The Test of a Worship Leader by Philip Nation

For my birthday, my wife and I had lunch with Keith and Kristyn Getty.  Along with 170 other people.

http://philipnation.net/2013/02/the-test-of-a-worship-leader/ by Philip Nation

Periodically, the Gettys hold luncheons in different locations to discuss leadership in the church, song writing, and how we can best disciple the people of God. I truly appreciate their emphasis that singing in worship is holy behavior and not just to get the congregation “warmed-up” for the sermon.

During the time together, we sang some of the hymns written by the Gettys and Stuart Townend. It was a wonderful thing to be led in worship through the simplicity of folk music written by local church leaders. Then, Keith and Kristyn took questions from the group. The inquiries ranged from “What’s your process to writing a song?” to “How do you test your songs?” There were two observations that Keith made that I believe are worth repeating.

First, to answer one question, he dealt with the quality of a song. He observed the following grid.

Bad melody + bad lyrics = the song will never be used

Good melody + good lyrics = the song will always be used

Good melody + bad lyrics = the song will be used too much

Bad melody + good lyrics = the song will never be used

His point is clear. Too many people will use a song regardless of the lyrics as long as it sounds acceptable to the audience. It is a danger we must guard against.

Secondly, a question was asked as to how they assess the work of a worship leader. The answer was brilliant. It had nothing to do with being on the right key, if the lighting was just right, or if the band felt good about their work. The test of a worship leader is simply this: Did the people worship well?

The true test for the worship leader is not about their skill but about the congregation’s engagement with Christ.

I feel that this is a true test for all of church leadership. As a Bible teacher, the test is not my ability to speak well but whether or not the people encountered God. It is a good test for everyone engaged with church leadership whether on staff or as a volunteer. We should ask ourselves consistently not about how well we did our work but how deeply the people met with God.

The Viral Worship Video Of The Week

Shel – now this has been forwarded by several friends/spiritual family, I can comment now ;-) The truth is contemporary worship divorced from Charismatic roots – is all about emo-tweaking instead of bridging to a mystical encounter with God through the gathering of His people in worship and openness to the Holy Spirit in us.  Anyone can do disney church (make em laugh, make em cry, get em hooking on you) – not everyone spends time in prayer with the Father to actually servant-lead people into the manifestations of the Kingdom.  There is only one thing that will do that – time with the Lord and His agenda in your life.

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhYuA0Cz8ls&feature=player_embedded 

Then there is the Dietrich Bonheoffer’s take on congregational worship: simpler is better –  I remember reading this in  a devotional group while in seminary.  It’s from “Life Together.”  I wonder what his response to the video would be?  Ok back to the grind-stone.  Best to all.

 

_______

 

“Sing and make melody in your heart to the Lord” (Eph. 5:19). The new song is sung first in the heart. Otherwise it cannot be sung at all. The heart sings because it is overflowing with Christ. That is why all singing in the church is a spiritual performance(meaning it is rooted in the spiritual life). Surrender to the Word, incorporation in the community, great humility, and much discipline – these are the prerequisites of all singing together. Where the heart is not singing there is no melody, there is only the dreadful medley of human self-praise. Where the singing is not to the Lord, it is singing to the honor of the self or the music, and the new song becomes a song of idols.

 

“Speak to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs” (Eph. 5:19). Our song on earth is speech. It is the sung Word. Why do Christians sing when they are together? The reason is, quite simply, because in singing together it is possible for them to speak and pray the same Word at the same time; in other words, because here they can unite in the Word. All devotion, all attention should be concentrated upon the Word in the hymn. The fact that we do not speak it but sing it only expresses the fact that our spoken words are inadequate to express what we want to say, that the burden of our song goes far beyond all human words. Yet we do not hum a melody; we sing words of praise to God, words of thanksgiving, confession, and prayer. Thus the music is completely the servant of the Word. It elucidates the Word in its mystery….

 

 

“The purity of unison singing, unaffected by alien motives of musical techniques, the clarity, unspoiled by the attempt to give musical art an autonomy of its own apart from the words, the simplicity of and frugality, the humaneness and warmth of this way of singing is the essence of all congregational singing. This, it is true, discloses itself to our cultivated ears only gradually and by patient practice. It becomes a question of a congregation’s power of spiritual discernment whether it adopts proper unison singing. This is singing from the heart, singing to the Lord, singing the Word; this is singing in unity.

 

There are some destroyers of unison singing in the fellowship that must be rigorously eliminated. There is no place in the service of worship where vanity and bad taste can so intrude as in the singing. There is, first, the improvised second part which one hears almost everywhere. It attempts to give the necessary background, the missing fullness to the soaring unison tone, and thus kills both the words and the tone. There is the bass or the alto who must call everybody’s attention to his astonishing range and therefore sings every hymn an octave lower. There is the solo voice that goes swaggering, swelling, blaring, and tremulant from a full chest and drowns out everything else to the glory of its own fine organ. There are the less dangerous foes of congregational singing, the “unmusical,” who cannot sing, of whom there are far fewer than we are led to believe, and finally, there are often those also who because of some mood will not join in the singing and thus disturb the fellowship.

 

Unison singing, difficult as it is, is less of a musical than a spiritual matter. Only where everybody in the group is disposed to an attitude of worship and discipleship can unison singing, even though it may lack much musically, give us the joy which is peculiar to it alone….

