• Our hope-filled future is bound up in sharing the story of Jesus, in discipling others, in bringing those disciples together into communities of believers, and in developing and releasing those believers to create other communities... till Jesus the King comes again!

Celebrate Grace

While sitting with a group of believers, someone starts playing a worship song on the piano or guitar. They are just playing the music.  What happens next?  Those who know the words begin to softly sing along with the music. 

Peter, at the end of his first letter (1 Peter 5), shares some parting counsel with his readers.  Some of the words of wisdom stand out from the others: “And after you have suffered a little while, the God of all grace, who has called you into his eternal glory in Christ, will himself restore, confirm strengthen, and establish you.” (5:11)

Peter describes God as ‘the God of all grace’.  It’s interesting that he didn’t write: ‘the God of grace’, but the ‘God of all grace’ as if to underline that God’s very heart is one of abundant grace. 

All of us face difficulties and struggles in our work to see disciples raised up and communities of believers multiplied.  There are numerous obstacles such as our own pride, the hardened hearts of others, or just plain daily living. There is an enemy as well who seeks to wreak havoc in our lives and in the work in which we are engaged.

Peter’s counsel to his readers, and to us, is learn to celebrate the God of all grace.  Despite everything that may be happening around us, one thing does not change and will not change: God has placed His unending love on us and no one will ‘snatch us’ from His grip.

It’s always easy to say what I just wrote.  It’s quite another to lay hold of it each day, with our arms of faith.  Probably why we need to find ways to ‘tell ourselves the Good News’ again today, tomorrow, and each day this week.

A great way is by remembering or rehearsing the words to songs that put our hearts back on Christ.

Here’s a song I might suggest: Yet Not I But Through Christ in Me

What gift of grace is Jesus my redeemer
There is no more for heaven now to give
He is my joy, my righteousness, and freedom
My steadfast love, my deep and boundless peace

To this I hold, my hope is only Jesus
For my life is wholly bound to His
Oh how strange and divine, I can sing: all is mine!
Yet not I, but through Christ in me

Silence as worship: a practical idea.

Day aloneWhen I wrote about prayer and worship in one of my recent posts, Linda shared the following thoughts. I found them so helpful; I thought it would be worth passing them along to the larger community:

I have resonated with your recent “Thoughts Along The Journey.” Your short writings have stimulated some of the very issues that have been tumbling around in my mind and heart lately as I seek to deepen my relationship with the King of Kings and Lord of Lord’s. To think that we have complete access into the very throne room where our Lord resides; what an immense honor and privilege! I wanted to send along some ideas that have helped me personally as I come and “still” myself before the Lord. Most of the ideas come from the book, Alone With The Lord.

A day alone with the Lord enables us to live with integrity in community.” Dietrich Bonheoffer

Silence and Solitude will become the anchor and central feature of your time alone with the Lord. In time you will learn that silence bears fruit; and in silence you will meet and hear Christ, and will attend to the inner witness of the Holy Spirit through the Word of God.

  • You need to find a quiet place to meet God where you will not be distracted or interrupted.
  • You need to avoid the temptation to interact with external interruptions, check your phone, text, or to read other materials.
  • You need to learn to be still even when it does not seem, at least immediately, to be worthwhile.
  • God is in the silence and He speaks in the silence. As you learn to be still you will cultivate the capacity to know and hear the One who loves you.
  • You need to intentionally quiet your heart and mind by gently turning from the noises around you, and the inner voices or “noises” in your heart; and to make a conscious and deliberate choice to be still before the Lord, your Maker and Redeemer.
  • You will need your Bible and a notebook to journal your thoughts as God speaks to you. For some it may be helpful to journal some of your prayers, so that you keep your mind from distraction.

Quite often when we intentionally set aside time to spend before the Lord, the enemy will barrage our mind with things we need to do or other disruptive thoughts. Keep a section in your journal in which you write these thoughts down. Do not engage them. After you have written them down, simply return to your time of quiet before the Lord.”

Silence as worship?

