Copeland – No One Really Wins Lyrics | 12 years ago |
From Oct. 2009 interview with CircleSixMagazine.com - http://circlesixmagazine.com/?p=82 - C6M: Another lyric I was wondering about was in the first track; there’s a line about “the endless fight between grace and pride.” What were your thoughts behind that? Aaron: This song has a pretty ambiguous meaning, but it’s also kind of indirectly about the church. Mainly with their stance on — geez I don’t even know if I should get into it… C6M: Go ahead. Aaron: Well the church’s stance on homosexuality. . . . Aaron: I just believe that there’s a place in the church for everyone. That’s pretty much what the song was talking about. I don’t want to get too much into it, but it’s basically about being accepting. The line, “change if you want / but don’t you go and change for me / I will love you as you are / I didn’t mean to make you want to leave,” pretty much that’s just about…if you believe homosexuality is wrong but you want to love people, you can’t just sit there and tell them, “I’m not going to love you until you change.” |
Copeland – No One Really Wins Lyrics | 12 years ago |
Actually, according to Aaron Marsh in an interview at CircleSixMagazine.com it is. See my post for Aaron's exact reply. |
Brand New – Jesus Christ Lyrics | 14 years ago |
Source/link please? I'd like to read the original interview as well as its always the right thing to do to cite the source/link. |
Brand New – Jesus Christ Lyrics | 14 years ago |
"Would a Christian rock band admit to having the devil inside them?" A lot do if you are talking about struggling with sin or a wicked nature, duality. |
Thrice – Wood and Wire Lyrics | 14 years ago |
??? Max Cady was guilty; he has mad at his lawyer for not helping him avoid being convicted. He also was never on death row. |
Thrice – In Exile Lyrics | 14 years ago |
This song makes me think of U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name." |
Thrice – In Exile Lyrics | 14 years ago |
It's about the afterlife and that this life and our understanding is not all there is and having realized these things one will always feel "out of place" in life but everything will be resolved and our understanding complete in the next life. Others have gone into very accurate dissections of the many allusions to Christian text and symbolism that the lyrics constantly reference. Upon hearing this song and understanding the lyrics I thought of U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name." |
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