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Home: T : Twila
Paris : Biography
Biography (courtesy of Sparrow Records)
Twila Paris doesn't spend a lot of time
looking back at 22 years of success as a songwriter and recording
artist. Despite 32 No. 1 songs, five Dove Awards, three American
Songwriter Awards, three books published and more than 2
million albums sold, the numbers don't mean much to her.
Whether it's in music, ministry, marriage or motherhood,
for Twila, true success isn't about numbers. It's about faithfulness. "My
dad once said, 'The definition of success is simple: God's
faithfulness plus my faithfulness equals success.' Of course,
God's faithfulness is a given; the only variable is my faithfulness.
So no matter what you appear to accomplish or whether people
think you're successful or not, it all comes down to that."
Throughout her career as an artist
and songwriter, a huge component of that standard has been
in giving songs of worship back to the church as an offering
for the One who has always been faithful to her. On each
of her 17 previous albums, the songs that have resonated
most with listeners have been those that have a definitive
worship aspect. Songs like "We
Will Glorify" and "He Is Exalted" have transcended
the music business, making their way into the hymnody of
the church, forever captured in time in hymnals all over
the world.
Worship is a calling and a privilege
she doesn't take lightly. "To
be called to minister through music is such a wonderful gift
from God. To be given the gift itself is amazing, but to
write and sing music for the glory of God, fulltime, as your
life's work is an incredible privilege. … That my
songs are used by the Church is one of the most fulfilling
aspects of my work. I know worship songs have an eternal
value, a higher purpose than I could've imagined. I'm just
the instrument through which He has moved."
When the time came to record her 18th album, Twila simply
couldn't shake the idea of eternity of Christians across
time and space bowing down and worshiping God in one accord.
She knew it was time to record a complete worship album,
something she hadn't done since 1991's Sanctuary.
"Over the years, God has made worship a constant thread
in my life and music, always responding to my times of personal
worship in presence and power," Twila says. "When
I look back over the music, worship songs are sprinkled here
and there, on various projects, just as they came." As
she struggled through the exhaustion and all the questions
that come with being a new mother, Twila found it impossible
to approach her craft as she had in the past. She had to
focus on higher things.
"After the birth of J.P., I found myself in that place
of wondering whether I'd write again, which created an anxiety
in me. I was forced to be away from my instrument, so I couldn't
rely on the chords I'd always fallen back on, which made
the writing processa new challenge." The result, she
says, is different, distinctive and fresh.
Produced by Brown Bannister (Michael W. Smith, Amy Grant),
House of Worship is more than another album in a sea of new
music for worship. It is a lyrical homecoming of a true worship
music pioneer, a compelling, collection of songs for today
born out of personal worship encounters with God. With a
distinctively organic production and profound yet simple
lyrics, these songs paint with broad strokes and brilliant
colors the faithfulness, worthiness and preeminence of God.
"God of All," the album's upbeat call to worship,
sets the tone for the entire effort. "It's one of those
songs, like so many of David's Psalms, that focuses on the
attributes of God." Twila says. "It's faith turned
upward, joyfully." The three songs that follow – "We
Bow Down," "You Are God" and "For Eternity" – keep
the focus heavenward.
Emotive and piano-driven, "Make Us One" is a bold
and passionate prayer for God to unify His children in love
and holiness. "It's something I feel God wants to remind
us of at this moment in time," she says of the song.
He is calling us to be one body. I hope that as we sing it,
we'll open up those darker corners of our lives to God and
allow Him to teach us to love."
Two big bonuses on House of Worship
are the re-recorded versions of Paris' classics "We Bow Down" and "We
Will Glorify," which not only prove these songs as timeless
as the day they were written, but also reveal how much more
relevant they become in a more modern setting, with the benefit
of vocal richness that comes with maturity.
Without the fanfare or interruptions
of a live album, without artistic pretense or spiritual
cliché, House of Worship
accomplishes what so few worship albums do. It draws individual
listeners away from the distractions of life and self, toward
Christ, the Savior and sustainer of all. And at the same
time provides vibrant, new songs for corporate expression,
appropriate for traditional, blended and even more modern
worship settings. It is worship, full of spirit and ripe
with truth.
For Twila Paris, who has been at the
forefront of contemporary worship for over two decades,
House of Worship signifies a bold new step in the same
direction, and yet plenty has changed. "I can't recall a time when I was more excited
about what God is doing through worship than I am right now," Twila
says. "We are living in a season in which God has been
reigniting a passion for worship in His people. There's a
new passion in the body of Christ for worship. There is a
greater understanding of the heart of worship, and more of
an effort to really worship in spirit and in truth.
"God uses worship to heal us, to win battles in the
spiritual realm, to draw those who don't know Him, to encourage
His children to refocus, to prepare, to realign our priorities
and ultimately to change us and make us more like Him. But
all these reasons are secondary. Worship is not about what
we get out of it. At the end of the day, we only need one
reason. We worship Him because He is worthy. We worship Him
for who He is. … And if no other reason existed, that
would be enough."
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