First Published by SGM Radio in November 2008
Life with Jimmy McMillan
By Lorraine Walker
Jimmy McMillan, lead singer extraordinaire, has a diverse resume with names such as George Amon Webster and the Heartland Boys, The Wilburns, and the legendary Toney Brothers. Two years ago, Jimmy felt the call to leave the comfort of the established group life and strike out with his own new trio. McMillan and Life was born, and Jimmy along with his wife Liz and Josh Arnett began to make a new mark in Southern Gospel. SGM Radio recently had the privilege to chat with Jimmy about McMillan and Life and his personal life experiences.
“My wife was singing with The Lesters and I was singing with the Toney Brothers,” Jimmy shares. “The Toney Brothers were her cousins and they introduced us. That was a big mistake on their part because not long after that we were married and we decided it was time for us to start a ministry of our own. It has been incredible and God has really blessed.”
“We have a brand new project out, called ‘No Storm Wasted’”, says Jimmy. “The idea for the title came from a song on the album, ‘Don’t Let This Storm Go To Waste’, a great song by Gina Vera and Twila LaBarre. When we pick songs to record, we ask God for songs that tell what the heart-cry of our ministry is. Across the board, all of the tunes on this recording do that. The whole CD is a message of a God of second chances, a God Who will hold your hand, and a God Who will pick you up and carry you when things just get too tough.”
“My absolute favorite song on the album is probably the most Southern Gospel song on the album, called, ‘I’m Gonna Reach Heaven’. It’s a song I sang years ago when I filled in with Ernie Dawson and Heirline. It will be our next radio release, hitting the air the first week of January.”
Jimmy describes the sound of McMillan and Life as more progressive and crossing a few musical ‘barriers’. “Donna Beauvais of Hope’s Call did the vast majority of the vocal arrangements on this CD. We have one real ‘power ballad’, Praise and Worship kind of song that I absolutely love, called ‘My Hope Is In The Lord’. The vast majority of our venues are small churches, and the amount of Praise and Worship we use depends on the church. When we go to a church that has a strong Praise and Worship program, we will lean our program in that direction. If the church is staunchly Southern Gospel, that’s where we will stay and we have no problem doing it either way.”
McMillan and Life exhibit this musical versatility in their latest CD, and this has attracted a variety of fans. Most artists eventually find their ‘niche audience’, the group of repeat listeners that are drawn to their style of music. Some might define their fan base by age or denomination. Jimmy has a different way of describing the people that are drawn to the ministry of McMillan and Life.
“The vast majority of the people we see in our audience are hurting people,” Jimmy explains. “The heart of our ministry is that God is a God of second chances. We share so many personal things about how He picks you up when you are down. I do the majority of the MC work, and I share several stories. Almost every night I talk about my battle with depression and there is not a night that goes by that I don’t council with at least four or five – sometimes ten – people. It’s a side of the church that is very much covered up and for a long time has been looked down upon. It is not recognized for what it is: an illness, like cancer or diabetes or heart disease or anything else.”
Jimmy continues, “I don’t think that the church has looked at it as a disease, where God can say, ‘Take up your bed and walk’, or He can say, ‘Go to a doctor’, or ‘Go to a Pastor’, or He can lead you to a friend or a family member or whatever the case may be. He may have any one of a hundred different ways that He has to help you through that. Like any other disease, it doesn’t need to go untreated.”
“Overall in the Church, depression has been treated as something that you are to be ashamed of having to deal with,” Jimmy says. “We are just very honest about that in concert. When people come up to me afterward, I’ve been amazed at the things God has given me to tell them. So many times, what He’s given me to tell them is something that He has given me to tell myself.”
Jimmy has faced personal and family battles with mental illness for several years. He shares, “Eleven years ago, I got a call on a Saturday morning that my Dad had committed suicide. He was a manic-depressive and I’d never had any compassion for his illness, or any understanding of it. I was almost heartless about it. A lot of times I would tell him, ‘You know, if you would just pray more, seek the Lord more, if you would just…’ this or that.”
“When my Dad died, everything that I’d been taught told me that he did not go to Heaven. I called a friend of mine that was a Chaplain in the U.S. Senate, who had been a friend of the family’s for years. I said, ‘You know, it breaks my heart that after all the years Dad spent serving the Lord, that he is now in Hell’. The Chaplain said, ‘What are you talking about?’ That’s the first time that I began to understand a little bit about what Dad had been going through. This gentleman said, ‘You know, your Dad had a disease and the Lord knew his heart’.”
