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Worship
Song
Story: "I Can Only Imagine"
Wendy Lee Nentwig
Contributing Writer
Bart
Millard's beautiful take on what Heaven will be
like started out as a way to work through his grief
over losing his father. Now, his song "I Can
Only Imagine" is helping others heal-and his
father keep a promise a decade after his death.
The
soaring song "I Can Only Imagine," a track
about envisioning the hereafter and our response
to meeting God one day in Heaven, has catapulted
Texas-based MercyMe to the forefront of the Christian
music scene, garnered three Dove Awards and brought
tears to the eyes of countless radio listeners.
The popular worship track didn't start out as a
tool to help better connect people to their Creator,
though. Instead, it grew out of the difficult questions
MercyMe frontman Bart Millard began asking after
losing his father to cancer when the future songwriter
was just 19.
"I kept hearing that clich€d phrase, 'your
dad's in a better place,'" Millard recalls.
Well-intentioned friends would then remind him that
if his father could choose to come back to Earth
or remain in Heaven, he would certainly choose to
stay there. "I heard that so many times after
he passed away and for a 19-year-old that doesn't
really do it for you."
Millard
knew his father, a godly man when he passed away,
was in a better place. And as a Christian since
the age of 13, Millard had heard all the wonderful
stories about Heaven but he was still frustrated.
He struggled with how his father died and why it
had to take place the way it did. And as he wrestled,
he wrote.
"I
used to write the phrase 'I can only imagine' on
anything I could get my hands on." Millard
says he did this for two reasons: "I did know
he was in a better place and that would set me off
thinking about what he was seeing. Getting strength
he never had here and seeing things he couldn't
fathom here. And it really brought peace and hope
to me. At the same time, I really wanted to know,
'God, what's so great about there that he would
want to leave me or not come back?' Call it selfish,
but it's just being human."
So
the song wasn't written out of some super-spiritual
motive to move closer to God. Instead, it was written
by a grieving son crying out to his Creator for
some sort of cosmic clue.
Years
would pass before Millard would stumble across the
phrase again in an old journal he was using to compose
song lyrics for a 1999 independent release. "In
the journal I had written that phrase over and over
and over," he remembers. "So I decided
to expound on what had been in my heart for so many
years. It was one of those 'God things' where it
was literally written in five minutes...It was written
in five minutes, but at the same time it was something
that was on my heart for 10 years.
The
song eventually ended up on the band's 2001 INO
Records debut, Almost There, and immediately began
to strike a chord. In fact, the band got so many
responses from people who had lost loved ones or
played the song funeral services that when the topic
of a video came up, Millard knew what they had to
do.
"I
just kept seeing all these people holding picture
frames that are empty because we all carry these
people with us in some way. I've had so many people
after a show pull out a picture of someone they've
lost. These people embrace these photos and I just
thought how can we tap into that?"
The
final product features normal, everyday people along
with artists like dc talk's Michael Tate, Tammy
Trent, Bob Herdman of Audio Adrenaline, Jesse Katina
and others. In it, each person appears in the beginning
holding an empty picture frame to signify their
loss and then as the video progresses, they are
holding photos of their loved ones. It makes for
a very moving presentation, one that rarely leaves
viewers with dry eyes.
Millard
can relate. "The first four times I saw it
I just bawled my eyes out. The thing that really
got me are the eyes of the people holding the pictures.
They can tell a million stories."
Like
Tammy Trent's. In the video she's clutching a picture
of her husband who passed away in a diving accident
last September. The photo was snapped as he sat
on the side of the boat 30 minutes before he died.
When contacted about participating in the video,
Millard recalls her saying, "it would be an
honor. I never leave the house without that song
since he died."
As
if responses like that aren't enough, the song is
also helping to fulfill a promise Millard's dad
made to him shortly before he died. To care for
his two sons, he has set up an annuity that would
provide them with a smaller sum every year for 10
years exactly instead of one lump payment, "because
he knew we'd probably spend it," Millard says.
"He used to say 'you're going to get this for
10 years, but don't worry. Even when that runs out
I'll be taking care of you."
Millard
was in the middle of a radio interview a few months
ago when he recalled that promise and realized that
his father was doing just what he said he'd do.
The annuity ran out in November 2001, the same week
the song that he inspired reached the No. 1 spot
on radio airplay charts, an almost sure sign of
MercyMe's continued success.
Who could have imagined?
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