Wednesday, 16 November 2011

It works over there so it'll work here, right? by David Gate

It can be very helpful to know what God is doing in other churches and movements. Picking up new songs, sounds and ideas from other places often forms the beginnings of whatever new direction we choose to take the worship in our local church. But this process of looking towards what is ‘working’ in other places has, for many worship leaders, replaced the more crucial and effort intensive work of prayer and of connection to our communities.

So readily have I loved what God is doing in other places with other people before appreciating the special and unique thing He is doing where I am. This tends to happen for two reasons. Firstly it is because what God is doing somewhere else is more professional, more polished and more popular. My eyes get drawn to its impressive impact and my heart desires the same things for where I am, so I channel my energies into recreating what I see elsewhere. This is not a sin or a crime or something particularly wrong. But it is, perhaps, not the very thing He has for us. When I boil it down, it is easier to replicate than it is to seek the Lord. It is easier to replicate than to improve, to work harder and to love others. This is why I end up relying almost entirely on other people’s songs, styles and methods.

Secondly, I cherish what God is doing elsewhere because I just don’t believe He is doing something in me and in my community. Or at least I don’t think it will be as ‘good’ or as ‘successful’. This is, of course, a lie. God will not give me or my church second best. There are no people, churches and movements that God loves more than me and my church. His heart for our songs, our worship, our people burns just as fiercely than for any other. But I often don’t believe that. I usually don’t expect that we might write incredible songs or that we may find new sounds and methods. Too regularly my faith for that is found wanting. So I defer, to what I KNOW ‘works’, to what I KNOW gets hands lifted and voices singing. 

Yet it can be so different. When I am spending time - REAL time - seeking the Lord for our church, in prayer, in worship, in resting in His presence - I find the new songs and methods and rhythms that our church needs. When I am connected to the people whom I serve in genuine family-like community - loving them, knowing them, walking with them - I can write and create from the best place possible. 

Jesus made it simple for us - love God and love each other. What we truly need as worship leaders and song writers will always be found there and nowhere else.



Friday, 28 October 2011

A lesson in Worship

Psalm 34
11 Come, children, listen closely; 
   I'll give you a lesson in God worship.

 12 Who out there has a lust for life? 
   Can't wait each day to come upon beauty? 

 13 Guard your tongue from profanity, 
   and no more lying through your teeth. 

 14 Turn your back on sin; do something good. 
   Embrace peace—don't let it get away! 

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Sunday, 23 October 2011

“I want the hearts of My people back”

This phrase has been sounding over and over again in my head and heart.  It has been enough to move me to relaunching my blog as a place where we can once again grow in our theological and practical understanding of worship and all it’s related facets.  I won’t pretend to be a great writer but I will confess that my heart beats for this kind of thing ...this kind of thing being...Jesus.  

Sometimes I feel like I am with Jesus...like we’re tracking.  Most times I’m a little too far ahead of him or behind him: everyday I’m learning to trust him, not walking too far ahead with over confidence in my own ability or drifting too far behind with doubt or insecurity.

As a worship leader I am always thinking about how I can help lead others effectively.  The  phrase above struck me because it oozes with God’s relentless desire to have our hearts.  He wants us and so He’s on board when we get up to lead others in worship...that very desire in us is actually His.  In the same way that we want to know, to feel and to experience the resurrected Christ in our gathered community, He wants to be with us.  It was His plan all along.  He initiated it.  He stepped down and “His gracious actions are not only etched into ancient history, but are engraved into our personal histories.” Richard Foster ‘A Celebration of Discipline’.  

And so worship is: human response to the divine initiative.