Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Psalms 102-150 -- Part 1: Michael McLean
Episode Date: August 20, 2022Does God need our praise? Michael McLean explores how worship and music enrich our lives and how the Psalms enrich our lives and lead to a deeper relationship with the Lord.Experience more inspiration... from Michael McLean at www.allthingsmichaelmclean.comPlease rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-h
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh.
We want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I am your host. I am here with my co-host,
John, by the way, who is like a pelican of the wilderness, like an owl of the desert.
John, I am not as a sparrow alone upon the house top. I am with you. John, that comes from
Psalm 102. And I think it means that he is really hungry. So I hope you're really hungry today.
I've never been called a Pelican before Hank. I'm so glad it was you that was
had that privilege to do that. I don't know if you've ever seen a Pelican of the wilderness, John,
but it's that's a compliment just so you know. Psalm 102 verse 6, in case you want to see that.
The beautiful. We are on our third episode of The Book of Psalms and we have
a special guest today, John. Can you tell everybody who's with us? Yes, I can and I like that you
put a special guest. This is going to be wonderful. For 25 years, Micah McLean has been changing lives
with tender songs, candid messages, a platinum recording artist with backgrounds in performing, composing, songwriting, producing, and directing. Michael McLean has a
perfect song for every person, twist or turn-along life's path, probably even one
for a Pelican. Michael McLean released his debut album in 1983, been touching
lives ever since around the world. Now more than 25 albums later,
his musical legacy has not only resonated in the hearts of thousands, but continues
to be a standard for those seeking a meaning and peace. He's directed some of the
church's most beloved films like Together Forever, The Protocol Sun, and Mr.
Krueger's Christmas. He's written and directed countless musicals,
including the forgotten carols, celebrating the light, and another more recent work Threads.
He's written four books. He and his wife have three children and live in Utah, and I have
a personal story about Michael. He had this three quarter size guitar. I thought that
is the coolest. That's perfect for travel.
And I think I said something like that. Wow, that's a perfect side. That's great for travel.
And I don't remember how many weeks later, here's Michael McLean on my porch, handing me a three quarter size guitar.
Wow.
And saying, I want you to tell me all of the fun places that you take this thing and all of the fun places that you sing
I became a Micah McLean fan. I thought what a kind thing to do to just show up on my porch and that guitar
I want to tell you Michael
Natalie's played it Andrew's played it Ashley's played it. I've played it that
Tars still here in our house is well beloved. And so you are
part of our house and we welcome you today. Thanks for being with us today, Michael.
Good to be here. Thanks, John. Michael McClain. John, I have my own Michael McClain stories.
I'll probably share them during our podcast today, but we've been friends for a decade now and he's good as you just explain
there. He's all good to the core. And Michael, I also understand you have a new
website. Could you tell us about that? My son said, let's have a place. Let's build a
home for all your songs so that it can be easily accessible and not only songs,
but books you've written will do
videos if you kind of like we're doing here, but you tell in a story about a song.
I did a podcast for a while called Songwriter, Sunday School, where I talk about songs that
meant a lot to me in their background and would play them.
But it's called allthingsmiclemeclane.com.
Thank you.
Our follow-him listeners are good supporters of our guests. So I'm sure you'll
see some some traffic going to all things Michael McLean dot com. We are going to have a great
day today. We are in the book of Psalms and Michael, I thought to myself, Psalms are songs
who is one of my favorite musicians on planet earth and we brought him on the podcast today. Michael,
how do you want to approach the book of Psalms? What did you think when I asked you to come on?
I've been thinking about the Psalms a lot. You probably, on the other earlier versions,
talked about the fact that it's the most quoted in the New Testament. But the thing that I thought first was these songs that became kind of the songs
of Jewish kids' youth, why didn't God have the melodies put in the Scriptures? Why didn't
David's version of Psalm 22 or Psalm 23 with those gorgeous words, I thought, well, I
know the notation may have changed.
Why didn't Heavenly Father said,
here's the tomb that goes with that song from David.
I had a great aha.
The reason those tunes maybe didn't get preserved
with those lyrics is because what if the tune
that is connected with the song that could have reached you
is a melody you hate.
I mean, Yaku, do we have to hear that one more?
My mother's favorite song or hymn in the hymn book, Growing Up, when I was growing up,
was a song called Unanswered Get the Prayer Your Lipses Pleated.
