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StoryBehindTheSong
We
Will Stand
Artist: Russ Taff
By Shari MacDonald
In the early
’80s, Russ Taff was enjoying a new solo career,
having recently left The Imperials. But he found
himself troubled by evidence of racism in the church.
He was particularly influenced by a story he had
heard several years earlier, shared by black gospel
singer Archie Dennis, Jr. As Taff remembers the
story, Archie had been invited to sing at a church
in Alabama, but the church leaders did not realize
he was black. On the agreed-upon Sunday, Archie
went to the church to set up, where he was met by
a very surprised pastor.
Taff recalls,
"The pastor came to him and very apologetically
said, ‘This is not gonna work here.’"
He then explained to Archie that a black gospel
singer would not be welcomed at his all-white church
and asked him to leave.
"Archie
said that as he was walking out, he was crying and
he said, ‘You know, Jesus, You saved me. You’ve
brought me to You. Why won’t a lot of the
churches in America let me in?’ And the Lord
spoke to him and said, ‘Archie, they won’t
let Me in, either.’"
Late one night,
still haunted by this story, Taff found himself
sitting at his kitchen table, unable to sleep.
"At about
two o’clock I just started writing; at four
o’clock I pretty much had the first verse
and chorus together. I ran in and woke my wife Tori
up and said, ‘Honey, look at this!’
And she looked at it and said, ‘That’s
really good,’ and rolled over and went back
to sleep! I think the next day we got together and
finished it, and James Hollihan, my guitar player,
put some music to it."
"You’re
my brother, you’re my sister/So take me by
the hand/Together we will work until He comes/There’s
no foe that can defeat us/When we’re walking
side by side/And as long as there is love/We will
stand."
Today "We
Will Stand" is a classic, and its message is
as vital as it was two decades ago.
"The song
accomplished in a degree what I wanted‚"
Taff says, "and that is bringing people together
and letting go of labels. There’s still this
huge line, I feel, between blacks and whites and
Hispanics, and every once in awhile you come across
a church that has really reached out to the community
at large. All I know is, the song had an effect
on me, and after all these years it’s still
singable and still sung, and the message is still
relevant."
"We can
change the world forever," Taff says confidently,
"if we’ll all stand together."
Provided
by CCM Magazine
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