Jimmy continues, “Six weeks after the final memorial service for my father, I crashed into a very deep depression. I went on medication and I went to counseling and kind of ebbed my way back out of it. Over the next ten years I suffered three more major depressions. The fourth one came about two months after McMillan and Life started, right when everything was what I’d always wanted. I was singing with my wife, we had a great ministry; we were doing what we loved to do the most for the One that we loved the most. What else could anyone ask for? And there I was again, cycling into depression.”
“I praise God because this time, for the first time, they diagnosed this as ‘clinical depression’ and they worked on balancing my medication. The doctors have gotten me to where life is pretty good. But through all of this, I have come to a more compassionate place and a greater understanding of how desperately the Church as a whole needs to reach out to people that are suffering with this disease. The Church shouldn’t react as I did with my Dad, ‘If you would just try harder, if you would just do this or that’. That is not the truth and not the way of God.”
How should the Body of Christ treat those who are dealing with mental illness? “The Church should be reaching out in love,” says Jimmy. “There are so many things that God can do through an ‘I love you’, or through ‘Can I help you?’ or through so many other things that we can do as believers.”
Jimmy shares his journey toward health. “I went through secular counseling. It didn’t do a whole lot of good. I used medication for a period of time. The next two times that I cycled down into depression, I just went to the doctor and said, ‘Look, I’ve dealt with this before and I need you to give me something’. Sometimes it worked and sometimes they had to try something else.”
“This last time, God sent me to Life Care Services out of Nashville, Tennessee. They were amazing. In my situation, it wasn’t so much a matter of needing counseling, it was a matter of needing chemical balancing. Life Care has been fantastic, very caring, understanding and available. If I call and say I’m having a problem with this medication or I don’t like the way I’m responding to it, they will work with me to find a good balance.” Open and transparent, Jimmy has a desire to help others by telling his story, so that more people will seek the help they need.
“I share all of this in concert as well because I want people in the body of Christ to know that there is nothing to be ashamed of,” says Jimmy. “I want people who are not suffering from this illness to stop, look and listen, and reach out. Don’t judge, don’t look at yourself any more highly than anybody else. If someone does share their sorrow and pain with you, have an open mind and an open heart to try to help as much as you can.”
There is research that suggests that some mental illness has genetic links. However, even though Jimmy’s Dad suffered from manic-depression, Jimmy says that genetics are not a factor in his own battle with mental illness. “My father that committed suicide was my adoptive father, so it is not genetic for me. Mental illness is genetic to some degree, however, especially in his family. His mother and possibly two of his sisters suffered with it. Dad’s mother suffered severely with it all of her life. I have a cousin who also suffers with manic-depression. I see signs of it with some of my other relatives. I say that from the bottom of my heart, because although I see the signs, I know they have not gone for help. This could be perhaps from social or religious views, that it is too embarrassing or humiliating, or maybe it’s too scary of a step to take.”
“It is a very scary step to take, to admit that you need help in that area.” Jimmy continues, “But I can say from the bottom of my heart that it can change your life too. I take three little pills a day and believe me, it doesn’t make all the problems go away, but it makes me able to deal with things on a level basis. I’m not saying I don’t have ups and downs, but praise God, He directed me to a place where I could get help to deal with it on somewhat of a decent level.”
Jimmy’s personal struggles have enabled him to connect with many who are hurting and God has used him to share His love with those who are in need. “In my situation, I am talking about a chemical depression, battling a mental illness that you can deal with using medication. In a lot of other situations where people come and talk to me, they are battling with depression or other difficulties, because of things that have happened to them. I almost call it a ‘circumstantial illness’ because the things are that going on their lives are causing them not to function properly.”
“People share with me a lot of different things,” Jimmy continues. “They ask for prayer and often I feel they share perhaps too much because these things are so personal. But sometimes, who else do they have to talk to? If God has put me there at that appointed time, then I know that He is going to give me the right words, the right heart, sometimes even the right smile or the right look for that person that they can’t get anywhere else. Sometimes they just haven’t felt free enough to share with anyone else.”
