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Driving Notes

The Official Blog of WNZR's Afternoon Drive

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new music

A Tuesday Filled with Games!

Welcome to the 12 Days of Christmas, ladies and gentlemen!
We love giving you chances to win, and we did that today here on the Afternoon Drive!

It’s Game Time Tuesday so we played some games!
For song poetry today we gave the lyrics to a familiar Christmas song!
Here are the lyrics…

“Oh how they pound,
Raising the sound,
O’er hill and dale,
Telling their tale.”

That’s the lyrics to ‘Carol of the Bells’!
Congrats to Rochelle from Mt. Vernon!
She’s taking home that $5 from Troyer’s of Apple Valley!

My suggestion for the lyrics were as follows…
“Ding, dong, ding, dong”
But Joe said no, so maybe next time.

We also exchanged some gifts today for the WNZR Christmas Gift Exchange!
Congrats to Robin from Mt. Vernon!
She won a gift certificate for a dozen carnations from Flowers for You!
and also congrats to
They won

We also like to do a little uplifting news for your Tuesdays!
Here’s a story about Tyler Perry! In the midst of the hustle and bustle of this life and the sadness that comes with day to day. Check out what he clings to in these times!

Image result for partridge
Partridges are medium-sized non-migratory gamebirds, with a wide native distribution throughout the Old World, including Europe, Asia, and parts of Africa.

A famous reference to the partridge is in the Christmas carol, “The Twelve Days of Christmas”. The first gift listed is “a partridge in a pear tree”, and these words end each verse. Since partridges are unlikely to be seen in pear-trees (they are ground-nesting birds) it has been suggested that the text “in a pear tree” is a corruption of the French “une perdrix“.

There is a huge theory behind this and it’s really neat.
The partridge is Jesus Christ, the Son of God, Who comes to us on the first day of Christmas. He is fittingly represented as a partridge, a bird which will feign injury in order to draw predators to itself and away from its young. By offering Himself on the Cross, “He hath delivered me from the snare of the hunters. He will overshadow thee with His shoulders: and under His wings thou shalt trust.” (Psalms 90:4)
The pear tree is the Cross itself. When King David wished to free his people from the scourge of the Philistines, the Lord told him that the moment would come “when thou shalt hear the sound of one going in the tops of the pear trees, then shalt thou join battle: for then will the Lord go out before thy face to strike the army of the Philistines.” (II Kings 5:24)”
Neato, right?

Also! A partridge in a pear tree costs $209.99.
That’s just one. But if you got all 12 of them… it would cost $2,519.88
With that cost, that makes up 1.6% of the total cost of the gifts.
The most expensive gift? The Seven Swans a Swimming.
For 1 of them… $1,875.
For 7 of them… it’s $13,125.00.
If you want the 42 times they’re mentioned in the song? Well…
That’ll run you $78,750!
That’s 50% of the total cost for all of the 12 days of Christmas, for every time they’re mentioned. That’s 364 gifts for $156,507.88.

Thanks for listening!
-Lilly

Blog Exclusive NZ Top 10! 12/15

In the midst of the 12 Days of Christmas here on WNZR, we still need to have the NZ Top 10, right? Rather than deprive the masses of the top 10 songs in Christian radio, why not make it blog exclusive, yeah?
Here it is!

10. Hard Love – NeedToBreathe Ft. Lauren Daigle
15th week on – 2nd week at #10

9. Messiah – Francesca Battistelli (NEW!)
Previously #23 on the charts, now #9

8. The Gospel – Ryan Stevenson
16th week on – down 3 spots from last week

7. O Come to the Altar – Elevation Worship
21st week on – down 3 spots from last week

6. O’ Lord – Lauren Daigle
4th week on – 2nd week at #6

5. Control – Tenth Avenue North
5th week on – peak week @ #5 – up 4 from last week

4. Your Love Defends Me – Matt Maher
6th week on – peak week @ #4 – up 4 from last week

3. Word of Life – Jeremy Camp
9th week on – 2nd week @ #3

2. Broken Things – Matthew West
18th week on – 7th week @ #2

1. Old Church Choir – Zach Williams
20th week on – 14th week @ #1

Thanks for listening to WNZR! Have a great weekend!
-Lilly

Prepping for Christmas – Who Knew Wednesday

WELCOME TO CHRISTMAS BREAK!
Christmas is my favorite time of the year and I’m ready to celebrate it with you!

