Right now I could dig out the most abused and oldest cassette tape from under my van seat, blow out the dust, shake out the petrified bug, pry the old jelly bean off the shell, and listen to audio that I last heard twenty years ago, starting right where I left off back then. I know it would play, but just not in my van. Prior to a Rejoice on the Road tour last year my wife convinced me we needed to exchange the dash tape player for a CD player. (I did so to make my wife happy, but let's see her listen to any of her coffee-cured, sun bleached CDs a couple of decades from now.)
For over eighteen years the cassette tape has had a vital role in Rejoice Marriage Ministries. My favorite illustration of the convenience of cassettes is the story of the four year old whose prodigal Daddy picked her up for visitation one day years ago. Once in his car, when the man asked his daughter what she wanted to do that day, she said "Listen to this," and her little hand pulled one of her mom's Rejoice tapes out of her coat pocket.
Mom had no knowledge of what her little daughter was doing. (I wonder if a CD would have even fit in that small pocket?)
I have left Charlyne's teaching tapes in truck stops and have handed them to strangers on trains after overhearing of marriage problems. They have been left with tips in restaurants and mailed around the world in the pre-Internet days. I do not think until we all get to glory will we each realize how many lives have been touched by the cassette tapes. I still love the indestructible cassette tape, but this is 2008 and people want to hear digital sound from a CD. The audio from every cassette I ever owned could now fit in that shirt pocket on memory sticks.
Know what? It is not the method that is important, but the message. Solid declaration of the permanence of marriage, and the importance of one man and one woman, married for a lifetime was relevant yesterday, is true today, and will ring out tomorrow, be it heard proclaimed from a vinyl record, a reel to reel tape, an eight track, a cassette, a CD, a podcast or whatever is coming next. The audio fads may come and go, but God's institution, the family is timeless and will stand strong, if we each do our part in its preservation. To God be the glory.
God bless,

Bob Steinkamp
(By the way, the tape player I updated in my van was a cassette player, not an eight track. Neither I nor my van are quite that antique.)