“When I first went back into depression a year ago this past June, I asked God, ‘Why now? Why, when everything is so great?’ He reminded me then and there, that with all the time I have sung on stage, with the Heartland Boys, Wilburns, Toney Brothers – I would just stand there. When it was my turn to sing, I would just step up and sing and step back. Somebody else always did the MC work. When we started this group, I looked at my wife and I said, ‘Honey, what am I going to do? I’m not a talker. I’m not the person to share, to lead the service’. She said, ‘Just tell them what God lays on your heart’.”
“I tried this for the first couple of months and it never seemed to click, never seemed like I was getting my point across. The words didn’t seem right, like I wasn’t talking about what God really wanted me to talk about. I couldn’t figure out why. Then, when I was laying there in the depths of depression, asking God why I was facing this, it was almost like I heard Him verbally say, ‘Have you forgotten what I brought you from, what I’ve brought you through and where I’ve brought you to? If I have to remind you, I will. Remember this and this is what you are to share with people’.”
“Ever since that day, I’ve never had a problem sharing or knowing what to say. Maybe I just needed to be brought low enough to open up and say to God, ‘Okay, You speak through me, I’m not going to try to speak for myself.’ However it was that He chose to make that change in me, He made that change at that point in time. Now I’m accused of being a preacher!”
“I’ve had people tell me for years that I was going to be a preacher. This is back when I never spoke. I would look at them and think, ‘Really? Because I don’t ever speak, what makes you think I’m going to be a preacher?’ I’ve had people tell me, it’s not a matter of what I think, it is a matter of what God’s told me. I thought those people were crazy. Now I think, ‘I need to call them and get another word from the Lord!’
In the short term, McMillan and Life are looking at another recording soon. Josh Arnett has only been with the group since April, and Jimmy feels that they have molded cohesively in that time. He would like to see the bonding grow stronger and the ministry grow as one unit. “God just seems to be dropping things in our lap lately and laying blessings on us,” Jimmy shares.
“For the vast majority of what we do, I see ourselves as a church or perhaps conference ministry. I’m not sure what all we might do.” Jimmy continues, “ We will continue to be a ministry that interacts with people. If we are in a big concert venue, we won’t share as much because there isn’t the time to do it. But we have the time to do it in a local church or in a smaller venue. That also gives people the opportunity to talk to us and for us to be able to do whatever we can do to be the vessel that I believe God wants the church to be, to help someone to heal. I like to do the big venues, but I see the desperate need for what we are doing in a church setting, or retreat, or conference.”
On a personal note, the Lord has been speaking to Jimmy about the very thing he was avoiding for so long. “In the last two or three weeks, I’ve begun to believe that at some point in the future, I am called to ‘minister in word’, as well as in song. I don’t want to say preach! I’m really beginning to see that there is that side of what I need to do ministry-wise.”
Taking a deep breath, Jimmy continues, “It’s exciting, but it’s scary; just ask anyone who is a preacher or a minister and they will tell you that. With everything that our ministry is about, I can see that we could be so much more effective being able to stay at one church for two or three days or maybe even a week. Not necessarily leading what may be referred to as a ‘revival’, but a ministry session. Just being able to spend the time with people. So many nights I almost feel ripped apart when it is time to tear down the sound system or its time to leave.”
“I’m torn because there are still people sitting there, wanting and needing to talk, wanting advice or direction, or just comfort. And I don’t get the ability to do that because I have to leave. When it’s time to leave, there is nothing I can do about that. I would love to be more in a setting where we could share for longer periods of time.”
Whatever chapter is next in the journey of McMillan and Life, it appears as though the Lord is leading them into higher heights of ministry. As Jimmy and his team reach out to the hurting, God is helping them to ‘…preach good tidings to the poor; heal the brokenhearted, proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound’. That will surely bring abundant life to the audience of McMillan and Life!
For more information, click on to http://www.mcmillanandlife.com
McMillan and Life are also appearing at The Breakfast Club this month
http://www.thebreakfastclubonline.com/
For current features on Christian artists, click on to http://www.sgmradio.com/
Showing posts with label mcmillan and life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mcmillan and life. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Monday, November 14, 2011
Rewind SGM Radio: Getting Past the Christian Stigma of Depression Part One - January 2009
Getting Past the Christian Stigma of Depression
By Lorraine Walker
Shown: Dr. Bob Nichols
Mental health has long been the elephant in the room of the local church. People who suffer from depression, schizophrenia, personality disorders or any other illness that affects the mind have been avoided and left to sit alone in the pew for too long. Whether this is from fear of the unknown, ignorance or wrongful teaching from the pulpit, the result has been the same. If a mental illness makes someone noticeably different from fellow churchgoers, they are often ostracized or a subject of gossip.
