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  • The book of Psalms in the Old Testament is a collection of songs written about and to God.

  • While many of these songs celebrate God's faithfulness and sing praise to him, there

  • are others which are considerably more downcast - angry at God for abandoning them and questioning

  • His faithfulness.

  • In fact, the Bible has many stories of devout, holy people who questioned God: from Job who

  • lost everything, to David King of the Israelites who wrote many of those psalms, and even Jesus

  • himself, in the Garden of Gethsemane.

  • Doubting God is never portrayed in the Bible as a negative thought you should avoid, but

  • rather a step toward understanding God a little better.

  • In 2015, two darling indie folk artists wrote their own psalms - two albums about times

  • in their own lives when their faith was tested, and felt like they had been abandoned by God.

  • Sufjan Stevens has never been shy in his music about his Christian faith.

  • His album Seven Swans is entirely devoted to the weaving of personal experiences with

  • bible stories, and he often conflates ideas of romantic love with his personal relationship

  • to Jesus.

  • (“To be alone with me, you went upon a tree.”)

  • Sufjan grew up in Michigan and was primarily raised by his father and stepmother, however

  • he spent a number of childhood summers in Oregon with his biological mother Carrie and

  • stepfather Lowell.

  • Carrie suffered from depression, schizophrenia and alcoholism, so Sufjan's relationship

  • with his mother had always been fairly strained.

  • In many ways he was closer to Lowell, who was able to provide stability for Carrie's

  • children during these trips.

  • Lowell has even been involved in Sufjan's music career, helping to run his record label

  • Asthmatic Kitty, and the pair releasing the albumAporiatogether in March of 2020.

  • On his 2015 album Carrie & Lowell, Sufjan offers small vignettes of his time in Oregon,

  • and particularly of his mother.

  • In Should Have Known Better Sufjan recalls a memory of Carrie forgetting about him in

  • public.

  • ("When I was three, three maybe four, she left us at the video store.")

  • Her negligence is also apparent in the song Eugene, as Sufjan speaks of trying to attract

  • his mother's attention.

  • ("Remember I pulled at your shirt, I dropped the ashtray on the floor.

  • I just wanted to be near you.)

  • He suggests that Carrie cared more about her smoking than she did her children.

  • ("Some part of me was lost in your sleeve where you hid your cigarettes, no I'll never

  • forget.")

  • Despite being quite distant from his mother for much of his life, Sufjan found himself

  • deeply affected by her death from stomach cancer in 2012.

  • "Her death was so devastating to me because of the vacancy within me.

  • I was trying to gather as much as I could of her, in my mind, my memory, my recollections,

  • but I have nothing.

  • It felt unsolvable.

  • There is definitely a deep regret and grief and anger."

  • But Sufjan isn't interested in laying blame - in the very first song, he tells Carrie

  • that he forgives her.

  • (“I forgive you mother, I can hear you, and I long to be near you.”)

  • His mother's death has not brought feelings of resentment toward her, but of love and

  • missed opportunities.

  • The song Fourth of July puts Sufjan in conversation with Carrie at her deathbed.

  • There is an intimacy between the two, as they trade pet names and try to console one another.

  • (“Shall we look at the moon, my little loon, why do you cry?”)

  • It's a relationship that they likely didn't experience while she was alive.

  • Sufjan's frustrations are instead directed toward God.

  • In Drawn to the Blood he once again likens his faith to a physical relationship, depicting

  • God as an abusive partner.

  • (“The strength of his arm / my lover caught me off-guard.”)

  • The strength of his armis a reference to Luke 1:51, a line from a song that Mary

  • the mother of Jesus sings when she discovers she is pregnant.

  • (“He has shown strength with his arm, He has scattered the proud in the imagination

  • of their hearts.”)

  • Sufjan questions why God has turned around and used their righteous strength against

  • him.

  • (“For my prayer has always been love / what did I do to deserve this?”)

  • Sufjan also uses the biblical story of Samson and Delilah to suggest the betrayal he feels,

  • and conjures an image of broken faith with a one-winged dove.

  • This crisis of faith sent Sufjan down a path of self-destructive behaviours - he shared

  • with Pitchfork how engaging in the same patterns as his mother somehow connected him to her.

  • He mentions this in No Shade in the Shadow of the Cross - making references to substance

  • abuse and self-harm, and ending the song with its lamentful title.

  • (“There's no shade in the shadow of the cross.”)

  • The foot of the cross is a place of peace and comfort for Christians, a position of

  • supplication that serves as a reminder of the saving grace of Jesus.

  • But for Sufjan, he no longer feels comfort at the foot of the cross, where its shade

  • may be cast over him.

  • The Only Thing sees Sufjan at his lowest, the greatest depths of his despair.

  • He contemplates the various ways he could end his own life, but looks for any signs

  • not to: from stories in star constellations, to meanings depicted in water stains on the

  • bathtub.

  • With the final verse however, he tips the song's structure on its head.

  • Instead of looking for ways to die, he finds a reason to live.

  • (“The only reason why I continue at all / faith in reason, I wasted my life playing

  • dumb.”)

