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To Stand in Awe April 21, 2009

Posted by jonesy24 in Austria, Bible, Christianity, God, Worship.
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The Israelites have just finished the tabernacle and the alter, they’ve been given all these detailed instructions on various offerings, the priests are good and ready, and in Leviticus 9 we have basically what is the first ‘worship service’. It being the first time, they probably don’t know what’s going to happen, or what to expect. The glory of God appears to all the people, and God consumes the offering with fire. The first ‘service’ ever, and God ‘shows up’, and the people go crazy, start shouting in joy and fall face down in worship.

Can you imagine? How awesome must that have been? The priests, Aaron, Moses and the people doing this for the first time the way God has told them exactly how he wants to be worshipped, not knowing what to expect, not sure what exactly is going to happen, and God shows up, and is seen in all of his glory!

But then in chapter 10:

“Now Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer and put fire in it and laid incense on it and offered unauthorized fire before the Lord, which he had not commanded them. And fire came out from before the Lord and consumed them, and they died before the Lord.”

Aaron’s sons Nadab and Abihu, after just having seen the glory of God, being all fired up and excited (no doubt about it) after just having seen God’s glory and fire come out from the presence of the Lord to consume the offering, offer unauthorised fire before God – contrary to how he’s said how it’s to be done. Bad idea! If God gives you instructions on how to do something, you stick to them. Otherwise, there’s serious consequences.

So, having done different to what God has told them to do, despite their hearts being in the right place, being fired up and excited about worshipping God, fire comes out from the presence of God, consuming them and killing them.

What’s interesting here is that they’re hearts are in it – they’re trying to worship God, but the way they do it isn’t right. It matters how we worship God. Our hearts have to be in it, but our actions – which reflect what’s going on inside have to be in line with how God wants to be worshipped. It’s not about how WE want to worship God – it’s how HE wants to be worshipped.

So, you’re thinking: Slaughtering animals, burning stuff, etc… that’s Old Testament, right? That’s old school? We don’t do that anymore, right? But the theory still applies today because God still cares how he is worshipped. Worship is an offering before God. We do need to follow the examples in the bible of how God wants to be worshipped. If we get mixed up in that, and worship God how WE want to, even with good hearts, like Nadab and Abihu – our good hearted worship offering can be offensive to God.

We were saved, not to be slaves to God, because that would imply he needs us, but to be sons and daughters, to worship God, our father, and to live lives that glorify him. We are all called to worship God. We are called to stand in awe.

Jesus talks about worshipping what we do not know. He follows on by saying (John 4:23-24) that “true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshippers the Father seeks (again – what God wants, what God is looking for). God is spirit, and his worshippers must worship in spirit and in truth.”

Worship in spirit and in truth? What is that?

“Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God – this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12: 1-2)

Worship is a sacrifice. An offering. Similar to the offerings in the Old Testament, here Paul talks about offering ourselves, our very lives as a worship sacrifice to God. Being a Christian is sacrificing your life to God – and that’s worship. Living a life of worship.

Spiritual worship is praising and worshipping a God who requires you to be all in, giving up the things of the world, and becoming more like Jesus daily. That involves sacrifice. That involves taking up our crosses daily.

Part of worshipping in truth is simply worshipping God in the way that he wants to be worshipped. With all your heart, soul, mind and strength, in accordance with what the bible says about how God wants to be worshipped.

We see plenty of examples of worship throughout the bible. We read the Psalms which teaches us how to worship God by singing. There’s examples of physical acts of worship (raising hands, facedown worship, kneeling, dancing, etc) as well, practised by people like Abram, Moses, Aaron, King David, Peter, James, John, etc. Taking a closer look at some of these people allows us to see the heart behind their physical acts of worship.

Every posture in worship says something of both the worshipper and the one being gloried in. The raising of hands tells of a soul stretched out high in praise and the worth of the one being exalted. Joyful dancing (like David) interprets a grateful heart and points in adoration to the lovable gracious God – the source of that joy. Worshipping facedown tells of a soul so captivated by God that to prostrate your self before God in true and total surrender seems the only appropriate response (and is probably the ultimate act of reverence) to our God, our high and exalted master.

What I’ve learned is that all these physical acts or postures begin as a posture of the heart. So it’s important to spend a short time before or just at the start of worship, readying your heart, focusing on God, asking for forgiveness, focussing on something that God has done, or that you long for him to do. I believe if you sort out your heart, and your head before you enter a time of worship, the prospect of raising your hands in a physical act of worship doesn’t seem a scary thing at all. When you truly focus on God, the people around you, which can make you feel uncomfortable and not confident in worshipping outwardly, become less of an issue.

