Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Revelation and Response: OT Example

Dear Worshipers,

Over the last several weeks we have been looking at different aspects of the vision statement of the Worship Ministry we share. I want to spend this week and next giving you a couple of Biblical examples of this summation of worship. Next week we will consider the way Jesus revealed Himself to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus and the way they responded. This week we look into the Old Testament as God revealed Himself to the prophet Isaiah and Isaiah’s response.

Isaiah 6:1-8 has always been one of my favorite passages of Scripture. The prophet receives and answers God’s call in this passage. He catches a glimpse of heavenly worship and then responds in worship himself. The way this transpires is instructive for us as we consider this pattern of revelation and response. I have preached an entire message on these verses and there is much material here, but I will focus this brief look into it here with these words-revelation and response.

The first several verses show us several things about the nature of God. He is high and lifted up. He is holy, holy, holy. He is the Lord God Almighty. His glory fills the whole earth. He is worthy of worship. It is interesting for us to note that the Lord reveals Himself to the prophet in the context of the Temple, THE place of corporate worship in the OT.

When Isaiah saw God, he immediately responded, “I am undone!” He realized that in comparison to the holy wholeness of God he was as good as disintegrated. Actually, he probably expected to die. This is a key for us, because too often we approach God too casually.

But the revelation continues. God shows that though He is the powerful One who reigns on high, He has a purification and purpose for Isaiah. God reveals that He has something for Isaiah to do. God is looking for someone to go on His behalf.

Isaiah responds again. Before he even knows what will be asked of him he replies, “Here am I. Send me!” I suppose after what he had seen, to respond with such sacrifice is not surprising, but it is note that this was a total commitment of self.

Do you see it here? God reveals Himself. Isaiah responds. God reveals His purposes and His ways. Isaiah responds again.

The Life Application Bible commentary offers these words: “Our daily frustrations, society’s pressures, and our shortcomings narrow our view of God. We need the Bible’s view of God as high and lifted up to empower us to deal with our problems and concerns. God’s moral perfection, properly seen, will purify us from sin, cleanse our mind of our problems, and enable us to worship and serve.” We God reveals Himself to us, we are ready to respond.

Let us give Him every opportunity to reveal Himself…especially when we gather together.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

We Respond

Dear Worshipers,

We Respond

This is the last week we will be looking into the vision statement. I know that we have been at this for a while now, but I want to spend a couple more weeks looking at our vision statement.
Our Worship Ministries exist to nurture worship as a lifestyle
characterized by sincere responses to God’s self-revelations.
This week I want to consider how we respond to God. Henry Blackaby in his Bible study Experiencing God makes this statement, "What you do next after the Spirit of God speaks to you through His Word is crucial.” What you do next says a lot about what you believe about God.

There are significant revelations, moments when God is unmistakably speaking. Think about Moses and his long discussion with God in Exodus 3 and 4, and its consequences. [He had to speak through Aaron.] When we respond with a lack of faith, we suffer the consequences of our disobedience.

There are also many more less significant revelations, the everyday ones. How we respond to them prepares us to respond to the others. When we respond in traffic, at school, at work or at home with reverent obedience, it prepares us for the next time.

As concerned as I am that you will respond to God in those life-changing moments like the one Moses had, I am honestly more interested in helping you cultivate a life of response, made up of many smaller responses. I had a good friend say years ago, a faithful life is made up of many acts of faithfulness. I want to help you nurture that kind of life.

Here is my challenge for you today. When God reveals Himself to you, respond. Maybe it will be in an opportunity to die to self [Galatians 2:20], maybe to serve others [John 13:14-17]. Maybe you will actually have to speak of His worth in some simple way [Hebrews 13:15]. Maybe it will be offering a reason for the hope you have in Christ Jesus [1 Peter 3:15]. Maybe it will be to respond to some unkindness kindly [Matthew 5:39].

Only the Lord knows how He will reveal Himself to you today, but you can purpose right now to respond in reverent obedience. As you do, your experience of worship will heighten, and your life of worship will strengthen. My prayer for you is that your life would be characterized by sincere responses to every revelation of God. May our collective efforts bring glory to His matchless name.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

God Reveals Himself

Dear Worshipers,

I know that we have been at this for a while now, but I want to spend a couple more weeks looking at our vision statement.

Our Worship Ministries exist to nurture worship as a lifestyle characterized by sincere responses to God’s self-revelations.

This week I want to consider how God reveals Himself to us. Henry Blackaby in his Bible study Experiencing God stated this as one of the Seven Realities of Experiencing God: "God speaks by the Holy Spirit through the Bible, prayer, circumstances, and the church, to reveal Himself, His purposes and His ways." The other six realities are just as life-changing as this one, but I will let you discover them on your own. [If you are interested in knowing and doing the will of God and are looking for a resource to train you in this, you have just found it.]