 

 

It is the voice of the Church that is heard in singing together. It is not you that sings, it is the Church that is singing, and you, as a member of the Church, may share in its song. Thus all singing together that is right must serve in its song. Thus all singing together that is right must serve to widen our spiritual horizons, make us see our little company as a member of the great Christian Church on earth, and help us willingly and gladly to join our singing, be it feeble or good, to the song of the Church.

Coffee with Jesus: Who’s Your Favorite Christian Singer, Jesus?

 

 I had this conversation with someone last week asking me about what Christian music I like to listen to. I tried to explain I simply don’t. I do like the church worshipping together. I like Christians making great art that is inspired by the Spirit in them. But those that use Jesus to promote their art – I am not interested anymore. I’ve seen the consumers that this makes, the resource draining it does from disciple-making and real mission, it creates people who care about style and not the Savior (beyond His usefulness to their funding and self-promotion).
Those who do NOT actually know him generally never listen to “christian music industry songs” unless they were nominally christian already. So I see the Christian-industry songs as reached the nominal consumers it created. Not sure Im called to reach the sub-culture-emo-addicts? Although this post might set some of them free to re-discover Jesus….
At least with Beyonce what you see is what you get….hehehehe Tuesday morning rabel rousing.

Why I Love and Worship God

Why I Love and Worship God February 3, 2013 By  

Why I Love and Worship God

Often I’m tempted to think one of the most basic differences between me and some fellow Christians is why we love and worship God.

I love and worship God because of Jesus.

Pietist leader Nicholas Ludwig Count von Zinzendorf once said that if it weren’t for Jesus he wouldn’t believe in God. I wouldn’t go quite that far. I think there is enough evidence for a supreme being, an intelligent designer and creator of the universe, that I would believe in God even if I did not know Jesus.

However, if I did not know Jesus, I would not love or worship God.

Is that somehow wrong? Blasphemous? Heretical? Evidence of putting something or someone “above God?” That seems impossible if Jesus is God.

A basic item of Christian orthodoxy is that Jesus is God. To be sure, Jesus is not “all” of God in the sense of there being no persons of God other than Jesus. However, to posit a God who is unlike Jesus would seem to me to verge on heresy—at least.

Even very conservative evangelical theologians have said that saints of God before Jesus loved and worshiped Yahweh because of the promise of a Savior—the Suffering Servant God would sent to redeem them. Even then, through the prophets, they had an intimation of Jesus. God’s “steadfast love” was their rock for loving and worshiping him.

If you ask me whether I would love and worship God if I had never heard of Jesus I can’t answer you. Can you answer such a question? The reality is, I have known God through Jesus my entire life. I have never known God apart from knowing Jesus. When I think of God I have always thought of Jesus’ character, his love for me, his humiliation, his self-sacrificing death and glorious resurrection.  Do I have a relationship with the Father and Holy Spirit? Yes, of course, but not apart from Jesus.

“If you have seen me, you have seen the Father.” (John 14)

So when someone asks me “Would you still love and worship God if it were revealed to you in a way you couldn’t deny that God is not at all like Jesus?” I interpret the question as asking “What if Jesus is not the revelation of the character of God?” Of course, first, I say “That’s impossible.” But to make my point about God being Jesus-like and no other, I play along with the purely hypothetical game and say “No.” That’s not at all the same as implying it’s possible and to say so is to reveal confusion about logic. A hypothetical answer to a hypothetical question never implies that one things it’s possible.

Am I then putting Jesus over God? Hardly. God is the one who put forward Jesus as the perfect revelation of himself. To suggest that one would continue loving and worshiping God if he were not like Jesus is to suggest a “hidden God” behind Jesus who is unlike him. Then what’s Jesus for?

Then, of course, we come to the question “What was Jesus like?” Ah, there’s another difference. I cannot read about Jesus in the New Testament and the earliest church fathers (who knew men who knew Jesus) and have a personal relationship with him and even begin to imagine that he only loved some of the people he encountered and only died for some people. That is not the Jesus I know.

So, I embrace my Calvinist brothers and sisters while grieving for their profound confusion and distorted images of God and Jesus. Of course, they (at best) do the same with me. This is no minor matter to be papered over with “Let’s just not talk about it and love one another.” Love one another—yes. Not talk about it? How can that be? “Speak the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:15) isn’t just about correcting heresy or confronting gross immorality. If I think what I believe is true and what a fellow Christian believes is in error, even if I think he or she is saved and a true disciple of Jesus Christ such that we can worship together and cooperate in all kinds of endeavors, how can I be silent about his or her error—especially if he or she brings up the subject?

Surely, if Jesus only mission was to die on the cross for our sins, the Son of God could have become incarnate as a thirty-three year old man (or whatever age) and been crucified. That he chose to be born and grow up and spend three years (we think) living among people and teaching and healing and casting out demons, that is, loving people in action, demonstrates that his life had a purpose, not only his death. What purpose? Well, in part at least, to demonstrate the heart of God. Obviously, then, God considered that people before Jesus, however, faith-filled they may have been, just didn’t “get it” when it came to understanding God truly. He had to come among them as one of them to show his character and will for human life.

It seems to me that people verge on heresy when they posit a God “behind Jesus,” a “hidden God” unlike Jesus. Or suggest that it is possible to know God truly apart from Jesus. (By “know God truly” I don’t mean “savingly.” I mean know his character truly.)

