
Canceled Shows
- 12.11.20098 CommentsWe are very sorry to report that we have had to cancel our concerts for tonight and tomorrow night (12/11 & 12/12). In eight years of being a band we have never had to cancel a show, so we are very sorry to have to do this at the last minute. Due to an immediate family member’s health, along with about ten other issues that seem to have hit us all at once, we decided it would be best for us to stick close to home for a couple of days and try to regroup and recoup. Thanks for your prayers and understanding and hope to see you guys out there very soon!
-Addison Road

Santa Claus, the Baby Jesus, and a Grown-Up Jenny
- 12.5.200912 CommentsJenny wrote an essay for our church magazine and we thought we’d share it here as well.
I got my picture taken with Santa this weekend. For free.
Free? Seriously? You people brought out a real live reindeer and an old, fat, jolly man with the best-looking Santa Claus beard I have ever seen…for free?
Yeah right.
This is it. I am about to fall prey to a Christmas scam. I can totally tell. I will come and they will try to convert me to Scientology or reindeerology or some strange political party. This Santa looks conniving. Can you believe that old man’s smile? He is totally after my wallet!
I have a seven-month-old baby girl; still, I have been the one excited about this encounter all day. I’m that annoying person who thinks it is OK to play Christmas music by November 1 and has the tree up and decorated as soon as the Thanksgiving turkey is off the table. Growing up, the excitement of the holidays was a little too much for me. Every Christmas Eve while my sisters watched It’s A Wonderful Life, I was splayed over the toilet puking up green and red sugar cookies. The anticipation of reindeer and all landing on my roof was more than my little heart could handle. Ok, more than my 8th grade heart could handle.
Santa, Help My Unbelief
So here I am, 29 years old, waiting in line to meet Santa Claus in the middle of a busy North Dallas shopping center parking lot. And as the kid in front of me walks up, I find myself asking, “what in the world are you doing here, Jen?” Santa motions for me to come sit on his knee. Your knee? You want me to sit on your knee? There was a seat in the sleigh next to him, but he insisted that I sit right smack on top of him. I know it’s tradition: you sit on Santa’s lap and tell him what you want for Christmas, but all of a sudden it felt creepy. The magic was gone. Santa was just an old guy who had eaten way too much food and had an unusual amount of facial hair.
On the ride home, a weight settled into my soul and I came to this sad realization: I am officially a skeptical grown-up. No more throwing up out of sheer holiday excitement. I had just spent the entire time with Santa suspiciously eyeing the reindeer and the elves, wondering who sent them; and wondering how much money I would really end up paying, and why Santa made me sit on his knee? Dirty old man.
Yes, everything has changed.
Back then, Christmas started the day after Halloween. Now, it threatens to overwhelm me; I can’t afford another Christmas.
Back then, I spent the night in a deafening silence on my bedroom floor with my two sisters listening for Santa. Now, I try to make sure we are several rooms apart. I do not want to be the one that starts the inevitable holiday fight.
Back then, I ate from every batch of cookies that left our kitchen. Now, I figure out how many holiday calories my thighs can afford.
Back then, I cried every single time I heard the song “Mary Did You Know” and listened to the story where my Jesus was born in a barn with cows licking him and no lights and a scared mom. Now, I have to muster up everything inside of me to try and believe again.
Back then, I was so excited that I puked. Now, I feel the last traces of amazement slipping away into adulthood.
And that’s where I find myself this year. Smack dab in adulthood.
My eyes have been opened. My heart has been wounded. My soul has seen darkness.
Yikes. (Is this an uplifting Christmas article or what?)
Slumlight
Last year, Andy sent out an e-mail wishing the IBC family a Merry Christmas. He told us about a beautifully designed Christmas card that read, “The day will dawn on us from on high.” But when you opened the card, it was a stark black and white picture of kids with swollen bellies in a slum that read, “To give light to those that sit in the darkness and in the shadow of death.”
Geez Andy. Merry Christmas to you too. Who sends that kind of guilty holiday greeting? You can’t put that next to the other cards; the starving African babies might stare at us.
Andy finished, “We can only appreciate the glory of Christmas if we’re aware of how dark a Christ-less world would be.”
When I was a kid, I didn’t see any darkness. I wasn’t jaded. And everything felt magical. When I was a kid, the story of baby Jesus was amazing…but not life changing, because I didn’t know about the darkness.
Now I know. Now I know what it feels like to not be able to pay the bills, to worry about my future, to watch cancer take the lives of my friends, to battle anxiety, to see suicide, divorce, abuse, cutting, miscarriage, and depression in the students’ lives that I work with. Now I know what darkness looks like. And now the story of Jesus coming to us as light in the midst of our world’s brokenness, in the midst of my brokenness, brings me to my knees.
God invites me to step away from both the magic of my childhood and the harsh adult reality that often surrounds me; and instead, to spend this sacred season in the soft light of the Christ Child. Santa Claus, Christmas lights, and cocoa-induced happiness are temporary. Yet cynical grown-up despair robs the childlike wonder of the season. So this year, I am just praying for a collision. A collision of Santa, the reindeer, the little kids in the African slum, the pains from my own life, and then right in the middle of all of that, the baby Jesus with the cows licking him and his mother having him in a barn.
God invites me to celebrate the moment when the sacred collided with the world and became one of us. He invites me to worship Jesus. He invites me into the glory of Christmas. He invites…
And the invitation is open.

