From Generation to Generation So we, Your people and sheep of Your pasture, will give You thanks forever; we will show forth Your praise to all generations. Psalm 79:13 Melodies of the Past Harry Bollback, the subject of the interview, poses for a picture on the piano. “ Music has always played a very important part at Word of Life.” Harry Bollback “It wasn’t that we decided to bring music in from the very beginning; music has always played a very important part at Word of Life. When I joined Word of Life in 1941, Jack would play a trombone solo, and I would play a piano solo. We would teach everybody a chorus, and that was our meeting. So from day one Jack loved music. When we got the Island, we began to put out a Word of Life songbook every year. Jack would get a new chorus, and I would write some - music has always been a great part of the ministry at Word of Life.” Do Something About It “When the Bible Institute started, they formed a group of singers called the Collegians. I believe somebody from Tennessee Temple came, and down there they were called Collegians, so we adopted the name. In 1975, Jack asked me if I would take the Collegians out to the Christmas program. They were doing a program called “The Living Christmas Tree”, but it wasn’t much of a living Christmas tree! They stood on the riser, and they held this string of lights and somebody would plug the lights in every once in a while. I was scared to death somebody would get electrocuted under those crazy Christmas lights, and when I got back Jack asked me, ‘What do you think?’ I said, ‘Boy, doesn’t sound like Word of Life - sounds kind of hokey.’ He said, ‘Why don’t you do something about it?’ I said, ‘Like what?’ He said, ‘Like write a Christmas program.’ I said, ‘Wow, gee, I never tried anything like that, but let me think about it.’ That was in December of 1975. In 1976, which was the bicentennial anniversary of the United States, I decided to write the patriotic musical called “Let Freedom Ring”. I had never seen a Broadway show so I didn’t know anything about a production. I had studied music, but I didn’t like music - and I did all these songs! Christine Wyrtzen - she was married to Jack’s younger son Ron - she had just graduated with a degree in music, so I said to her, ‘Christine, how would you like to write the arrangements for this show?’ She said, ‘I’ve never written arrangements.’ I said, ‘I’ve never written any shows, so here we go.’ “ Christine wrote the arrangements. They went on the road in the spring of 1976. The reaction was phenomenal - anywhere from twenty to twenty-five thousand people came to see the program. This response prompted Harry to take the same program out in the fall of that year. Over ninety thousand people came - “And it all started when Jack said do something about it! I have to tell you this because this whole thing has to be of God; we had nothing to do with it - we didn’t know anything!” Harry followed up this success with the Christmas program “Ring The Bells.” It was so successful that when Word of Life published the cantata they sold over one hundred thousand copies and in sheet music over a million copies were sold. Harry Bollback and Jack Wyrtzen Every year Harry wrote another production. It wasn’t till later that Harry realized how many people attended the various gospel productions. “When I was putting together the archives up at Heritage Hall that’s when I recognized that more than two million people came, and I called Millie and said, ‘Hey Millie, you know you’re talking to somebody rather important’. She said, ‘What do you mean?’ I said, ‘I’m like a rock star! Who else talks about more than two million people coming to see a program!’ “It was not only the number of people that came, it was the thousands of people that got saved. The first night we did “The Passion Play”, we did it over in Rochester NY. It was spring, and it snowed, and the truck wouldn’t get over the bridge. I got over there with half the people, gave the first invitation, and more than a hundred people came forward. So that’s the story of the tours, and I want to make sure everybody knows that it’s only the Lord. Jack used this phrase all the time, ‘I being in the way the Lord led me.’ That was the way we operated at Word of Life - when an opportunity came, it happened, we did it. “We would travel from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon to San Diego to Miami. We’d drive about twenty thousand miles every year with the Collegians, tractor trailer, and busses. It was an incredible thing that God brought to pass. That’s the story of music, but Jack had music from day one.” The Team “I developed a wonderful team of guys. I’m a team guy; I do very little by myself - I get all the credit for it, but I don’t do it all. I tell my guys all the time, ‘I feel bad because I get all the credit; you guys do all the work.’ God brought Christine Wyrtzen to start, then Dave Dorman, a student here, he made some of my props. We still used some of them up till last year in The Passion, and we did the first Passion Play in ‘78, and now he makes major production shows all over the world. Then there was Brian Donley, who directed the music for me. Lee Scurlock made over two thousand costumes for our shows. Barbara Davoll worked on the dramatics of all the stories. We brought Derek de Cambra - he worked at the metropolitan company producing shows for major operas - and God put us all together as a team, and these people became some of my very, very best friends. Scotty Freeman, Paul Barney - these guys would move the world for me. They’d do anything, and God used us as a team. I remember the first night after we did The Passion Play, we did it down here at the Bible Institute for the students... we were behind the screen, it was all over, we were just overcome, overwhelmed with In 1976, Harry Bollback wrote the very first WOL gospel production,“Let Freedom Ring”. 