Art is more engaging that propaganda.

Outside of Christ, my songs have no value

I never felt part of the Christian industry.

I wonder who would lead us if none of us would vote.

The Beatles said 'all you need is love,' then they broke up.

I can't improve on how the Bible expresses itself, so I don't even try.

If they aren't going to advance God's kingdom, I don't care to help them advance their kingdom.

All music written by a Christian should be as integrated as everything else done by a Christian.

We need worship for our spirit, fellowship for our soul and committed subservience for our body.

Don't ask me for answers, I've only got one. That a man leaves the darkness, when he follows the Son.

Look deep inside, and when you locate the sadness, give it a vacation, and focus on the simple things.

My music was too religious for the rock and roll stores and too rock and roll for the religious stores.

I never sent promotional copies to Christian radio stations in my life. It's not what I'm interested in.

I think we should all be servants. To be really great in God's eyes is to be least among each other and serve each other.

I love God and I follow Jesus but I just don't have much affinity for the organized folderol of the churches in the Western World.

I'm only here on Earth to serve God. I never had a career. I don't care about commercialism. I have a ministry and I'll fight for the ministry.

I know I stand visibly onstage, but my function is still unseen, because I rarely see the immediate results of what I am saying or doing or writing.

Jesus got me through the slums without getting murdered. I just walked with him as though he were really there and not a spirit just floating around.

Christians don't seem to be as aware of, or as sensitive to, the dire state of humanity as they are about the pleasant growth of their Christian walk.

Only in a concert situation do I have access to people directly to preach to them, and I don't believe that the bigger your platform is, the more people will pay attention.

I don't see the point in being a star - it takes a lot of energy to carry yourself off as being more perfect than somebody else. I'd rather just be available with all my weaknesses.

I'm fishing for men with a certain kind of bait, and the bait that I am offering is not a candy; it's a very specific thing that I'm offering, which is a deep gospel and a deep conversion.

I want to encourage other people to try to discover who they are, not to try to fit into some superficial prototype of what they think a Christian should be, but to discover who they really are.

Gospel songs to me are about the mansion in the sky, and washed in the blood of Christ's crimson blood, songs that are filled with biblical wording that's no longer understood by a lot of people.

I don't know how people can easily remain Christian if they get no fellowship. They may be able to do it intellectually, but part of the body of man is composed of spirit and parts of soul and of flesh.

The churches weren't going to accept me looking like a street person with long hair and faded jeans. They did not like the music I was recording. And I had no desire to preach the gospel to the converted.

I don't live my life as a Christian with trepidation, feeling that perhaps I've failed to give the best gospel possible on each occasion, but realising that God's taking care of a lot through his Holy Spirit.

I feel that Christian music is a subculture directed towards the Christians. It's not really being exposed to non-Christians and it's not really created for non-Christians, so non-Christians almost never hear any of this music.

Apparently God makes us all different. Some of us are happy to respond to His individual touch on our lives by remaining individuals, and others of us are intimidated or frightened into trying to become like each other so that we have company, so that we don't feel so lonely.

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