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Ministries|Wed, Jun. 13 2007 12:34 PM EDT

How to Share Your Faith Using Linkin Park’s What I've Done

By Jane Dratz|Christian Post Guest Columnist

What I've Done, Linkin Park's new lead single from their Minutes to Midnight album, recently hit the Number 1 slot on Billboard’s Modern Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. What I've Done is a thought-provoking, reflective music video, drawing attention to a wide range of social issues that we’ll be confronting for decades to come. The music video dramatizes issues ranging from war and terrorism to famine and pollution. Add in the clips of racism, addiction, obesity and environmental concerns, and you have a catalogue of many of the key areas in which society has 'missed the mark' and failed to do the right thing.

Sound depressing? Actually, the song's lyrics present a very different picture from the haunting images that make up much of this music video. The lyrics focus on acknowledging the mistakes, facing the problems, 'fessing up, seeking forgiveness, letting go and moving on.

Check out these lyrics:

So let mercy come,
And wash away...
What I've Done.
I'll face myself,
To cross out what I've become.
Erase myself,
And let go of what I've done...

I'll start again,
And whatever pain may come.
Today this ends,
I'm forgiving what I've done.

Everyone's life holds mistakes, regrets, major mess-ups, sin...whatever tag you want to label it with. But in the end, the Bible's terminology is on target - the Bible calls it 'missing the mark'. And whether you view this song from a societal level or a personal level, it speaks to the ugly consequences that result when we mess-up.

Our human response to 'missing the mark' can include a whole range of reactions: denial, excuses, anger, guilt, withdrawal or depression. And even if we take the right steps, seek forgiveness from those we've hurt and strive to make amends, we can still struggle to 'forgive ourselves'. That's what makes Jesus' gift of forgiveness so radical and life changing! When the lyrics to the song cry out "Let mercy come, and wash away, what I've done," they capture the essense of Jesus' salvation message and describe the gift of forgiveness He offers to all who are willing to accept it. Jesus is the answer to the cry for mercy and for new beginnings!!

The Apostle Paul describes it this way in Romans 8:1-4:

With the arrival of Jesus, the Messiah, that fateful dilemma is resolved. Those who enter into Christ's being-here-for-us no longer have to live under a continuous, low-lying black cloud. A new power is in operation. The Spirit of life in Christ, like a strong wind, has magnificently cleared the air, freeing you from a fated lifetime of brutal tyranny at the hands of sin and death. God went for the jugular when he sent his own Son. He didn't deal with the problem as something remote and unimportant. In his Son, Jesus, he personally took on the human condition, entered the disordered mess of struggling humanity in order to set it right once and for all. (The Message)

So use this song to talk about Jesus and His incredible free gift of forgiveness with your friends! You might try some of these conversation starters:

• Which emotions does this music video stir up in you? Fear of the future? Depression? Forgiveness? Encouragment? New beginnings? Hope? Share how your relationship with God has helped you as you deal with those same types of emotions in everyday life.
• Ask your friends if they have a particular response when they mess-up. Denial, excuses, anger, guilt, withdrawal,depression? Share what Jesus' gift of forgiveness has meant in your life.
• What do you think of when you hear the lines from the song that say "Let mercy come, and wash away, what I've done"? Share the Christian view of God's mercy and how Jesus washes away our sins.

What I've Done provides a natural bridge for bringing God's mercy and forgiveness up in your conversations. So let mercy come, and wash away, what I've done...
________________________________________________________________
Jane Dratz works for Dare 2 Share Ministries in Arvada, Colo., a ministry committed to energizing and equipping teens to know, live, share and own their faith in Jesus. For more information on Dare 2 Share Ministries, please visit www.dare2share.org. Send feedback to jane@dare2share.org.

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  • Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:40 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Jane. I couldn’t agree w/ you more. I own the cd, but just watched this video for the first time today, and was very moved by it. I was in the car w/ a couple of kids from church the other day, listening to this song, and I said that I didn't know if the man who wrote it was a Christian or not, but he should be. Whether knowingly or unknowingly, he has captured the essence of the human condition - the pain of brokenness and a longing for renewal. I appreciated how the group drew attn to world wide injustice w/o conforming to the current trend of finger pointing. We took a group to the Dare to Share conference in Denver this weekend, and one of the speakers said that when Adam and Eve sinned, they "downloaded a virus" into all of us. I liked that illustration. The brokenness in the world isn't a national, ethnic, or socioeconomic phenomena, its a HUMAN phenomena, and its evidence is EVERYWHERE. I also loved how the imagery of rebirth was aligned w/ the lyrics about mercy. Because we were created to be in relationship w/ our creator, our soul yearns for this. Brokenness leaves our soul longing for renewal. God's mercy heals our brokenness, bridges the gap, and satisfies longing. Through this beautiful song and video, kids cans hear a huge music artist express that same basic, inherently human, need. Thanks Jane!
    ~In Christ, Gail~

  • Mon Aug 13, 2007 1:13 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    In my opinion this article is only using half of the gospel to reach the lost and therefore falls short of reaching soulds for Christ. When witnessing we need to tell people that one day we will all stand before God and face His judgement. It's good to mention that we have all messed us and have missed the mark with God. But we also have to obey Biblical teaching and warn people of the consequences of our sins, that there is a hell. But once we've mentioned the consequence we can present them with the gospel, the good news, that God sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to suffer and die for our sins and that he took the punishment we deserve for our sins on the cross, so that by believing in him and trusting in him for salvation we can have eternal life, "For God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son, that whoever shall believe in Him shall not perish but have eternal life". Then they will understand why they need Jesus and will be prepared for the trials and tribulations that the Bible says all Christians will face.

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