And I thought the lyric was spectacular, but the melody sounded like it was a bad 1927 recording.
I just graded on my nerves.
I can understand why it didn't make the cut
for the new green hymn book, but those lyrics were so great.
And I remember one day I thought,
well, in the early hymn books of the church,
you just pick a tune.
Oh, let's take this great lyric,
and let's do, this was a popular tune. Let's do the hey Jude tune. Oh, let's take this great lyric and let's do this was a popular tune.
Let's do the hey Jude tune for this, you know, or whatever it was. The opening line of the song
with my tune on Ancert Get the Prayer. Your lips have pleaded in agony of heart these many years.
of heart these many years. Does faith begin to fail? Is hope declining?
And think you all in vain those falling tears?
Say not the Father has not heard your prayer.
You shall have your desire.
You shall have your desire
Sometime, somewhere
You shall have your desire
Sometime, somewhere
And so whenever I would sing this song
I'd pick my tune, not because it was
the true and living tune, but it spoke to me. And so many times I think we sometimes think
with songs that if we're sitting there and the tune doesn't resonate, we miss the power
of the lyric. We miss the power of the message.
You know, I have a great friend who's a gospel singer
who would come to the back of the chapel with your pods on,
great gospel singer, and she would just sit there
before the meeting started.
And once I came in and I sat next to her and I said,
what's your listening to?
And it was this Edward Hawkins unbelievably cool gospel choir. And she said, I'm just feeling the spirit. This is how I hear it,
because we don't sing this way. And I said, that's right, we don't sing that way. But she said,
but this speaks to me. And I love, I love the reality that of all those songs and all the different
interpretations and all the different melodies that could have been written. I don't think
Heavenly Father wants us to be unable to hear His messages from those songs because we don't get
the, you know, the chord structure or we don't get the melodies or we don't get them. And also,
because they were not originally written in English, they're translations.
When I take a spirit of a song and try to turn it in a song of my own, in interpret,
I don't feel too bad about not just playing a music for the words exactly as written
in the King James version.
I'm trying to get to the heart of it so that I can keep repeating that message
to myself. The spirit in which it was written, you get an
in tune with that, I wanted to read you something from the manual and get both of your thoughts on it.
It says, the Psalms invite us to reflect on the Lord's power, on His mercy and on the great things He
has done. We can never repay Him for any of this, but we can praise him for it. That praise may take different forms for different people. It may
involve singing, praying, or bearing testimony. It often leads to a deeper commitment to the Lord
and to following his teachings. It goes on to say, whatever praisje the Lord means in your life,
you can find more inspiration to do it as you read and ponder the Psalms. Michael, I've heard you say before that music is a language.
How has the language of music?
How have you seen it? I mean, this is your whole career, so this is a big question,
but how have you seen it? Bless lives. John, same with you. I won't ask you after I hear from Michael.
First of all, I'm so glad you read that passage, because after I read that passage trying to get prepared for this,
PS, I grew up in a family where my mother taught me from when I was old enough to understand
English.
There's only one problem with life.
What?
No, there's only one problem with life.
What's that mom?
No background music.
What?
She said, if we had background music, everything, like a movie, would go back.
Everything.
Think of this.
It would be so better in your podcast if you read a thing that says, there will be problems
if you don't keep the commandments.
Or if you say, oh my gosh, you kept the commandments.
If there was just music, everything would be clear as you're driving up to this place
and you're having the person in your head tell you the directions.
I want heavenly airpods.
I want to say, watch out, go left.
Now there's traffic problems here.
No, no, no, no, no, no, don't spend any more time here.
This is a good thing. So when I read that section about praise, I have to be honest. This
is like two days old. I thought, does God need us to sing pra, is he not quite sure he's
okay? And if we just sing more praises to him, then he'd be good. It may be a little irreverent, but I wrote this down because I was,
I needed to learn something.
And of course, sometimes the song teaches me the truth, the only way my heart can hear it.
And I picked, I picked an actually a reverent in the hymn book tune.
And this is my thing about praise.
reverent in the hymn book, tune, and this is my thing about praise. I don't think that God,
that God is insecure and needs us to praise him so he'll feel okay. He's never been unsteady, I don't think he's ever been unsure Or waiting for my praise to make his day.
But if we call his name every moment that we see
Another miracle's given you or me
It truly won't be hard to praise Him evermore.
