The Theological iPod Grows and Grows

I found the The Theological iPod by Andrew Faiz, June Record, very interesting and have a number of songs to add to the list. My Christian faith began to mature in the late eighties. At that time I had the pleasure of travelling across Canada and the U.S. with Spectrum Productions, which was an arm of Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship. Spectrum had a multi media show called In Search of the Sun which used secular music to pose questions about science, sex, love etc. This was followed by a second show which looked at the Christian faith. This experience along with the influence of certain people in my life at that time profoundly affected me and introduced a faith that allowed questions.
Today I have far more interest in secular music as I find it to be more artistic and questioning in general. Sadly, the taste for contemporary Christian music eludes me for some reason.
I will keep my list relatively short as there are many secular songs out there that speak spiritually in profound ways. I do have two categories though; truly secular songs and songs by a particular Christian artist that are little more cynical and questioning nature.
Secular songs:
“The Big Music” by the Waterboys – “I have heard the big music and I'll never be the same. Something so pure has called my name.”
Several Bruce Cockburn songs: “Dweller by a Dark Stream”, “Can I go with You?”, “All the Diamonds in the World”, “Creation Dream”, “Lord of the Starfields”
Michael Scott (of the Waterboys): “Bring em all in” – “Bring the unforgiven, bring the unredeemed, bring the lost, the nameless, let 'em all be seen, bring 'em out of exile, bring 'em out of sleep, bring 'em to the portal, lay them at my feet”
Michael Scott: “She is so Beautiful” – This is one of the most beautiful love songs I have ever heard (certainly a love song is spiritual!) – “For she is like a song, she is like a ray of light, she is like children praying, like harps and bells and cymbals playing. And she is like a wind, moving, soothing, bringing joy. And here am I, destroyed. She is so beautiful. I don't know what I'm going to do when I leave, except grieve.”
King Crimson: “Epitaph” (a little dated maybe, but powerful, and not a spiritual song per se), it quotes ” Knowledge is a deadly friend if no one sets the rules”
A Christian song(s):
Anything by Mark Heard whose songs in my opinion are the epitomy of what it is to be Christian and to question our fundamental boundaries. Take for example “We believe so well” – “But we believe so well, don't we tell ourselves. Don't we take exclusive pride that we abide so far from hell? We might laugh together but don't we cry alone. For the ashes and the dust we've swept beneath the Holy throne.”
Looking forward to seeing what other songs people come up with.