I was reading through some old journals and came across this statement by Steve Smallman in an article called, “The heart of worship”:

priere_silenceBe still and know … So, while there is indeed singing and praise and expressions of repentance, the essential element of worship was silence and humble submission.  In his book, Reaching Out, Henri Nouwen says that this silence calls for much discipline and the taking of risks.  We always seem to have more important things to do.  “Just sitting there” and “doing nothing” more times than not, disturbs us more than it helps.  But there is no other way. At the heart of all prayer, lies our natural discomfort of being “useless” and silent in the Lord’s presence.  We are told in Psalm 46.10, “Be still and know that I am God.” What encourages me about this command is that although it is very difficult, it is something we can do.  Our worship will only rarely be the result of a dramatic encounter, but learning to be still in the presence of God puts us in the same place as the great worshipers of God in Scripture.

That small paragraph raised a number of questions in my heart.  Here are two of them:

  • Why do I, why do we often experience this “discomfort of being “useless” and silent in the Lord’s presence”?
  • What would encourage me, what would encourage us to be “still in the presence of God” more often?

 

 

 

Words are important

The musical score of a song can be pleasing to our ears.  I’ll often catch myself humming a few bars of a song I have recently heard.  Sometimes I might remember the words, but that usually takes longer as I need to hear or sing the song a few times before the words are committed to memory.the-power-of-words

Maybe you have discovered the same reality as I have: that sometimes a melody can be fun to sing, but he words attached to it are rather shallow.

In prayer and worship, I’m recognizing more and more how important are the words we say, we sing and we pray.  Those words need to express the feelings of one’s heart as well as (or more importantly) lift one’s eyes back on God.

The song below is one that was used during a community time Rebecca and I attended in Hong Kong.  It may not be familiar to many, but the words took my heart and mind off of what I needed from God and created a desire to give back to him the adoration He deserves.

We bow our hearts we lift our hands
we turn our eyes to you again
And we surrender to the truth
that all we need is found in You
Receive our adoration
Jesus lamb of God
Receive our adoration
how wonderful you are
We choose to leave it all behind
and turn our eyes towards the prize
the upward call of God in Christ
you have our hearts Lord take our lives
Receive our adoration Jesus lamb of God
Receive our adoration how wonderful you are

Every soul you´ve saved sings out
everything you´ve made resounds
all creation´s standing now
lifting up your name
We´re joining in the angel´s song
we´re gathered to your ancient throne
children in our Father´s arms
shouting out your praise

 

One possible application: commit to memory the words and melody of a song that draws your heart back to God and use it as part of your individual and community worship.

More than just music

Okay, I’ll admit that I have a ‘liturgical bone’ in my background and that from time to time I enjoy the richness of a community time centred on certain practices which originated in the early years of the Christian faith.  Liturgy, though, is actually another form or expression of worship; a form that focuses on declarations and response to those declarations.

It is worship that is more than just music.

Nicene-Constantinopolitan-CreedFor me, the reciting of the Nicene Creed (first written in 325 AD) is one of those worshipful declarations of faith:

I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible.

And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all worlds; God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God; begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father, by whom all things were made.

Who, for us men for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit of the virgin Mary, and was made man; and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate; He suffered and was buried; and the third day He rose again, according to the Scriptures; and ascended into heaven, and sits on the right hand of the Father; and He shall come again, with glory, to judge the quick and the dead; whose kingdom shall have no end.

And I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and Giver of Life; who proceeds from the Father [and the Son]; who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified; who spoke by the prophets.

And I believe one holy catholic and apostolic Church. I acknowledge one baptism for the remission of sins; and I look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come. Amen.”

I am not arguing for a liturgical element in the worship of the communities of believers that we establish.  I just want to highlight the fact that believers over many centuries and from many different cultural contexts have discovered acts of worship that express for them their growing understanding of who is this great God they serve.

Worship is declaring what we know of this God.  It is making music to celebrate who He is.  It is talking with Him about His promises.  It is serving others because we have experienced His grace and love.  Worship is reflected in all of our life.

 

Come let us worship

Recently, I asked a number of WT workers if they could share in less than three minutes how our core values are being worked out in their personal, team and ministry lives.  Last week you heard from Caressa about the Gospel.

This week, Daniela, one of our workers in Asia, shares how she sees prayer and worship worked out in her context.