Ken Medema
"New Beginnings"
 
Program #4423
First air date March 11, 2001
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Biography

Songwriter and performer Ken Medema is a prolific composer and a master at musical improvisation. 
Ken performs hundreds of concerts every year, across the country and around the world, thrilling 
audiences wherever he plays. He’s been blind since birth, but Ken has never let that get in his way. 
He is truly one of America's most inspirational performers. [Biographical information is correct as of 
the broadcast date noted above.]

"New Beginnings" 
Wherever you are watching this, I invite you declare that place a holy place. Any place can be a holy 
place. In a holy place wonders can happen!
               

Sanctus

Let’s go up into a holy place;
Let’s go up into a dreaming space;
Visions coming like a summer rain
‘Til the garden comes alive again.

Shall we see the tongues of fire?
Shall we hear the great wind roar?
Shall we know the awe and wonder
That we’ve only glimpsed before?
Shall we know the awesome presence
That can make us laugh and weep?
Shall we know the pain of waiting?
When for so long we’ve been asleep.

Let’s go up into a holy place;
Let’s go up into a dreaming space;
Visions coming like a summer rain
‘Til the garden comes alive again.

Shall we know the hungry longing
Of the child at mother’s breast?
Shall we drink ‘til there’s no wanting
Only all consuming rest?
Shall we leap with boundless pleasure
Across the forest and the fields?
Shall we search for buried treasure
That sacred soil her bounties yield?

Let’s go up into a holy place;
Let’s go up into a dreaming space;
Visions coming like a summer rain
‘Til the garden comes alive again.

Shall we learn the ancient music
From the ever moving throng?
And from those who’ve gone before us
Shall we learn this journey’s song?
Shall we come to wisdom’s portal?
Shall we bask in wisdom’s light?
And though the flames may burn and sear us
Shall we not shine like stars at night?

Let’s go up into a holy place;
Let’s go up into a dreaming space;
Visions coming like a summer rain
‘Til the garden comes alive again.

So here’s the scene for our story: Jesus is teaching in the Temple, and all at once there’s a ruckus, 
a noise. Everybody looks around to see what the ruckus is, and suddenly a woman is dragged into 
Jesus’ presence, maybe kicking and screaming—I don’t know—but she’s dragged there beyond her will. 
The leaders of the Jews are about to make an angry, conflict situation come alive here. Watch what 
Jesus does and watch how Jesus gives this woman a new beginning. She was caught in the very act 
of adultery. The story is told from her perspective. It starts like this:

               

A Place of Beginning Again (John 8: 1-11)

I remember the day when they knocked on the door and they dragged me to my feet.
What to my wondering eyes should appear but the leaders of the Jews.
In just a moment, the whole thing was clear and I shouted, "My God, I’ve been used!"

Listen, lady, we understand you’ve been playing with somebody else’s man!
We need bait and you’d nicely do. Cooperate or we’ll throw the book at you!
Listen, lady, this is the plan: we’re gonna catch us a Galilean teacher man.
We will bring him the likes of you and we’ll ask him what in the world to do.

It won’t matter what he tries to say, it won’t matter because we’re gonna get the fellow either way. Ha ha!
If he says stone you like the law declares, then his crowd is gonna leave him and we won’t have a care.
If he says to let you go, we’ve got him in a trap for contradicting Moses’ law, he’ll have to take the rap.
Listen, lady, come with us. Shut your mouth and don’t you dare put up a fuss!

So they took me straight to Jesus and they told him all my story.
Can you imagine those people all standing there looking at me, wagging their tongues, saying:
"Stone her! Stone her! Stone her! Stone her! Stone her!"
"Wait, just a minute!" said one of the Pharisees. "All must be done in order!"
So they came to Jesus and they said:
Oh, good teacher, what shall we do? (Oh, what shall we do?)
Oh, good rabbi, we’ve come to you (Oh, we’ve come to you)
This woman was caught, adultery was her crime.
She should be stoned! (Be stoned)
She should be stoned until she’s dead!

"Stone her then! Stone her then! But let the sinless one throw the very first stone!"
He bent down and with his hand he began to write something in the sand.
One by one they all backed away.
"So where are your accusers now?" he said.
"Why, no one stands accusing you; then I don’t accuse you either," he said.
"Go your way, go your way, go your way and sin no more!"

There’s a place it’s as clean as a mountain stream,
That’s as bright as an April morn.
There’s a place for rebuilding a shattered dream,
There’s a place where hope is reborn.

It’s a place that is open to all this day;
It’s a place for all women and men;
It’s a place that is only a step away;
It’s a place of beginning again.
Beginning again.