I’m such a reindeer dork – or ‘reindork’ if you will. I found so many Christmas reindeer crafts and recipies, and, wow, they just make me smile. I’m so excited to share them!
Click the links below to learn how to make them!

Reindeer Rice Krispy Treats
Reindeer Gift Wrap
Reindeer Paper Balls
Popsicle Stick Reindeer
Candy Cane Reindeer
Pinecone Reindeer

I, of course, had to share some more Christmas crafts and recipies.
Check them out here.

One for our furry friends
An edible plate!?
Christmas Light Cookies
Christmas Light Finger-Paint
Poke-a-Tree game!
A Snowman Candle Ornament
Christmas Slime!

And Hannah talked about how to prepare for Christmas, and how to do Christmas on a budget! Check it out!
Christmas on a budget
The ultimate Christmas Checklist

Thanks for listening!
-Lilly

A Christmas Mystery Monday!

One of my favorite Christmas songs is the 12 Days of Christmas.
My Mystery Question for today is related to that song…

If you received ALL of the presents mentioned in the song… how many presents would you receive in total!?

1 Partridge in a pear tree X 12 days  = 12
2 Turtle Doves X 11 days = 22
3 French Hens X 10 days = 30
4 Calling Birds X 9 days = 36
5 Golden Rings X 8 days = 40
6 Geese-a-laying X 7 days = 42
7 Swans a Swimming X 6 days = 42
8 Maids a Milking X 5 days = 40
9 Ladies Dancing X 4 days = 36
10 Lords a Leaping X 3 days = 30
11 Pipers Piping X 2 = 22
12 Drummers Drumming X 1 day = 12

12+22+30+36+40+42+42+40+36+30+22+12= 364 gifts.

Without counting the multiple times the gifts are mentioned, it would cost $34,363.49.
Counting the multiple mentions, it would cost $156,507.88.

So if you’re looking for gift ideas this Christmas… this is probably not it.

Congratulations to our Different Kind of Winner from our Different Kind of Giveaway!
Ashley from Howard is winning 2 tickets to see the Different kind of Christmas tour with Mark Schultz and Love and the Outcome on December 10th!

If you would like more information on the concert, check out our website, WNZR.fm.

We’re also gearing up for Food for the Hungry! Our live broadcast is on December 9th, and it will be live streamed on MVNU.tv! For more information, click here!

Thanks for listening!
-Lilly

NZ Top 10 12/1!

Here’s the first NZ Top 10 of December!

10. Control (Somehow You Want Me) – Tenth Avenue North
9. Your Love Defends Me – Matt Maher
8. O’Lord – Lauren Daigle
7. Hard Love – NeedToBreathe Ft. Lauren Daigle
6. Even If – MercyMe
5. The Gospel – Ryan Stevenson
4. Word of Life – Jeremy Camp
3. O Come to the Altar – Elevation Worship
2. Broken Things – Matthew West
1. Old Church Choir – Zach Williams

Here’s brand new Christmas music from Ryan Stevenson! ‘This Christmas Eve‘!

Thanks for listening!

Today on the Afternoon Drive, we switched gears a little bit and featured the MVNU Mens Basketball game against Indiana University Northwest!
That, however, doesn’t mean we don’t have an NZ Top 10!
Check out the top 10 songs of the week, and of course, the stats 🙂

10. Control (Somehow You Want Me) – Tenth Avenue North
NEW TO THE NZ TOP 10! \\ Debuting at #10
[Booted off ‘Home’ from Chris Tomlin
Home spent 31 weeks on the Charts and peaked at #2].
9. Oh My Soul – Casting Crowns
25th week on the charts \\ 1st week at #9
8. Your Love Defends Me – Matt Maher
2nd week on the charts \\ 1st week at #8
7. Hard Love – NeedToBreathe Ft Lauren Daigle
11th week on the charts \\ 2nd week at #7
6. Even If – MercyMe
34th week on the charts \\ 2nd week at #6
5. Word of Life – Jeremy Camp
5th week on the charts \\ 2nd week at #5
4. The Gospel – Ryan Stevenson
12th week on the charts \\ 5th week at #4
3. O Come to the Altar – Elevation Worship
17th week on the charts \\ 3rd week at #3
2. Broken Things – Matthew West
14th week on the charts \\ 3rd week at #2
1. Old Church Choir – Zach Williams
16th week on the charts \\ 10th week at #1

NEW FEATURE: SONG ON IT’S WAY UP!
O’Lord – Lauren Daigle.
Two Weeks ago: #15 \\ Last Week: #14 \\ This Week: #11

Be sure to check out Jordan Feliz’s new song ‘Witness‘!
Also check out the story behind the song!

