Archive - September, 2009

FieldNotes: New Life Church…

This weekend was my last chance to skip church before we start on a project that will have me tied-up until Christmas, so I packed up the family and drove down to Colorado Springs to visit New Life Church.

If you’re not familiar with New Life, here’s a little sample of their worship:

Now, you have to understand that I’m something of a cynic. When I look at this video, I see a polished and rehearsed moment, well-planned and captured for the benefit of selling records. I fully expected that the actual experience would be something less.

I was wrong…

New Life is a worshiping church. The same sense of excitement and anticipation that is evident in the video was there on Sunday morning too. I was pleasantly surprised by the authentic worship experience. We were able to easily follow and worship with them, because the experience is also well-led. Even when the leader said, “We want to teach you a new song…” the congregation responded eagerly.

Also surprising was the broad generational and ethnic diversity.

We took our 4-year-old daughter to children’s church, which was a process that took about 15 minutes. The facility is outrageously cool and the teachers were great. When we picked her up after service, she begged to come back again.

We weren’t pounced on by ushers or greeters, but every time we got that “caught in the headlights” look, someone offered to help us find what we were looking for… and not necessarily someone wearing a nametag. On the stairs in the children’s building, my wife made a comment about being glad we left plenty of time to find the classroom and the lady in front of us asked if it was our first visit, then escorted us to the right room.

There were just enough missteps to remind us that these were real people, serving and worshiping and leading…

So regardless of what you think about “mega-churches,” New Life is a testimony of what resources and leadership can do to expand the Kingdom of God…

My daughter woke us up on Monday and asked to go to “perfect church” again… And while I know that there’s no such thing as a perfect church, visiting at New Life was a great experience.

FieldNotes is a live-blog feature… Contributors write-in with their impressions from a service, conference or event.  To contribute to FieldNotes, email us from the Contact page.

Purchase “Counting On God” CD by New Life Worship from the WOP store.

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Reverance vs. Relevance

One of the best discussions that we’ve heard on contemporary worship. Ed Setzer and Mike Harland talk about the practical and spiritual issues surrounding corporate worship “style”… Some great thoughts on both sides…

We encourage all pastors and worship leaders to devote the hour to watching the full broadcast…

Reverence vs Relevance from LifeWay Productions on Vimeo.

SacredCows, Part 1…

PhotoCredit: believer9 on Flickr.com

PhotoCredit: believer9 on Flickr.com

When I was studying biblical interpretation in college, our professor enjoyed the exercise of forcing us to examine our presuppositions in light of what the Bible actually says… We described it as “Sacred Cow Tipping” and as a group of ministry students in a conservative, denominational college, we had lots of Sacred Cows… The truly interesting thing about Sacred Cow Tipping is that you rarely realize which of your beliefs are Sacred Cows until someone else points them out…

This is the first post in a series in which I want to create a discussion about our Sacred Cows in worship… Ideas that are deeply ingrained into our practice, but have little or no biblical basis…

Sacred Cow: Worship Style Matters…

I’ve have the opportunity to serve in a variety of churches with a variety of styles. Each one has had it’s own “scriptural” justification and each one has had it’s detractors… I do quite a lot of reading on the subject, surfing various blogs and trawling for fodder to feed my own and I have noticed a trend:

Everybody thinks their way is the right way and they can use the Bible to back it up…

This is easy to see when comparing Catholic liturgy to the worship of Pentecostals, for example. But even the ecumenicists have a firm belief that “nonsectarian” is the best way to go… with the emphasis on “God” instead of the polarizing practice of worshiping “Jesus.”

The bottom line is that every tradition believes that the forms or styles in worship really matter… a lot… to God. It is a core element of our denominational distinctiveness and it separates us in the same way that the first century Jews were separated from the Samaritans…

Our fathers worshiped God on this mountain, but you Jews claim that the place we must worship is in Jerusalem… – Samaritan Woman to Jesus (John 4:19, The Bible)

You see, up to this point, Jewish Law had been the only way to approach God… God set it up that way. There are specific rules set out in Leviticus to define the forms for worship. The Jewish “claim” that Jerusalem was the only location for true worship was based on these rules…

BTW, these rules had already been called into question by the time Jesus came on the scene because the Jews had lost the Ark of the Covenant (the official seat of God’s presence)…

A time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem… a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth. God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and truth… -Jesus’ response to the Samaritan Woman (John 4: 21. 23-24, The Bible)

The modern application is simple:

Whether you are in a mega-church or meeting in a house, whether you follow strict liturgical traditions or have a free-form service, whether you are focused on God’s presence or on the needs of seekers… the true worshipers are authentically inclined to God with their whole being…

Which is probably simpler than it sounds…

Ok… so let it begin…