Shall We Emulate Elvis?
An estimated 70,000 fans made the trek—pilgrimage, I should say—to Memphis last week to honor Elvis. The occasion? This past Friday, August 16, was the twenty-fifth anniversary of his death.
To judge from some media coverage, you’d think Presley was a saint—a role model to emulate. ABC-TV’s "Good Morning America" program last Monday pointed to the religious roots of his music—that listening to Christian artists whose styles ranged from black gospel to the Blackwood Brothers Quartet inspired his emotional delivery. They added that his three Emmy awards were for recordings of gospel songs.
ABC commended one side of Elvis’s non-conformity. He defied the segregationist practices of his times by visiting ethnic churches and attending the zoo on "Black only" days. And when he appeared on Ed Sullivan’s TV program, he insisted on singing "Precious Lord, Take My Hand" for his mother.
ABC also mentioned that when Presley performed, he was "All Shook Up" over the full length of his body. As a result, when "Elvis the Pelvis" appeared on "Ed Sullivan," producers decided decency required them to zoom in and show only his upper body.
But what ABC neglected to mention was that, even though Elvis took much of his style from gospel sources, his primary message was the antithesis of biblical standards. Top hits like "It’s Now or Never" insisted "be mine tonight" and "my love won’t wait." His lesser-known songs would include one in which he sings to his steady girl, "I resisted tho’ my arm was twisted." This leads to the song’s title: "Almost Always True." The occasional slip into "almost" fidelity was the slippery slope to the total promiscuity of many subsequent rock stars.
On ABC’s rival, NBC, Matt Lauer interviewed Joe Esposito, who claims he met Elvis in the Army. Esposito was co-best man at Elvis’s wedding and was the first to find Presley overdosed on the bathroom floor twenty-five years ago. Esposito described Elvis as "conflicted" and said he never emotionally matured beyond boyhood.
In Great Britain—hard as it is to believe—a re-mixed version of Elvis singing "A Little Less Conversation" has been the number one single for weeks. In it Elvis croons, "A little less conversation, a little more action please." The he elaborates: "Close your mouth, and open up your heart, and baby satisfy me."
In spite of media portrayals of Presley’s religious roots, his belief system was not the "true and undefiled religion" that the Apostle James wrote about. One ABC segment played Elvis singing, "To spend one night with you is what I pray for." Wow! Did he really think God answered prayers to expedite one-night stands?
Lost in the hullabaloo is the reason why Elvis died so young, instead of still being alive today at age sixty-seven. As Reuters reports, "Presley died of a drug-induced heart attack …" He was, by all accounts, a miserable man in his last years, often sleeping in his own excrement.
Is the "king of rock ‘n’ roll" the role model you want for your children and grandchildren? Let’s be honest: Instead of an idol to emulate, Elvis is an object lesson in the wages of sin. And the best thing people can do is not make pilgrimages to Graceland, but seek the real grace that our loving God offers.
--- Begin Message ---Note: forwarded message attached.__________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs http://www.hotjobs.com--- Begin Message --- Title: BreakPoint with Charles Colson--- End Message ------ End Message ---
![]()
BreakPoint with Charles Colson
Commentary #020820 - 08/20/2002
Sequins, Suits, and Sunglasses
Shall We Emulate Elvis?An estimated 70,000 fans made the trekpilgrimage, I should sayto Memphis last week to honor Elvis. The occasion? This past Friday, August 16, was the twenty-fifth anniversary of his death.
To judge from some media coverage, you�d think Presley was a sainta role model to emulate. ABC-TV�s "Good Morning America" program last Monday pointed to the religious roots of his musicthat listening to Christian artists whose styles ranged from black gospel to the Blackwood Brothers Quartet inspired his emotional delivery. They added that his three Emmy awards were for recordings of gospel songs.
ABC commended one side of Elvis�s non-conformity. He defied the segregationist practices of his times by visiting ethnic churches and attending the zoo on "Black only" days. And when he appeared on Ed Sullivan�s TV program, he insisted on singing "Precious Lord, Take My Hand" for his mother.
ABC also mentioned that when Presley performed, he was "All Shook Up" over the full length of his body. As a result, when "Elvis the Pelvis" appeared on "Ed Sullivan," producers decided decency required them to zoom in and show only his upper body.
