Rebecca St. James revisits ‘Wait for Me’

Baptist Press

Rebecca St. James

Purity has long been an issue of great importance to singer-songwriter Rebecca St. James, and at the fifth anniversary of the release of her landmark single “Wait for Me,” she continues to show young people worldwide how to wait honorably for the spouse God may have for them.

The song, written by St. James as a pledge of commitment to her future husband, has inspired thousands of teenagers worldwide to remain sexually abstinent until marriage.

“I think, deep down, young people do know that waiting is the right way to go, and they just want encouragement to wait,” she told Baptist Press. “I think for a lot of girls that heard it, Wait for Me became kind of their song that they were singing to their future husbands that encouraged them to be strong. I also think we girls are such romantics at heart, and it’s a song that is romantic but also pure. I think that’s why it connected.”

Richard Ross, co-founder of the True Love Waits abstinence movement, said the song has played a large role in the success of program.

“Wait for Me has been one of those pillar songs for True Love Waits. Both the words of the song and the purity of the artist behind it have carried great weight with Christian teenagers,” Ross told BP.

St. James said she first made a decision about purity at a True Love Waits rally in Peoria, Ill., when she was 16 years old and just starting out in the music industry.

“I saw a couple hundred other young people taking a stand for God, and I was so inspired by that, but also really felt challenged to make that commitment myself,” she recounted. “I had grown up in a Christian family and I knew that was the right way to go, but I also knew that there was a lot of pressure on us as young people today to compromise in that area. So I wanted to make a commitment that really would help me to stand strong.”

Sometime after that rally, her father gave her a purity ring during a ceremony the family held at home. She still wears the ring to remind her of the commitment she made.

As she progressed in her music career and became a popular figure at youth rallies and True Love Waits events, she began speaking publicly about her goal of purity. Afterward, she said, teenagers would gather around and share how thankful they were that someone else was waiting because that made it a little easier for them to wait.

Eventually, a song was born.

With its release in 2001, Wait for Me caught on quickly, and St. James said she has heard hundreds of stories of how it was instrumental in helping people keep their pledge for purity. Married couples tell her the song helped them to abstain from sex while they were dating, and some have even played it at their weddings because it meant so much to them. And in 2002, St. James also wrote a book with the same title that expounds on the issues raised in the song.

Another lesson the song’s success has taught St. James, a member of The Peoples Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Franklin, Tenn., is that youth yearn for a community of peers in facing the struggle for purity.

“Just about every time I hear of a young person who has slid down an immoral path, it’s because they’ve surrounded themselves with other young people who are not living the Christian life and are not committed to God’s way,” she said.

“On the other hand, I’ve also seen a lot of young people who have waited, and I think a large reason why they’ve had the strength to stand is because they’ve dated other people who are committed to waiting, and they’ve had friends who have encouraged them in that commitment,” she said. “And I know for me, I have friends who are committed to waiting, and that encourages me, too.”