Ultimately, who’s bigger? We’re concerned about the person to the right and left of us? Maybe they’re concerned about you? What will they think if I raise my hands and actually worship God in the way my heart wants to, in a response to who God is and what he has done for me? And I get it. I understand. Half the time, I struggle with it myself. Half the time I don’t do what my heart wants to do. It’s difficult sometimes.

One example of facedown worship is when the Ark of the Covenant has been taken by the Philistines in 1 Samuel 5, they take it a temple and they place it before their ‘god’ Dagon. The Ark of the Covenant was God’s presence. They come into find their ‘god’ (a statue) Dagon facedown before the Ark of the Covenant. Even supposed gods end up facedown in the presence of God.

Then there’s David. Shortly after the Dagon incident, the Ark of the Covenant is brought back to it’s rightful place. David is so overjoyed, that he dances with all his might in worship of God, in an undignified way. Sometimes when we God ‘gets’ us, we get ‘it’, which is to say we tend to throw off the concerns about what people may think, like David did… and go a little bit crazy and worship God in an undignified way.

This leads to my final point. Worship is a response. It’s a response to who God is. It’s a response to what he’s done, and what he’s going to do. We get so wrapped up in what we want from worship. We base our judgement on how good worship was depending on how ‘hyped up’ and spiritual we feel afterwards. Coming back to what I said at the beginning, it’s about God. Not us.

First and foremost, worship is to God. Secondly, it’s us. God can and does minister to us through the Holy Spirit in worship. It’s communion with God. It’s a two-way thing. That is also why we can (like David does in the Psalms) cry out desperately for God in worship, in our pain and hurting, in the midst of some of the craziness in this world, but still ultimately put our hope and our trust in the God who is in control of everything.

Worship is also a choice. It’s not something we always feel drawn into. Sometimes I’m just not in the mood to get down on my knees and worship God. Just like sometimes the last thing I feel like doing is reading my bible or praying. We don’t just pray to God when we feel like it; otherwise it’s just a take, take, take, relationship. In the same way, we need to make the choice of worshipping God in the midst of suffering. We need to step into worship even when we don’t feel like it, which is basically saying, “God, even though I feel miserable right now, you’re still worthy and I’m going to worship you despite…”

In Habakkuk, the prophet Habakkuk is crying out to God. He’s asking for help. His people are screwing up big time. They’re not living the lives God called them to live. Habakkuk talks about all the destruction and violence and strife and conflict. He wants to know why God isn’t moving when there’s so much wrong going on. He wants to know how God can watch this and do nothing.

God tells Habakkuk that he’s raising up the Babylonians to sort things out. He’s raising up an even worse ungodly nation, to take over the currently ungodly nation of Israel. Ouch. Basically, Habakkuk is in a bad situation, and it’s only going to get worse, and then he prays this:

“Lord, I have heard of your fame; I stand in awe of your deeds, O Lord. Renew them in our day, in our time make them known; in wrath remember mercy.” (Habakkuk 3:2)

It’s amazing. Despite the fact that Habakkuk is in a crappy situation, and he knows it’s only going to get worse because God is raising up the Babylonians, he still worships God. He still, in the midst of suffering, in the knowledge that it’s only going to get worse, trusts God and puts his hope in him.

Habakkuk standing in awe of God’s deeds? What? Even in a bad situation?

There’s so MUCH to stand in awe of. So much that God has done in the bible which should have us fall flat on our face (like Dagon) in worship to God. How can we even find it ‘hard’ or ‘awkward’ to worship?

Austria ‘09 April 18, 2009

Posted by jonesy24 in Austria, God, What's happening with me....
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So, last Saturday I got back from the 2009 Scripture Union Austria camp. I have to say, it was a lot of fun.

This year there were a lot of changes. First off, we weren’t staying at the place we usually stay at – a huge Castle run by and for Christians, who accomidated us for as long as I can remember. This proved difficult because where we had what was pretty much a conference room in the ‘Castle’, we were now in a hotel, using the dining room for meetings and worship, not to mention food!

We also had a lot of new leaders. My cousin Stephen was the main man for the trip this year, with my brother Gareth being his right hand man. All the old (literally old) ski instructors had decided last year was their last year. It worked out as Stephen, Gareth, Linny (another cousin), and Andy taking the classes, and me at least putting my name to the ‘Free skiers’ – I was responsible in a very informal way. EEK.