But what ABC neglected to mention was that, even though Elvis took much of his style from gospel sources, his primary message was the antithesis of biblical standards. Top hits like "It�s Now or Never" insisted "be mine tonight" and "my love won�t wait." His lesser-known songs would include one in which he sings to his steady girl, "I resisted tho� my arm was twisted." This leads to the song�s title: "Almost Always True." The occasional slip into "almost" fidelity was the slippery slope to the total promiscuity of many subsequent rock stars.
On ABC�s rival, NBC, Matt Lauer interviewed Joe Esposito, who claims he met Elvis in the Army. Esposito was co-best man at Elvis�s wedding and was the first to find Presley overdosed on the bathroom floor twenty-five years ago. Esposito described Elvis as "conflicted" and said he never emotionally matured beyond boyhood.
In Great Britainhard as it is to believea re-mixed version of Elvis singing "A Little Less Conversation" has been the number one single for weeks. In it Elvis croons, "A little less conversation, a little more action please." The he elaborates: "Close your mouth, and open up your heart, and baby satisfy me."
In spite of media portrayals of Presley�s religious roots, his belief system was not the "true and undefiled religion" that the Apostle James wrote about. One ABC segment played Elvis singing, "To spend one night with you is what I pray for." Wow! Did he really think God answered prayers to expedite one-night stands?
Lost in the hullabaloo is the reason why Elvis died so young, instead of still being alive today at age sixty-seven. As Reuters reports, "Presley died of a drug-induced heart attack " He was, by all accounts, a miserable man in his last years, often sleeping in his own excrement.
Is the "king of rock �n� roll" the role model you want for your children and grandchildren? Let�s be honest: Instead of an idol to emulate, Elvis is an object lesson in the wages of sin. And the best thing people can do is not make pilgrimages to Graceland, but seek the real grace that our loving God offers.
Copyright (c) 2002 Prison Fellowship Ministries
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
"BreakPoint with Chuck Colson" is a daily commentary on news and trends from a Christian perspective. Heard on more than 1000 radio outlets nationwide, BreakPoint transcripts are also available on the Internet.
BreakPoint is a production of The Wilberforce Forum, a division of Prison Fellowship Ministries.![]()
- "Rock Icon: Elvis Legend Swivels on, 25 Years Later," ABC News, 12 August 2002.
- Jan Herman, "At Graceland, alone among many," MSNBC, 13 August 2002.
- Josh Grossberg, "Elvis: 25 Years Gone," E! Online, 16 August 2002.
- Os Guinness, Steering through Chaos: Vice and Virtue in an Age of Moral Confusion (Navpress, 2000).
- Ken Myers, All God�s Children and Blue Suede Shoes: Christians and Popular Culture (Crossway, 1989).
| | ![]()
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your e-mail address, or e-mail format, click here.
![]()
COLLEGE STUDENTSTime is running out! Register now for "A Christian View of the World," an online three-credit college course featuring Chuck Colson as a guest lecturer. The fall course begins NEXT WEEK, running from August 26 to December 12.
How does a biblical understanding of God and creation lead to social involvement? How does one move from "personal faith" to "social action"? Hear Chuck Colson and other exciting speakers address these issues at "Living Out Your Worldview @ Street Level," a one-day BreakPoint conference in Minneapolis on September 28. Register online or call 1-888-672-0007 for more information.
In Steering Through Chaos: Vice and Virtue in an Age of Moral Confusion, Os Guinness analyzes the corruption of ethics in academia and popular culture to reestablish the deadly seriousness of vice in an age of moral confusion.
Have you seen the new BreakPoint WorldView magazine? This new publication is filled with informative feature articles on today�s hottest issues, updates from Capitol Hill, the best of BreakPoint commentaries, and more! For a donation of $25 or more, you can receive 10 issues (1 year). Sign up online.
For more books, CDs, videos, and other materials visit the BreakPoint Resource Center.
No time to read the newspaper? Visit BreakPoint Online daily and read "Elsewhere on the Web" by Wilberforce Forum Research Associate Kim I. Robbins. It contains links to compelling articles on issues critical to worldview thinking.
![]()

