Several of the songs are long form stories, some
are admonitions to unbelievers, several are directed to those with
addictions and many delve into the deep and dark days predicted
in the books of Daniel and Revelation. Other songs are indictments
of Satan, a rarity in gospel-themed music, but the author was determined
to forcefully identify satanic influence in international terrorism,
the rejection of God in public and private life, addictions and
myriad human frailties.
The songs, when rearranged in a different order,
began to form a story arc - a beginning, a middle and an end - about
the prophesied End Times and fictional characters who would inhabit
those days before and after the Rapture. Thus began the writing
of the play - after the songs were written, which is the
exact opposite of how such productions usually take form. Again,
this is a fictional account of those days, and
meant as a warning shot across the bow to those whose ships have
wandered into treacherous waters.
His inspiration was, and continues to be, the Word of God contained
in the Bible and the astonishing 100% of Biblical prophecies that
have all come true - except for those about the Second Coming of
Jesus Christ to set up His Eternal Kingdom. Every front page news
report about the tiny state of Israel brings that certainty even
closer.
Vojo became a Christian in 1996 when he heard Pastor
John McArthur at Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California.
“It was a devastating, life-changing experience,” he
says, “to stand convicted of my sins and ask Jesus Christ,
the Son of God, to enter my life. The old lifestyle of my past is
gone forever. These songs and this stage production are for God’s
glory, written in gratitude for the
sacrifice of His Son on behalf of sinners like me
and
for opening my eyes before it
was too late.”
There are some who reject the use of drama or fictional depictions
of End Times events. The author's writing is but for one purpose
- to reach out to the unsaved. Revelation is a fearful book, and
not one that a non-Christian would pick up for casual reading. However,
they might attend a play on the topic, if invited by a Christian
friend.
Although
a published writer under his own name, Vojo is a pen name that he
created because it was a convenient four letter "dot com,"
but mainly because it allowed ego to evaporate while creating for
God's glory, not individual credit.