Archive for the ‘ worship ’ Category

From drip drip to Hoover Dam

My heart was ravished afresh this morning by God’s love for His people in the Gospel!  Our gathered worship began as David lead us in singing How Deep the Father’s Love For Us, I Will Glory in My Redeemer & The Lord Is. Man it was a sweet time of singing!  Then Stephen spoke on The Proclaimed Kingdom in our series God’s Unfolding Kingdom.  What was a trickle in the Old Testament is now like the Hoover Dam overflowing - the Spirit is now calling a New Israel from every nation, language, people & tribe!  Stephen challenged & encouraged our participation in this great gospel advance. Because we are God’s dwelling place by the Spirit we are all empowered to be part of this Kingdom surge. An apt illustration was given of a banquet table that we can sample & smell as we await the great feast - the Kingdom has come but we await it’s fullness.  In this overlap of ages we are to worship, be on mission, & suffer for God’s glory. Following the message we sang Completely Done & Before The Throne as David gave some piercing exhortations.

Ahhhhh, we tasted something more of the feast to come this morning. And now we have the privilige this week of inviting others to join us at the banquet table.

~ Mike

  • Share/Bookmark

“WHY?” – The Great Commission

Small group discussion questions for the week of November 15, 2009, based on the sermon “The Great Commission” from the What, Why, & How series.

Theme: The church exists to proclaim the Gospel in order to bring God glory.  Therefore, our mission is the great commission.

Introduction:

  • List some things the church is to do.
  • Discuss whether any of these things should be top priority. If so, what?
  • Read John 20:19-21, Matt 28:16-21, Luke 24:44-49 and Acts 1:8, in that order. Try to imagine you are hearing/reading these words for the first time.

Questions:

1. What do each of the above passages reveal about the great commission? (note how each passage builds on the one previous).

2. What do you think of this quote?

“Missions is not the ultimate goal of the church.  Worship is.  Missions exists because worship doesn’t.  Worship is ultimate, not missions, because God is ultimate, not man.  When this age is over, & the countless millions of the redeemed fall on their faces before the throne of God, missions will be no more.  It is a temporary necessity.”

~John Piper in “Let the Nations be Glad: The Supremacy of God in Missions”

3. The entirety of history is flowing toward Revelation 7:9 – are you/we participating in this stream or standing on the sidelines?

4. We are called to be faithful to the Gospel Message while adapting to be faithful Gospel messengers in our context (1 Cor 9:19-23) – what specifically might that mean here in Hillsboro?

5. How does the Gospel itself empower us to proclaim the Gospel?

6. Imagine you have been called to a foreign country to share the Gospel and ask yourself these questions:

  • How would you approach secular employment?
  • What standard of living would you expect as pioneer missionaries?
  • What would you spend your time doing?
  • What opportunities would you be looking for?
  • What would your prayers be like?
  • What would you be trying to do with your friends?
  • What kind of team would you want around you?

7. Recall the two kinds of military chaplains Mike mentioned in his message – which chaplain do you think had the most effective ministry among the Marines and why?  Which chaplain best describes us?

Questions & sermon prepared by Mike Hanafee.

  • Share/Bookmark

Grace & Truth’s Worship Music Set List: Sunday, 10/25/09

The theme for our gathered worship this week was learning to trust in God’s faithfulness and provision for every season of our lives, whether we are in the midst of sickness or health, need or abundance – to “count our lives as loss”.  We recognize that this is difficult to do. In fact it is impossible to achieve and even desire without the Spirit through the Power of Christ and the Word, so we preach these truths to ourselves in song and pray to that end.

Choosing a theme around which to structure our worship can occasionally be very challenging and this was one of those weeks. But I believe it’s helpful for the church (and for me as I lead) to focus on a key aspect of God’s character or redemptive work as we worship. Often I see or hear that God used the truths we sang to work in a way the team had never anticipated and that is both humbling and faith-building.

