The Church Needs Good Deacons

"The Church Needs Good Deacons" is a gospel blues song written by Washington Phillips (18801954) and recorded by him in 1929 (vocals and zither).[2]

"The Church Needs Good Deacons"
Single by Washington Phillips
RecordedDallas, Texas, December 2, 1929
GenreGospel blues
Length3:02
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)Washington Phillips
Producer(s)Frank B. Walker [1]

A deacon is a Christian minister associated with service of some kind, which varies among theological and denominational traditions. Phillips refers to the great example of St. Stephen, one of the seven deacons appointed to distribute food and charitable aid to poorer members of the community in the early church. He goes on to say:

A deacon he must be a clean man,
And he must live a mighty smooth life,
He must have his children under good control,
And be the husband of one wife.

He condemns deacons of his time who "won't put up with one honest woman, but tries to live with two or three", and concludes with a reference to the description of what the character of a deacon should be in the First Epistle to Timothy (traditionally attributed to St. Paul) at 3:813.

Recordings

  • 1929  Washington Phillips, 10" 78rpm single Columbia 14566-D [2][3][4]
gollark: It hides dark secrets.
gollark: https://elm-lang.org
gollark: Well, it's nice and functional, and the core library is nice.
gollark: Basically.
gollark: Elm compiles to JS.

References

  1. Corcoran, Michael (December 29, 2002). "Exhuming the Legend of Washington Phillips". Austin Statesman. Retrieved August 20, 2015.
  2. "Washington Phillips discography". wirz.de. Retrieved August 31, 2015.
  3. George Washington Phillips: The Church Needs Good Deacons, Composed by Stephen Foster at AllMusic. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
  4. George Washington Phillips: The Church Need Good Deacons at AllMusic. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.