Monthly Archives: October 2008

Re: Moving From Mercy To Justice

Link: http://www.theooze.com/articles/article.cfm?id=2129

Steve Conrad wrote about a recent trip to Africa. On his trip he saw that showing just mercy and giving gifts to help the poor sometimes shortchanges their ability to live on their own. It creates dependence on the giver instead of healthy interdependence. The giver must pay attention to justice by thinking past the gift and into the end result that giving that gift will have.

Steve really hit a target here. Until I read this I hadn’t thought about the repercussions of simply throwing something “over the wall” as we say in the software development world. Not thinking about the effects we have on the people we help is a huge error. This article is definitely worth the read.

Amy’s thoughts (in the comments) helped focus this on relationships. That is an important part of being truly effective especially in areas where corruption may be a factor and what assistance we bring may simply end up in someone’s pocket. So there must be relationships and trust to be effective. No surprise there once we think about the whole picture. Of course as Steve mentions, this takes a lot more time and probably gives the investor less immediate gratification. You would have to be in it for the long haul.

Thanks Steve, for the insightful post.

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

My Worldview

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

Tony Green, who played bass with Kevin Prosch in several bands best sums up my world view. Once when talking to him about outreach combined with playing at worship conferences, he said:

“It’s all worship…”

Once we have really seen Creator God and understood His loving plan, as NT Wright has said in many passages that we have read, worship is not an issue of compulsion, but the only reasonable response to God.

And so getting up (God what do You want to do today?), brushing our teeth (I take care of this body in honor of the One who gave it to me and to stay useful in my life and the Kingdom), etc. Paul’s “living sacrifice” is taking an “It’s all worship” view into every part of life and applying it. [1]

Origins
God, desiring voluntary relationship created us in His image with the ability to choose Him or not, yet with a purposeful makeup that is incomplete without Him. His genius design made us to be fulfilled doing the very thing He desires of us: to know Him, to love Him, to commune with Him.

What Happened?
Being the independent sort, we lost our communion nearly as soon as we were given it. This created a need for justice. Consequently, because God is committed to love us, it also created the first human need for mercy and grace.

Our disobedience brought separation and created a break in our relationship with God and so God in His Son stepped into time bringing together Heaven and Earth with His presence here as a human. He took our disobedience and missing the mark and paid the price that justice demanded by giving His life and declared forgiveness.

In this sacrifice and resurrection, Jesus made a bridge back to communion with God. And He sent us the Holy Spirit. This was a gift of great proportion allowing us to become the temple of God’s presence, no longer a building where we would meet, but carried in our human hearts. [2]

What is the Kingdom of God?
Now, by guidance of the Holy Spirit, we can listen to God’s voice, fully expectant to hear Him, and respond to how God directs us in obedience. Obedience is the primary evidence of worship throughout history, and is our first calling of worship.

Our obedience to show mercy, to declare God’s goodness, and to speak out for those who have no voice bring the Kingdom of God to the world. Our open arms to others, making space and time for their needs, and gathering to declare our love for God and one another, expresses the Kingdom of God in the human family. Our identity that we take on to reflect to others as it reflects God’s character, expresses the Kingdom of God by the Church. [3]

Endings
Our delightful ending is when God makes all things new and the Kingdom of God comes in completion. The thin places that we sought will now be replaced by God presence. Our faith “replaced” by “face to face.” It will no longer be an unseen world in which we trust, but a seen redeemed world in which we live and thrive. [4][5]

We will have a new name, a new heaven and earth where God reigns and we govern under His Lordship. All of our senses, every fruit, vegetable, and coffee bean will be truly “organic!” The physical world renewed is a joyous thought.

Maranatha, Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

1. Rom 12:1-2
2. 1 Cor 3:16
3. Isa 58:6-12
4. 1 Cor 13:10-12, Rev 21:1-5
5. NT Wright, IW Worship All, pg. 316-318

Unclogging our streams…

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

Dan Wilt in Essentials in Worship Theology wrote in his text,

“We are always flowing in some way and are at our best when creative inlets and outlets are occurring simultaneously in our lives. It is vital that our understanding of the nature of worship never leave it devoid of an ongoing creative flow from and for our local communities.” [1]

The lack of an inlet in a stream dries up the river. The lack of an outlet ends in flooding and the stream going outside of its banks. If both are not moving, then the result is stagnation and a place where once clean water becomes diseased and dangerous.