The truth is that Mental Illness is a disease that needs to be seen in the same light as any other disease such as cancer. It is not contagious or proof of a spiritual wrongdoing. It is not demon oppression or possession. It is however a very serious and disabling condition that requires professional help and open discussion.
The National Institute of Mental Health, part of the National Institutes of Health which is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services offers several sobering statistics on their website. The site reports that one in four Americans, or 26% of the population, suffer from a diagnosable mental disorder in any given year. Mental illness is one of the major factors in suicide, which was the eleventh leading cause of death in the U.S. in 2004. Suicide was the eighth leading cause of death for men in 2004, the sixteenth leading cause of death for females, and the third leading cause of death in young people ages 10 to 24. [Statistics quoted are from the NIMH National Institute of Mental Health website at www.nimh.nih.gov (2009).]
Many websites on depression cite the prevalence of the diagnosis of this type of Mental Illness at 9.5% of the American population in any given year. However, only about one-third of those who suffer from depression actually seek help. The rest suffer in silence. Many fill our churches and our workplaces, living their lives in the shadows. The Church can and should be a part of the healing process for those who suffer from depression and all types of Mental Illness.
A friend of mine, who suffers from bi-polar disorder, or ‘manic-depressive’ as it has also been called, once described mental health as a continuum. At one end is a state of complete Mental Health and at the other, Mental Illness. All of us are somewhere on that continuum and our position may shift depending on the day or year. No one is immune and good mental health needs to be a goal that we work toward daily, similar to good physical health.
Dr. Bob Nichols is an expert on mental illness and works with pastors to assist them back to a state of mental health. He has a doctorate in theology and psychology and over thirty years in ministry. A speaker and counselor who travels the world, Dr. Nichols recently took time while in Portugal to answer our questions about depression and the Church.
Dr. Nichols feels that prevalence of mental illness in the church is typical of the general demographics. “Though probably a bit higher in the pulpit, as is typical with a high-stress job,” says Nichols. “Some church members may go to their pastors for counseling if the pastor is effective in this area. Larger churches have full-time pastoral counselors and other churches have lay-led counseling teams. The later is the present trend according to Barna Research Group. Due to the fall of many public church leaders, the parishioners are no longer trusting the professionals and are trusting their friends, especially if the friend has some form of training.”
For a Christian with depression, reaching out for help is often very difficult. They may feel that it reflects on a lack of spiritual maturity, or that others may see them as inadequate in some way. Jimmy McMillan, a southern gospel artist with McMillan And Life, is a Christian who suffers from clinical depression and who recently shared his battle in an interview with SGM Radio. Jimmy has talked with many people who also fight this battle and shared what he has heard regarding where they go for help.
“The answer varies greatly depending on the spiritual atmosphere of the church they attend,” says Jimmy (pictured to left). “Is the church a body that understands and cares for it’s own with open hearts and minds or simply an organization of members? It is not hard to tell the difference and the heart of a church determines whether someone feels safe to share their need for help, especially when it comes to this illness that has long been regarded as shameful. The same applies to the pastor and perhaps even more so as they often set the spiritual tone for their church.”
Dr. Nichols agrees regarding the pastors’ search for assistance. “Where do pastors go for help? This is a huge problem. Many denominations are developing vehicles for this but most do not have a vehicle. I presently work with different denominations providing that service. The problem is that men of the cloth are viewed by most as those with all the answers and no problems. When they do share a problem, most denominations terminate their services. Therefore the pastor is induced to hide his issues.”
Timothy Mills, southern gospel artist with The Southern Brothers, is pursuing his degree in Psychology and recently shared his views on mental health with us. “I would argue that the church Mental Illness statistics are quite similar [as the quoted demographics], if not higher. My logic is that the spiritual opposition has found, or always known, that the true battle for humanity is within the mind. If one can capture the mind, the rest is merely consequential. I believe that all church and religious leaders, including pastors, deacons, teachers and singers, have a huge target put upon them for the simple fact that they are leaders. As cliché as it may sound, the church will rise and fall with its leadership and the enemy knows this.”
