Catholic Exchange

A Catholic Ear for Johnny Cash

In 2002, at the death of Johnny Cash, there was much ado about his musical career. I saw the film Walk The Line in early 2006 and that summer our family traveled to Tennessee and North Carolina. In the process, I immersed myself in the music of Johnny Cash. I was no stranger to Cash, for both my grandfather and dad usually had radios set to the local country station, so there was a certain romanticism associated with the songs. But on this trip, I sought to listen to every recording Johnny Cash ever made. I prefer classical music, Gregorian chant, and Rock and Roll, yet there is something to a lot of the traditional country music ballads.

The reason I feel compelled to write this article is due to the effect of listening to the music of Johnny Cash as a Catholic. Allow me to explain. One of my favorite songs, found on his album Personal File released posthumously, is No Earthly Good. The song begins:   

"Don't brag about standing or you'll surely fall …

you're shining your light, and shine it you should,

but you're so heavenly minded you're no earthly good.

If you're holding heaven, then spread it around.

There's hungry hands reaching up here from the ground.

Move over and share the high ground where you stood…

so heavenly minded, you're no earthly good.

The gospel ain't gospel until it is spread

but how can you share it where you got your head?

There's hands that reach out for a hand if you would…"

What an indictment against some Christians' ministry, which is solely focused upon getting people saved so they can keep a running tally of the number of salvations as they eagerly await the rapture and the destruction of the world.            

Another song with a similar theme worth mentioning is A Half a Mile a Day. It is written from the perspective of a man who visits a church one evening where several members are witnessing to their salvation. One man reports,

"I'm going to heaven as fast as I can go

like an arrow from a bow."

Another says,

"I'm sailing into heaven…on a sea of blue."

Yet another announces,

"I'm flying into the portals of heaven on silver wings!

Sailing over all the troubles and trials down below straight on in."

 Obviously Johnny did not subscribe to this point of view because the last person to stand is a little old lady who claims that she's making it to heaven about a half a mile a day. The woman admits the difficulties and her stumbling; the way to heaven is not rapid transit. Instead she says:

"I believe that if I'll heed the things he had to say

even I might get to heaven at a half a mile a day."

No talk of rapture here. She's too busy living the kingdom. She continues:

"Lord, when I let you lead, I don't make any speed

because I have to stop and touch the ones who need so much

and then sometimes others pull me off of your narrow way,

and by my mistakes I barely make a half a mile a day."

Powerful imagery of a Christian concerned for justice and peace.

A poignant scene from Walk the Line involved Johnny's recording agent and the officials from the record company. The men are concerned that Johnny's audience — which was, according to the men, predominantly comprised of good Christians — would be scandalized by his recording of an album from Folsom Prison. Johnny replied, "Well, then, maybe they're not really Christian." Whether or not he actually said it, I do not know, but it would seem to represent his feelings for the lost and forsaken of this world.

His signature song Man in Black embodies his credo.

"I wear the black for the poor and the beaten down.

Living in the hopeless, hungry side of town…

I wear it for the prisoner who has long paid for his crime,

but is there because he's the victim of the times….

Well we're doing mighty fine, I do suppose

in our streak of lighting cars and fancy clothes,

but just so we're reminded of the ones who are held back,

up front there ought to be a man in black.

I wear it for the sick and lonely old.

For the reckless ones whose bad trip left them cold.

I wear the black in mourning for the lives that could've been

each week we lose a hundred fine young men.

And I wear it for the thousands who have died

believing that the Lord was on their side.

I wear it for another hundred thousand who have died,

believing that we all were on their side…."

In Life is Like a Mountain Railway, he sings,

"Life is like a mountain railway

with an engineer that's brave.

We must make the run successful

from the cradle to the grave;

heed the curves and watch the tunnels,

never falter, never fail.

Keep your hand upon the throttle

and your hand upon the rail."

The earthiness of his songs are sacramental encounters with a God Who is not far away or just waiting in the wings waiting to swoop down and take the "raptured elect" while the rest of us sorry suckers are left behind to suffer the chaos of tribulation.