When a FB Post Turns Into A Blog Post on the State of Worship

Facebook post – that really is a blog post on the coming SF evangelical collapse (stealing title from the late Michael Spencer).

Church is not a crowd or a show – its a people called together by the Spirit. Don’t confuse a crowd with the beautiful body. Mix the right cultural triggers together you can create a crowd. Tears and emo manipulation is not the same as anointing. Jesus and the apostles knew when to call out and scatter crowds – this is an art lost on todays mcchurch show creators I fear. What are you building and justifying – a crowd to pay your bills or disciples ?

(1/12/13: From InternetMonk: “Are you church-shopping? Maybe you’ll want to check out the new church meeting in Islington, England. The Nave in St. Paul’s Road is England’s first atheist church. There will be a speaker each month, tackling topics like “beginnings,” and they’ll have an “awesome house band.” Come to think of it, that could describe many evangelical churches in the United States. See? We’re not always behind Europe in trends.”

This of course makes my point that the attraction church is REALLY all about the crowd.  If we need to stop talking about God, Jesus, “hard issues”, more like Oprah (ahem Mr. Osteen), more like the president, more like the military, more like the current hit TV or Movies series – we will change because our HIGHEST value is crowd based on ability to tweak common cultural emo-trends.  Atheist church now?  WHY NOT – can we get the butts in seats?)

 

Shel Boese (Sometimes i just get under so much conviction about the state of the sf church. Lord help me not to lose my soul in being tempted to become what the truly unchurched will not encounter the call to repentance and radical love in.)

B: “Tears and emo manipulation is not the same as anointing” Amen!
D: I need some explanation on that Shel and B..
D: Are you saying that emotion and tears and hurting should not be apart of the church body.  Hmmmm?  Confused

L: I think they are talking about when everything is orchestrated with the intent of producing a specific emotional reaction, rather then letting the Holy Spirit do its work. I’ve been to that church. You know EXACTLY at which point in the worship you are supposed to cry. Every. Single. Week.

Shel Boese D, I am all for people using their emotions and bringing hurts to god in the worship of the church. What I am entirely convicted by is when pastors and worship team (all of it not just music) make worship gatherings about a produced show designed to take you on an emo-roller coaster of their design each week. With the SOLE intent of tweaking certain emos and then BY THEIR PRODUCTION bringing emo resolution – so they create litteral chemical dependency on the entertainment. The hook is the high – and not Jesus Christ. Therefore they also avoid teaching or preaching anything hard or different that they cannot fit into the emotional- manipulation pattern.

Shel Boese It’s partuarly troubling that there is a new generation of church leader/pastor that does not want to get you hooked on Jesus and the challenge to BE spiritual family (they would never say this – but it’s what you manufacture that tells me your real beliefs). Just come and get your warm fuzzy from our guru and go live basically the same life. At least classical mystical movements and charismatic understood emotion as a vehicle – not to get you hooked on the show and personality – but to push yourself into deeper communion/relationship with God.

Now its all about takin the neutral (most vanilla, least challenging knock off of Jesus ) and make it all about this local personality, this star or that show.

AND it’s VERY tempting when you see it “working”. Lord forgive me for idolizing numbers – they do not necessarily represent care – and some grow is bad: e.g. excessive fat or cancer.

Shel Boese There is a reason I almost left evangelical-attractional churches over a decade ago. We need to work on better emotional theology in worship. Again I affirm emotion in worship IF there is honesty about it. There was an awesome video that went viral a few years ago that parodied this kind of thing. And yet here in SuFu we are about 10 years behind – so people are eating up – not realizing the spiritual hangover and deep disillusionment they will experience after it peaks out – and they were manipulated by broken men and women leading into what they were not honest about and not led to Jesus, not equiping the saints, not calling them to spirit-filled risk-taking – just keeping them in pop-culture. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RJBd8zE48A

Parody Of Our Modern Church Service
www.youtube.com
Learn More At http://www.prophecynewswatch.com/

Shel Boese (Now you will like all these elements – I do – BUT it’s SO SO SO predictable and they could be selling anything!!)  And in fact they are only selling one thing – themselves.
Shel Boese (I sometimes wish the prophetic bent would just go away – I haven’t even read all of AW Tozer…)

D: Ok I understand what your saying now. I agree.

Shel Boese This is also why we have a more traditional service AND why in our version of “conteporvent” we do things from older liturgies and charismatic practices. These include: silence, listening, space for people to share Holy Spirit words as they grow, (actual normal people not on the platform instead of our “manufactured normal” jane/joe jack/jill, back-and-forth prayers, prayer team ministry, creeds, confessions of sin. All of these help destroy and tear down the platform/people divide, the shiny-show emo-manipulation by the personalities in charge. We intentionally decrease our emo-appeal and instead want God’s work THROUGH THE GATHERED FACE-To-FACE PEOPLE to be facilitated in worship. This will indeed involve emotions, spirit, etc. but at looser more God/community-based order than simply micro-manged human control of the puppet-master.

These are the kinds of worship gatherings I yearn for – where Jesus IN THE PEOPLE by HIS SPIRIT manifesting is our highest worship gathering value. The goal getting you stuck to Jesus in community. Everything else could go away and you are still the church and know what worship really is without us telling stories and tickling your already of-the-world sensibilities (which if you being tickled and emo-manipulated and unchanged will leave you in darkness while selling you light.).