As artists, it is important to remember to keep the flow moving in our lives. As leaders, it is important to encourage that flow in others and to nurture it when it is in our power to do so.

For the last 5 years though I have been fairly active in ministry, I have felt “clogged” in fulfilling my calling. I was taking some flow in, but not really immersing myself like I had in the past. And while I was playing, serving and leading worship, I still was not stepping out like I felt God had directed me to. I have become complacent.

Being a person who firmly believes that the physical in our lives map to our spiritual condition, I am not surprised that I was recently diagnosed with and am currently being treated for a bunch of blood clots in my leg. I am walking out getting them cleared up and dissolved and at the same time trying to make changes in life that walk out my calling and thus get the life flow, spiritual and physical, moving again.

It was a breath of fresh air to realize that our creativity is important and even more than that a reflection of Him. To ignore it is to ignore His work in us.

Nonetheless it is sometimes difficult to make time for these things that make the life flow. For me it has been some simple changes that have already made a difference. A few set times to pursue fellowship with those who I can give and receive encouragement and sharpening, and a plan and target to focus creativity on. These are helping me make the turn, and will stick, God willing.

May God give us the insight to see how and where we can find that fulfilling activity that both brings Him pleasure and makes the life flow in and out of us.

1. Dan Wilt, Essentials In Worship Theology, p. 43-44

As Long As It Takes

This is not the homework but a longer discussion I am inviting input to on the side. So if you don’t have time and need to see my homework just skip down a couple posts…

It was hard picking something to write about this time. I had several but felt like I would have to write and research a lot more to really get it said. One that really eats at me is this one. So many people in our congregation only end up worshipping at the Sunday service, but that is somewhat geared down compared to what it could be because we are sensitive to time. I felt that NT Wright’s indictment against much contemporary worship and not taking time to really read and dig into scripture [1] rang true, but we watch our service with a stopwatch (the schedule runs 2 minutes for this, 1 minute for that) – what to do?

Many worship services that ran a lot longer just seemed richer. Sometimes they had some moments that were not as refined as something more concise, but the assumption was that we would worship as long as it takes. I miss that.

Maybe the real key is to be engaged during the week. The Sunday morning service really does act as a catalyst for people and if we can engage them then maybe they will engage in deeper times of intimacy.

But times of large corporate worship gatherings are powerful times. I have seen God do amazing things in these sort of times. Not that God is limited to them, but I feel like Morphew said about the festivals that God really wants and enjoys these times with us. [2] For us to leave them out of our regular cycles of gathering I feel causes us to live less fully.

So I think – how about Sunday or Saturday night? Make it clear that this is an “as long as it takes” meeting. But the issues of time still come up. What if the guitarist needs childcare in order to play – you have limits.

What do you think?

1. NT Wright, The Word In Worship, Inside Worship (collection)
2. Derek Morphew, The Restoration of Celebration, Inside Worship (collection)

Essentials Blue Silly Song

Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQ_jhY6MKYM

Yes, it’s silly. SOMEone had to do it…

I feel so good I got a busy mind
I’ve got homework all the time
Since I started puttin in time
On essentials Blue

Saving nickles saving dimes
essentials red is coming in a short time
These have been some happy times
On essentials Blue

I’m going up someday
to see Dan’s face
from essentials Blue
to the great white north
the chilly home
of essentials blue

Where the dreamers and poets
and astrophysicists
can all begin to see
We’re creators all
and must answer the call
a fully human being

No I’m not blue
My dreams came true
On Essentials Blue

Here we have something old and new (a Gumby from when I was a kid and another that was from my niece last Christmas. We also have an old song with new lyrics.
I am somehow driven to do this stuff even though it makes it looks like (as Robin said) “You have too much time on your hands.” Though it is obvious how much time I spent on this recording…

Ryan Delmore Interview Comments

Link: http://odeo.com/episodes/23235131-Inside-Worship-Episode-04-featuring-Ryan-Delmore-s-Falling-Down

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

Ryan Delmore recently wrote a song included on his new CD “The Spirit the Water and the Blood.” The song is called “Falling Down.” It was in response to issues some friends had. So often our writing has this sort of personal value. When we are able to capture in musical essence a hurdle that people in our congregation are facing, it brings a much-needed outlet.