In his popular song, Sunday Morning Coming Down, a man awakens after an all night drunk. On his walk home he sings,

"In the park I saw a daddy with a laughing little girl that he was swinging

and I stopped beside a Sunday school and listened to the songs they were singing…

then I headed down the street

and somewhere far away a lonely bell was ringing

and it echoed through the canyons of my disappearing dreams of yesterday.

On a Sunday morning sidewalk I'm wishing Lord that I was stoned

'cause there's something in a Sunday that makes a body feel alone.

And there's nothing short of dying that's half as lonesome as the sound

of the sleeping city sidewalk and Sunday morning comin' down."

In the song What on Earth Will You Do for Heaven's Sake? Johnny asks,

"Did you turn a frown with a smile?

Did you lift a lowly heart about to break?

Would you also give your cloak

to one who took away your coat?

What on earth will you do for heaven's sake?

Did you feed the poor in spirit and befriend the prosecuted?

Will you show the bound that all the chains can break?

Will you be one of the meek,

did you turn the other cheek,

would you give a little more than you would take?

Did you shine your little light upon the children of the night?

What on earth will you do for heaven sake?"

There are many songs with these themes, but of particular interest to Cash seemed to be the plight of the imprisoned. In Give My Love To Rose a man recently released from a San Francisco prison is found lying nearly dead along the railroad tracks. The former prisoner asks the passerby to give his love to his wife Rose and his son. In the version from his American IV: The Man Comes Around album, his voice had aged and the way he sings the song has so much more feeling than from his earlier crooner days.

Other songs such as Another Man Done Gone; There Ain't No Good Chain Gang; I Hung My Head; I Got Stripes; Busted; Don't Take Your Guns to Town; Sam Hall; 25 Minutes to Go; Joe Bean; and Greystone Chapel all deal with men in prison or men awaiting their execution.

In American III: Solitary Man, he includes the song Mercy Seat. The song is about a death row inmate pondering his fate on the very day of his execution. The man claims,

"Well it all began when they took me from my home

and put me on death row —

a crime for which I'm totally innocent, you know."

The man rambles on and on as his contorted conscience begins to get the best of him.

"…in a way I'm yearning to be done

with all of this weighing of the truth,

an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth,

and anyway I told the truth

and I'm not afraid to die.

I hear stories from the chamber.

Christ was born into a manger

and like some ragged stranger

he died upon the cross,

might I say it seems so fitting in its way

he was a carpenter by trade,

or at least that's what I'm told…

In heaven his throne is made of gold

The ark of his testament is stowed a throne of which I'm told

all history does unfold…

It's made of wood and wire

and my body is on fire

and God is never far away….

into the mercy seat I climb,

my head is shaved my head is wired

and like the moth that tries to enter the bright light,

I go shuffling out of life

just to hide in death awhile

and anyway I never lied.

And the mercy seat is waiting

and I think my head is burning…

And the mercy seat is burning

and I think my head is glowing,

and in a way I'm hoping to be done

with all of this twisting of the truth,

an eye for an eye

and a tooth for a tooth,

and anyway there was no proof,

and I'm not afraid to die.

And the mercy seat is glowing,

and I think my head is smoking,

and in a way I'm a-hoping to be done

with all these looks of disbelief,

a life for a life and a truth for a truth,

and I've got nothing left to lose

and I'm not afraid to die.

And the mercy seat is smoking

and I think my head is melting,

and in a way that's helping

to be done with all this twisting of the truth,

an eye for an eye

and a tooth for tooth,

and anyway I told the truth but I'm afraid I told a lie."

Regardless of where one stands on the issue of capital punishment, the song truly rouses the listener's conscience.

A.P. Carter's song Keep on the Sunny Side of Life, encourages us that good will conquer evil. There is no need for despair or hopelessness. The paschal mystery of Christ promises life, hope, and goodness:           

"Though we meet with the darkness and strife,

the sunny side we may also view.

Let us greet with a song of hope each day,

though the moments be cloudy or fair,

let us trust that our savior always

will keep us everyone in his care.                 