Shel Boese The “Passion Conference” attractional model post also speaks of the problem: http://shelboese.org/what-would-jesus-make-of-passion-conferences-guest-blog-by-austin-fischer/

What Would Jesus Make of “Passion” (Conferences)? Guest Blog by Austin Fischer | shelboese.org
shelboese.org

 

Hymns Recently Stuck In My Head For Months!

These hymns with various contemporary versions and mass choir versions have been stuck in my heads for a couple months now.

Jesus Paid It All 
Words: Elvina M. Hall, 1865. Music: John T. Grape

I hear the Savior say,
“Thy strength indeed is small;
Child of weakness, watch and pray,
Find in Me thine all in all.”

(refrain) Jesus paid it all, 
All to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.

For nothing good have I
Whereby Thy grace to claim,
I’ll wash my garments white
In the blood of Calv’ry’s Lamb.

Refrain

And now complete in Him
My robe His righteousness,
Close sheltered ’neath His side,
I am divinely blest.

Refrain

Lord, now indeed I find
Thy power and Thine alone,
Can change the leper’s spots
And melt the heart of stone.

Refrain

When from my dying bed
My ransomed soul shall rise,
“Jesus died my soul to save,”
Shall rend the vaulted skies.

Refrain

And when before the throne
I stand in Him complete,
I’ll lay my trophies down
All down at Jesus’ feet.

Refrain

AND

“Beautiful Savior”
by Author Unknown, 1677
Translated by Joseph A. Seiss, 1823-1904

1. Beautiful Savior,
King of Creation,
Son of God and Son of Man!
Truly I’d love Thee,
Truly I’d serve Thee,
Light of my soul, my Joy, my Crown.

2. Fair are the meadows,
Fair are the woodlands,
Robed in flowers of blooming spring;
Jesus is fairer,
Jesus is purer;
He makes our sorrowing spirit sing.

3. Fair is the sunshine,
Fair is the moonlight,
Bright the sparkling stars on high;
Jesus shines brighter,
Jesus shines purer,
Than all the angels in the sky.

4. Beautiful Savior,
Lord of the nations,
Son of God and Son of Man!
Glory and honor,
Praise, adoration,
Now and forevermore be Thine!

 

The Importance of Sunday from The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation

The Importance of Sunday

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Resurrection Icon Copyright Theologic Systems
Icon of the Anastasis provided by Theologic and used with permission

The North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation
Saint Paul’s College, Washington, DC

Recovering the theological significance of Sunday is fundamental to rebalancing our lives. As Orthodox and Catholics, we share a theological view of Sunday and so our purpose in this statement is four-fold: to offer a caring response to what is not just a human, but also a theological question; to add a little more volume to the growing chorus of Christian voices trying to be heard in the din of our non-stop worklife; to offer brief reflections in hopes of drawing attention to the fuller expositions elsewhere; and to reinforce the ecumenical consensus by speaking as Orthodox and Catholics with one voice.

For Christians, Sunday, the Lord’s Day, is a special day consecrated to the service and worship of God. It is a unique Christian festival. It is “the day the Lord has made” (Ps. 117 (118):24). Its nature is holy and joyful. Sunday is the day on which we believe God acted decisively to liberate the world from the tyranny of sin, death, and corruption through the Holy Resurrection of Jesus.

The primacy of Sunday is affirmed by the liturgical practice of the early church. St. Justin the Martyr writing around 150 AD notes that “it is on Sunday that we assemble because Sunday is the first day, the day on which God transformed darkness and matter and created the world and the day that Jesus Christ rose from the dead (First Apology, 67).” Sunday has always had a privileged position in the life of the church as a day of worship and celebration. On Sunday the Church assembles to realize her eschatological fullness in the Eucharist by which the Kingdom and the endless Day of the Lord are revealed in time. It is the perpetual first day of the new creation, a day of rejoicing. It is a day for community, feasting and family gatherings.

As we look at our fellow Christians and our society, we observe that everyone is short of time and stressed. One reason is that many of us have forgotten the meaning of Sunday, and with it the practices that regularly renewed our relationships and lives. More and more Christian leaders see the effects of a 24/7 worklife and ask “Where is the time of rest?” As members of the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation, gathered October 25-27, 2012, we add our combined voice to their call.

Our purpose here is not to replace or replicate their message; it is to underscore and point to it. Anyone who looks at the 1998 Apostolic Letter Dies Domini (The Lord’s Day) of Pope John Paul II and its cascade of patristic quotations will see there is already a feast of food for thought on the meaning of Sunday. Anyone who reads the recent book Sunday, Sabbath, and the Weekend (2010, Edward O’Flaherty, ed.) will see there is also strong ecumenical consensus on the need to recover the meaning of Sunday– not just for our souls, but for our bodies, our hearts, and our minds as well.

Sadly Sunday has become less of a day of worship and family and more like an ordinary work day. Shopping, sports, and work squeeze out the chance for a day of worship or rest in the Christian sense. By abandoning Sunday worship we lose out on the regenerative powers that flow out of the liturgical assembly. And when Sunday becomes detached from its theological significance, it becomes just part of a weekend and people can lose the chance to see transcendent meaning for themselves and their lives (The Lord’s Day, 4).

