Tag Archive - worship

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…

Reboot For Inactive Artists…

Untitled by Moyra Blayney

Untitled by Moyra Blayney

I’ve been chatting with Moyra Blayney, our Featured Artist, about her work and her recent reboot.  She had been inactive with her art for 15 years before opening a small show earlier this year at a coffeehouse in Belfast. Since I have also had a reboot in my writing and theatre in the last year, I thought that it might be encouraging to share a few thoughts…

It’s easy to get stuck in the routine of your “real life” but I think that artists (and this is probably especially true of Christian artists) abandon real living when they trade a day job for their artistic passion. For me, it was selling sprockets (not joking) that totally consumed my productive hours and kept me wishing I could do something artistic rather than doing it.

Dreaming takes a lot less effort than actually putting paint on a canvas or words on a page. Guitar Hero is easier to master than guitar. Watching TV is easier than appearing in a play… you get the idea.

I hadn’t given a lot of thought to my own reboot until I started talking to Moyra… but her story and mine share some of the same elements… Elements that might actually form some foundational principles for rebooting… I wanted to share them.

1. FEED YOUR INNER-ARTIST… It struck me that Moyra stayed interested in reading about art and art technique even when she was inactive. For me, attending plays and reading classic literature kept my imagination active even when I was too busy to write.

Passion is something that needs fuel. This is true in art, in relationships, in faith. If you’ve stopped fueling your imagination, pick up a book…

2. FIND A MUSE… For Moyra, it’s the Irish countryside… For me, it’s the Colorado foothills… But everyone has a place, an activity or a person who ignites our imagination…

For the Christian artist, there is a wealth of inspiration to be had in our relationship with God. I’ve found that the more I seek Him, the more inspired my writing becomes. Every good gift comes from God, after all, and our artistic talents are no exception… Ask Him to bring inspiration and He will.

3. TALK ABOUT YOUR DESIRE… Nothing fuels desire like speaking it out loud… And I can’t think of many things that are harder to talk about. It’s kinda scary to talk about a reboot. Our fear of failure kicks in and we freeze up.

Find a trustworthy friend and start talking about your reboot… For me, I started saying things like, “I’m writing that novella I’ve been thinking about.” My friends were very supportive… Moyra’s friend actually set up her first show… If your friends aren’t supportive, get some new ones.

4. SET UP A PLACE AND TIME TO WORK… Moyra had a deadline for her first show and not a single, completed canvas… She set up a studio in her home and set aside time to work… There’s nothing like a deadline to motivate you to work.

I did something similar with my novella, publishing the drafts of each chapter every Monday in my blog… Pointing my desk out the window and at the mountains gave me even more of a reason to sit down and write…

If you have a “day job” it is especially necessary to set aside a certain time (maybe the hour right after dinner) to work, otherwise, you will get derailed by business.

5. JUST DO IT… Talking and planning are great motivators, but eventually you have to pick up the brush, dust off the piano or fill the balloons with paint… You don’t have to write the Great American Novel or create a masterpiece with your first effort, but if you’re ever going to do something noteworthy, you must start somewhere…

Remember that the journey of 1000 miles begins with the first step…

Want to add something or tell us about your own reboot? Comments are always welcome!

Read more about Moyra’s art here.

Read Tim’s novella, The Warrior, or check out his new live nativity script, bethlehemEXPERIENCE.

Do We Rely Too Heavily On Music To Worship?

photo credit: AJ Efondo (partyhardAJ on Flickr)

photo credit: AJ Efondo (partyhardAJ on Flickr)

Caught a really interesting tweet the other day and wanted to bounce it around before I sat down to write…

@MattOlds very interesting conversation re: worship, music & style…do we rely too heavily on music to worship?

I remember the first time I led worship… I was in high school and it was 1986… A lot of things have changed about form and style since that awkward Sunday morning… but one thing remains:

The most common, working definition of “worship” is still singing songs in church.

I don’t object to worship music… I play keyboard and sing on the worship team at my church… but singing songs isn’t worship…

Singing songs is “praise.”

I know that it seems like I’m splitting semantic hairs over this, but the Bible gives us a specific definition of “worship” in Romans 12:1…

…offer your bodies as living sacrifices – holy and pleasing to God – this is your spiritual act of worship…

So, worship is a way that we live… by giving our skills, gifts and time as a “living” offering to God and by pursuing holiness… I’ve heard people call it “lifestyle worship” … but the bottom-line is the same:

The way we live everyday is more important than the words we sing for 30 minutes on Sunday morning…

I was watching a video of a popular student ministry worship team on YouTube and I was struck by the way the students were worshiping… There seemed to be SO much heart in it… so much passion… but I remembered a little factoid from my student ministry days:

Christian teens are virtually indistinguishable (statistically speaking) from non-believers in the areas of drug/alcohol abuse, sexual behavior, truancy, drop-out risk… the list goes on…

But the concept of “holiness” relies on that statistical distinctiveness… It literally means “different” or “set apart”… And it is a biblical requirement for worship that we live our lives in this way…

So, while I cannot judge the heart of any single teen “worshiping” on that YouTube video, I know from experience that more than half of those students are sexually active… That doesn’t make them less sincere, just less holy…

And, after all,  God is not limited to observing us on YouTube.

