Especially when the worship leader delivers the patter in a half-snarled, half-whispered mutter, as if he’s letting you in on the secret of something dangerous - which he is: Aslan’s not safe, after all, just good. And, when the song is sung at proper tempo ( no slower than Mullins himself performed it), the rapid-fire, syncopated sixteenth-note patter creates an effect that surpasses its individual words. God as God not just of happy, shiny, fluffy things, but also of the storm. (“Eden” rhymes with “be believin’” - really?) The patter does, though, address themes often left out of “Jesus is my boyfriend”-style worship songs. Awesome God alternates patter in the verses with an expansive chorus, and the patter is hardly scintillating prose, much less verse. To be fair, the lyrics get better from there: “There is THUNder in His footsteps / And lightnin’ in His fists.” Although not by much. Mullins himself considered Awesome God something of a failure, remarking, “the thing I like about Awesome God is that it’s one of the worst-written songs that I ever wrote it’s just poorly crafted.” And yet it’s a song many of us remember fondly. And yet, that’s how Richard Mullins’s best-known song, Awesome God opens. Nobody rolling up their sleeves is “puttin’ on the Ritz.” The rolled-up sleeve-position used for manual labor is the opposite of the sleeve-position used for an old-fashioned fancy night out. “When He rolls up His sleeves / He ain’t just puttin’ on the Ritz” must be one of the least promising ways to begin a worship song ever.
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