Sunday is more than just the first day of the week. In our faith we see how it is the ultimate day of new beginnings: “It is Easter which returns week by week, celebrating Christ’s victory over sin and death, the fulfillment in him of the first creation and the dawn of “the new creation” (cf. 2 Cor 5:17). It is the day which recalls in grateful adoration the world’s first day and looks forward in active hope to “the last day”, when Christ will come in glory (cf. Acts 1:11; 1 Th 4:13-17) and all things will be made new (cf. Rev 21:5. The Lord’s Day, 1).”

Sunday even unlocks the mystery of time itself, for “…in commemorating the day of Christ’s Resurrection not just once a year but every Sunday, the Church seeks to indicate to every generation the true fulcrum of history, to which the mystery of the world’s origin and its final destiny leads (The Lord’s Day, 2).” The Lord’s Day is the day after the last day of the week and so it symbolizes eternity as well: what St. Augustine calls “a peace with no evening (Confessions 13:50).” St. Basil the Great in his Treatise on the Holy Spirit writes, “Sunday seems to be an image of the age to come… This day foreshadows the state which is to follow the present age: a day without sunset, nightfall or successor, an age which does not grow old or come to an end (On the Holy Spirit 26:77).”

The apostolic letter of Pope John Paul II calls it a day of joy, rest, and solidarity. Joy there is, because the disciples are always glad to see the Master. God scripturally established a day of rest as a gift to us, and rest there must be for every human person. Rest is built into our nature and also withdraws us “…from the sometimes excessively demanding cycle of earthly tasks in order to renew [our] awareness that everything is the work of God. There is a risk that the prodigious power over creation which God gives to man can lead him to forget that God is the Creator upon whom everything depends. It is all the more urgent to recognize this dependence in our own time, when science and technology have so incredibly increased the power which man exercises through his work. Finally, it should not be forgotten that even in our own day work is very oppressive for many people, either because of miserable working conditions and long hours — especially in the poorer regions of the world — or because of the persistence in economically more developed societies of too many cases of injustice and exploitation of man by man (The Lord’s Day,65,66).”

As members of the Consultation, we strongly urge both clergy and laity to work cooperatively within their communities to stress the importance of Sunday for worship and family. Foremost we call for all to render thanks to God and render love towards one another – and be willing to reserve time to do both — and avail ourselves of the riches of the Lord’s Day. Appropriate authorities can be approached to schedule sports activities after 12 noon in order to give young athletes and their family the opportunity to worship on Sunday morning. We call for our children to live in a timescape that respects the God-given rhythm of the week.

“Yes, let us open our time to Christ, that he may cast light upon it and give it direction. He is the One who knows the secret of time and the secret of eternity, and he gives us “his day” as an ever new gift of his love. The rediscovery of this day is a grace which we must implore, not only so that we may live the demands of faith to the full, but also so that we may respond concretely to the deepest human yearnings. Time given to Christ is never time lost, but is rather time gained, so that our relationships and indeed our whole life may become more profoundly human (The Lord’s Day, 7).”

“all of life is worship” principle can be taken to an extreme…James KA Smith

Great stuff!  Bolding is mine…

Sanctification for Ordinary Life

There are many different ways to tell the story of the Protestant Reformation. A favorite centers on the heroic tale of Martin Luther, an Augustinian monk newly convicted by his discovery of Paul’s forensic gospel, furiously hammering his ninety-five Theses to the church door in Wittenberg. The Reformation is thus launched by a kind of medieval blog post about justification by faith that becomes the catalyst for a theological
action-adventure narrative filled with public battles, back-door intrigue, wily villains, and our lone Braveheart hero declaring “Here I stand!”

A different angle on the story of the Reformation—one that’s emphasized by scholars as diverse as Michael Walzer, Nicholas Wolterstorff, and, most recently, the Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor—sees the Reformation not just as a narrowly theological debate but more broadly as a Christian reform movement concerned with the shape of social life—with how we understand our life coram Deo, before the face of God.

THE SANCTIFICATION OF ORDINARY LIFE

As Taylor tells the story, the Protestant Reformation was one of several “reform” movements in the late Middle Ages and early modern period that railed against the distorted social arrangements of medieval Christendom. In particular, the Reformation called into question the two-tiered religion that had emerged, with monks, nuns, and priests (the “renunciative vocations”) on the top tier and everybody else mired in domestic (“secular”) life consigned to the lower level as second-class spiritual citizens. The “religious” worshiped while everyone else just worked.

In this climate, the really revolutionary impact of the Reformation issued more from Geneva than Wittenberg; calling into question this two-tiered, sacred/secular arrangement, Reformers like John Calvin and his heirs refused such distinctions. All of life is to be lived before the face of God, they said. All vocations can be holy, for all of our cultural labors can be expressions of tending God’s world. There is no “secular” because there is not a square inch of creation that is not the Lord’s.

The result is what Taylor calls “the sanctification of ordinary life.” On the one hand, this has a leveling effect: the monk is no holier than the farmer, the nun no holier than the mother. “Religious” vocation is no longer seen as the shortcut to divine blessing; if anything, it is seen as perhaps spurning God’s good gifts. On the other hand, it’s not that the renunciative vocations are laid low; to the contrary, expectations for lay people are ratcheted up. Engagement in domestic life is no longer a free pass from pursuing holiness. Ordinary domestic life is taken up and sanctified, and renunciation is built into ordinary life.