94,156 people attended one of the “Let Freedom Ring” concerts. Over the years, more than 2.5 million people have attended a Word of Life Production. kept her out there and at the end we do Jesus on the Throne, the saints in white, the angels and the trumpets...and I said, ‘Come on you’ll want to see this one’ - because the way I would preach, everybody that’s in the auditorium is in one of these scenes. You can be in the Lake of Fire or you can be around the Throne singing Worthy is the Lamb - you make the choice - and that lady got gloriously saved. I think the joy was to see so many people come to Christ and knowing that you’re preaching and teaching the Word of God.” emotion, and I just thank the Lord. So all these people came in and made it all happen. It wasn’t just me having an idea. Maybe my part was the idea, but God brought all the rest of the people together - and we disagreed, because when you work with creative people, everybody’s got an idea, and they were all great. Sometimes we would get pretty feisty with each other, but we stuck together as a team. Now Brian’s gone, Lee Scurlock is with the Lord, Barbara Davoll went to be with the Lord - so they’re slowly disappearing, my team...I think they’re beginning to wonder where I am. I’m living so long here they must be thinking, “Gee, we thought Harry was a Christian and he’s not here.” To Behold His Glory To Harry, one of the best things about the Gospel Productions was the fact that it did what preachers tried to do in so many words - visually portray a scene in the Bible that audiences would otherwise have difficulty understanding. A teacher stood at the pulpit and taught from Books such as Genesis, Daniel, and Revelation and then turned the message over to the Gospel Productions team to bring the scene in the scriptures to life. “We did some incredible scenes. We did the Lake of Fire. We’re doing this scene and Millie had been out with the other people. She was just walking, and a lady comes rushing out saying, ‘I don’t want to see that, I don’t want to see that!’ So Millie Something Different and Unique “I’m glad that they’re going back out on the road again. I think that’s very important for Word of Life to be out on the road; that’s the only way we can advertise what we’re doing. I’m very happy to see them out on this new program with the Magi. Somebody came and talked to me before they did the program and they asked me a lot of questions. I said, ‘You know, I don’t think I can be very helpful to you because God has a unique timing for everything and every person.’ And what we did in the 70’s, 80’s, and 90’s, that was a moment in time, where the world was, where America was, where the church was, where we were. Would any of that work today? I doubt it, I don’t know. But I know we live in a different world. I’m not sure what I would have to say is even relevant for today. America has changed, the church has changed, Christian thinking has changed - but I am aware of this. it’s the same God that I had, and His concern is still for people, so it’s just a matter of finding what the program is and doing it. Sometimes the way I tell stories it seems like we never had any failures, or we never made any mistakes. Well no. As I’ve preached, the only people who don’t make mistakes are the dead. If you’re going to do it, you’re going to make a mistake. Make decisions because if you’re right only fifty percent of the time, that’s a five hundred percent batting average and you’re in a league all by yourself. So I don’t know what kind of program would go today - I have ideas. In 1976 when I started out doing the type of program that we were doing, no one was doing anything like it. Now every church is doing what I did. And what I think - I’m a very progressive thinker Word of Life has to come up with something unique for this generation. We were the leaders; we’ve got to be the leaders again. Everything is media, you know that. I don’t know what it is. You’ve got to come up with something that’s different and unique, then everybody will have a run for five or six years, then everybody will start doing it - that’s my thinking.” Admonition for Success “I’m a firm believer that God gives a particular person a job to do. If you don’t have that person that’s ready to die for the project, I don’t think it flies. In my life, I was dedicated, committed. I had no staff. My secretary and I rented one hundred auditoriums, I did the printing of the brochures, I wrote the show every year, recorded the music, rehearsed - now it takes twenty to thirty people to do it. Was it easy for Millie and I to travel one hundred and twenty days a year? No, but we were committed to it. I did all the letter writing for Word of Life and at the same time, I did all the fundraising, I did all my other meetings. I felt like I personally owned these shows, but I believed that God had put me there, and I’d like to see a guy who is also committed to doing it. If you’re really going to make it fly, it’s not something that you do because someone wrote it. We would talk about this as a team, but it takes a leader. Everything rises and falls on leadership. But I’m happy we’re back on the road. That’s where we belong, that’s Word of Life, my first days with Jack Wyrtzen - that’s Word of Life, traveling every night to a different city. I’m glad we’re back.” “I think Don’s on the right track. I think Word of Life is on the right track, and I believe what they’re doing is right but you’re going to learn by doing. I’m very pleased with where Word of Life is. Don is a great friend to me. I want to be helpful to him; I really believe in him. I’m very committed to Don and the ongoing ministry.” “We’re thinking about writing a book, and Don is the one to write about the future. He said ‘Boy, that’s a tough one.’ I said, ‘No, that’s going to be the easiest.’ He said, ‘What do you mean?’ I said, ‘Don, If you continue to stay true to the Word of God and hold forth the Word of Life, I could write the rest of the story for you. It’s going to be successful, I can guarantee you that.’ I said, ‘I could write it for you if you want me to.’ I think Don is the leader I’m talking about, staying true to the Word of God. God’s gonna bless. It’s a different world - different ideas, different people, different area, that’s alright, because it’s a different world. I think God has raised up Don and this new team of people because they are from this generation. It will all come together, as I told them, it’ll be the most successful chapter of Word of Life history if you keep standing true to the Word of God, holding forth the Word of Life - guaranteed, guaranteed success.” Harry Bollback and Aaron Clark, the interviewer, ask God to raise up innovative leaders to reach this generation in an effective, new way. Ryan Arnold, who directs music at Word of Life, as Harry once did, rehearses with some of his Collegian members, a group that began with Harry. On the Road Again “Word of Life announced in the winter of 2012 that we would no longer be performing the Sights & Sounds of Christmas at the Harry Bollback Performing Arts Center,” says Brandon Arnold of the Music Department in Florida, “but that we would be creating a new show to take on the road.” That show became Magi.” Brandon’s brother in New York, Ryan Arnold, the Music Coordinator of Word of Life Bible Institute, continues this line of thought, “A big part of that was getting back on the road. We’ve been reaching a lot of the the same people every year and we wanted to get Word of Life’s name out on a broader geographical spread. Because Magi is a long tour, we’re able to travel farther than your typical weekend ministry, and that helps us in reconnecting with people we used to know and connecting with brand new people.” Recent Gospel Productions have been anchored in the Harry Bollback Performing Arts Center in Florida. Ryan states that with those productions “People come to you, where you are, but with Magi you’re able to travel out to what’s home for them. You’re on their home field and sharing the message with them there. You get to go to their home churches, you have to adapt to where they are, even trying to learn their culture because it’s not necessarily the same as where you’re from. That was a big part of it, just learning people in order to minister well to them in a way that’s appropriate and in a way that they would understand. That was pretty significant as far as having to be intentional about when we’re communicating this message to people - are we doing it in a way that they understand and in a way that matches their culture?” In this manner, Magi touches its roots with the older Gospel Production plays - tours like Daniel, Revelation, and Ring the Bells - a touch where “rubber meets the road” in a drive to deliver the Gospel across eastern America. However, though Magi and its ancestors share this nomadic spirit, it is a very different animal. Magi travelled with a much smaller group, about twentyfive people, and had much less equipment in tow. Less equipment in Magi meant faster set up time, a relief for the small team. The casting for the show was also different. Whereas in the past staff generally held the main roles, the entire cast was filled with students. The differences in Magi were obvious. As it went into production, a question formed in the back of everyone’s mind: Is it too different? How will audiences respond to something this compact and contemporary compared with the old Gospel Productions? Brandon relates, “Every part of Magi was stressful, because it was all new, and we hadn’t been on the road with a show in over twenty years. We didn’t know if it was going to come together, or if it was going to be good, or if it would be a flop.” When Magi hit the road, Brandon realized his fears were unfounded, because God worked in equal measure to the riches of His grace in Jesus Christ. Brandon continues, “Magi far surpassed all of our expectations. It ended up being incredible, and all the praise goes to God...It was a new and interesting project - audiences didn’t know what to expect. Some were hesitant, because they were used to our big productions and felt that they may be let down with something not as large and produced. Others had seen the old tours, and probably felt like this one would be like the old shows. Everyone was in for a shock, because it was unlike anything we had ever done before. Moving lights, live music with a band, more intimate setting - it was awesome, and I think the “It’s just a totally different take on the Christmas story; I don’t know If I’ve ever seen anything that has taken this approach.” Ryan Arnold audiences were taken aback with the professionalism and intimacy of this particular show. We received many compliments, and I know from observing many tears in the seats that people were moved by the Gospel, and encouraged in their walk with God.” So what did the first showing look like? Ryan gives us an insider’s perspective, “Our first actual performance on the road was in Loudonville, NY, one of the biggest churches that we went to, and it was packed. Everybody was super pumped. We had practiced a lot, but there was still that first time nervousness, but that’s healthy so you pay attention to detail. In our opening song, the first line is ‘shepherds on the hillside,’ and that’s in the first verse, and in the second verse, ‘angels fill the night sky.’ I mixed the two. Instead of the first line, I said, ‘shepherds in the night sky,’ which doesn’t make sense. So that’s how I started it; that was a great way to kick off the first Magi tour.” Though a line went awry, a good cause for a laugh backstage. What defined the show was not so much the enthusiasm of those producing the play as the general reaction of audiences and the message portrayed. Ryan affirms, “You’ve got an entertainment response and then a spiritual response. With the entertainment side we have all these lights and music and it’s fun to see little kids when the lights start flashing on the crowd. Their faces just light up - even adults, you see them forgetting that they’re adults. That was a lot of fun, but obviously the bigger impact is people realizing that they’ve been celebrating Christmas all their lives, but never knew the whole celebration of Christmas, which is Christ coming on our behalf. Seeing that transition where everything combines in people’s minds, where the wheels are turning and they start to click and understand exactly what’s going on - to understand the whole plot, why Christ came, for some of them that’s the first they have ever heard of that. Then we’re able to talk to them after the show. That’s really powerful. Sometimes we take it for granted that we know what Christmas is all about, but there are so many people who don’t know. So that was huge to be able to see them first understand that, and to see people understand it who had heard it their whole life and just never understood it.” “At our very last show, we had people raise their hand if they had made a decision to trust Christ. There was one lady, who was like seventy-two, that was in the front row that nobody saw, but I saw her raise her hand. She raised it just a little bit, and I was up front playing guitar, so afterwards I went and talked to her. She said she had heard it her whole life, but that night was when it really made sense that she needed “I love working with the students. They are the reason I’ve stayed with Word of Life so long, and I absolutely love serving alongside of them, teaching them, getting to know them.” Brandon Arnold to trust Christ and it couldn’t be something that she earned on her own. I guess the older you get the less likely you are to change what you believe - so that was huge. That’s just evidence of the Holy Spirit and what He does - the power of God.” Though Magi is smaller and very different than its predecessors it has proven its worth through the eternal impact it has made. It has taken one of the most important events inscribed by hand and illustrates the greatest news ever proclaimed by lips of men or angels- that Jesus Christ came to the Earth, humbled Himself to become like men, died for our sins, and then rose from the dead! Brandon reflects, “Magi reminded me, in a very powerful and sweet way, how majestic the birth of this child was, how great His sacrifice, and how precious and significant the tearing of the veil was. God had provided a way to reconcile us to Himself through the sacrifice of His one and only Son, Jesus.” “I had been working with students all year, but being able to go out on tour with them, that’s really a bonding experience. You’re on a bus, whether you want to be smashed up next to somebody or not, you’re spending all that time with people and get to see their heart for ministry and learn more about their walk with the Lord. I got to talk to people after the show - and there’s a few people I got to stay in touch with, but not very many but with the students I’ve got another half a year and summer with them. To this day we’ve still got inside jokes and memories and that’s been real helpful in my relationships with the students I work with.” Ryan Arnold Staff: Mike Calhoun Tom Phillips Rich Andrews Christian Andrews Micah Melville Mark Bodlien Kyle Findley Chris Vickery Todd Mackey Jay Sanders Ray Deck Ryan Arnold Brandon Arnold Jeremy Dame Olivia Denhoff Ashley Warren Ethan Warren Florida Cast: Katherine Archila - Ensemble Sarai Armfield - Praise Team Michelle Atis - Praise Team Morgan Crohn - Ensemble David Ebrahim - Ensemble Connie Ferchland - Drama MJ Ferguson - Praise Team Jillian Figly - Drama Aaron Gerhart - Drama Olivia Hartsfield - Praise Team Dean Hendricks - Drama Elijah Knowlton - Ensemble Rachel McOmber - Ensemble Abby Novak - Drama Kayla O’Brien - Ensemble Amy Odhner - Drama Eliam Orozco - Drama Christian Vasquez-Mol - Drama Eran West - Praise Team New York Cast: “I’m happy we’re back on the road, that’s where we belong, that’s Word of Life.” Harry Bollback Caleb Bonney - Drama Daniel Cudworth - Ensemble Cherith Danielewicz - Praise Team Jason Deardorff - Ensemble, Drama Josiah Fox - Ensemble, Drama Bethany Frazeur - Ensemble, Drama Samuel Gottschall - Ensemble Rebecca Hamblen - Drama Caleb Ingvaldsen - Praise Team Abbie Kuhne - Ensemble Elizabeth Ladew - Accompanist Peter Lindblom - Praise Team Jared MacKay - Praise Team Molly Reynolds - Ensemble Aogu Suzuki - Praise Team Erin Swett - Accompanist Erin Toal - Ensemble Mark Vanderkooi - Praise Team
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