Oh, the storm in its fury broke today,

crushing hopes that I cherish so dear,

storms and clouds will in time pass away

and the sun again will shine bright and clear."

We hear a man singing about a God who loves all of his creation, as charged with his grandeur. But this is no Pollyanna approach to life, neither is it an escapist theology based upon the preaching of prosperity and a promise of rapture when the going gets tough.  

Cash's music is pious-free and Catholic friendly. Even two of his last songs, The Man Comes Around — which seems to be influenced by all the talk of rapture — and the traditional God's Gonna Cut You Down, both deserve to be listened to for they contain within them ageless truths.

Johnny admits in the liner notes that the song The Man Comes Around was a difficult song and it took him a long time to write; it is about Christ's Second Coming. In one line he asks,

"Will you partake of that last offered cup

or disappear into the potter's ground,

 when the Man comes around?"

In this I hear a Eucharistic theme — intended or not. In the Book of Revelation, Jesus speaks: "I stand at your door and knock. If you open the door I will come in and sup with him and him with me."

God's Gonna Cut You Down may seem harsh to Catholic ears, but the truth is that one day we will all die and render an account to God for the gift of our life. As Saint Benedict wrote: "Keep death ever before you."

"You can run on for a long time…

sooner of later God'll cut you down.

Go tell that long-tongue liar,

go and tell that midnight rider,

the rambler, the gambler,

the back-biter,

tell 'em that God's gonna cut 'em down."

Is this not the Hound of Heaven?

The hungry, thirsty, homeless, naked, weary, anxious, imprisoned, soldiers, war veterans, orphaned, abandoned, aged, insulted, and lonely took heart in Johnny's songs with their themes drawn from the gospel message.

Hence the catholicity of Johnny Cash's music comes through in the sense of God's sacramental presence in the world around us, the commitment to both faith and human reason, an emphasis upon the communal aspect of our baptismal call and a love for the saints — and sinners.

May we all keep on the sunny side of life, greeting each and every day with a song of hope, knowing that through the storms of life Christ is with us. And when Christ comes to raise our mortal bodies, may we awaken in the sweet by and by of the peaceful valley of paradise, meeting on that beautiful shore of the banks of Jordan our loved ones and the communion of saints with whom we have journeyed unaware.

Comments

  1. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I enjoyed the article as well as his music. He was a man of conviction, a man who faced is demons and a redeemed man who was humble. I saw him live in NYC of all places and he wasn't afraid to speak of his faith while not being preachy or better than thou about it. Look for God in all things! peace, Allan

  2. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    A rather shallow article about an unrepetant sinner. Can't Catholic writers do better than this?

  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Scandalous.

    And when the Pharisees saw this, they said to His disciples, "Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?" Matthew 9:11

  4. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Johnny Cash clearly grew to greatly love God, and his music brought a great deal of comfort to the imprisoned.  I am always pleased to see whatever good that God has brought forth with those who love Him. 

  5. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Oh, I thought the article got quite involved. Anytime there are lyrics to a song the auther is digging in. As for Johnny being unrepentant, who really knows? but his songs and his interest in those who are under a cloud would indicate otherwise. Good article.

    Goral

  6. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Whoa, criskram!

    That was just a little bit harsh.  We don't know whether anyone is unrepentent or not.  Matt. 7:1 "Do not judge, or you too will be judged."

    Anyway, God can use whomever He wants, however He wants, to do His will, as long as we are open to it.  I believe that time and prayer have the means of changing ANY heart, and you have to judge by the fruits.  The fruits of Mr. Cash's songs indicate much had gone on within the man spiritually.

    DM

  7. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    "May we all keep on the sunny side of life, greeting each and every day with a song of hope"

     

    Thank you, John, not enough of us do that. If that's the only lesson I learn all day, it's worth it.

  8. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I agree with criskram. Catholics are to convert the world … we've forgotten that maxim in all this "tolerance" gobbly goo. Cash is commendable to seek out and talk for the "unloved" of this world. We don't judge his soul, but if he didn't convert to becoming Catholic then …unrepentent.