So the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker are called to serve God, even as they are affirmed in their “worldly” stations. It is this interplay of worldly holiness and holy worldliness that Max Weber would later call the “Protestant work ethic.”

Worship isn’t just something we do; it does something to us.

ALL OF LIFE IS WORSHIP

This “sanctification of ordinary life” is at the heart of the Reformation heritage. We are exhorted to do allto the glory of God (1 Cor. 10:31). All of life can be worship. Whether we’re in the laboratory or the law office, whether homemaking or placekicking, tilling the earth or sculpting clay, all of our cultural labors can be expressions of praise to the King.

But this “all of life is worship” principle can be taken to an extreme, especially when conjoined with a sort of mutant Kuyperianism that is a tad vigorous in policing the boundaries between the “spheres”—a strain that is more Kuyperian than Kuyper himself! Since all of life is worship, the argument goes, then the gathered worship of the church seems, well, optional, perhaps even unnecessary. The library and laboratory are on par with the chapel, even preferred over the chapel. In this account, the “sanctification of ordinary life” becomes a directive to vacate the sanctuary.

Is that what the Reformers had in mind? Or is this a distortion of the Reformers’ impulse, like an extended version of the telephone game in which the Reformers first whisper, “All of life is sacred,” only to have the message garbled down the line until it finally comes out as “Who needs church?”

EXPRESSION AND FORMATION

This overreaching of the “all-of-life-is-worship” principle is part of a bad habit we picked up after the Reformation: the tendency to reduce worship to expression. After the Reformation, and especially in the wake of modernity, wide swaths of contemporary Christianity tend to think of worship only as an “upward” act of the people of God who gather to offer up their sacrifice of praise, expressing their gratitude and devotion to the Father, with the Son, in the power of the Holy Spirit.

Obviously this is an entirely biblical impulse and understanding: if we don’t praise, even the rocks will cry out. In a sense, we are made to praise. The biblical vision of history culminates in the book of Revelation with a worshiping throng enacting the exhortation of Psalm 150: “Praise the Lord!” But one can also see how such expressivist understandings of worship feed into (and off of) some of the worst aspects of modernity. Worship-as-expression is easily hijacked by the swirling eddy of individualism. In that case, even gathered worship is more like a collection of individual, private encounters with God in which worshipers express an “interior” devotion. It is precisely this model that prizes “authenticity” so highly.

The same expressivism is behind those versions of the “all-of-life-is-worship” principle that sees gathered Sunday worship as basically optional. It is a “Reformed” version of the “spiritual but not religious” canard that waxes eloquent about the “church” of nature and the sacred experience of a mountain sunrise.

But throughout the course of its history (including the Reformation), the church has always understood worship as more than expression. Christian worship is also a formative practice precisely because worship is also a “downward” encounter in which God is the primary actor. Worship isn’t just something we do; it does something to us. Worship is a space where we arenourished by Word and sacrament—we eat the Word and eat the bread that is the Word of life. This understanding of worship is equally central to the Reformation heritage, and it is at the heart of John Calvin’s legacy.

If we fail to appreciate that Word and sacrament are specially charged conduits of the Spirit’s formative power, it would be easy to imagine that worship can happen just anywhere. On the other hand, if we appreciate that Christian worship around Word and table is a unique “hot spot” of the Spirit’s wonder-working power, then we will also appreciate that the sanctuary can’t be replaced by just any other space in God’s good world, for it is in the sanctuary that we are made into a people of praise. In communal worship we receive the unique promise of the Spirit that is tethered to Word and sacrament.

(In case any Kuyperian border patrols are getting worried, a reminder that Kuyper himself emphasized this same point might be helpful. The church as “organism”—engaged in cultural labor—works “in necessary connection” with the church as “institute”—gathered in Christian worship. Our immersion in the formative practices of gathered Christian worship around Word and sacrament form us and equip us to be agents of cultural renewal. The church as organism is no replacement for the church as institute; to the contrary, the organism needs to be nourished by the institute.)

ABRAHAM KUYPER

Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920) was an influential pastor, professor, and politician in the Netherlands who became Premier of the country in 1901. He is known for promoting a Christian worldview, stating that one’s beliefs ought to intersect with one’s personal and public life and God is active and sovereign in all spheres of life. Kuyper also gave some thought to worship, writing a book Onze Eredienst (Our Worship), which was translated into English by Harry Boonstra (Eerdmans 2009).

SANCTIFICATION FOR ORDINARY LIFE

Christian worship gathered around Word and table is not just a platform for our expression; it is the space for the Spirit’s (trans)formation of us. The practices of gathered Christian worship have a specific shape about them—precisely because this is how the Spirit recruits us into the story of God reconciling the world to himself in Christ. There is a logic to the shape of intentional, historic Christian worship that performs the gospel over and over again as a way to form and reform our habits. If we fail to immerse ourselves in sacramental, transformative worship, we will not be adequately formed to be ambassadors of Christ’s redemption in and for the world. In short, while the Reformers rightly emphasized the sanctification of ordinary life, they never for a moment thought this would be possible without being sanctified by Word and sacrament.

