I was immediately transported into the awesome, awful presence of God.
It was one of those moments you can't create; and often come unbidden.
I had just been minding my own business; not necessarily feeling very spiritual.
And all that happened was I was overheard Chester's prayer.
"..Let mercy come..." he kept crying out; alluding to and confessing shame and guilt; vowing transparently to forgive himself and move on.
"Let mercy wash away what I've done," he confessed out loud; very loud.
It was such a personal, vulnerable outpouring that I almost felt voyeuristic overhearing it; but I also couldn't help feeling it with him; appropriating, amening and praying it myself.
You have had experinces like that; when a fellow believer is just so fearless yet open and broken before God that you recocgnize the honest and huge holiness of what is happening in the atmosphrere; you are inevitaby drawn into a deeper realm of prayer and worship; even holy anxiety and angst...just by daring to be ruthlessly honest; a "My God, why have you forsaken me..." statement of
"I'm hanging on...I think" faith.
About the voyeuristic part; don't worry, I wasn't snooping in on a private prayer time in a "house of God" or private home; nor was I hiding in a confessional booth.
I was just listening to, and watching, Chester

pour out his gutwrenching offering to God. Just him and God..
And me.
And the maybe million people also watching.
It was prayer indeed, but I didn't mention it was in the form of a song.
Sung at the House of Blues in Los Angeles.
As part of the Jimmy Kimmel Show, broadcast around the world Friday night.
And I never said anywhere that Chester was a Christian.
He may well be.
The rumor is that many, if not most, of his bandmates in the group Linkin Park are.
(Do some homework googling band interviews on the topis if you like, but remember as Beth Maynard has well said, that itself can be voyeuristic)Some web forums say every last one is a believer...except maybe for Chester...
..the singer, priest, worship leader who was unabashedly, unpologetically belting out for all he was worth:
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.
Let Mercy come...
Resolutely doing his laundry in public; offering full-out sacrifice and wrestling with God
psalms ; yearning desperately for healing; covenanting with God, Jimmy Kimmel, House of Blues, and me:
I'll start again,
And whatever pain may come,
Today this ends,
I’m forgiving what I’ve done.
Wow, I thought: If only most Christians of a more traditional tribe "got" that forgiving oneself is so crucial to feeling "mercy has washed me clean".
Maybe it's just a song to Chester Bennington.
But I doubt it.
Watch the broadcast yourself below (pausing at the end of the song...two minute mark... so you can watch the second song later..I'll explain later). I realize of course, that due to varying mujsic preference and awareness of the band may cause some to say "What's Dave talking about? I got nothing out of that!":
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