  9. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Criskram and Bairdm66,

    The Gospel says to go unto all the world and preach the Gospel.  It does not say go preach Catholicism!  We are to pray for our separated Christian Brothers and Sisters – not condemn them.  I came into the Catholic Church as an adult having been raised in "Bible Believing" churches that each said basically, "My way or the highway."  The Catholic perspective, I learned, was that the Church has the fulness of the truth.  Only God knows the plight of a man's soul.  We should appreciate Cash for the truths he provided and pray for his soul.

  10. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Johnny Cash rode hard.  He found drugs and he found Jesus.  I welcome this article for its depth in Cashism.  I will seek out the songs mentionded in the article.  I love faith based songs.  I love harsh songs like the blues or Johnny Cash type tunes.  They are full of heart, soul and humanity.  I feel much and it makes me glad to be alive and baptised and part of the communion of saints.

    I for one had a hard time watching the movie Walk the Line.  The only hopeful point in the movie was at the very end.  Johnny Cash was a tough one and I respect him for all that his soul felt.  But, man it was tough and not very up lifting.  If you haven't seen it, just prepare yourself for a tough movie.

    Thanks for the article.  And as far as judging …. we should let it ride.  That is between Johnny and God.  Prayers wouldn't hurt.  Nothing is certain except for death.

    GK – God is good!

  11. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Did Brother John know any particularly good examples of Catholic Christianity who might encourage or attract him to become Catholic, himself?  And how can anyone possibly know whether he died unrepentant, or not, other than God?! 

    One song Cash recorded I didn't see mentioned here, from his very first Christmas album, I think:  "Ringing the Bells for Jim."  The lyrics, as I recall (perhaps inaccurately) from my childhood:

    "The father heard church bells at midnight,

    the wrong time for church bells to chime.

    He went to the tower, found a little girl there,

    and said, 'Why ring the bells at this time?'

    "I'm just ringin' the bells for Jim, please, Father.

    Ringin' the bells for Jim.

    I'm sorry I'm cryin',

    but my brother Jim's dyin',

    so I'm ringin' the bells for him."

    The song continues with Jim's being healed when he heard the church bells.  With the mention of "Father," this is probably the closest Catholic-specific song Cash ever recorded (unless he had an Episcopalian priest in mind, of course).  I do not know if he actually wrote this song, or not, however.

  12. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Apparently there are some here who think that St. Paul went to the Aereopogus and told the Athenians: "You bunch of heathen idolaters, look at all these statues of your so-called gods. All of you are headed to hell."

  13. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    There is a quote of Sister Faustina Kowalski on a Confessional at the Shrine of Devine Mercy in Stockbridge, MA : "the greater the sinner the more right he has to God's mercy". Who can know the carma that is being worked out in a person's life. God does not waste but redeems even an iota of good in a person.

    Goral

  14. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    This is a wonderful article.  I'm a big fan of Johnny Cash,  I know he was very well versed in the bible, and that he loved St Paul.  He spent the rest of he life after his recovery,repenting, He  was a good soul.

  15. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Thank you for a good article.  Johnny Cash was a gentle and humble man.  I’ve hesitated to purchase music by Johnny Cash but this article is helpful to me,  I’ve always done my own housework and I like to listen to a variety of music while I’m working.  On a certain days I might prefer Mozart or the Four Seasons by Vavaldi and there are times when I prefer the older 1940s, 50s and 60s country music

    Have a wonderfully blessed day.

  16. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I heard Johnny singing "The great speckled bird" (a recording) and I believe that whether the author knew it or not, that song is about the Catholic Church. "The Great Speckled Bird" was written by The Reverend Guy Smith. It is based on Jeremiah 12:9, "Mine heritage is unto me as a speckled bird, the birds round about are against her; come ye, assemble all the beasts of the field, come to devour." It was recorded in 1936 by Roy Acuff. It was also later recorded by Johnny Cash (in 1959) and Jerry Lee Lewis.

