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I Can Only Imagine
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PRAISE FOR I CAN ONLY IMAGINE
“In I Can Only Imagine, we are reminded that God is able to transform an abusive and monstrous father into a tenderhearted friend and role model. He is able to change a reluctant choir student into a world-renowned vocalist. And he can turn a song written in ten minutes into an anthem about the wonder of eternity.
“God is able to do ‘immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine,’ and Bart’s story is a testament to that truth. What does God have in store next for his music, his family, his career, and his legacy? The answer’s in the title.”
—Pastor Greg Laurie
“Bart is a friend of mine. He’s the same guy on the surface as he is a thousand feet deep. He knows how to play music, but even more important, he knows how to live life. This isn’t a book about Bart; it’s about Jesus. It’s an invitation to grab your knees and do a cannonball into the big life God promised us if we’ll risk being real enough to try.”
—Bob Goff
Author, New York Times
bestseller Love Does
“This book is appropriate because not only does Bart have a song to share but he has a story to tell. I have literally watched the pages of this book play out with Bart as he searched for his identity as a worship leader. He temporarily mistook his identity as the lead singer of MercyMe. Now he is writing, singing, and telling his story about his true identity in Jesus Christ. This book can greatly impact people who experience trials and are searching for their identity.”
—Rusty Kennedy
Director, Leavener
“Bart Millard is one of the most powerful voices in Christian music, and his voice is even more impactful as he tells his life story. The vulnerability and honesty shown on each page is a refreshing change from our pseudo-macho male culture. The love, grace, and forgiveness that Bart communicates in his personal life is an amazing reflection of the faith that guides him. I Can Only Imagine has deeply inspired me as a father, husband, friend, and follower of Christ.”
—Mike Matheny
Manager, St. Louis Cardinals
“Sometimes God intervenes, if only to remind us of the depths of his love taking place every moment behind the curtain. This wonderful story is about God amazingly showing up for a frightened young man who had lost touch with God’s protection and goodness. Then suddenly God explodes into real time what he’s been doing all along. And when Bart sees it, he is eventually stunned, amazed, and authentically undone at God’s grace. And he has been that way ever since. I’ve had the honor of recently watching it up close. It has changed my faith. Read this book—if only to find your story.”
—John Lynch
Coauthor of The Cure
“Bart Millard is one of the most engaging, fun-loving, positive artists I’ve ever met. It’s hard to believe he is the product of such a painful and difficult childhood. I can’t count the number of times I heard Bart say, ‘This song was inspired by my dad,’ and I pictured only one scenario. It wasn’t until I heard him tell his story that I realized how different his upbringing was than what I had imagined, and how remarkable it is that he has gone on to create such incredible beauty throughout his life.”
—Amy Grant
Recording artist
I Can Only Imagine
© 2018 Bart Millard
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by W Publishing, an imprint of Thomas Nelson.
Published in association with the literary agency of WTA Services, LLC, Franklin, Tennessee.
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I CAN ONLY IMAGINE is a trademark of MercyMe Music, Inc. Used by permission.
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture references are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. www.zondervan.com. The “NIV” and “New International Version” are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc.™
Scripture references marked THE MESSAGE are taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene H. Peterson. Used by permission of NavPress. All rights reserved. Represented by Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.
Scripture references marked NLT are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation. Copyright © 1996, 2004, 2007, 2013, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Any Internet addresses, phone numbers, or company or product information printed in this book are offered as a resource and are not intended in any way to be or to imply an endorsement by Thomas Nelson, nor does Thomas Nelson vouch for the existence, content, or services of these sites, phone numbers, companies, or products beyond the life of this book.
Epub Edition January 2018 9780785216759
ISBN 978-0-7852-1675-9 (eBook)
ISBN 978-0-7852-1673-5 (TP)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Library of Congress Control Number: 2017917450
Printed in the United States of America
18 19 20 21 22 LSC 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To Shannon, Sam, Gracie, Charlie, Sophie, and Miles.
I know what I was, and I know what I am now.
CONTENTS
Author’s Note: MercyMe! A Movie and Memoir
Introduction: How Great Is Your Love
One: Dear Younger Me
Two: The Hurt and the Healer
Three: Hold Fast
Four: New Lease on Life Life Lessons from My Movie Dad
Five: In the Blink of an Eye
Six: Finish What He Started
Seven: Bring the Rain
Eight: Beautiful
Nine: Everything Impossible Small World, Big God
Ten: Keep Singing
Conclusion: Even If
Appendix 1: Your Identity in Christ
Appendix 2: MercyMe Career Overview
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Photos
AUTHOR’S NOTE
MercyMe!