So here are the songs around which we formed our worship this morning at Grace & Truth:

1. You Are My King (Amazing Love) by Billy Foote

2. Thy Way Not Mine by Horatius Bonar, Joel Sczebel — Worship of Giving

I dare not choose my lot
I would not if I might
Choose Thou for me, my God
So I can walk aright

Scripture Reading – Romans 8:18-25

3. The Lord Is (Psalm 23) by Pat Sczebel & Bob Kauflin

Message – From Bodyolatry to True Health and Beauty (Mike Hanafee)

4. Thy Way Not Mine (we repeated the song congregationally here after being used as the worship of giving earlier)

5. Here is Love by Robert Lowry, William Rees, Matt Redman

6. The Glory of the Cross by Bob Kauflin

What mercy now has been proclaimed for those who would believe
A love incomprehensible, our minds could not conceive
A mercy that forgives my sin and makes me like your Son
And now I’m blessed forevermore because of what you’ve done.

And, oh, the glory of the cross – that You would send Your Son for us
I gladly count my life as loss, that I might come to know
The glory of, the glory of the cross!

Well, that’s what the Lord enabled us to publicly proclaim in song this morning.  For our worship team this week, I led on acoustic guitar, David played the keys and added some nice vocal harmonies, and Loraena was able to lead as a vocalist this week as well.  I believe God will continue to teach and change us as a result of what the Spirit showed us this morning, for His glory!

Blessings in Christ,
-Josh

(I’m including this post in Fred McKinnon’s Sunday Setlist carnival, where you can see what many different kinds of churches around the world are singing.)

  • Share/Bookmark

Grace & Truth’s Worship Music Set List: Sunday, 10/18/09

In an ideal world, I’d like to give a preview of our worship on Friday or Saturday each week, but this week I’m posting after the fact as a testimony for what God did.  I’m also including this in Fred McKinnon’s Sunday Setlist carnival, where you can see what many different kinds of churches around the world are singing.

1. Here I Am to Worship by Tim Hughes was the opener for our musical worship.  The gathered church had already been vocally involved though as we preceded the song with a congregational reading of the 111th Psalm.  I always love to hear the church proclaim the truths of Scripture together, and as only our second Sunday in a new acoustic setting at Lincoln Street Elementary giving people a chance to hear themselves and each other prior to singing a word seemed to be a helpful exercise.

2. Thy Mercy, My God, which is an old Isaac Watts & John Stocker text with recently updated music by Sandra McCracken, followed another Scripture reading out of Matthew 23. I mentioned how the worship God hates is externally-based and seeks to exalt self while true worship is heart-based and points to God’s mercy & grace in Christ.

Without Thy sweet mercy, I could not live here
Sin would reduce me to utter despair
But through Thy free goodness, my spirit’s revived
And He that first made me still keeps me alive

3. The Precious Blood by Peter Gagnon (based on a Puritan prayer from The Valley of Vision) was sung after Mike Hanafee preached out of Ecclesiastes, From Religion to Resting in Jesus.  This song also served as our Worship of Giving, and everyone got involved by midway through the song.  This one isn’t overly familiar to all, but I know it has had a special ministry to many in our church.

A crown of thorns
Pierced hands and feet
A body bruised
And Mercy’s plea

4. In Christ Alone by Stuart Townend and Keith Getty is a familiar song and one which our church sings well.  I also notice people are freshly affected by the message of the song each time we sing it, which to me is a good sign of the song’s enduring nature.  I’m not one to pronounce a song an “instant classic,” but I do think this might be one from our generation.  I was planning to mix it up a little bit with the timing/feel of the song, but our rehearsal was compressed so we just slowed the tempo a bit and used the chorus to “The Solid Rock” between the 3rd and 4th stanzas and again as a tag at the end.  This seemed to be very effective and was used by the Spirit to direct some closing remarks that Mike made at the end.

5. All I Have Is Christ by Jordan Kauflin has proven to be a difficult one for me to sing with dry eyes.  This is a powerful song of God’s redemptive working in lives, and one which I love to include in worship.  I can still hear the final chorus ringing unaccompanied in our “cafetorium”, and pray that its truths are resounding in lives for years to come:

Hallelujah!
All I have is Christ
Hallelujah!
Jesus is my life

I was greatly encouraged by what God did in my heart this week, and by what He appeared to be doing in others.  It is such an undeserved privilege to be able to lead the body of Christ (who He died for!) each week in gathered worship.  May God continue to give us the grace to worship Him in spirit & truth!

Have a great week resting in Christ,
-Josh

  • Share/Bookmark

The Blazing Fire of the Cross

“The Cross is the blazing fire at which the flame of our love is kindled, but we have to get near enough for its sparks to fall on us.”

John Stott

  • Share/Bookmark