Steven Curtis Chapman's "I Will Be There" Turns 34
Fifty nine Gospel Music Association (GMA) Dove Awards winner Steven Curtis Chapman's hit song "I Will Be There" turns 34 years-old. The song was first released on Chapman's 1989 album More to This Life. Although the song shares a message of enduring love, the song was actually written out of pain. Not long after Chapman and his wife got married, his parents divorced. He wanted to reassure his wife that he would never leave her and that he would always "be there."
Chapman writes, "34 years since the release of my song "I Will Be Here". This song still means so much to Mary Beth & me, and I'm grateful for the countless stories of how much this song means to many of you as well."
In an interview with Today's Christian Music, Chapman shared how he felt when he wrote the song, saying ""It felt like I needed to drive a stake in the ground again and say to her, 'No matter how I feel when I wake up tomorrow, no matter how disillusioned we may be at different points of this, I have made this commitment to you, and I will be here when you wake up.' Because I think there was this real fear in her that said, 'Wow, if this happened in his parents' lives, what assurance do we have that this won't be our story as well?'"
Thankfully, Chapman's marriage has endured the test of time and he has been able to keep the commitment he promised to his wife in this classic song.
Tomorrow morning if you wake up,
And the sun does not appear
I, I will be here
If in the dark we lose sight of love,
Hold my hand, and have no fear
Cause I, I will be here
I will be here when you feel like being quiet
When you need to speak your mind,
I will listen and
I will be here when the laughter turns to cryin'
Through the winning, losing and tryin'
We'll be together 'cause I will be here
Tags : Steven Curtis Chapman Steven Curtis Chapman's "I Will Be There" Turns 34
Hot Trends
-
Travis Cottrell, Beth Moore, Fisk Jubilee Singers & More Pay their Respects at Mandisa's Funeral
-
"American Idol" to Air Live Tribute to Mandisa
-
Planetboom Releases "Till The Walls Come Down;" Featured On New Album Out May 17
-
Local Police Offers Update on Mandisa's Death
-
Crowder Earns His Fifth No. 1 with "Grave Robber;" New Single Out Now
-
America’s Got Talent, BET’s Sunday Best Alum Bay Turner Releases Debut Radio Single, "Brand New"
-
Watch Colton Dixon, Danny Gokey and Melinda Doolittle Pay Tribute to Mandisa on "American Idol"
-
Down East Boys’ “He Looked Beyond My Fault” Offers a Profound Message
-
V1 Worship Drops New Song “Your House”
-
New Documentary "Multiplied" Explores the Question: Is Worldwide Evangelism Dead?
-
Lauren Daigle Performs at GRAMMY on the Hill Awards
-
Lakewood Music Teams Up with Tauren Wells on "Outnumbered"
-
TAYA Leaves Hillsong Church
-
"She Did Not Die from Self-Harm:" Father of the Late Mandisa Claims
-
Is Taylor Swift a Christian?
Most Popular
-
Travis Cottrell, Beth Moore, Fisk Jubilee Singers & More Pay their Respects at Mandisa's Funeral
-
"American Idol" to Air Live Tribute to Mandisa
-
Planetboom Releases "Till The Walls Come Down;" Featured On New Album Out May 17
-
Local Police Offers Update on Mandisa's Death
-
Crowder Earns His Fifth No. 1 with "Grave Robber;" New Single Out Now
-
America’s Got Talent, BET’s Sunday Best Alum Bay Turner Releases Debut Radio Single, "Brand New"
-
Watch Colton Dixon, Danny Gokey and Melinda Doolittle Pay Tribute to Mandisa on "American Idol"
-
Down East Boys’ “He Looked Beyond My Fault” Offers a Profound Message
-
V1 Worship Drops New Song “Your House”
-
New Documentary "Multiplied" Explores the Question: Is Worldwide Evangelism Dead?
-
Lauren Daigle Performs at GRAMMY on the Hill Awards
-
Lakewood Music Teams Up with Tauren Wells on "Outnumbered"
-
TAYA Leaves Hillsong Church
-
"She Did Not Die from Self-Harm:" Father of the Late Mandisa Claims
-
Is Taylor Swift a Christian?