Friday, November 21, 2014

Sermon Snippets

I'm quoting Liam Neeson from Taken in my sermon this week. Specifically, this:


Why? Because it's a Ministry Skills Sunday!
Just as Mr. Neeson was well-equipped in a variety of ways to seek out and find his kidnapped daughter in that movie, we as Christians need to be well-equipped to successfully deal with the trials and tribulations of our lives. And a Ministry Skills Sunday is a special week in between series where we equip ourselves with knowledge and practical insights regarding various skills needed in the Christian life.

This week - Prayer. It is not a Liam Neeson-type skill that will help us overpower a bunch of bad guys. Though it does help us in spiritual fights.

Prayer is a crucial skill Christians need to acquire. It is vital to our own spiritual health and the fundamental tool God has ordained to involve us in His Kingdom purposes (Matt. 6:10, 9:37-38).

Ok, using Liam Neeson to make a case for sharpening our prayer skills may be a stretch, but in whatever scenario we find ourselves in, prayer has to be a skill we utilize.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Music Mondays

Of all the criminally underrated, overlooked, and forgotten contemporary worship songs I've been chronicling , this is my favorite.


This isn't one of those contemporary songs that needs a full band to play super loud. In fact, it's best when sung by a crowd led by one guitar and a soloist. Matching it's minimalistic musical qualities are the lyrics, which concisely and appropriately express everything our worship should be. I don't know why it never gained popularity within the American church, though I have a theory that it was too easily parodied. But this is an absolutely pure worship song - extolling Christ's greatness and his grace as well as expressing our devotion to him. 



Monday, November 10, 2014

Music Mondays

I can't honestly say these songs are contemporary worship classics that have unfairly been forgotten over time like the others over the past several weeks. But I'm featuring two songs this week that were fun mainstays in my youth group days. Both were catchy and simple songs that featured MOTIONS to the lyrics. Sure by the time I was an upperclassman, they various hand and arm movements seemed hokey, but they were a fun kind of hokey.

(Editors Note: I picked two of the sort-of/totally awkward-to-watch videos because they had motions. These aren't the motions I learned, but it seems that those fluctuated greatly from church to church and state to state. But be forewarned, these aren't videos of the highest quality.)



Saturday, November 8, 2014

Sermon Snippets

I'm sure most of us have heard the clever, semi-profane axiom about what assuming does. While the Bible doesn't put it quite like that, it does make a strong case concerning the dangers of assuming.

Proverbs is littered with it's own axioms meant to show just how bad assuming and presuming can be. Proverbs can certainly be very deep and theological, but this is just another example of how practical and real it can get in this compilation of the sayings of Solomon.

A couple of my favorites that I'll spend some time on tomorrow are 21:2 and 20:24. There are certainly many ways we can fall into the trap of assuming in life, but these two encompass two of the most common mistakes we make. 

21:2:
A person may think their own ways are right,
    but the Lord weighs the heart.

Here we are warned about assuming we know what is best and right about ourselves. We can easily fool ourselves into thinking we are doing something for the right reasons and we can easily deceive ourselves into believing what we want is what is best in a given decision.  Unless we evaluate our thoughts, desires, and heart through the lens of Scripture, we can easily trip ourselves up.

20:24: 
A person’s steps are directed by the Lord.
    How then can anyone understand their own way?

Our thinking about the future is another common area where we can let ourselves assume too much. In William Ernest Henley's famous poem, Invictus, he defiantly concludes: 
  
It matters not how strait the gate,
      How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate,
      I am the captain of my soul. 
 
Proverbs begs to differ. As does James 4, which states
 
 13 Now listen, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.” 14 Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. 15 Instead, you ought to say, “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.” 16 As it is, you boast in your arrogant schemes. All such boasting is evil.

We are not the master of our fates, that God's prerogative. And to assume other wise is to risk disaster, disappointment, and difficulty. We must entrust our plans to God and allow him to captain our souls.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Music Mondays



This song became popular thanks to a Michael W. Smith cover in the early 2000's, but I will always remember hearing it first at the summer camp I've mentioned in previous posts. 

This is a unique song among its contemporary peers as it involves singing parts, albeit simple ones compared to the harmonizations of older hymns (or in some cases what you could do with older hymns).

Every time I've sung it in a church worship setting, it's always been arranged in a straightforward way with men singing their lines and women singing theirs. There's certainly a beauty to it, yet it always falls just a bit short by my high standards. Why, because when I was originally introduced to it, the men sang their lines the first time through as did the women - and then they switched parts the second time through.

Personally I always found the women's part - the rapid fire singing of the various names of Jesus-  to be superior. So in my ideal world, both genders get to share the full force of this song. But alas, I continue to be let down (just a bit). Oh well, I'll get over it. After all, it's the message of the song, not how it is sung that is most important.