Embedded in this intuition is a helpful, even prophetic, corrective to our triumphalist tendencies. The Reformed vision of cultural renewal can breed its own sort of “activism,” a confidence in our work of cultural transformation. In fact, we can sometimes become so consumed with “transforming culture” and pursuing shalom that our well-intentioned activity becomes an end in itself. We spend so much time being the church-as-organism that we end up abandoning the church-as-institute. Not only do we emphasize that all of life is worship, we come up with self-congratulatory quips that look down on worship as “pietistic,” as a retreat from the hard, messy work of culture-making.

But as Kuyper himself emphasized, there is no way we are going to persist in the monumental task of kingdom-oriented culture making if we are not being habituated as citizens of the King. As N.T. Wright once counseled in these pages,

God’s work in the world is never merely pragmatic. It isn’t simply “We can organize a program to go and do this.” If you think we can do God’s work like that, read the lives of people like William Wilberforce and think again. You can’t. You need prayer, you need the sacraments, you need that patient faithfulness—because we are not wrestling against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers and the world rulers of this present darkness (Reformed Worship, March 2009).

If we are going to be caught up in God’s mission of remaking the world, thereby sanctifying ordinary life, we need to be sanctified by the Spirit through Word and sacrament. If all of life is going to be worship, the sanctuary is the place where we learn how.

About the Author

James K.A. Smith is professor of philosophy at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he also teaches in the department of congregational and ministry studies.

When Worship is Wrong

Skye’s article bellow is spot on brilliant – particularly the role of the Holy Spirit.

Pop-vanilla evangelicalism took the outward parts of pentecostal/charismatic worship – divorced it from the prayer and Holy Spirit theology and made a bastardized version of emotional addiction.  This in place and  instead of creating an emotional bridge to Jesus’ Holy Spirit in the church and believer. AND on top of that did it they do this in the name of relevance in mission/outreach, yet removing the very charismatic/pentecostal Luke-Acts view that tells us being filled with the Spirit (as something unique from the indwelling in conversion) will drive us into mission through language speech gifts and grant “staying power” in hard places and times.

Contemporary/post-contemporary worship divorced from the relationship misses the point of the experience and the power that is available.  Making roller-coaster mountaintops a cheap knock-off.

But don’t get me started on that.

http://www.skyejethani.com/when-worship-is-wrong/1404/

When Worship is Wrong

A new study finds large worship gatherings can be chemically addictive, and why it is a serious problem for the church.

Aug 21st, 2012 | By Skye Jethani

In 1515, Michelangelo completed a sculpture of Moses. The marble figure depicts an old but very muscular Moses with the Ten Commandments under his arm and a billowing beard. But tourists are often shocked to see what appear to be devilish horns protruding from Moses’ head.

The horns can be traced to a mistranslation of the Bible in the 5th Century. The story from Exodus 34 says that after Moses met with the Lord on Mount Sinai, the people were afraid because, “the skin of his face shone.” The Hebrew word for a ray or beam of light was mistranslated into Latin as “horns.” So, when Michelangelo read his Bible he believed the people were frightened because Moses had grown horns while meeting with God on the mountain.

Today we no longer depict Moses with horns, but a misunderstanding of his mountaintop experience remains all too common. According to the Apostle Paul in the 2 Corinthians 3, Moses did not hide his face because the people were frightened, but to hide the fact that the glory of God was fading away. Whatever transformation he experienced in God’s presence on the mountain was temporary, and the veil hid its transient nature. Moses’ mountaintop experience was genuine, glorious, and full of God’s presence-but it did not bring lasting transformation.

Through the influence of our consumer culture we’ve come to believe that transformation is attained through external experiences. We’ve come to regard our church buildings, with their multimedia theatrical equipment, as mountaintops where God’s glory may be encountered. Many of us ascend this mountain every Sunday morning wanting to have an experience with God, and many of us leave with a degree of genuine transformation. We feel “pumped up,” “fed,” or “on fire for the Lord.”

No doubt many, like Moses, have an authentic encounter with God through these events. But new research indicates another explanation for our spiritual highs. A University of Washington study has found that megachurch worship experiences actually trigger an “oxytocin cocktail” in the brain that can become chemically addictive. The same has been found at large sporting events and concerts, but attenders to these gatherings don’t usually attribute the “high” to God.

“The upbeat modern music, cameras that scan the audience and project smiling, dancing, singing, or crying worshipers on large screens, and an extremely charismatic leader whose sermons touch individuals on an emotional level … serve to create these strong positive emotional experiences,” said Katie Corcoran, a Ph.D. candidate who co-authored the study.

The problem with these mountaintop experiences, whether legitimate (like Moses’) or fabricated, is that the transformation does not last. In a few days time, or maybe as early as lunchtime, the glory begins to fade. The mountaintop experience with God, the event we were certain would change our lives forever, turns out to be another fleeting spiritual high. And to hide the lack of genuine transformation, we mask the inglorious truth of our lives behind a veil, a façade of Christian merchandise or busyness, until we can ascend the mountain again and be recharged.

This pursuit of transformation by consuming external experiences creates worship junkies who leap from one mountaintop to another, one spiritual high to another, in search of a glory that will not fade. As one church member interviewed for the University of Washington study said, “God’s love becomes … such a drug that you can’t wait to come get your next hit. … You can’t wait to get involved to get the high from God.” In response, churches are driven to create ever-grander experiences and more elaborate productions to satisfy expectations. But if lasting transformation is our goal, mountaintops–even God-ordained ones–will never suffice.