Timothy (pictured to left) sees a change in Christians seeking help with Mental Illness. “I believe that the tide is turning somewhat on the stigma of Mental Health counseling. Attitudes have changed in the past ten years and dramatically in the last twenty. Most counseling, I believe is still done through local pastors, and for pastors, through a loose network of friends within the pastoral circle. It is sort of a good-ole-boys network to this day. I think the tide is turning in the positive direction for the pastor’s flock, but I think the leadership has some way to go before Mental Illness is addressed in a positive manner within the ranks of pastors. I liken this problem as John 3:16 syndrome. All in Christianity can visualize God saving the world in spite of their faults and sins, but balk on the thought of themselves. “Whosoever is much easier to mentally and spiritually process than me.”
One hindrance to finding help for Mental Health issues, is the inability of the Church leadership to understand the symptoms they are seeing in their parishioners. A recent article on www.reasons.org/blogs/average_joe stated, “Here’s the first paragraph of a recent report titled, “Church Pastors Dismiss Mental Illness.” : In a study of Christian church members who approached their church for help with a personal or family member’s diagnosed mental illness, researchers found that more than 32 percent were told by their pastor that they or their loved one did not really have a mental illness. The problem was solely spiritual in nature, they were told.”
A quick search revealed that the quoted report is no longer accessible on the internet, however this appears to be the unfortunate reality for many.
Dr. Nichols listed the following as symptoms of depression, one of the most common mental illnesses:
“There are many types of depression. Some of the better known are:
Agitated depression
Dysthymia
Clinical depression
Bipolar depression (also called manic-depressive disease)
Winter depression (lack of sunshine, Vitimin D)
Postpartum depression
Depression is an illness that involves the body, mood, and thoughts; that affects the way a person eats and sleeps, the way one feels about oneself, and the way one thinks about things. A depressive disorder is not the same as a passing blue mood. It is not a sign of personal weakness or a condition that can be wished away. People with a depression cannot merely "pull themselves together" and get better. Without recognition and help, symptoms can last for weeks, months, or years.
Depression symptoms include:
* Persistent sad, anxious, or "empty" mood
* Feelings of hopelessness, pessimism
* Feelings of guilt, worthlessness, helplessness
* Loss of interest or pleasure in hobbies and activities that were once enjoyed, including sex
* Decreased energy, fatigue, being "slowed down"
* Difficulty concentrating, remembering, making decisions
* Insomnia, early-morning awakening, or oversleeping
* Appetite and/or weight loss or overeating and weight gain
* Thoughts of death or suicide; suicide attempts
* Restlessness, irritability
* Persistent physical symptoms that do not respond to treatment, such as headaches, digestive disorders, and chronic pain
If you or anyone you love fits this description, please seek help from your family physician. Untreated depression can lead to many things, even suicide as was discussed earlier.
In future parts of this series, we will talk about the diagnosis of mental illness, the Christian’s positive response and the connection between the spiritual, emotional and physical aspects of Mental Health.
For more information:
Dr. Bob Nichols: http://www.drbobnichols.com
Jimmy McMillan, McMillan and Life: http://www.mcmillanandlife.com
Timothy Mills, Southern Brothers: http://www.thesouthernbrothers.com/fr_home.cfm
By Lorraine Walker
First published on http://www.sgmradio.com in January 2009
For current features, please click on http://www.sgmradio.com
Friday, April 15, 2011
Liz McMillan injured in traffic accident

Smyrna TN, April 13, 2011
Liz McMillan of McMillan & Life was involved in a four-car accident on Tuesday, April 12, at approximately 2:30 pm. She was taken to Stonecrest Medical Center in Smyrna TN, where she was treated for a fractured knee cap and released. She will be undergoing further testing to determine the extent of the interior damage to her leg.
Miraculously, no serious injuries were reported, and only one other person was transported for treatment.
“I just thank God for His protection,” says Jimmy McMillan, “and somehow I know this is all part of His plan. Not sure how, but I’m sure it is.” The group would like to thank everyone for their continued prayers.
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Audio Files: Rob Patz Interviews Jimmy McMillan

SGN Scoops Exclusive:
Rob Patz talks names, second chances, and duets with Jimmy McMillan.
Jimmy sings with the gospel trio, McMillan and Life.
Click here to listen
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