This
Mother’s Day, I give thanks for Johnny Cash’s mother Carrie. She said to Johnny at age 15: "You've got a gift, JR. You're going to
sing. God's got his hand on you. You're going to carry the message of Jesus
Christ." Cash saw the song ‘I walk
the Line’ as his first Gospel hit. He
sang it not just to his wife, but also to God. His mother Carrie always believed in her son
even through the worst of his addictions.
Sadly Johnny’s alcoholic father did not know how to bless his son. When his older brother died tragically, his
father unfairly blamed Johnny, saying “Too bad it wasn’t you instead of Jack.”
Johnny
Cash was a seventeen-time Grammy winner who sold more than 90 million albums in
his lifetime. But his life was full of
tragedy and heartbreak. Johnny Cash
self-medicated for much of his musical career, saying: “You know, I've had my
years in the wilderness, had my years when the demons crawled up my back. That
was only when the drugs started, and they've gone away now...I had to finally
accept it, you know, that God thought there was something worth saving, so who
was I to say, 'You're wrong?.' I had to accept it and go along with it, and
that's what I did." Cash said that he used drugs to escape but it devastated
him, making it impossible to communicate with God. Amphetamines and alcohol were literally
killing him. Cash admitted: “you're on
the suicide track when you're doing what I was doing.”
Cash's music spoke up for the voiceless, the
rejected, the abandoned, and the prisoner.
Who can forget when he did a live album in Folsom Prison? Time Magazine
said that “Cash and his songs are rooted in the basic of country life: the
land, lost loves, wanderlust, the seasons, lonely trains hooting across the
still prairie night, preachers, prison and Sweet Jesus and home sweet
home."
A
major part of his recovery was the relentless love of his wife June Carter Cash.
Johnny Cash
said of June: “She loves me in spite of everything, in spite of
myself...She's always been there with her love and it certainly made me forget
the pain for a long time many times.” June often flushed his drugs down the
toilet, and prayed for him when he was near death with an overdose. She and Johnny’s mother were there waiting
for him when he pulled out of a suicidal tailspin at Nickajack Cave near
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Another
key to Johnny Cash’s recovery was the loyal friendship of Billy Graham. John Carter said: "When my father fell
short, he could always reach out to Billy Graham. Billy didn't judge my father. He was there as his friend
unconditionally. Billy would lift him
up, support him and say, 'You can do this. Stand back up. You know who you
are.'” He and June would eventually share
and sing at nearly three dozen Billy Graham Crusades in front of nearly two
million people.
Many
people don’t know that Cash wrote a novel about the apostle Paul, saying: “If
God could embrace an avowed and bloodthirsty enemy of his son Jesus Christ,
he'd make a place for Johnny Cash."
Few were aware that he was an ordained minister, even performing
weddings, including one for his daughter
Kathy. Johnny Cash commented: “The
Master of Life's been good to me...He gives me strength to face past illnesses,
and victory in the face of defeat. He
has given me life and joy where others saw oblivion.”
In
the last ten years of his life, Johnny Cash came back to his creative roots and
was rediscovered by the younger generation of musicians. Bono of U2 commented: "To me, Johnny
Cash --with all his contradictions-- was a quintessential character of the
scriptures, or at least of the characters in the Bible that interested me. If
God had time for these flawed characters, then God had time for me.” Bono said
that he would rather spend a day with Johnny Cash than a week with most other
pop artists. Bob Dylan said: “Listen to (Cash) and he always brings you to your
senses. He rises high above all, and he 'll never die or be forgotten, even by
persons not born yet --especially those persons...” As an artist, Johnny Cash
wanted to make records that made a difference.
Johnny
Cash finished well. His last producer
Rick Rubin drew out that which was best and truest about Johnny Cash,
particularly in the video Hurt.
Cash noted: "Rick saw something in me that I didn't know was there
anymore.” Johnny Cash rediscovered what made him tick musically. Rick Rubin
commented: "When I asked artists what they admired about Cash, that's what
they often mentioned --that vulnerable, hurt aspect, that man who wouldn't give
up." Bono said that Hurt was perhaps the best video ever
made. It was raw and real. Cash’s unshakable faith in Christ shone
through this remarkable video. His
daughter Rosanne commented: “It's so unflinching and
brave and that's what you
are. I thought it was an enormously courageous . It was a work of art,
excruciatingly truthful."
My
prayer for those reading this article is that we like Johnny Cash may finish
well, that we may be creative and faithful until the end of our lives.
The
Rev. Dr. Ed Hird, Rector
St.
Simon’s Church North Vancouver
Anglican
Mission in the Americas (Canada)
-an article for the May 2014 Deep Cove Crier
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Guide
(1) Robert Hilburn,
Johnny Cash: the Life ( Little, Brown & Company,
New York, NY, 2013), p. 23.
(2) Hilburn, p. 104.
(3) Hilburn, p. 20.
(4) Reinhard Kleist,Johnny Cash: I See
the Darkness (Abrams ComiArts, New York, NY,
2009), p. inside Cover
(5) Johnny Cash: My Mother’s Hymn
Book CD and notes, p. 15.
(6) Cash by the Editors of Rolling Stone, edited by
Jason Fine (Crown Publishing, New York, NY, 2004 ), p. 162-163.
(7) John Carter Cash , House of Cash: The
Legacies of My Father Johnny Cash.
( Insight Editions , San Rafael , CA, 2011), p. 73.
(8) Cash, edited by Jason Fine, p. 205.
(9) Michael Streissguth, Johnny Cash at
Folsom Prison: the making of a masterpiece (Da
Capo Press, Cambridge, MA, 2004), pp. 13, 27.
(10) Hilburn, p. 363.
(11) Hilburn, p. 606.
(12) Hilburn, p. 370, p. 375.
(13) Hilburn, p. 506.
(14) John Carter Cash, p. 59.
(15) Johnny Cash: American
III: Solitary Man, 2000, CD liner.
(16) Cash, edited by Jason Fine, p. 139.;Hilburn, p. 538.
(17) Hilburn, p. 628.
(18) Cash, edited by Jason Fine, p. 149.
(19) Hilburn, p. 546.
(20) Hilburn, p. 629.
(21) Hilburn, p. 603.
2 comments:
Thank you Ed, for this -- another excellent biographical sketch. You've brought Johnny Cash up close, warm and personal, and provided a 'Technicolor encounter' with The Man in Black (contradictory as that juxtaposition sounds).
Your presentation of this story magnifies the grace of Father God. ~~+~~
Hello Ed. Wondering if you could email me with your correct email address, please, sir? I need to speak with you. Thanks. gbelec@bell.net.
P.S. Love Johnny Cash! :)
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