For those gifts I never truly thanked Him for.
And then what I realized is God doesn't say praise me, praise me, praise me because He needs
to hear the praise.
It's because in recognizing the gifts, it changes us.
It changes the way we see things. It changes
our gratitude function. And of course, spending time in Nashville and working with some
of the greatest Christian songwriters, they've got the praise songs down. And we don't
sing, you know, the closest to a praise song I may have ever written is in the Forgotten
Carol's called a Rise in Shine 4. And that really, you know, feels like a praise song.
I've started to think about every song
in which Michael McClain goes,
oh, I missed that the first time.
That's the way father in heaven changes me.
He doesn't need the validation.
He needs me in the thinking to go, oh, oh, my heavens,
there's another gift you gave me I missed. Thank you. That's beautiful. I grew up in a family that
the ancient phonograph was constantly going. My dad was not a musician, but he was a, had great musical
taste. Every Sunday morning, dad was walking around in the living room,
leading the phonograph.
And my mom sang in the Tabernacle choir
and so did my grandparents and my great-grandparents.
So I told you Hank,
when I went on my mission
and elders played the Tabernacle choir,
they were just discovering it,
and it was making me homesick.
Because it's what I grew up with.
And so it's always been important to me. And I was
thinking as we were approaching this, that one of the hymns that I feel like is kind of a
psalm is how great that art. And as Michael was saying, right, it's not, I think God needs me to
say this to him today. Oh, Lord my God, when I, in awesome wonder,
consider all the works that I have made.
I see the stars.
I hear the rolling thunder.
I power throughout the universe,
displayed and then sings my soul.
And it's for me too.
It's not just for him.
It's for me.
How great that art.
And Hank is a teenager being on scout trips and growing up in Salt Lake
City and just enough street lights that I didn't see the stars but I remember going on scout trips
and looking up at that display and just going whoa what is going on out there look at all those
stars and having that,
how great that art feeling,
and being able to say to myself,
my, my father did that.
That is my heavenly father did that.
Was a powerful affirming moment to think,
that's my father that did all this.
And I wanted to sing like that song.
It reminds me two of James Taylor that I listened to
my sisters mostly when they were teenagers who sang a song called On the Roof and he had this one
line on the roof the stars put on a show for free and those stars blew me away and I thought of that.
That doesn't that sound like a song Michael that how great that art. How great that art is the best.
It's the best of all those.
And like you said, the power of it is not wow.
You made a great world.
It's, you made a great world for me.
Yeah, what it does for me is like,
we just listen to the thing about Elijah
and how unbelievable spectacular things where Elijah calls down
heavens and everything's going great and then he's gone and he thinks well maybe I failed. I mean
here I am sitting didn't work out so great and I started to think about all the things that I
thought I did this in hopes that I could have an impact on the world that I would change them. And this is what came. And I also dedicate this to you, my dear friends,
who are in fact making a difference. My son went like this. Have I made a difference at all?
Have I made a difference at all? Maybe, sometimes, probably not that much.
If a difference has been made, it's not for me to judge.
But do I make a difference at all?
Do I make a difference at all. Do I, do I make a difference at all? I just keep on trying. I
won't stop myself even if I'm not sure if all the trying helps but I'll try and try and try and try and maybe one day I'll see that the difference I
have tried to make made all all the difference in me.
As I get closer to the other side, and as we talked about a little bit earlier, I'm on
a kidney donor list, and if I don't get a kidney, I don't get to try to make a difference
at all.
Fortunately, there's been a huge blessing that a kidney donor has come along who heard me saying my songs in 1995
in Colorado Springs, but the song stuck with him and when he found out that I needed a kidney,
he decided to
volunteer which is beyond humbling. And of course John as a kidney donor knows about this, but the thing that I thought is
So what if I don't get a kidney? What
if I'm done? Did I make a difference at all? And I got this song because that's my language.
And it's Michael, you're measuring the wrong things. You're measuring any show business
and as a songwriter, how many streams did you get? How many people loved it? That's
what really counts. And I thought,
no, no, no, no, no. And I have to add this. I have a granddaughter. And I was driving
with her in the car. And we were listening to hits that 10-year-old's love. And it was
Ariana Grande was singing the song she loved. And when the song was over, it was just Sadie and I. And the
DJ said, that's area to grant a singing seven rings or golden rings or something. It's
just past 300 million streams. 300 million. I turned to my granddaughter. I said, Sadie,
what's your grandpa got to do to get 300 million people
to hear one of my songs?