A Movie and Memoir
Having your life made into a movie is a surreal experience. When the film I Can Only Imagine went into production, I quickly learned what an incredible challenge it is to compress a person’s life story into less than two hours of screen time. And because movies are so expensive to produce and market, add to that time crunch an intense pressure to make every minute engaging and entertaining for the audience. As I said, it’s an incredible challenge.
Storytelling in film is most certainly an art form. Every second counts—literally. After shooting countless hours of footage on location, the very first cut of the film was around six hours long. The directors began by editing the scenes into chronological order in order to tell the story, but because no one had signed on to produce a lengthy TV series docudrama, more than four hours—about two-thirds—of the footage fell to the cutting room floor, as they say. Years had to be edited down to a five-minute composite. A series of events had to be accurately depicted by a single scene. This, I learned, is why you sometimes hear of a certain actor being cast in a movie and then find out later he or she was edited out or the vast majority of the actor’s scenes were deleted.
Giv
en these constraints, the filmmakers did an incredible job of not only producing an amazing movie but also telling my story with authenticity and integrity. Dennis Quaid, the legendary actor who has played a myriad of characters onscreen over the years, played my dad. He really helped me understand why and how to draw the line between the reality of my life and the movie about my life. (I’m forever grateful to Dennis for the time we spent talking about my relationship with my dad between takes.)
So when the opportunity to write my memoir came up in connection with the film, I was really excited to have the opportunity to tell some of the details that couldn’t make it into the movie. The filmmakers were locked into an industry time frame, but within these pages, we don’t have to be. Now I get to share more about the amazing people who are such a vital part of my story.
I pray you enjoy reading about the roller-coaster ride of my life. But more than anything, I pray that through this book, you will come to know, or know more intimately, the God who offers us a life that is more than we could ever ask for or imagine (Ephesians 3:20).
INTRODUCTION
How Great Is Your Love
My heart is steadfast of God,
And I will sing,
With all my heart and soul,
Music for the King.
—MERCYME, “HOW GREAT IS YOUR LOVE,” FROM ALMOST THERE (2001)*
I was standing just offstage at the iconic Ryman Auditorium, Nashville’s “Mother Church of Country Music,” listening to an incredible band play the intro to my song. The grin on my face was quite literally ear to ear. This was, without a doubt, the single greatest moment of my professional life. All the countless nights I had lain awake envisioning better days and a brighter future, and now this reality I was experiencing outdid them all. I was frightened, but ecstatic. Nervous, yet peaceful. Proud, while humbled.
For the first time ever in my life, reality was outrunning my imagination.
And then, just when I thought it couldn’t get any better, the crowned “Queen of Christian Pop,” Amy Grant, who had been my absolute hero and guiding light from the seventh grade on, stepped up to the microphone. In her angelic, soothing style, she sang the words:
I can only imagine what it will be like . . .
I soaked in the moment, every word and every note. As Amy was finishing the first chorus, it was my cue. Just as we had planned, I stepped out onto the stage, into the spotlight, and into a surreal moment. I walked to the mic, stared out into the sea of faces, drew in the deepest breath I think I’ve ever taken, and sang,
I can only imagine when that day comes . . .
As I ended the verse and went into the chorus, Amy joined me, along with her husband, Vince Gill, the legendary country music superstar. And then some sort of holy convergence occurred. The crowd gathered there at the Ryman seemed to fade away, and I began to sing for an audience of only two. I envisioned my dad watching, smiling, taking in all that he had prayed for and believed for me, while my heavenly Father was also watching, smiling, accepting my offering of giving Him the glory He so richly deserved.
The acoustics in that hall are like nowhere else in the world, but there was something much bigger happening, something sacred. In this historic sanctuary, once called the Union Gospel Tabernacle, the Reverend Sam Jones used to stand Sunday after Sunday to preach about heaven. Now I stood beside Amy Grant on that legendary stage, singing about the day when we will see Jesus face-to-face. It was an amazing and intimate time of worship as I reflected on all God had done and brought me through to lead me to this moment.
As the crescendo of the last chorus cascaded down over us all and the final chord faded, people applauded and cheered. Amy embraced me as if she were a proud big sister. It was truly a divine hour of blessing rising out of my broken world.
Later that night, alone with my wife, Shannon, I could no longer hold back the tears. God had actually allowed my wildest dreams to come true. But that was just the beginning of the ride of our lives. And it’s been one crazy journey, to say the least.
While it has often been a hard road to travel—and, honestly, the success sometimes only made it harder—one thing I know for certain is that the gospel is more alive to me today than ever, thanks to the front-row seat I was given to watch Jesus change my dad.
From a feared monster to a faithful mentor.
From an abusive dad to a loving father.