    One version of this great church song has the following lyrics:

    1.What a beautiful thought I am thinking

    Concerning the Great Speckled Bird

    Remember her name is recorded

    On the pages of God's Holy Word

    Refrain: With the other birds flocking around her

    She is so despised by the squad

    The Great Speckled Bird in the Bible

    Representing the great Church of God

    2.Desiring to lower her standard

    They watch every move that she makes

    They long to find fault with her teachings

    But really they find no mistakes

    3.I am glad I have learned of her meekness

    I am proud that my name's on her book

    For I want to be one never fearing

    On the face of my Savior to look

    4.When He cometh descending from heaven

    On the cloud that He writes in His Word

    I'll be joyfully carried to meet Him

    On the wings of that great speckled bird

    5.What a wonderful word is recorded

    By the prophet of God in His Word

    Of His church and all those who are faithful

    And are like to that great speckled bird

    6.With the other birds flocking against her

    They envy her glory in vain

    They hate her because she is chosen

    And has not denied her dear name

    7.She is spreading her wings for a journey

    She is going to take by and by

    When the trumpet sounds in that morning

    She will meet her dear Lord in the sky

    8.In the presence of all her despisers

    With a song never uttered before

    She will rise and be gone in a moment

    For her great tribulations are o'er

    9.I long for the day of her coming

    When friends that are gone I shall see

    In robes and a crown of bright glory

    They are waiting in heaven for me

  17. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Very much enjoyed the article.  I must admit, though, some of the comments that followed have given me pause.  Johnny Cash said he was a Christian–I believe he was, as evidenced through his words and the example of the later life he led.  I, too, am a Christian–saved through the blood of Jesus Christ.  I am not a Catholic, but  believe Catholics can be Christians.  However, it sounds to me like some of the Catholics that have commented here believe that those who are not Catholic are not saved–cannot be Christian–and are doomed.  If I have misunderstood, my apologies.  But if I am correct in my deduction, please illustrate where in God's Word it states that one must be a Catholic to be saved.??  God knows each heart.  We are not saved by what religion we might choose to worship within, but by grace and the blood of Jesus Christ.

    Romans 10:9

    Ephesians 2:8,9

    Ephesians 4:4-6 

    Again, if I have misunderstood intentions, my apologies.  But a definite chord was struck within me, and I felt compelled to respond.

  18. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Thank you for asking, Kim.  It is the teaching of the Catholic Church that those who are baptized in the name of the Holy Trinity and whose faith in Christ is being nurtured by a community of believers outside of the Catholic Church are to be recognized by Catholics as our brothers and sisters in Christ.

    It is also the teaching of the Church that the Catholic Church is the Church founded by Christ, where the fullness of the Christian faith is taught and where worship is carried on according to the instruction of the apostles, of whom Christ said, "he who hears you hears me." If someone knows this and yet that person willfully rejects joining himself or herself to the Church, that is a damnable offense against the Holy Spirit. However, it is also the teaching of the Church that none of us are able to discern another's deepest motives, intentions or understandings, so we cannot judge that another person's failure to join Christ's Church and submit to the apostolic authority He established has indeed damned him. We are to pray for all souls.

    The Church prays for your salvation at every Mass. It is, in fact, the Mass that makes present in the world the grace of God through which you are being saved by faith. The Mass is the work of God, the perpetual (once and for all time) perfect offering of the Son to the Father — it is how that blood of the Cross to which you refer is made present and efficacious for us today, 2000 years and many miles away from the Crucifixion.

    We invite you to learn more about this worship, instituted by Christ. Please do not allow the harsh comments of a couple of posters here to cause you to stumble. Look at the kindness and warmth of the majority here who well represent the Catholic faith.

  19. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    KimJ,

    Rest assured that the Catholic Church does not condemn other Christians to hell.  Some individual Catholics, like some individual Protestants, do condemn other Christians.  But that is just part of being on earth and the weaknesses of humanity.  Don't judge the Catholic Church based on a few.  Take those who condemn others as individuals who are not singing from the same sheet of music as the Catholic Church.  The official Catholic teaching on non Catholics can be found: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20000806_dominus-iesus_en.html

     

    GK – God is good!

  20. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    gk and mkochan,

    Thank you for filling in the background for my comments.

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