The Good King by Ghost Ship
One of the good things to come out of Mars Hill Church was that it gave birth to a number of Christian bands that, even after Mars Hill’s collapse, continued to produce music that is both theologically rich and stylistically eclectic. My favorite Mars Hill Bands are Citizens, Kings Kaleidoscope, and The Sing Team, but I also really like Ghost Ship’s debut album, The Good King (2013). One of the things I like about the album is its thematic unity. True to its title, every song is about Christ the Good King and His character and deeds. Even the songs not explicitly on this theme fit within this framework. The songs on the album are also, I am convinced, arranged as a chiasmus.
Tracks with asterisks after them (3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8) refer to Christ’s kingship, but the central track of the album, the turning point of the chiasmus, is entirely dedicated to enumerating His kingly attributes.
Tracks 1 and 11: “Mediator” and “What a Friend We Have in Jesus”
Christ the Good King is the intercessor through whom we are reconciled to God and through whom we pray to God.
Tracks 2 and 10: “Orion” and “Where Were You”
Both songs are based on Job 38. Christ the Good King is sovereign over all creation, yet also shows intimate concern for us.
Tracks 3* and 9: “Lion Man” and “Behold the Lamb of God”
Christ the Good King is both conquering lion and sacrificial lamb.
Tracks 4* and 8*: “Jude Doxology” and “The Gospel”
Christ the Good King is our savior, redeeming us from slavery to sin and death.
Tracks 5* and 7*: “Son of David” and “Holy, Holy, Holy”
Christ the Good King removes spiritual blindness so that we can see Him as He is. (In this rendition of “Holy, Holy, Holy,” a Trinitarian hymn, the last line is changed to place emphasis on God the Son as “King of kings.”)
Track 6*: “The Truth”
“The Truth” at the heart of the album, thematically and numerically, is Christ the Good King. This King is “mighty,” “loving,” “sovereign,” and “faithful.”