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Talbot Davis

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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five U2 Songs (Reprise)
February 4, 2014 at 2:00 am 0
The rock world is buzzing with U2's new song Invisible, released for free on iTunes on Super Bowl night.  You can read about it here.

Do they take themselves too seriously?  Yes.  Does it sometimes take one transcendent song to rescue an otherwise mundane album (like the way Magnificent delivers No Line On The Horizon)?  Yes.  Does their ambiguity regarding faith frustrate those of us who are Apostle's Creed-certain?  Yes.

But all that aside, when it comes to emotion-pulling, adrenaline-racing, goose-bump-generating anthemic rock, are they the best band in the world?  Yes.

With that in mind -- and with the looming release of an album-full of songs to accompany Invisible -- I thought it time to revisit a post from 2010 in which I count down my top five favorite U2 songs:



I admit it: I'm a fan.

I remember first hearing U2 on the Philadelphia station WMMR (93.3 on your dial)in 1984. It seemed like that station played "Bad" every 30 minutes or so.

Three things have always stood out for me in U2's music: 1) The sonic power of Bono's voice; 2) the eery landscapes of the Edge's lead guitar; and 3) the spiritual longing at the center of most of the lyrics.

So here they are . . . more than 30 years of songs distilled into my five favorites.

5. Hawkmoon 269. A forgotten song lost in the middle of a much-reviled album, Rattle & Hum. But I love it all from first chords to final howls.
 


4. One. Simply, painfully, beautiful.
 


3. Beautiful Day. When I first heard it in 2001, I thought, "oh, that's OK." But isn't that the measure of a great song -- it sounds better now than when first released?
 


2. I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For. The gospel-choir version from Rattle & Hum is especially moving.  But a rendition of it with Bruce Springsteen isn't half-bad, either.
 


1. Where The Streets Have No Name. Someone is doing this one at my funeral. I hope people will still know how to play it in 60 years. How about this Super Bowl Halftime version of it, just four months after the 9/11 attacks?
 
 
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A Sermon Closer
February 3, 2014 at 6:21 am 0
I was looking for a way to wrap up yesterday's sermon called Scoreboard.  I was hoping for a compelling and personal way to remind people that "God's not keeping score.  He's saving a place."

And then I remembered a testimony one of my friends from our Men's LifeGroup gave during a meeting.  He recalled an event that changed his faith from religious routine to union with Jesus.

It didn't hurt that the guy in question is one of my all-time favorite people.

So here it is: a video testimony that closed a sermon, concluded a series, and conveyed a story of a living relationship with Jesus Christ:



 
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Defining Moments Week 5 — Scoreboard!
January 31, 2014 at 2:00 am 0

I am so grateful for Defining Moments.

Which is ironic because I fought with it for the four weeks before it launched.  I'm glad the series won that fight.

Because the concept connected.

The fasting brought breakthrough.

The "Sunday morning at the movies" tickets brought people in the door.

The invitation brought them to faith.

And now it's about next steps, both in attitude and in action.

It's called Scoreboard and it digs in deep to the best part of the story of the Prodigal Son -- a part that's not about the Prodigal Son.

Sunday.

8:30.  10.  11:30.

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Best. Tattoo. Ever.
January 30, 2014 at 2:00 am 0
One of the many happy consequences of Stan Wawrinka winning last week's Australian Open was the message contained in the tattoo on the inside of his left forearm.


(Before I return to the tattoo, some other of the "many happy consequences" of his win include:  1) A one-handed backhand wins a Grand Slam event!  The first one-hander not named "Roger Federer" to win a Slam since Pete Sampras won the 2002 US Open.  2) A Swiss wins a Grand Slam event.  The Swiss now have 18 of them to their credit; this is the first by someone not named "Roger Federer."  3) Rafael Nadal lost.  Wawrinka's maintained his resolve even in the midst of mystery-back-injury-gamesmanship and held on to win.  4) Perseverance pays off.  Wawrinka is 28 and had never come close to winning one of the four Majors before.)

Back to the tattoo.  Here's a closer look:


Who tattoos a string of sentences on themselves?  Apparently Stan Wawrinka does.

Yet here's what they say, quoting the British playwright Samuel Beckett:

“Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”

Tremendous sentiment.  Fail better.

I first thought:  "That will preach!"  And it probably will.  But more to the point, that will live.  Embracing failure is part of the process of gaining success.  It's why the most effective pastors and churches can write longer -- and more authentic -- books on what they've done wrong than they can on what they've done right.

Fail better.

I think I'll go attempt some large things for God's name and by God's strength and if they don't work will I throw in the towel?  Nope.  I'll just fail better.

Now: will I get inked myself to remember the mantra?  Maybe so.

But . . . probably not.
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What Can You Blog About On A #Snowpocalypse Day?
January 29, 2014 at 10:53 am 0
Here's what our city looks like today:


So what in the world can a preacher blog about on a day like this in Charlotte?

Of course, we've certainly got it better than Atlanta where my daughter's commute home took five hours yesterday.

Speaking of my daughter, she makes an appearance in this flash mob video.  If you know anything at about her personality, you know how out of character -- and therefore delightfully endearing -- this moment is:



Well, I guess it turns out there is something to blog about on a #Snowpocalypse Day.

You've just got to look around for it.




 
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