And without thinking she says,
stop writing yesterday's favorites and start working on today's hits.
Start working on today's hits instead of yesterday's favorites.
So I think all of us who, whether it's a podcast
or a film or anything that are trying with all our souls to make a difference and we don't really
know, the gift is we get to make a difference and that's what changes us. That's what transforms us.
That's what makes us new creatures, I think.
Psalm 105 is interesting in that it sings about songs.
It starts this way.
105 one, so it sounds like a great radio station, doesn't it?
Oh, give thanks unto the Lord.
Call upon His name, make known His deeds among the people, sing unto him, sing Psalms unto him,
talk ye of all his wondrous works, glory ye in his holy name, let the heart of them rejoice
that seek the Lord, seek the Lord and his strength, seek his face evermore. So we have a song
telling us to sing. Even in the previous Psalm Psalm 104, I will sing unto the Lord as long as I live. I will sing praise to my God while I
have my being. That sounds like you, Michael. I will sing until my very last breath, which we hope
is not anytime soon. I'm reminded of this song. I don't know if it comes from a song, you have to
forgive me if it does, but how can I keep from singing? That's my only way to share what I'm feeling right now. And that just reminds me again of that
How great that art is where do I go with all of this awe that I feel?
How can I keep from singing? So I love that music is such a part of the gospel that Jesus would sing at him that
They did this in all of their practice before Passover things like that that it was such a part of the gospel that Jesus would sing at him that they did this in all of their practice before Passover, things like that, that it was such a part of it.
And Hank, I even want to look at Psalms 100 that's just before the lesson plan.
It's very short.
Make a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands.
Serve the Lord with gladness, come before his presence with singing. He wants that, I think, and there's something
magical in otherworldly about music that's international, how music has always been a part
of the gospel here, way back in the Old Testament, that we have 150 songs or songs here, at least.
Surprise to learn they sang during the temple sessions, right?
So here they are doing the sacrifices
and lighting the altar of incense
and they've got a choir there.
They've got a choir singing.
What if my great ah-ha is about songs?
And this is not a doctrine.
This was just an ah-ha.
I was, this is a big deal to me.
And it's very sacred and I hope it
it's okay to share this. I was reading the 120-second song earlier this month and it's the my
God, my God, why has thou forsaken me? And that was always a very, very precious lyric to me,
but I hadn't thought of it in the context of a song because it was the
the lament of Jesus on the cross. And during my nine-year faith crisis, one of the great
things that gave me hope was my dad had given this really great talk. And he said,
you think you're having a hard time if the son of the Almighty is saying,
why have you forsaken me? I'm feeling abandoned, I'm struggling. It's not because God's in another side of the universe.
It's because He, the greatest intelligence of them all,
was bearing witness that if He could put all of His faith
in Jesus, that He would come through
and do those fathers will, even when His father's spirit
wasn't there, can't we all?
And I was going through such a hard time. And I remember
him saying to me, and maybe when you feel most abandoned, and for me, it was a nine-year
drought of thinking, why won't he talk to me? If Jesus could go through that, and if
Heavenly Father could say, I have faith in Jesus, maybe your drought is your Father in Heaven
is saying, Michael, I have faith in you
that you will choose me even when you don't feel like.
I'm there.
So I have great love for that scripture,
but here's the ah-ha for me.
I realized as I went through this unbelievable song
that completely a thousand years before Jesus came came is describing the crucifixion.
It's no, it's going to be like this and then it's going to be like this and then it's going to
be like this. And only at the very end is there the hope of it. And then I thought, this makes me weep.
What if at the moment on the cross where Jesus is an agony in his mother is at the bottom
of the cross, he chooses because he doesn't have any energy.
A few lyrics from a song she taught him growing up.
She taught him because the song would prepare him that maybe that was
part of how he lined up. Maybe that's when he said, is that me? And then in his
final moment, if he says to his mother, my God, and maybe he's saying it. My God, my God, why has Thou forsaken?