Going back in our WNZR Time Machine to 2000!
Check out or NZ Rewinds… Dare you to Move from Switchfoot
and You’re Powerful from Skillet!

Our NZ Top 10 Back to Back Artist Spotlight falls this week on Francesca Battistelli!
Check out her songs This is the Stuff (with the story behind it).
and ‘Free to be Me‘ (with the story behind it)!

Thanks for listening!
I’ll be on my way to Wisconsin this weekend, so I wish you a Happy Early Thanksgiving!
-Lilly

Praying Extraordinarily

Psalm 77:2 says, “I sought the Lord and my day of trouble. My hands were continually lifted up all night long.”

Many times, our prayer strategies go to the next level when situations reach a point of desperation. Health, finances, family struggles…these unexpected moments of intensity call for ‘drop everything’ prayer. It’s when you call or text friends to pray. Rally the church…prayer chains…everybody praying. Desperation can still be strategic.

This week, as we continue our series inspired by the Kendrick brothers’ book. The Battle Plan for Prayer, we’re focusing on how to pray extraordinarily.

The experience of Esther in the Old Testament led to the necessity for extraordinary prayer. You may recall how she, a beautiful young Jewish woman, was selected as a candidate for Queen of Persia when the king deposed his own wife. But from inside the palace, Esther learned from her childhood guardian, Mordecai, about a plan to exterminate the Jewish people.

The situation was dire – no less for Esther than anyone else. She wasn’t yet in a position to approach the king with any petition without permission. Customs of the day meant she could be lawfully killed for attempting to enter his presence. But she made a courageous call for extraordinary prayer: “So, assemble all the Jews who are found in Susa, and fast for me; do not eat or drink for three days, night or day. I and my maidens also will fast in the same way. And thus I will go into the king, which is not according to law; and if I perish, I perish“ (Esther 4:16).

The result of their praying was miraculous. The mastermind of the genocide was killed instead, hung on his own gallows, and Mortdecai, the Jew, was raised to a key position of leadership, charged with the state-sanctioned program of protecting the Jews from for the persecution. That’s the kind of prayer model the Bible guides us to follow.

There are three important elements of the extraordinary prayers in Esther: corporate prayer, fasting prayer and fervent prayer.

____

CORPORATE: Extraordinary prayer is a team effort. We read about this in Acts. The apostles gathered after Jesus’ ascension into heaven and prayed together.

When Peter was literally thrown into prison under heavy guard, “prayer for him was being made fervently by the church to God” (Acts 12:5). The night before his execution, chained between two soldiers, Peter was trying to sleep. Then an angel appeared, set him free and let him past the guards and gates on his way back home. As one old time author has said “the angel sent Peter out of prison, but it was the prayer that sent the angel.”

FASTING: They prayed with fasting. We know that fasting is one of the keys to prayer. But serious matters call for unusual sacrifice with focus, devotion and dedication.

God, through the prophet Joel, commanded his people to return to him “with all your heart…with fasting, weeping and mourning,“ (Joel 2:12).

Jesus, at the outset of his earthly ministry, prepared himself for the challenges ahead by committing to 40 days of fasting in Matthew 4:2. By taking time to deny the daily demands of our flesh to focus all of our attention on God, we can go more deeply and intimately into focused prayer in times of difficulty, strain, and emergency.

We fast because we mean business. Fasting together means we’re united in appealing to him and hearing from him. When it’s done in sincerity, God consistently honors it.

_____

FERVENT: They prayed fervently, persistently and passionately. Circumstances can reach a point where our survival instinct alone can produce fervent praying. When the men on board the ship with the prophet Jonah began fearing for their lives, they called earnestly on the god they didn’t even know, begging for mercy from the storm (Jonah 1:14). God spared them.