This is also why I pray for student ministers…

So, do we rely too heavily on music to worship?

I think it goes way beyond that… Many people are deceived into believing that that their offering of praise is enough to ingratiate them to God… We think that through this watered-down worship, we’ve put God in the position of somehow owing us something… I’ve sung passionately so now God has to do what I ask Him to…

In other words, I think we rely too heavily on music to BE worship, so that we can blow-off the whole living-sacrifice-thingy and do what we want…

Or maybe that’s just me…

But I kinda doubt it.

The bottom-line and the struggle that I face daily in my own walk is how I live when the lights aren’t strobing and the bass isn’t thumping and the praise isn’t rising…

And, believe me, it’s a struggle everyday…

But He’s worth it…

And that’s why they call it worship

Hat tip to @MattOlds for a great discussion starter… What other thoughts do you guys have? If you’re not following Matt, check him out… He tweets some thought provoking questions from time to time…

New Songs…

photo credit: Sid Turner (sidturner on Flickr)

photo credit: Sid Turner (sidturner on Flickr)

I was in a conversation last night about “blended” worship… There was an issue raised about how best to mingle traditional songs with contemporary songs. Someone commented that it was “sad” how songs become obsolete so quickly in the post-modern church… I had used the chorus of a hymn in our worship set and someone expressed a desire to sing the entire hymn next time around…

I declined… I don’t really do entire hymns anymore…

It’s not that I dislike hymns, but I appreciate them in the same way that I appreciate Shakespeare and Thoreau… They are art from a bygone  era, beautiful in their own way and certainly not to be discarded, but in the same way that many people don’t “get” Shakespeare’s humor or Thoreau’s existentialism, they don’t “get” hymns either.

To me, that’s the real deal-breaker in worship music…

Like it or not, our congregations are culturally bound… and in the 21st century, that means that they have short vocabularies and even shorter attention spans…

But there’s another even more compelling argument…

We talk a LOT around here about Romans 12:1…

Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God – this is your spiritual (or reasonable) act of worship.

This is really the bottom-line for worship in our minds… “Offering our bodies” simply doesn’t mean laying ourselves on some altar… The Bible is talking about the stuff we do… for artists that means art…

For songwriters, it means songwriting…

The resistance of some to new music quenches the worship of the songwriters in their congregation… It literally limits the ability of these artists to obey God and offer the works of their bodies as living sacrifices…

There’s a reason why lots of new worship music flows out of churches like Hillsongs and New Life

They have given their songwriters permission and opportunity to worship through songwriting…

And whatever you think about their respective theologies overall, these churches (local) have blessed the Church (Christians everywhere) with some incredible worship music…

If we devote our time in corporate worship to songs that are 30… 50… 100-years old, are we giving our artists permission to worship with their gifts?

What do you think?

.

Beta…

beta graphicYou might have noticed some random changes in the site over the last few months… font tweaks… layout changes… plug-in experiments… We’ve been working and reworking site functions and appearance for a beta test…

And now we’re ready to start the beta test…

Now, if our site had a lot of moving parts, we’d be using the next six months  to make sure everything works… taking user feedback and rewriting code and all sorts of other technical stuff…

But we don’t have a lot of moving parts…

So, OUR beta process will look a little different… We’re going to focus on promotions, features and gathering reader input about content…

Changes that you might notice…

This week, we’ll be adding a tool that will allow Facebook, Twitter and Flickr users to contribute content to the site through an outside media website… The media site is also in beta, so we will be inviting a limited number of reader-contributors to test the functionality of the interface… Once the media site opens for business in September, we’ll tell you how you can join too…

We’ll also be starting our #MusicMonday promotion for independent artists on Twitter on Monday, August 3.

Our Featured Artist program is gearing up to present a new artist every 2 weeks, beginning August 3… We have some great artists lined-up to introduce in August and September.

We will be changing how the slideshows work… This is the number 1 user-recommendation that we’ve received in the past 2 months… You’ll see this improvement on this week’s Flickr Frlday post…

Finally, we’ve added a WOP Bookstore at Amazon.com… We’ll be adding recommendations from WOP staff and friends…

Changes that you probably won’t notice at all…

All of our programs are being streamlined internally… For example, we’re adding processes and forms to the way we invite content, contact artists and tag posts, photos and media… You won’t notice, but it will free us up to spend more time creating and inviting great content…

Where all of this is going…

Ultimately, we have established 2 goals:

Create a site that motivates and inspires artists to use their gifts in ministry and worship…

Create a site that assists churches is starting ministries to artists, for artists  and by artists…

How you can get involved…

Comment on everything!  If you like a post, show us some love… If you disagree with a post, show us some critical thinking (with love)…

Retweet us on Twitter whenever you find a useful or interesting post… “Like” our posts on Facebook…

If you blog, photoshare or produce media that is focused on art, worship, ministry or inspiration, you can contribute content to the site by joining our beta test group… We are limiting the number of users, so contact us to request an invite… and don’t be offended if we reply that the pool is full…

If you are an artist in any medium, contact us with a brief blurb about yourself and your art, include some samples or a link to your website… You might be selected to be one of our Featured Artists…

Become a fan on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, subscribe to our YouTube channel and join our group on Flickr.

Thanks!!

Page 5 of10« First...«34567»...Last »