She knew all the rest. She filled in all the blanks. She got every message. And so in his final
moments on the cross, rather than proclaiming his agony, he used a song to comfort his mother.
to comfort his mother. I thought of my gratitude for the fact that that's my language. It's the song writing the songs, thinking about the songs, making up songs
my hope. That's how God talks to me. That's how I figure stuff out in my
strange brain. And it may not be true or doctrinal or perfect, but it's perfect
for me. And so thinking of all
these other songs that that come up, I'm seeing them in a whole new might. Absolutely. Wonderful.
I wanted to share something with both of you that maybe you did not know before, John. You
have to tell me if you already knew this, but there is a word that appears 245 times in the Hebrew Bible,
but is not found in the King James text. And John, I think a couple of our guests have mentioned this,
it's called Heset. I read this article from Dr. Belnapp, who Daniel Belnapp, who is on our
podcast previously. The article is called How Excellent Is is the loving kindness. The Gospel Principle of Heset.
He says, this word appears 245 times in the Hebrew Bible,
but it's really difficult to translate.
He said, the KJV provides no less than 15 different terms
for this word, Heset.
The most common, he says, is mercy, kindness, or loving kindness. I was
looking at all the place this term appears in Psalms, it's Psalm 25, Psalm 31, 36, 44, 51, 59, 86,
106, 107, 109, and the list goes on. Well, what is this Heset? Let me read from the article.
Well, what is this Hesse-ed? Let me read from the article.
If salvation is becoming like God,
then the doctrine of Hesse-ed, as presented in the Old Testament,
reveals his divine nature and it illuminates hours.
He said Moses declared that God desires to do Hesse-ed
when he stated that delivering man is not just God's work,
but also his glory.
God loves what he does.
I love that statement, John.
God loves what he does, and thus the full meaning of He said is revealed.
For while it is an act predominantly done by God, his expectation is that those who experience
his He said should do so as well. This in turn suggests that Hesse'd is
ultimately revealed to teach us how to act like God. We perform Hesse'd when we find ourselves doing
the same things God does. We engage in the work of deliverance. If those works are big or small,
each one instructs us in our obligations to our fellow men and to God.
He says, we may begin these obligations in covenantal relationships, but these relationships allow us to learn how to delight in performing Hesad.
I wanted to share with you just a couple of these verses, John and Michael. This is 107 verse 43, who so is wise and will observe these things, even they shall understand the loving kindness, the
Heset of the Lord. It happens again in 109 verse 26,
help me, O Lord my God, O save me according to thy Heset.
Well, I wonder because one of them that I underlined was
Well, I wonder, because one of them that I underlined was one nineteen of verse 77, let thy tender mercies come unto me,
that I may live, for thy law is my delight.
And I think it was kind of elder Bednar that brought that tender mercies
phrase kind of into our consciousness and conversations so often.
Elder Bednar gave that talk in 2004,
his first talk about tender mercies.
I was in California at the time,
and I thought, man, that's a great talk.
And I thought to myself, it's too bad
that that wasn't a song,
because that message is so profound to me,
that's kind of when I fell in love with him,
and I thought, that is so great.
Two o'clock in the morning, I woke up and this is what came. This is based on his talk
and then what happened to me afterwards. The day that the soldier crossed through the
veil, I heard his way, wife got his letter in the mail
And it said how he loved her, though so very far away
And he knew that be together forever someday
And she was heard to say, a tender mercy has come to me.
It came from heaven I do believe.
It seems like whenever I choose to see God's tender mercy's poured down on me.
Well, I believe for forever that a song is a gift.
It can speak to your spirit with the power to lift.
Though the tune may be simple, it can run so deep, teaching lessons like this one
that woke me from my sleep. It's when I'm gonna keep, it was a tender mercy that came to me. It came from heaven I still believe.
Seems like whenever I choose to see
God's tender mercies
put down on me.
And if you're out there and listening and you're wondering why, you get this feeling inside
you, make sure you want to cry.
Perhaps you'll remind it of a memory or two when God's tender mercies were given to you. But then maybe
you're thinking, Mike, this hurts too much. With unanswered prayers, you feel so out of touch. Well I wish I could be there and help you hold on till
that day when your heart can't help singing this song. I know you'll sing it strong. A A tender mercy is come to me.
It came from heaven, I do believe.
Maybe why I was chosen is because I chose to see God's tender mercies are for those who believe.
It's tender mercies are for you and for me.
Thank you. All of us, I think since that talk, have had that feeling in your song, and I think this
week my family has, oh, that was a tender mercy.