Lydia Talbot: Ken Medema with New Beginnings. You’ve touched the spots of our soul, Ken! 
You’ve been blind since birth and yet your vision is clearer and more imaginative than most sighted people.

Ken Medema: You say very kind things!

Talbot: Where do those images come to you? Dreaming a vision that is like a summer rain.

Medema: I use a lot of visual imagery in the stuff I do. I suppose because I am intrigued with words. 
I love words. And I love visual words. And though I don’t see the things you do, I have my own associations 
with visual words. When you say red, I have an association with it. When you say blue, I have an association. When you say azure sky, when you say green forests, I have an association. So, I may not mean the same things you do when I use visual words, but sometimes they’re the most powerful words to convey the meaning. And because I love words so much, I love to play with words. I want to use every single possible word at my disposal!

Talbot: You play with them and you’re provocative. You go places that are not comfortable, as your mission 
in the Brier Patch music company states. And you take us there in this collection of Biblical stories.

Medema: Well, it’s so important to me, this whole idea of new beginnings, that notion that people don’t have 
to be stuck in the rut where they are. I’ve seen this happen so often, a lot of times among people who are disabled or who feel like they’ve been given a bad rap, or given a bad deal by society. So I think there’s this 
idea that’s so resident in the faith about "you don’t have to be stuck there." There is a new possibility. 
You can make a change, make a turn, go a different way.

Talbot: You sang that holy places are wherever you happen to be. There are possibilities wherever you are.

Medema: Moses found a holy place out in the middle of nowhere at a bush. Zacheus found a holy place 
up in a dog-gone tree, for goodness sake! Martha, busy Martha, always cooking, finds a holy place in her 
living room where her life is turned around and she discovers she doesn’t always have to be cooking. 
Sometimes she can sit and chill!

Talbot: The poet Emily Dickinson said: "The road to paradise is not far, I travel it into my soul everyday." 
Is that what you do, Ken?

Medema: I don’t know if I would be that sort of "elevated" about it, but I do feel like my life is a blessed life, 
is a gifted life. I do feel like there are people around me and situations around me where I am enabled to 
see and hear new possibilities. And I am very grateful, both to my Creator and also to the wonderful people 
who have surrounded me, who have given me all these opportunities. It’s pretty exciting!

Talbot: Our audience, of course, knows you as a guest, but also you are the composer of the theme music 
for this program. How did that come to you?

Medema: Well, they needed new theme music and I had done some shows, so they said let’s do it. 
They told me how much time we needed, the kinds of sounds we needed. We want something sort of "churchish" but not really. But it has to have tradition, but not really. It has to be sort of old and new. 
So I put together a lot of sounds on a synthesizer, which was one of the older synthesizers back about 
fifteen years ago now, I guess. Then I composed the little melody in my head, did all the parts in my head, 
did all the instruments in my head, and then went to a studio with the keyboard. One by one we laid down 
the parts, all the bells and whistles, and the little solo things, and the drums. We laid down the parts and 
mixed it and there we were!

Talbot: Well, we are connected with that and we’re connected with you. Share with us some more music, 
Ken Medema.

               

Here and Now

I’ve been waiting, can’t wait any longer.
Don’t have time for these detours any more.
I’m getting restless, feelings getting stronger,
And I know I must go where I dared not got before.
Now I see it, looking like a throughway,
And it leads me places I’ve never, never been.
Time to travel, travel down a new way.
Turning the corner and this is the way I begin.
Here and now, I know that I can change my life.
I will rearrange my life and turn it right around.
Here and now, I’ll take a new direction, yes I will!
I’m on my way, headed for higher ground.
I’m on my way, now I am freedom bound.
I see people caught between the falling rocks
Maybe driving down a dead-end street with no way through.
Life gets dreary between the rock slides and the road blocks.
Well, maybe when you’re driving around,
You don’t do what you know you gotta do.
Now I see it, it’s looking like a highway.
It leads me over the rough and treacherous land.
Now I see it, and I think it’s going my way.
Got my map on the dash and I’m taking the wheel in my hand.
Here and now, I know that I can change my life.
I can rearrange my life and turn it right around (right around, right around).
Here and now, I’ll take a new direction. You bet I will.
I’m on my way, headed for higher ground.
I’m on my way, now I am freedom bound.
Watching out for the mountains and the valleys,
Bright eyes peeled for the signs along the way.
Stopping everyday to read the instructions again,
It’s a long, hard road, but it leads to a better day.

Here and now, I know that I can change my life.
I will rearrange my life and turn it right around. You bet I will.
Here and now, I’ll take a new direction. So, so sure.
I’m on my way, headed for higher ground.
I’m on my way, now I am freedom bound.
I’m on my way, know that I am freedom bound.

Talbot: Ken, Medema, what an inspiration!
  


 

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