But many situations in our lives and world are just as severe and call equally for fervent prayer. Sin is in our nature, pride is in our churches, heartbreak is in our homes and persecution happens among our brothers and sisters. The seeds of hardship and hospitality against Christians – experienced even now and many nations of the world – are already here on our shores. But is the church of God broken and surrendered? Are we willing to be “miserable and mourn and weep when necessary?” (James 4:9)

We know without a doubt that difficult times will come (2 Timothy 3:1). Jesus realistically told his disciples, “you will have suffering in this world,“ in John 16:33. “Do not be surprised “Peter said, “at the fiery ordeal among you.” When these problems reach an insurmountable breaking point, they require an unusual power that will only result from extraordinary prayer.

___

All of us tend to revert to a default level of praying – most likely an easier and more comfortable praying then we like to admit. But Jesus, in his own life, would ramp up the fervency of his praying depending on the need of the moment. From a joyful request, to praying all night, the crying out on his face before going to the cross.

Fervent prayer touches God’s heart. “The effective fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much” (James 5:16).  But imagine what the combined, persistent, united prayers of many righteous people, each of them fasting and praying, might accomplish. It doesn’t just connect – it works miracles, moves mountains, ushers in revival, and changes the course of nations. Extraordinary prayer can produce extraordinary results!

Lord God Almighty, I praise you that nothing is impossible with you. Train us and lead us into extraordinary prayer. Help us throw off any sin, surrendering ourselves completely to you. May we see the needs of our city and our nation the way that you see them. Unite believers in my church and community an extra ordinary prayer. May we walk in love, I agree and heart, fast and faith, and unite in for rent, persistent prayer. Bring revival and spiritual awakening to our land. Be glorified through us, oh God!

 

  • Thanks for listening!
    -Lilly

Mystery Monday!

Steppin’ in to a brand new week here on the Afternoon Drive! (Haha. Mystery Box Pun).
(Read on to find out why that’s funny).

First thing’s first, he figured out that it was not very fragile and not edible.
He also figured out that the item “slides” pretty easily. (HA another item pun).
The item has a part that is made of a spongy material, and it is mostly used often outside.

From the sniff test, we learned that it is not a gardening item, nor is it a sports item.
We also learned that my feet have a medicated smell. So that’s a thing. Idk man.

eurhythmic

  1. characterized by a pleasing rhythm; harmoniously ordered or proportioned.

    The English eurhythmic conflates two Greek adjectives: rhythmikόs meaning “set to time,rhythmical (movement)”; eurhythmόshaving the wider range of meanings “rhythmical, harmonious (in music, dancing, or song); regular (of a pulse);graceful, orderly (of a person).” The prefix eu- is from Greek an adverbial use of the neuter singular of the adjective eǘs “good, brave, noble,” very common in epic poetry. Eurhythmic is restricted in English to harmony and proportion in architecture and to the   system of exercise with music and dancing. Eurhythmic entered English in the 19th century for the architecture sense, and in the 20th century for the music and dancing sense.

    Thanks for listening!
    -Lilly

A chilly one here in Mt. Vernon for Homecoming Weekend!
Counting down the top ten songs in Christian Radio, here’s your NZ Top 10!

10. Your Love Defends Me – Matt Maher
9. Home – Chris Tomlin
8. Oh My Soul – Casting Crowns
7. Hard Love – NeedtoBreathe ft. Lauren Daigle
6. Even If – MercyMe
5. Word of Life – Jeremy Camp
4. The Gospel – Ryan Stevenson
3. O Come to the Altar – Elevation Worship
2. Broken Things – Matthew West
1. Old Church Choir – Zach Williams

Bringing you new sounds for your Friday, New Music Friday brought us two great songs!
Check out ‘Rescuer‘ from Rend Collective and ‘Warrior‘ from Hannah Kerr!
Also check out the story behind Rescuer and the story behind Warrior!

Our NZ Top 10 Artist Back to Back Spotlight this week fell on Tenth Avenue North!
Check out their songs ‘Love is Here‘ and ‘Control’

Our WNZR Time Machine took us back to 1991 today!
Check out 4 Him’s ‘A Man You Would Write About’ and ‘Remember‘ from Crystal Lewis!

Thanks for listening!
Have a great weekend!
-Lilly

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