Christopher Locke buys old trumpets, trombones, and French horns and
transforms them into acoustic amplifiers for iPhones and iPads. His creations
are modeled on the trumpetlike speakers used in the first phonographs during
the late 1800s. Music played through Christopher’s AnalogTelePhonographers has
a “louder, cleaner, richer, deeper sound” than what is heard from the small
speakers in the digital devices. Along with being interesting works of art,
these salvaged brass instruments require no electrical power as they amplify
the music people love to hear.
Paul’s words to the followers of Jesus in Corinth remind us today that
in living for Christ and sharing Him with others, we are not the music but only
a megaphone. “For we do not preach ourselves,” Paul wrote, “but Christ Jesus
the Lord, and ourselves your bondservants for Jesus’ sake” (2 Cor. 4:5). Our
purpose is not to become the message, but to convey it through our lives and
our lips. “We have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellence of the
power may be of God and not of us” (v.7).
If an old horn can amplify music, then perhaps our flawed lives can
magnify the goodness of God. We’re the megaphone; the music and the power come
from Him!