Aaron and Amanda Crabb “Mercy” Album Review
No seminary or Bible College prepares us to minister with
more pastoral sensitivity than the school of hard knocks. Suffering offers us a first-class tutelage
that affects us beyond the cognitive. By
God’s mercy, sufferings can often soften us to be more malleable towards God
and His Word; as a result, our entire being changes. We begin to exude affectibility towards God
and hurting that is more compassionate, loving and contagious. This is the impression one gets when
listening to Aaron and Amanda Crabb’s “Mercy.”
The Crabbs themselves have seen their own share of sufferings. On the night of the 2009 Dove Awards, while
Aaron and Amana Crabb were driving to the show, Amanda received a shocker of a
call from their nanny. Their 2 year-old
daughter Eva had just fallen off a 15-feet high two storey window; she had landed
on an air-conditioned unit below covered entirely in blood. When fellow artist
and friend Donnie McClurkin received the news, in the middle of the Dove Awards,
he even paused to pray for Eva and the Crabb Family.
After a tumultuous time of having to witness their two
year-old screaming in a bloody mess, Aaron and Amanda had to hold on to Eva so
that a proper CT scan could be administered.
By God’s grace, Eva not only did not suffer any broken bones or internal
injuries, she looked like she was just scarped herself falling on the sidewalk. Yet, the experience was monumental in the spiritual
formation of the couple’s lives. And
such an added heft of spiritual gravitas is heard right through these songs
especially the album opener “If I’m Guilty.”
Setting the theme of the record “If I’m Guilty” is a propulsive
country-flavored toe-tapper that finds Aaron basking in God’s unending
mercy. Mercy empties its emotional
quotient on Jeff Ferguson and Reggie Stone’s “God Loves the Broken.” The crackles in Amanda’s falsetto pack so
much punch that we can’t help but fight back our tears as she wrestles with us
in our desperation for God.
“Guide Me,” one of 6 songs written or co-written by the
Crabb couple, is a gorgeous piano cum strings ballad that has both the vintage
charm of a hymn and the contemporary nuances of a power ballad. Being worship
leaders at John Hagee’s San Antonia’s Cornerstone Church, the Crabb allow us to
see them in action with the worship anthem “Holy.” Though “Holy” is not really earth shattering,
it’s good to see them stepping out of their bounds to tackle something
different. But remember to schlep an
umbrella when the Crabbs step into the shoes of the prophet Elijah in calling
for rain in the midst of a drought on the Gospel infused “It’s Gonna Rain.” This
is indeed a mountain-moving song at its best.
Never parochial, producers Ben Isaacs and Aaron Crabb have even serviced
“I’m Learning,” a paean to self improvement and betterment, to contemporary
country radio.Inspired by their trip to Israel where after Amanda prayed for inspiration at the Western Wall, “Take Him to the Place” was born. Never relegating the Cross and the resurrection of Jesus as a mere event in history, “Take Him to the Place” is a beautiful illustration of how Christ can still transform the dead things in our lives back to life. “Mercy” in many ways is like Aaron and Amanda Crabb’s own diary set to music. In the light of what they had been through over the last few years, you can hear their struggles, their season of drought and their own frustrations. But on this record, you will also witness how they have overcome with God’s mercy, God’s provision of rain and how through the resurrection of Christ brings dead things back to life.
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