Missions-minded music
Ray Boltz has been
on the Christian music scene for 18 years, with record sales topping
5 million units. His compositions often strike a chord by telling
the story of an individual in the Bible or challenging the faith
of today’s Christians. One of his early songs, “Thank
You,” written for his pastor on Pastor Appreciation Day,
became Gospel Music Association’s Song of the Year. His
“I Pledge Allegiance to the Lamb” became the biggest
single ever on Christian music’s Inspiration chart. Boltz,
50, took a break from his current tour to chat with News Editor
John W. Kennedy.
PE: You’ve
had a long professional career. How has your outlook changed over
the years?
BOLTZ:
I was naïve when I started. I live in Indiana, not Nashville.
When I was first confronted with how the whole Christian radio
and record industry works it was overwhelming. “Thank You”
exploded; it went to No. 1 everywhere. But I found that doesn’t
happen every time. I’m grateful for the platform that song
gave me. It’s tough for young people starting out today
to become known for a piece of work that lays a foundation to
continue their ministry.
PE: You didn’t
seek to be a Christian singer as a teenager.
BOLTZ:
I sang for 10 years and nobody knew who I was. I didn’t
make a record; I just traveled around singing songs about my faith
in nursing homes, prisons, youth groups. My pastor told me, “The
world says if you want to be great, look at who’s on top
of your field and copy his moves. But when Jesus was asked about
being great in the Kingdom, He picked up a little child.”
There are always people lower than you who need a helping hand
to lift them up. If you concentrate on lifting them up, God is
faithful to lift you to the platform He wants you to have. I was
in my 30s when I quit my job as a purchasing agent and went into
music full-time.
PE: You’re
not the same singer you were in the 1980s.
BOLTZ:
You have to evolve. People want you to stay exactly the same.
The problem is if you do, those same people aren’t satisfied.
We want things familiar, but we really want to discover new things.
So as an artist I’m always faced with the dilemma: If I
just rehash what I’ve done in the past it becomes too predictable.
I try to approach every record as I hope a pastor approaches a
sermon: Lord, what do You want me to say? Then I try to put music
to those messages. Sometimes it’s a success commercially;
sometimes what God wants me to say is not popular. Not everything
your pastor says is based on pleasing people.
PE: You’ve
always placed an emphasis on missions in your ministry. Why?
BOLTZ:
The top reason my music is missions-minded is that I came to Christ
at a Christian concert in a converted bar at 19 years of age.
I was strung out and messed up, and I stumbled into a Christian
outreach center and heard the gospel. It was the first time music
communicated to me that Jesus is alive. That night I gave the
Lord my life and I gave the Lord my music. I had played guitar
in a rock and roll band.
My music changed as
my life changed. I never expected it to turn into a career. When
it did, I realized I was being given the same opportunity to reach
other people for the Lord. That worked its way into “Thank
You,” talking about Sunday School teachers and missionaries,
people who don’t receive a lot of applause. I was incredibly
moved when I visited a Mission of Mercy project in Calcutta started
by Mark and Huldah Buntain. Thirteen little boys who used to live
on the streets in Bangladesh sang “Thank You” back
to me. From then on I wanted to help these kids and others like
them. Now instead of one room, the Home of Hope in Dhaka, Bangladesh,
has four stories. The same thing has happened in Sri Lanka, and
now we’re working with abandoned AIDS babies in Kenya. We
dedicate every tour to some type of missionary outreach.
Winning Three Dove
Awards has been exciting. Singing at Promise Keepers’ Stand
in the Gap in front of more than a million men is a moment I’ll
never forget. But without question, the greatest thing in my career
is seeing 50,000 kids who have received meals or a place to live
because my audiences sponsored them. The Assemblies of God and
Mission of Mercy have given me something that will last beyond
record sales.
PE: You’ve
never pulled any punches in telling Christians to get with it,
in songs such as “Church Hop” and “I Pledge
Allegiance to the Lamb.” What is your chief aim in writing
such songs?
BOLTZ:
I’m speaking mostly to my own walk with Christ. For instance,
in “Feel the Nails” I ask does Jesus still feel the
nails every time I fail Him. “Allegiance” was inspired
when I went with 40 teenagers to Botswana and saw them perform
a drama just out of love. On the plane home I said, “Ray,
where is your allegiance? Are you totally sold out to the Lord?”
PE: Do you see any
troubling signs in the state of the Christian music industry?
BOLTZ:
I see good things happening. When MercyMe can have a song like
“I Can Only Imagine” climb the pop chart it’s
a wonderful sign that the secular music industry realizes that
Christians have something to say. That song talks about Jesus,
and it’s being played in between Christina Aguilera and
Britney Spears. We’re not just trying to copy. We’re
singing what we believe. But I am troubled by Christian retail
merchandising in general. We are so marketing-minded in producing
music, sermons and books — driven by what will sell, not
by what God wants us to say. Sometimes we need to hear what is
difficult to hear.
PE: Is that the
reason you started your own label, Spindust Records?
BOLTZ:
The Nashville community is sometimes driven by producing what’s
hip. I’m driven by the schoolteacher or bricklayer who lives
down the street in Muncie, Ind. With the label, I’m able
to help others who believe the same thing and want to reach college-
and high school-age audiences. It’s not that I’m against
capitalism. I was a marketing major in college. But it scares
me the way things are marketed to the church. We shouldn’t
equate commercial success or church attendance numbers with the
ultimate stamp of God’s approval of what we’re doing.
PE: You’re
still out touring.
BOLTZ:
I enjoy introducing younger artists. Mitch McVicker is on tour
with me and he’s making an impact on kids at concerts. He
was in the car crash that killed Rich Mullins. Mitch was in a
coma for a number of days and had to learn how to walk and eat
again. I see him as a big inspiration to the young people who
come to my concerts. I am slowing down a bit. But as long as children
come up and tell me at concerts they want to commit their hearts
to the Lord, I’m going to keep doing it.
E-mail your comments
to pe@ag.org.