How often have you done that?
And I think it was Elder Gerald N. L Lund who wrote a book called Divine Signatures,
that same idea. And Hank, you had a talk. He knows you. He knows you about personal little
tender mercies that people get. I just kept a tender mercy journal. And I thought, I've got so many
of these I need to share them. So yeah, I turned them into a talk because they're just these
beautiful stories of God's personal, timely messages that come to each one of us.
In my Christmas book, I wrote about this.
I was so thrilled that my last mission companion was one of my high school friends.
And so Elder Andrew and I were at Christmas conference in Baguio City in the Philippines and we watched
guests, Michael.
We watched Mr. Krugers Christmas.
Now, I'm in the Philippines watching Snowfall on Temple Square.
And then Elder Andrew and I both from Salt Lake City were going, whoa, that's, oh, that's
because we love Christmas, love Temple Square, love seeing snow fall in Temple Square.
As that movie goes on and the dancers are there
and I'm going, whoa, that's a, that's a heart tug for home.
Well, I went back to my area and I have never seen this
before since, but I'm back to the hot, muggy Philippines
and I'm walking down the street and there is a tree
That is warming with fireflies and I've never seen it before or since but there were
so many that tree was glistening like temple square and
I remember just thinking did the Lord do that for me?
That was my thought whoa look, look at this. People were
standing around and looking at it just because I don't think they'd ever seen anything like it before.
But I thought, did the Lord just send me a Christmas card?
Yeah, I'll never forget that. That was my tender mercy that actually was kind of funny because
it was a day or two after watching
snow on Temple Square and Mr. Kruger's Christmas. That's beautiful.
I hired Jimmy Stewart to do Mr. Kruger's Christmas. That was my story. I got one of my great memories
as I got a chance to and intimidating. I was 27 years old and I'm standing in front of the first presidency in the quorum of the
12 by myself, and I'm playing all the parts.
I'd spent three years trying to sell this idea, and I felt strongly about it, I felt
guided by it, but I was a kid I didn't know why I was doing, but I knew I was supposed
to get this story told, because I'd been producing the tabernacle choir music in the spoken
word for years, and I thought, instead of just a concert,
maybe we could let the choirs music
that I grew up with in Chicago and New Jersey,
where all my Jewish friends would come over
during the holidays and listen to the tab choir.
And it was really something.
And so here I am alone.
And I had cards and I pushed play on the cassette player
for the songs that were in that.
And this is what it's gonna be.
And I didn't know who would be able to hire
to play the part of Mr. Cruz Christmas,
but in my heart, I wanted it to be Jimmy Stewart.
So I did bad Jimmy Stewart, you know,
whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa,
and I kind of strumble and do this thing.
And I remember that moment where after it got presented
to the brethren.
And the gift of being young is you don't know you can't do it.
You don't know that it's a 27 year old
who plays in rock bands that you could go out
and hire the biggest star in the world to make a movie
that's gonna be seen by 300 million people in all those different
languages. Oh my gosh. In fact, I was in Ukraine because the president of Ukraine had invited
me, the former president, Viktor Yushenko, who led the Orange Resolution. He had invited
me to come and sing at his birthday party. I had a translator who helped there. And then
I did some fire sards on the Temple Square there in Ukraine. And I had a translator who helped there. And then I did some fire sats on the temple
square there in Ukraine. And I met a woman who came up, she said I didn't join the church
till a few years ago, but when I was 12 years old, the first Christian thing ever broadcast
on communist, former Soviet television was Mr. Kruger's Christmas. And I sat there and I wept.
And I didn't know where it came from.
I didn't know what it was about.
But I thought, oh, this is what Christmas is
in an American country that's free
and that has religious freedoms.
And I felt it fast forward years later,
the missionaries in Ukraine knock on her door.
And as they're talking about the
spirit and how she feels it, she says, well, like the closest I've had to this
feeling was when I was 11, this makes me cry, when I was 11 years old. And I
felt something called Mr. Kruger's Christmas and the Tabernacle Choir.
And the missionary said, well, that's us.
That's us.
And then this Ukrainian woman that joined the church throws her arms around me.
