Produced and Arranged by: Phil Keaggy and Jeff LamsĮlectric, Acoustic guitars and Bass – Phil KeaggyĪcoustic Piano and Synthesizers – Jeff Lams In humility, we learn to both reach out for help and reach out to help. As travelers of the same path, we are to bear one another’s burdens because there will be times when our load will seem too much to bear. Though we find ourselves alone at times, our encounters with our brethren bring us courage, comfort, and the will to hold fast to that which is good. Mixed by Jim Scheffler, Phil Keaggy, and Tom Coomes at Bill Schnee Studioĭeveloped in the studio with my friend Jeff Lams, the song speaks of the need we have to be in fellowship with friends who share our pilgrimage. The wind and other elements of nature bend but don’t break us as we keep looking and growing heavenward.Įngineers – Chris Taylor and Jim Scheffler During these experiences, we - symbolized by the wheat – are nurtured and watered, given sunshine and care. Having been born anew by the eternal seed planted within, we nevertheless face the winds of various trials and testings. The circle speaks of and reflects our continual process of growth in Christ. ![]() Inspired by harp styles both past and present, the song is a continuous circle that always changes colors while remaining the same. It offers the calm and steady hope of peace and contentment of the lion lying down with the lamb.Īrranged by: Phil Keaggy and Harlan RogersĮngineers – Jim Scheffler and Eddie Keaggy The song offers a sense of a place where there is no cruelty, no war, no sickness, no death, no sadness. ![]() Its aural image of clouds encircling the earth and crossing the sky stirs up the New Testament image of the triumphant procession of those whom the Son has redeemed.Īrranged and Produced by: Phil Keaggy and Jeff LamsĮlectric and Acoustic guitars – Phil KeaggyĮngineers – Jim Scheffler, Eddie Keaggy, and Chris Taylor Based on this call to victory, “March of the Clouds” opens The Wind and the Wheat. “Since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the race this is set before us” (Hebrews 12:1). As I hear it, The Wind and the Wheat reveals a great longing of those of us who have reached deep within ourselves to believe in the promise of eternal life which God wants to give us. childish, of course.There is a message to be conveyed in song. Looking back on the argument, Anne wrote: ‘Pfeffer looked very sullen, didn’t talk to me for two days and made a point of sitting at the table from 5 to 5.30 anyway. Eventually, Fritz gave in, but he did so reluctantly. Things got so heated that Anne asked her father to intervene. ‘Stay calm, this fellow isn’t worth worrying your head about!’ ![]() ![]() Anne was enraged and calm at the same time. He felt that Anne’s work was not important, unlike his study of Spanish, Dutch, and English. When Anne indicated that she would like to divide the time at the table more evenly, so that they could both work in peace, Fritz refused. Their main conflict had to do with the writing desk. The first signs of friction were soon to follow. At the same time, Fritz Pfeffer had a hard time dealing with Anne, a rebellious teenager. It was not easy for Anne to share her small room with a man as old as her father.
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