The New Testament emphasizes a different model of transformation. Rather than seeking external experiences, Jesus and his Apostles speak of an internal communion with God through the presence of the Holy Spirit. Contrasting the fading glory that Moses experienced on Sinai, the Apostle Paul says that we are being transformed “from one degree of glory to another,” and that this comes from the Spirit. This transformation is not from the outside working in, but from the inside working out. To encounter the glory of God no longer requires ascending a mountain, but learning to embrace a divine mystery-”Christ in you, the hope of glory.”

Why then are we so tempted to abandon the new covenant, inside-out model of transformation for the inferior old covenant, outside-in strategy? The reason is simple–an internal communion with God through the Spirit cannot be packaged, commoditized, and marketed to religious consumers. It is far easier for us to create mountains than shepherd people toward the inner life of divine communion.

The problem, of course, is not our gatherings, but what we expect from them. If we have an ongoing, internal communion with Christ, then our gatherings will be where we reveal the continual worship that marks our lives. However, if we have no real communion with Christ through his Spirit, we will come to worship seeking a transient dose of glory to carry us along, and we will demand these external events to permanently transform us–something God never intended them to do. We may draw people to our mountaintops with promises of transformation and a genuine encounter with God, but we must ask whether they leave these experiences radiating the unfading glory of the Lord, or merely sprouting the horns of consumerism.

 

 

Sunday Worship – It’s About the 8th Day of New Creation!

Shel – this Easter I shared the early church language of Sunday/resurrection day – as the “8th day” of the in-breaking new creation.  Skye has a great reminder why we worship on Sunday…

 

Sunday! Sunday! Sunday!

Why it matters when we gather for worship.

by Skye Jethani

I recently read a report in USA Today that more churches are shifting their worship gatherings from Sunday morning to Wednesday night. For some it’s a matter of convenience, and other churches are simply trying to reach those who can’t/won’t come on Sunday morning.

I’m not sure this can really be called “news.” Churches have been providing alternative worship times for as long as I can remember, and I’m certainly not against that. I’ve spoken with many church leaders, including at my own congregation, about alternative worship times. But what bothers me is the lack of biblical or theological understanding around this topic. Most evangelicals seem to believe Sunday morning worship is merely historical tradition, and therefore carries no great importance. They conclude that we can or should abandon Sunday if a more convenient or missionally effective time can be found.

Occasionally I may hear someone make the connection between Christ’s resurrection and Sunday morning worship. As Keith Green sang many years ago, on Sunday “Jesus rose from the grave and you, you can’t even get out of bed.” You may hear about the resurrection as the reason Christians now observe the Sabbath on Sunday rather than the Old Testament’s command to rest on Saturday, but that’s usually as far as the theology of Sunday worship goes. In the end, most church leaders are so thrilled if anyone comes to church, they’re not about to fight about which day people come.

Still, we need to remember that there is a deeper reason why the church has worshiped on Sunday mornings–one that is still relevant today.

When Jesus rose from the grave, he was doing more that conquering death. He was doing more than displaying the vindication of God. He was doing more than giving us hope for our own resurrections in the age to come. Jesus’ resurrection is the first fruit of the New Creation. His raised and transformed body, as Paul lays out in 1 Corinthians 15 and Romans 8, is indicative of the transformation that awaits all the saints and the creation itself. As N.T. Wright says:

Jesus’s resurrection is to be seen as the beginning of the new world, the first day of the new week, the unveiling of the prototype of what God is now going to accomplish in the rest of the world. -Surprised by Hope, page 238.

Following the creation account in Genesis 1, Sunday is the first day of creation. So Jesus is raised on a Sunday to mark the beginning of God’s new creation. This fact was not lost on the early Christians. They did not worship on Sunday because it was convenient. They gathered on Sundays because they were people of the new creation, people of the resurrection, and people of the in-breaking Kingdom of God. Wright goes on:

Many Christians will find, for all kinds of reasons, that Sunday is a difficult day to attend church services. But we should remind ourselves that the earliest Christians lived in a world where Sunday was the first day of the working week, much like our Monday, and that they valued its symbolism so highly that they were prepared to get up extra early both to celebrate Easter once again and to anticipate the final Eighth Day of Creation, the start of the new week, the day when God will renew all things. -Surprised by Hope, page 262.

The move away from Sunday worship can have many motivations, and some of them are honorable and even Spirit-guided. But I sense some congregations opt for non-Sunday worship without considering these deeper realities. In other words, the merely utilitarian reasons on which which we abandon Sunday may be another sign of how theologically, historically, and biblically ignorant we have become. We view our gatherings as a time of self-improvement, therapeutic enrichment, social connection, or artistic expression–and it can be these things. So we make human-centered, self-centered decisions about when these functions can happen most conveniently during the week.

But we often fail to see our gatherings as a spiritual and embodied display of our participation in a new cosmic reality. We fail to see how Sunday morning is when and where the church displays the wisdom of God before the powers and authorities in the heavenly realms by aligning ourselves with Christ’s resurrection and the work of God’s new creation.

If you are considering abandoning Sunday morning worship for another time, I’m not saying you shouldn’t. Leaders ought to prayerfully seek God’s guidance on the matter, and do what is right for your flock and mission. Obey the Lord. But as part of the discernment process, at least study the richer reason behind the church’s historical commitment to Sunday morning worship, and teach this facet of worship to your congregation. I think many would be surprised by the real value of Sunday.