April 25, 2012
Casting Crowns frontman also a youth pastor
Courtesy photo
Contemporary Christian rock band Casting Crowns comes to the Civic Center for a Saturday evening show. Lead singer Mark Hall is a youth pastor -- as are all of his bandmates.
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"The world is a lot bigger than what you do from 8 to 5," he said.

Both are part of a life. The pieces look separate on a calendar, but they fit together because of Hall's faith in Jesus Christ. He said he couldn't live the way the he does otherwise.

"If I lived by how I feel," he laughed. "I'd be in trouble."

Like anyone else, Hall said, he gets tired. He gets annoyed, frustrated and even sick. There are days when the alarm clock goes off and he doesn't even want to get out of bed, let alone go to his office or get on a bus in the middle of the night to drive 500 miles for a concert.

"The truth is, God has put me here to know him and make him known," Hall said, "and I'm going to do that."

He chooses to live by faith. The rest kind of takes care of itself, although Hall pointed out that he has a lot of help. His wife of 21 years, Melanie, runs most of the day-to-day business operations of Casting Crowns, which Hall said allows him to stay active in the church.

"She's the left side of my brain. And if anything is going well for us [Casting Crowns], it's God taking care of her. She's just an awesome lady."

The two met at his home church after her family moved to town and her father became the music minister. Hall was in fifth grade. She was in seventh.

"She was the prettiest girl ever," he laughed, "and I was the little kid who got on all the high school kids' nerves -- the kid whose parents helped out with the youth group."

Hall said he and his future wife were friends for years, then started dating when he was about 20.

"We only dated for four months. It was like, 'What's left to get to know?' "

Hall said they're total opposites. "But what keeps us together is, we're part of each others lives. We're not living separate lives. We've been part of each other's ministry. We're partners."

So when Hall climbs into his bunk Wednesday night, his family does, too. They try to keep it fun for the family, make every trip away from home fun for kids.

"We hit the town," he said. "We go to the park or a children's museum, something fun for the day."

Hall said he squeezes a lot into his life, but there's no big mystery about how he does it.

"I think understanding who you are is what keeps you going," he said. "I think, if I'm just here to get to the weekend or to retire some day . . . forget that. All I really want is to be a good husband and a good daddy. I think that, as long as my kids are loving Jesus and loving each other, I'll be OK."

Reach Bill Lynch at ly...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5195.

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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