Rock Or Not?
- 10.10.200920 CommentsWe’re playing a show with December Radio and MercyMe tonight and this is our transportation for the day. We parked next to their busses so we could at least steal their internet. So what do you think? Rock Or Not?

Thank You!!
- 9.27.20099 CommentsWow. We are completely blown away by all of the support, prayers, and love you guys have shown us. We put the blog up on Thursday night asking for help, and by tonight (Sunday) we have met our goal of $3000. $3,176 to be exact! We are still in shock at how quickly the response came. Thank you so much. It has been such a blessing for us to see the Church come together and support us. God continues to remind us of His faithfulness.
Some really cool details have worked out with our transportation for the tour. Erik Bledsoe is a worship leader in Nashville, TN and caught wind of our situation. Erik has a great shuttle bus that is way better than our 15 passenger van and it turns out he is not using it during the month of October and has offered to rent us this amazing shuttle bus for the tour. So for the same price it would cost us to rent a 15-passanger van, we now have access to a bigger, more comfortable shuttle bus. Yeah, ARoad upgrading!
What is really cool about this story is that he and his wife have been a little stressed financially about the coming months with not many shows booked on the calendar. So the money that you all so freely gave not only makes this tour possible for us, but it goes beyond us and helps another family. It is amazing to see how God works.
So, from 5 very grateful and humble friends, thank you for being the body of Christ to us. You have been such an encouragement to us. This past week could have been overwhelming and discouraging, but God used each of you to remind us that He is faithful and that we are exactly where He has called us to be. Using our music to bring people closer to Him. Thank you for believing in us and believing in what God is doing through us. We look forward to seeing many of you soon out on the road.
Love you guys- ARoad

We Need Your Help
- 9.24.200912 CommentsThe curse of the Irish? Seven years bad luck? Third times a charm? Who knows, but Addison Road has struck out again! On the way home from a show late Tuesday night we got in a wreck with an oak tree that had just fallen into the road due to some rain and storms. The oak tree won. The van is out of service for a minimum of 3 weeks and once again we find ourselves headed into a tour with no transportation.
In the 8 year history of Addison Road we have never EVER asked our family, friends, or fans to financially support us, but today, we are asking.
We need $3,000 to rent a van for the Sanctus Real tour that begins next Friday… otherwise ARoad will be out of commission. We in fact realize that this is not bad luck, rather, we believe it to be directly from the one that seeks to kill, steal, and destroy. Every time we as a band set out to make God’s name known, to love on people, to bring hope to those who are hurting through our music, and to be God’s hands and feet, we find that every area of our lives are attacked. And that poor van gets the brunt of it! We count it pure joy to find ourselves in the midst of such attacks and rely heavily on your prayers… and today… your financial support. With so many obstacles, we are more convinced than ever that in the spiritual realm, there is someone who does not want us doing what we are about to do. Little does he know… we cannot be stopped that easily.
Another way you can help… If you have access to a van that can pull a trailer for about three weeks and would be willing to let us borrow/rent, please let us know. That could also be an amazing way that you can help us.
Love you guys and appreciate all of your prayers and support. We will keep you updated.
-ARoad
**Donation has been removed** Thank You So Much! **









