Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Your Grievances (исполнитель: Daniel Johnston)
[bad word] [bad word] hihowareyou Don't let the sun go down on your grievances Respect love of the heart over lust of the flesh Do yourself a favor: [bad word] your own savior And don't let the sun go down on your grievances And when you wake up in the morning You'll have a brand new feeling And you'll find yourself healing So don't let the sun go down on your grievances And yet if you find yourself in the dark And you're left holding the bag Then take care of it right away And don't let the sun go down on your grievances again Sometimes you might want to give up But keep that chin up Cause you're gonna find You're gonna find Sometimes you might be alone But don't feel lonely 'Cause you're gonna find You're gonna find So don't let the sun go down on your grievances Start each day with a clean slate You'll feel better if you can shake off all that hate And don't forget to forgive and forget And don't let the sun go down on your grievances Don't let the sun go down on your grievances Everybody! Respect love of the heart over lust of the flesh Sing it! Do yourself a favor: [bad word] your own savior And don't let the sun go down on your grievances [bad word] [bad word] 2012/03/dont-let-sun-go-down-on-your-grievience.html Ephesians 4:26-27, "Be angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath: Neither give place to the devil." Focusing on the imperatives delivered by the author of Ephesians (not necessarily Paul), Daniel Johnston explicates a few choice passages to explain his own interpretation of the book’s [bad word] “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Your Grievances”, (not to be confused with the more succinctly titled “Grievances”, in which Johnston lists grievances against an ex-romance) focuses on several Biblical lines, notably Ephesians 4:19 (“Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with [bad word] to “Respect love of the heart over lust of the flesh”) , 4:24 (“And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and [bad word] [bad word] to “Do yourself a favor: [bad word] your own savior”), and 4:26 (cited in the [bad word] to a really obvious line). What drew my attention to this song was the fact that Johnston sings “grievience” instead of “grievances,” as the title would have the listener anticipating (grievience is not yet a word recognized by any dictionary, although an internet search reveals it to be rarely used synonymously with grievance). In fact, the cover version by Clem Snide that appears on The Late Great Daniel Johnston: Discovered Covered represents a reincarnation of this bearing the modified title “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Your Grievience”. Johnston’s message falls in line with a popular maxim for couples that may have initially developed from the Ephesians passage itself: don’t go to bed angry. (Whether you believe this to be good advice or not, it is a sentiment that has been supported very recently by sleep studies.) His belief in Christianity appears to be unwavering, but these lyrics are much more than a banner wave for dogma; they are simply a plea for people to get along with each other. The messages presented by these lyrics vary. rejection of carnal exploration in lieu of emotional love certainly has only tangential relations to the practices of dismissing one’s anger and expressing forgiveness. This loose connection supports the biblical basis for the lyrics: Johnston is much more likely to have written this song strictly out of inspiration from reading the passages in Ephesians than by [bad word] the theme himself and finding biblical references to incorporate. It’s when Johnston moves into lines like “And yet if you find yourself in the dark, and you’re left holding the bag” and “Sometimes you might want to giv