Showing posts with label Salvation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salvation. Show all posts

Monday, May 1, 2017

Worship Engagement

You're on stage and between songs.  Everything up to that point has brought you here.  You have one (or two) songs left on the set list, and you feel an urge to do something not planned.



Sometimes it takes a quiet moment to hear God's voice and directions.  We prepare and pray for His guidance in the upcoming services, and sometimes He gives us just enough to get to 'that' moment.  It can be anywhere in the worship service, and you know it when you get there.  What do you do?

Some worship leaders know exactly what to do.  Others don't.  I knew what to do from the experiences I received by watching my parents and other ministers and worship leaders.  Not everyone grows up in the environment I did, and therefore doesn't have the same experiences to draw from that I do.  None the less, it was still terrifying to actually do it.

God will sometimes drop something in your spirit or in your heart, and you can't help but share it.  It's usually something that uplifts or edifies the church.  Pentecostal brothers and sisters will know what I'm talking about...Sometimes God uses speaking in tongues for this something, and other times He impresses us like He does ministers when they are preparing their sermons.  The method is not important.  What is important is that when this happens, you trust God and do or say what He wants you to.

Their are other times that speaking to the congregation will encourage worship or help set the attitude and help focus the people in their worship.  Sometimes a simple prayer or an exhortation can be enough.  Then there are times where you may quote scripture and briefly interpret it for them. There are many  things that can be done in those moments.  You just have to do it.

Don't be afraid.  You're already singing in front of the congregation, why not go ahead talk to them.  You talk to them before and after services anyway.  Sometimes we get nervous about the little things we do, when we need to just focus on God.

These moments of spoken word will have positive results in the long run.  It may take you a couple times to get the feel for it, or to recognize what God is asking you to do; but...It keeps the focus of the people where it belongs.....On worshiping God.  You never know what condition someone may be in, or what they are going through.  Your words may remind them that He is sufficient for all needs in their lives; that He is mighty enough, loving enough, and gentle enough to help them through anything they are facing or dealing with.  This opens their hearts to a more sincere form of worship, and those that respond usually leave encouraged by God, having a more positive outlook on their situation, and since they've had an encounter with the Almighty, they leaved changed.



After all, isn't this our mission as worship leaders?  Aren't we supposed to help people into sincere worship?  Aren't we supposed to help them into the Holy of Holies? Aren't we supposed to help the Pastor make sure that people leave changed?

This is one way to do this!

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Nothing But The Blood (3 of 7)

"What can wash away my sin? What can make me whole again?
Nothing but the Blood of Jesus!

For my pardon this I see, For my cleansing this I plea.
Nothing but the Blood of Jesus!

Nothing can for sin atone.  Naught of good that I have done.
Nothing but the Blood of Jesus!

This is all my hope and peace, This is all my righteousness!
Nothing but the Blood of Jesus!

O precious is that flow, that makes me white as snow.
No other fount I know!  Nothing but the Blood of Jesus!"

Wow!  What a song!  The Rev. Robert Lowry felt such passion about the value and importance of the blood that he penned this song with strong and powerful wording!

Only the blood of Jesus Christ can wash our sins away, can make us complete, is able to pardon, and is our hope and righteousness.  Only the blood can atone for our sins, and nothing we do can make us righteous.  How incredible is it that the weight of these words and the importance of understanding them is the cornerstone of our faith!



A shower with Herbal Essence shampoo and Dove body wash cant cleanse you like being totally submerged in the precious blood of the lamb!  Too many times, church goers tend to live like they want to Monday through Saturday. Then, Sunday morning, they come in with their spiritual shoes on and jump, shout, run the aisles (ask your Grand Parents about it), and "work" under the anointing.  I'm sorry...God doesn't want that.  He wants to submerge you beneath the flow....

Did you catch that?  The blood is flowing!  That means it's not a standing pool like what we are baptized in.  It's a flow.  Once you're in it, you move to a new place.  You can't get out of the flow where you entered the flow!

When you are sincere in your repentance, God totally submerges you in the flow and you are changed.  You don't go back to the things that you used to do, or to where you used to go.

Strive to stay in the flow!


Monday, April 10, 2017

There Is A Fountain

"There is a fountain, filled with blood
Drawn from Immanuel's veins.
And sinners plunged beneath that flood
Lose all their guilty stains.
Lose all their guilty stains.
Lose all their guilty stains."

"The dying thief rejoiced to see
that fountain in his day.
And there may I, tho vile as he,
Wash all my sins away.
Wash all my sins away.
Wash all my sins away"

"E'er since by faith, I saw the stream
Thy flowing wounds supply
Redeeming love has been my theme
And shall be till I die.
And shall be till I die.
And shall be till I die."

Then in a nobler, sweeter song I'll sing
Thy pow'r to save
When this pool lisping, stammering tongue
Lies silent in the grave.
Lies silent in the grave.
Lies silent in the grave."


This is a beautiful song written by W.M. Cowper.  Look at the wording, the emphasis on certain words, and how he follows a distinctive structure.
Cowper didn't just write a song. No, he wrote an anthem about The Crucifixion of Jesus.  The blood wasn't spilled, it was drawn.  The thief rejoiced when he saw that fountain because even he knew of the grace that it supplied.  Then Cowper references his own conversion and tells that his one declaration on the Earth shall ever be of Jesus' redeeming love.  Lastly, he looks across death and into Glory.  He looks to the time that he sings God's praises in Heaven; to when he is singing, "Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord; Who was and is and is to come!"




The eloquence that Cowper uses should make all songwriters take a second look.  I think too many times we "Dumb Down" our worship to make it easier to sing too, or more relevant to a generation of people that refuse to think on a higher plane of thought.

Millennials tend to think with emotion versus logic.  So, we adapt to what they need in order to understand grace and salvation.  Once they get it - once they realize what salvation truly means; we then need to direct them to the elegance of worship.  What does that mean?  It means once a student knows what a painting is, and what the purposes of a painting could be, we introduce them to a Monet, or a Picasso.  Once the student understands what music is and how it is made and written, then you introduce them to the complexities of Beethoven, Bach, and Tchaikovsky.  They will have a greater appreciation of the beauty of these great painters and composers once they understand the basics.

We have to give them the meat.  We have to get them off of the milk and help them mature in Christ Jesus.  Their worship needs to mature as well.

This process isn't the music directors alone...No, it falls on all leaders in the church.

But for now...take some time and ponder the wondrous cross.  Discover eloquent verses that reflect a writers most passionate and compelling emotions.  Discover how they described our God.  Not in simple mans terms, but in complex phrases and thoughts, as well as fluid scores of music.

Be inspired by this song that Cowper so elegantly penned.