God reveals Himself. We do not discover God. Like rounding a corner and finding Him setting there. He puts Himself in our path and leads us around the corner. Then He gives us eyes to see Him. Otherwise, we simply would not. The Holy Spirit is the person who does this. When he does it, He is revealing the Truth to us. The Truth is a person: Jesus Christ.

Any believer would agree that God reveals Himself to us through the Bible and prayer. How many times have you been reading or meditating on a passage of Scripture and it was as though the light had been turned on in the dark room of your mind exposing things that you previously had not noticed? God speaks to us and shows us Who He is as we read and pray. But God also often uses circumstances and the church, or other believers, to help confirm what He is saying.

In John 5:17 Jesus gave us an example of God using our circumstances to speak to us. He said, “My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I, too, am working.” In verse 20 Jesus tells us that the Father would let the Son (Jesus) know what He was doing. The Father took the initiative and revealed to Jesus what He was doing. That revelation is an invitation to join the Father in what He was already doing. God does the same with us.

He starts doing something around us, in us, through us, etc. He reveals that activity through our circumstances. That revelation is His invitation to join Him. We respond with obedience or disobedience. As Blackaby says, two words that should never go together in a Christians vocabulary are “No Lord.” Unfortunately, though we may not speak those words, sometimes our response SHOUTS them.

The fact that God speaks through the Church is born out beautifully in I Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4 which form our concept of the Church as the body of Christ, and Jesus as the Head. This is a picture of how we are mutually interdependent. We all need each other to function as intended. God has intended for the church to function as a unit, not just individual parts. Blackaby says, “As I function in relationship to the church, I depend on others in the church to help me understand God’s will…Apart from the body, you cannot fully know God’s will for your relationship to the body.” If you have ever walked through a period of rebellion in your life, where the church was not an important part of your life, you know this to be true. If you have never experienced the peace of having God’s will for your life confirmed by a number of other believers, then you may still have yet to understand this vital truth.

My prayer for all of us is that we would ever be open to the speaking of the Holy Spirit, through all these vehicles. They will be in agreement when God is revealing Himself. Then the crisis of belief occurs. Will I obey what God has revealed…or not?

Next week...

Our responses to God's self-revelations. When God reveals Himself, His purposes and His ways, what we do next is crucial. We will consider that a little further next week.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Quiet Time Repertoire

Repertoire - the entire stock of skills, techniques, or devices used in a
particular field or occupation: a musician's repertoire.

Dear Worshipers,

Over the last few weeks we have been looking at the vision statement of our Worship Ministries. We looked at some different perspectives on worship as a lifestyle and the character of our responses to God. We also considered how corporate worship prepares us for our life of worship. Today I want to consider our private worship prepares us for our life of worship, but first let us remind ourselves of our vision.

Our Worship Ministries exist to nurture worship as a lifestyle
characterized by sincere responses to God's self-revelations.

I am borrowing a list from a book I have been reading, worship-a way of life by Patrick Kavanaugh. He takes care to develop the role of the Bible and prayer in our private worship. He states that the key to quality in this discipline is consistency. He takes a pretty hard line saying that if something is important to you, you make time for it. I would agree. I have struggled at different times in my walk with Christ to prioritize time with God, but have always found a way to make it work. It has always required sacrifice and flexibility on my part, but I believe that is part of the sanctifying process.

After outlining some key aspects to these previous pillars (Bible and Prayer), he offers a list with suggestions to help develop Worship as a part of the quiet time. This is his list: speaking praise to God (Psalm 71:8), singing songs to God (Ephesians 5:19), singing spontaneous praise to God (Psalm 96:1), physical activity (Psalm 95:6), adoration Psalm 46:10), communion with God (Luke 22:15), meditating on the Word (Psalm 199:97), and waiting on God (Psalm 27:14). [pp. 184-187] This is quite a list!

Before you become overwhelmed with this list, remember that they are suggested things to ADD to your quiet time repertoire. Kavanaugh, an orchestra conductor, used the analogy of a concert pianist adding to their repertoire to illustrate the approach. These artists have a list of pieces that they have at their disposal to use at any time they have the opportunity to play. Beyond this list, they add one piece at a time so as to diversify and compliment their repertoire. Remember the definition of repertoire above.

As you desire to continue to grow in your worship lifestyle, one essential component will be to develop your quiet time repertoire of worship. This will enable and empower your worship as you go through the “noisy” time of your day. It will give you an expression of worship for every setting quiet or noisy, essential repertoire for the life of worship.


In Christ,

Pastor Scott