  • And in John, My Beloved, he ends the song with a declaration of faith, more upfront

  • than he has ever been before in his music: ("Jesus, I need you, be near me, come shield

  • me from fossils that fall on my head.")

  • But ultimately there is very little resolution to Sufjan's anguish.

  • There is no narrative order to these songs, and each one is filled with mixed emotions.

  • In much the same way that Sufjan felt abandoned by Carrie in her life, it was in her death

  • that he felt abandoned by God.

  • If Sufjan's faith was tested by tragedy, Julien Baker is the opposite.

  • She opens her 2015 album Sprained Ankle with the spiritual disconnection she feels in her

  • everyday life.

  • (“Do you think that there's a way I'd ever get so far / that you'd ask me where

  • I'd been like I ask you where you are?”)

  • Julien often feels distant from God, but when she goes on in the song to tell the story

  • of a car crash, she places God at the scene.

  • ("I know I saw your hand when I went out and wrapped my car, around the streetlamp.")

  • The way she ambiguously implicates God in this accident could suggest she's either blaming

  • them for causing it to happen, or thanking them for protecting her in it.

  • This traffic incident is just one of many moments on Sprained Ankle that Julien finds

  • God while at her lowest.

  • Throughout her life Julien has battled against her own mind and body.

  • She struggles with substance addiction, mentioning at various points alcohol, drugs and cigarettes.

  • And she speaks of her deteriorated mental health, which has led to self-harm.

  • Julien paints herself as someone who spends more time in a hospital bed than a church

  • pew.

  • She feels at odds with her own body, comparing it to dirty clothes and dilapidated furniture.

  • The album title itself is a reference to an injury that prevents you from moving forward

  • and represents Julien's perceived weakness of her own flesh - a common thread throughout

  • the New Testament.

  • But it's in this weakness that she seemingly feels the closest to God.

  • Her picture of Jesus is the one who spends time with the poor, oppressed and suffering,

  • not the holy and righteous.

  • Suffering and redemption go hand-in-hand for Julien, in much the same way it did for Jesus

  • on the cross.

  • She equates the two on the song Everybody Does: ("Cause I'm interested, and our carpenter

  • is so elegant at placing splinters right beneath my nails, where I cannot dig them out.")

  • While this is a grotesque image of the pain she endures in life and attributes to God,

  • it also shares the same imagery as the crucifixion: nails and splinters.

  • In the same way that Sufjan conflates personal relationships with his faith, Julien places

  • her human expectations onto God.

  • (“You're gonna run when you find out who I am.”)

  • On its surface, Everybody Does reads like a song about fearing rejection from a friend

  • or lover, but it's this rejection and abandonment coming from God that Julien fears; the same

  • abandonment Sufjan fears and received from both his mother and Heavenly Father.

  • (“You're gonna run, it's alright, everybody does.”)

  • Julien understands that in order for salvation to occur, there needs to exist a brokenness

  • which requires divine intervention.

  • It's from this dichotomy of pain and peace that stems her on-and-off-again relationship

  • with God, and her response mirrors this.

  • On the track Rejoice the expressions of Julien's mind and body are released from her mouth.

  • Addiction throughchoking on smoke”, intimacy with God insinging your praise”,

  • and spiritual disconnection when sherejoices and complains”.

  • But she finally realises that God is present not only in her brokenness, but every aspect

  • of her life.

  • (“But I think there's a God and hears either way.”)

  • Julien now recognises that she doesn't have to be self-destructive and at her lowest in

  • order to feel close to God.

  • But habits are hard to break, and on the album's closer Go Home we find Julien in a familiar

  • position: succumbing to her addictions and in a state of helplessness, having to ask

  • friends to come pick her up and take her home.

  • But in the second verse she switches from talking to friends to talking to God, confident

  • that he is watching over her, regardless of whether she's feeling physically broken

  • or spiritually disconnected.

  • And in her last line of the album, she asks God to take her Home - to Heaven.

  • (“I'm tired of washing my hands / God, I want to go home.”)

  • The separation from God that Julien felt in the album's first line has been closed by

  • its final one, and she ends the album with a rendition of a modern hymn, In Christ Alone

  • (my personal favourite worship song), while a preacher delivers a sermon in the background.

  • Both Julien Baker and Sufjan Stevens are not considered to be Christian artists; they are

  • singer-songwriters whose faith plays an essential role in their music, and whose music is an

  • expression of worship.

  • As a Christian and lover of music myself, I've always felt at odds with Contemporary

  • Christian Music, guilty that I struggle to be moved by many worship songs when entirely

  • secular music has provided me with deep spiritual experiences.

  • But albums such as Sprained Ankle and Carrie & Lowell bring me closer to God in a way that

  • much Contemporary Christian Music doesn't.

  • These are not airbrushed depictions of God and uplifting statements of unwavering faith

  • - they are full of doubts, fears and insecurities, honest accounts of people trying their best

  • and often failing.

  • Human stories and emotions that are relatable to the spiritual and non-spiritual alike.

The book of Psalms in the Old Testament is a collection of songs written about and to God.

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