I once was talking with various members of a congregation I led worship for and shared that I would welcome their input. While I was sharing that I said, “I don’t want to always tell you what to do.” To my surprise one of them said “I like that you tell us what to do.”

Some people have a great idea of what to do and how to worship, but some need help to express the things in their heart. It is our privilege and responsibility to find out what God is saying through scripture and song and bring it as a servant as an offering that all can participate meaningfully in.

This is no small task, and when you add to that the expectation that you need to cover folks who may be visiting and may not “get” worship at all, the task becomes impossible to do without seeking guidance from God so that you go in the right direction.

Ryan’s song has the chorus “and I’m falling down…” it’s the response to God when we are faced with a situation and He’s the only one who can give us what we need. May we fall down before the One who can shed light on the next worship set, our life decisions, and our most passion driven dreams.

I Can’t Dance

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

In an article by Derek Morphew named The Restoration of Celebration, he writes about the loss of celebration in the church over the years and how important it is to bring it back. He focuses specifically on dance, and says that it reflects the state of celebration in the Church. I agree and I think we often fall short.

Morphew writes that we are commanded to rejoice by scripture. This is quite a refreshing and relieving view for this conservatively raised boy. When I started college I had to sign a paper that said that while I was a student at this Christian college I would not dance.

I questioned this point of view then and a few years later joined a community that encouraged dance as part of worship. I have since been in congregations that in turn embrace, condemn, avoid, and have heated elders meetings over the subject.

When God called me to lead worship, I did a lot of thinking about worship and concluded that if a person could dance for joy over a touchdown, then they had no right objecting to someone offering exuberent thanks to the One who is all powerful and eternal. If our emotions and expressions are given to us for anything they are for giving God glory.

But generally I don’t dance.

There is one notable exception in my past that changed my life and my view of worshippers. I was prompted by my wife (who I believe in turn had God’s prompting) to dance in the middle of a worship time. In the middle of my awkwardness in stepping out to do that, God told me that He liked to dance with His children just like I enjoyed dancing with my (then) little girls. It was not about getting things perfect, and certainly not a show. We want to please each other — it was about enjoying and valuing each other.

These days I usually leave the dancing to someone else, but that time with God is one I will never forget.

Morphew writes:

“… a saying of the Mishna, which captures the Jewish concept
of God. According to this saying, when God finally judges His people, He will not only judge them for the things they have done, but for the good things which He gave them to do which they failed to enjoy. He will want to know four things:
Did you ever find yourself playing with little children?
Did you ever enjoy a fine wine?
Did you court in the springtime?
Did you ever find yourself dancing for joy, without knowing why you were dancing? [1]

It seems that we sometimes get so serious that we forget that this journey we are on is about life and love and living out the one-anothers not just between us but also to include God in our acts of celebration.

Morphew later concludes by quoting Richard Foster, in his Celebration Of Discipline:

“Far and away the most important benefit of celebration is that it saves us from taking ourselves too seriously. That is a desperately needed grace for all those who are earnest about the Spiritual Disciplines.
It is the occupational hazard of devout folk to become stuffy bores. That should not be. Of all people we should be the most free, live and interesting. Celebration adds a note of gaiety, festivity, and hilarity to our lives. After all Jesus rejoiced so fully in life that He was accused of being a wine bibber and a glutton. Many of us lead such sour lives that we couldn’t possibly be accused of such things.” [2]

There is a lot to break free of while still holding on to the important stuff. Christian life can be hard but should also be a life of celebration of all God has done as we reflect the attributes of the God of heaven here on earth.

1. Derek Morphew, The Restoration of Celebration, Inside Worship (collection)
2. Richard Foster, Celebration Of Discipline, Hodder, London, 1985.

Re: WHEN YOUR CALL IS ON HOLD by Scott Phillips

Link: http://www.theooze.com/articles/article.cfm?id=1448

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

In Response to the article linked above…

Hi Scott,

Thanks for the word. It apparently rings true for many that feel “put on hold.”

