. I'm
assuming that it will pretty much always be that way. If it
changes, then we obviously have to reevaluate our lives because
something has changed within us. Christ hasn't changed.
Q: Although most music
fans think of you as a new band, you've have been around for
awhile, putting together six independent records and touring
together for seven years. Tell me about the journey.

Bart: We started out
as a concert band seven years ago. We thought we were going to
play stuff and people were going to come hear us. But as an
independent band you learn to be flexible. We did church camps
and everything else so we learned a lot of worship songs to
cover. We had no intention of being a worship band but you had
to pay the bills. After awhile, students wanted to hear these
songs we were doing at camps.
So we went in and did a couple of concert albums. Then we
went in and did an album of just cover tunes of worship songs
and students really responded to it well. We weren’t really
satisfied being a cover band. It was like, there's got to be
more to this.
We started hearing youth
ministers and students saying, "We want new worship." Not that
there's anything new under the sun, but they wanted new music.
That's when we locked ourselves up in an old Sunday school room
and started writing our own worship. That's kind of scary
because you feel like you're using people as guinea pigs to see
if they worship to the stuff that you're writing. In a few days
we wrote the whole album, The Worship Project. That's
what pretty much changed our lives. We realized that God was
making evident that that's where He wanted us. It's really cool
to think that there's a possibility that we just might write
music that lasts longer than we do.
Q: So let's shift gears to
the present. If you were to write a review for Almost There,
how would you describe it?
Jim: It's hard to describe
because people that are familiar with our stuff from the past
will hear our influence. Obviously the lead vocals sound the
same, but a lot of the other stuff is totally different because
we were able to do more production-wise. You can hear anything
from U2, Delirious, even maybe Sarah McLachlan
influences, but it's not one particular style you could
describe.
Q: "I Could Only
Imagine" is such a powerful song. Bart, what's the
backstory?
Bart:
My father passed
away when I was 18. From that point on I became very consumed
with the idea that my dad was in heaven—a place—and thinking
about the things that he was seeing. My dad had cancer and he
went from like 300 and something pounds to 118 so it was a
rough time when he passed away. And heaven meant so much more
because I knew his strength was renewed and he was in his new
body.

I'm just a guy that doesn't have
the answers. There were a lot of nights I would lay my head on
my pillow and wonder, "How am I going to react? Am I going to
do what I do in church all the time? As far as the way I
worship here, am I even close? To physically lay eyes on the
One that's completely altered our lives is just going to blow
my mind.
I always say in our concerts,
there's probably going to be some Southern Baptists that can't
sit still and some charismatics that are speechless. I think a
lot of people have related to the song because it doesn't have
any answers. It's just like, "God, I don't know how I'm going
to respond to You but praise God I'll be there."
In its way it brought comfort through a lot of stuff I went
through. The song was only written a couple of years ago, but
it's been ten years since my dad died. It's funny, I just
talked with a guy last night and he was like, "You've been
talking about this song for ten years" and I'd forgotten that I
had so it's been on my heart for a long time.
Q: It's got to be
humbling to know that that song is probably going to be used to
comfort a lot of people going through loss.
Bart: It's amazing
what it's done so far.
Q: How would you
define worship?
Nathan: In Romans it
talks about worship being an act of service or an act of
sacrifice. We don't really think of worship as a particular
song or singing with a band or without a band. It's more of, in
anything you do in life, a constant attempt to give God glory
through whatever you're doing. We just try to apply that to
music as well.
Q: You never want to
say that worship is a trend but there has been a growing
awareness of the importance of worship in recent years. Why do
you think this is?
Bart: It's funny
because we've been doing this for several years and we've seen
interviews and magazines and stuff that have said, "So and so
has jumped on the worship bandwagon." It's so ironic for the
fact that what we've been created to do is worship. The thing
we take comfort in is that worship will last much longer than
this industry will. It's so funny that over all the years and
centuries that worship has taken place, it seems as if the
industry has caught on just recently. I don't know if that's a
good or bad thing. I hope that God finds glory through this.
The scary thing is that
worship has a tendency to create a very shallow Christian,
somebody that doesn't want to read the Word or hear the
preaching because they like the fix that they get on worship.
That just blows our minds because it's having a hunger for the
Word and being consumed for that stuff that makes you want to
worship. My personal outlook on worship is you have a lot of
people that will come to a worship service and their desire is
to take or fill up, it's more for themselves.
My idea of worship is coming
into the presence of God and instead of taking, just pouring
out. I think it's when we find ourselves in the Word and we
find ourselves being obedient that we grow with a deeper love
for Christ. Being more in love with Christ, the more we want to
worship and bring Him the glory. I think the popularity of
worship is great.
There's going to be more people affected in a good way than
in a bad way. I'm sure you've got some that are doing it for
the wrong reasons. That's not my responsibility, it's not my
problem. I know what God has called us to do and we're going to
keep doing it as long as He allows us. A lot longer than the
record deals and the interviews last, I pray that the five of
us worship until He brings us home.
Q: If no one knew
anything about MercyMe, what would you want people to know?
Bart: The biggest
thing —we're not perfect at it—to be uncompromising in the fact
that we try very hard to be Christ-centered. If somebody left a
concert and didn't think that everything revolved around the
throne of Christ, or that it was not centered on Him, then
we've completely done it in vain. It's ironic that there's
Christian music, then there's "worship." I'm not sure where the
two split off.
Last night we met a lady
whose son passed away a couple of months ago. He was 18. She
played "I Can Only Imagine" at his funeral. She walked
up to me and showed me a picture of him and said, "I want you
guys to know that I didn't know any of your songs except that
one and because of that song, I just saw Christ." That's the
biggest compliment we could ever, ever receive.
(MercyMe will be in Atlanta twice
this fall in September and October. Check out the concertline
for details.
Visit MercyMe's
official website at
www.mercyme.org)
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