And she said, whatever sacrifices you made to figure out how to get that movie
made. And then she just held me and wouldn't let go. There are people who have been faithfully
listening to you and one episode may reach them more than others and another one may be not,
hopefully maybe one of these songs on this episode may be touching them. But while you're going through,
there will be a moment. Maybe it's now where something beyond Hank and John and Michael
reaches out and makes a word or a thought or a phrase or a lyric or an insight and suddenly boom, where has that been?
How come I didn't get that?
And we don't know when those moments are.
And we don't measure them and they're not about us anyway.
The older I get, the more convinced I am, whether it's stopping a fireside in Colorado
Springs and said somebody else needs to speak.
And all these years later, that one who said it was me,
let me give you my kidney. We don't know.
There are so many orchestrations, so many beautiful moments that have been people that have
been brought into our lives. Just last month, my song Hold On The Light Will Come, which was my song about hanging in there
that I wrote for my musical about the arc.
And it had always been one of my favorite songs
and it really helped me then.
Just a month ago, I wake up in the middle of the night
and this spirit says, get Hold On The Light Will Come
translated into Ukrainian. And you know, with
kidney failures as bad as mine is, I have no energy. I can't do anything. And I thought,
well, that's interesting. What am I? No, no, no, Michael, figure out how to get in touch
with those people who translated your songs when you went there years ago. You've had
to translate, hold on the light will come. Oh, and while you're doing that, Spirit, find somebody who's a great Ukrainian singer that everybody would know,
and have that person sing it. You can go back to bed. Yeah, sure. I send a little text out about
my song, hold on the light will come. And then that next day, Dave Levit, who had kind of facilitated
my getting there and getting
to know Victor Yushenko, he said, this is interesting, I'm going to Ukraine to help distribute cash
funds through my foundation to help people who are refugees.
You know, you said you needed a singer, maybe this is the one and sends me a link to the
woman who was just last fall, the runner up to the Ukrainian version of the voice.
Amazing singer.
And he says, hold by the way,
her brother-in-law lives in South Jordan.
And I said, this isn't even real.
So like after I have my in the middle of the night,
I'm on the phone.
Oh, she's not in Ukraine right now.
She's a refugee in
Poland. Let me see if I can get her on the phone through her brother-in-law, the translator.
So I'm on this four-way call and she doesn't know who I am. She doesn't know who this song is,
although I find out that she's a return missionary, that it served her mission in Ukraine. And I said, I'm going to send you a copy of a version of this song.
Maybe it would, it'll let you know if it's something you'd be willing to sing,
because she's an amazing singer. We've got a translator working on it,
but could you maybe help us translate it? And oh, while I got you on the phone,
could you fight a recording studio in Warsaw?
And tell me what key you want to hear my song in?
And I'll sit here in Heber and I'll play the background, nothing fancy, no orchestration,
to hold on the light will come, and I'll send it over the internet to Warsaw so you can sing it.
Send it over the internet to Warsaw so you can sing it.
And she says, okay, we find out what key it is. I'm always intimidated about not being a very good piano player,
but there was nobody else.
I send it to Warsaw.
She sends me back the recording and I'm weeping.
My son hold on the light will come
written 40 years ago to help me with my depression and be part of a musical.
And she sings this spectacular. It was so moving that the former first lady of Ukraine heard her sing it.
As they were playing it, this kills me. Playing it on a YouTube speaker for a bunch of refugees in a tent and they're weeping and these tough,
tough broken Ukrainians are holding each other with hold on, hold on the light will come.
Katya, Yushanko says, I think I know the guy who still owns the biggest broadcast station in Ukraine.
Let's get it there. And then they put it on YouTube and then I get an email yesterday from a buddy
of mine from Heber who's doing a refugee mission in Romania working with refugees, none of which are members, but trying to help them get
placed. And they say every time we hold them and try to feed them, we take our
YouTube speaker and we play your song in their language. And here's the sweetest
thing of all. I wasn't there for the recording. When it comes to
the end of that song and it reprises the opening verse, Julia whispers to words. She's got the most
spectacular voice ever, but she whispers the words. And when I finally got back to thank her
for this amazing thing,
she through the translator said,
it's not the high notes,
it's not the power of a great vocal performance.
She says,
it's the still small voice.
And I felt at the moment, don't sing it, whisper it, because my people need to feel the
still small voice.
And the fact that a song was how that was used and may bless people that 40 years ago I could have never known,
could be blessed.
It's talk about God being great all the time.
And there are miracles.
We don't see them.
We don't know they're coming, but they are real.