From a heart of stone to a life of grace.
As Shannon and I continued to share our hearts that night, we thought back to the first time I sat down to visit with Amy about “I Can Only Imagine.” The fact that a song I had written moved her and touched her deeply was, well, more than humbling. After all, she’d been singing to me for years through my headphones, helping me through my own hard times.
Amy had asked me where the song came from. It was a mystery even to me how quickly I’d written the song when so many others had been much more difficult to write. I told her the truth: “It just kind of happened. Lyrics took about ten minutes, I guess. Music took about the same.”
Thoughtfully, graciously, out of a heart of wisdom and life experience, she said, “Bart, you didn’t write that song in ten minutes. It took a lifetime.”
Amy was absolutely right. “Imagine” had been coming to me throughout my entire existence—arriving as a divine appointment at a spiritual crossroads of life and art. In moments of pain, confusion, and despair, God had been writing the words on my heart, slowly giving them genesis in the chaos of my life. And in every instance when I experienced His peace, love, and joy, the chorus was being shaped and sung into my spirit, the melody intertwining through my days like an unending thread weaving together the patchwork of a cherished family heirloom quilt.
But the fruit on a tree’s branches is not grown for the tree but for those who will eat from it. Although this song may have been written from my life, it was for anyone who would “taste and see that the Lord is good” (Psalm 34:8). King David, one of the most prolific songwriters in history, proclaimed to God, “I’ll be the poet who sings your glory—and live what I sing every day” (Psalm 61:8 THE MESSAGE).
So, echoing that same spirit, this is the story behind my song.
One
DEAR YOUNGER ME
Of all the painful memories still running through my
head,
I wonder how much different things would be,
Dear younger me.
—MERCYME, “DEAR YOUNGER ME,” FROM WELCOME TO THE NEW (2014)*
My dad was Arthur Millard Jr., son of Arthur Millard Sr. When Dad was around ten years old, and his brother, Mike, was about seven, my grandfather left the family, divorced my grandmother, and quickly remarried. Because of Arthur Sr.’s devastating choices, my dad took on the immense pressure of suddenly being head of the household, a horribly premature responsibility that birthed an anger and bitterness in his heart that would affect him throughout his life.
As a young man, my father was a star football player at Greenville High School. Greenville is a small town in Texas, about forty-five miles northeast of Dallas. He became an All-American at the position of center. For you non-sports folks, that is the player in the middle of the offensive line who snaps the football to the quarterback, then blocks the defense away from the man with the ball. Needless to say, guys who play center are big, tough dudes, brutes you do not want to mess with or make angry. My dad was no exception.
He was offered football scholarships to several schools, but by the time Dad graduated from high school in 1961, he chose Southern Methodist University in Dallas so he could stay close to home. Another important factor in this decision was that he was dating a young lady named Adele. Adele, known to her family and friends as Dell, would eventually become my mom. She was the daughter of a pastor who had planted a new church in Greenville.
When a Dream Dies
By his sophomore year in college, Dad was playing center for the SMU Mustangs and had dreams of going on to play pro football. But with all
the time and energy demanded by his sports schedule, coupled with a full slate of classes, he deeply missed his sweetheart, Dell. He also struggled with a strong sense of responsibility to take care of his mom, so Dad made the difficult decision to let go of his dream, leave school, and move back home.
From that day when he drove away from SMU’s campus back into Greenville’s city limits, Dad never lived anywhere else and rarely ever left town. He and my mom soon married, and, in 1968, they welcomed their first child, Stephen. Once again, Dad had the responsibility of supporting a family.
The decision to walk away from his opportunity to play football would haunt my dad for a very long time, and a deep regret festered in him, eventually turning into a cancerous case of the what-ifs. As a result, sports were a constant focus in our family, and soon that near-obsession demanded that my brother and I get involved too. Whenever Stephen and I were playing sports, things were always a little better at home.
Several years after leaving SMU, Dad got together with some of his old teammates. They told him that the Green Bay Packers and the Baltimore Colts had been considering him in the draft, but when he quit college ball, he fell off both teams’ radars. Evidently, he had never known that possibility was forming behind the scenes. That kind of information can be hard for any man to take, especially when disappointment is already a constant companion. This was one of many little slices of life that caused my dad to become a realist, always insisting that people have to give up their dreams to have any sort of family stability.
So many people have told me over the years how in that season of his life, when he had just come home from college, Dad was a “big ol’ teddy bear.” Everybody liked Arthur and wanted to be his friend. In the Greenville area, he was the local sports hero, popular everywhere he went. Dad was the proverbial “big fish in a small pond,” which can be a blessing but also a curse, because fish live in glass houses.