You wrote: …ideas many young pastors bring to the table will only be wasted on traditional “old boy’s club” churches. Better to take our ministry to the streets, to the people, a sort of grass roots movement. There are artists, musicians, rappers, dancers, preachers, evangelists, graphic designers, writers, and others with many gifts God wants to unleash on this world to make an impact.” [1]

I think this is key. It may be that we should not direct traffic as you conclude in your article, but take the step to see if our vision and calling can live in the street. Maybe fulfillment in our calling lies in taking our vision outside the walls and meeting the huge need that is out there.

I recently attended an Alpha training conference. One of the striking truths that I learned there was that many people who have no experience in the church have no idea who we are, and are intimidated by the thought of “church.” But if we bring the “Church” (capitalization intentional) to them, then they have opportunity to find out that:

1. We really do care.
2. We're normal folk.
3. There really is hope!

Blessings and fulfillment in your journey!

Robb

Bibliography:
1. Scott Phillips, WHEN YOUR CALL IS ON HOLD

Psalm 2008/10/13

OK, God, just a bit discouraged over the weekend. While I seem to talk a pretty good talk, I am really missing most of the elements of pursuing being the worship leader or even the worshiper I want to be, and would encourage others to be.

I could use a little help here to sort through the conflicts that pull me aside and the practical issues that keep me from writing / being fathered / fathering / leading, etc. All of the stuff I say I should be doing.

I know though that You know and that you have seen and ordained my days. May this time of focus on what this all means help me to pull some of these things into my normal life cycle.

Amen.

The Artisan Worship Leader

Link: http://www.danwilt.com/the-rise-of-the-worship-artisan-2/

For: The Institute Of Contemporary And Emerging Worship Studies, St. Stephen’s University, Essentials Blue Online Worship Theology Course with Dan Wilt.

In Dan’s video [1] and the article linked above, Dan speaks of the Worship Artisan and proposes definitions and guidelines for becoming and being a worship artisan.

The immediate thought I came to was that often artisan and journeyman are used in the world of craftsmen. This immediately got my attention and gave me a new scope of measurement of where I was at as a worship leader.

In the Medieval times, there were guilds for various crafts. These guilds had positions within their craft of Apprentice, Journeyman, and master.

The apprenticeship makes a commitment to serve the master craftsman, traditionally a live-in position. They serve for a term of three to seven years. Then with the master’s approval, they become a journeyman (you can find a bit more information on a journeyman here). The journeyman can then work for any master craftsman who will have them.

A journeyman cannot have apprentices working for him. It is not until he has served as a journeyman and brings his work to the guild for approval that he can become a master.

I would guess that many today would consider the worship music industry to be the “guild” of our time, but if you applied this idea to the “profession” of a worship artisan, as someone trying to attain artisan status, you could derive several parallels:

1. At some point we are all apprentices. At some point, we decide we want to lead worship and learn the skills to do it. We become an apprentice of Jesus, and we need to stay close (live with Him) to get to know Him. This time is essential and cannot be bypassed. We also likely apprentice under another worship leader or pastor.

2. Once we have spent some time with our Master, and possibly under the guidance of some artisans, we will eventually graduate to become journeymen, able to be given a task and perform it on our own, but continuing under the covering of a master, and The Master.

3. Some will then gain master status, although for many it is not because of their maturity, but from a hit record. This puts them in the place of a master in that they are a craftsman unto themselves, and can work independently of another master. While some do this successfully, I believe the best worship artisans, the true masters, are accountable to others, and always subject to their One Master.

Someone once told me that to be a good leader you should always have a Paul (Father / Mentor), always have a Timothy (Son / Apprentice / someone to Mentor), and always have a Barnabus (peer / friend) in your life.

I feel this describes much of the place a true artisan would be in. If he is being mentored, he acknowledges that he is still growing. If he is mentoring, he must keep his own art sharp and fresh so that it can be passed on. If he is accountable to a peer, he has a lifeline that will help him remember his life song when he has himself maybe forgotten the words.

So I hope that as a journeyman and continued apprentice of Jesus and a servant to my Father, the ultimate Master, that I will finish a craftsman held in good esteem by the guild, and be a true artisan. Knowing my craft, my Master’s ways, and that my tools will be found well used and put to good use when I lay them down.

Some of the info on the Medieval guild system I got from this website: http://web.nickshanks.com/history/medieval/careers [2]

1. Wilt, Dan The Rise Of The Worship Artisan (audio track)

2. Jariwala, Nikhil Medieval Economy – Professions