So, leading worship this year was different. I didn’t have a sound man. I didn’t have a PA or a sound desk. I was working with Me on guitar and vocals – through a huge marshall amp, Gil on Piano and vocals – through another acoustic amp, and a last minute addition of a cracking wee musician called dean, who brought his bass guitar and amp along. The sound mix was probably awful. And the dynamics of the room were dreadful, with me not being able to see what seemed like half the campers. It was hard for me to get over the things I could control being far from ideal and trusting God that he’d move regardless.

Then the powerpoint! AGHHHHHHHHHHH! I had also organised powerpoint, meaning I brought a projector, and a laptop, and ‘borrowed’ the church lyrics and what not. It was a disaster. Something seemed to change/go wrong every single night. Plus, I was speaking the first night on congregational worship, and pretty much forgot about powerpoint entirely.

And my ‘talk’, or message. Having worked on it in advance of Austria (something other leaders clearly didn’t do – something I realized when they were taking afternoons of skiing to work on it! ;-p. (I only mention it because it makes me look organised for the first time in my life!). But yea, the message went pretty alright. I’d threw it (emailed) to my pastor Brian Ingraham to have a looky at and give me a few pointers, and suprisingly it wasn’t ‘crap’ like I though it’d be. At least that’s what he SAID.

There seemed to be a good response. People definately took the things I’d challenged them with and tried out a few things during the week relating to what was being talked about. Although writing was one thing, I definately need to work on my communication.

OVER ALL… I loved it. It was good to be more organised BEFORE I went this year, which meant it was less rushing, etc. Worship went good – because God moved, and it had nothing to do with me. The talks rocked, even the badly communicated, lack of powerpoint ones (mine) – not because anything I had done, but because God intervened. Skiing was amazing, not just because it was skiing, but because I spent a bit of time just relaxing and standing in awe of God’s Creation.

Austria 07 – Came and Gone April 16, 2007

Posted by jonesy24 in Austria, What's happening with me..., Worship.
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God's playground...

*Sigh* – I miss it already. Austria was awesome. God was there.

Here’s a sorta run down of what our week/ten days looked like:

Saturday – All aboard the bus – travel to England (BOO! Kidding Andy…) and catch a ferry. Good opportunity to get to know the ‘campers’ and learn everyone’s names.

Sunday – Ship lands in Belgium. Our third country. We travel absolutely all day through Belgium, France, somewhere else I can’t remember the name of, Germany and finally Austria. Long day. Multiple DvD’s, and lots of sleeping.

creepy?Monday – First day Skiing. Get hire skis for anyone that doesn’t have their own, and hit the mountains. (Also recieve a txt from Brian at the top of a mountain… wonder how much that cost him… or me?). After skiing, we’ve got dinner, quiet time groups (during which I spent the time preparing for Worship), then the ‘meeting’ where we have a teaching time and Worship time. The theme of the week is ‘The Good News’.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday are much the same. Apart from mixed in to our ‘Agenda’ is: Visiting the local town for either swimming or ice skating – of which I done neither; a good old fashioned ceildh (I’ll never spell it right); extended time of worship.

The one day that we had the ceilidh (another attempt) though we had taking a minor mis- turn in one of our off-piece adventures. We ended up in a gulley (me falling into a burn) and had to spend about an hour and a half climbing out through deep snow. Amazingly, we did make it back to the bus on time. However, I did pay for it at the ceilidgh (yet another attempt) during Strip the willow – nearly falling over several times. Andy Ash would have loved it.

Extended Worship time/night was good. Or at least, that’s the impression I got. Basically, anyone that wanted to had the opportunity to stay on for ‘more Worship’. I had asked another guy who was pretty keen to lead worship lead that night, so there was a gap inbetween meeting and the ‘extra stuff’ which allowed people to go to the loo, get a drink, and me to get my gear set up.

It’s one thing I love. I see part of a Lead Worshippers role as actually ‘leading’ the congregation into that place of Worship. With this small group of people though – some of them not even Christians – they came ready to worship God. They were already ‘warmed up’ from the meeting and were longing for more… of GOD. Longing to praise him more. It was quality.

We also done this thing every morning sorta during breakfast where someone would ’share’ either their testimony or ‘a thought’ or something they’d been recently thinking about (bible related obviously). So picture this:

I had decided to stay in bed. Seeing as I rarely have a proper breakfast, I decided I’d benefit more from an extra half hour in bed. I decided after about half an hour, that I might as well get ready and go down to breakfast for the last 5 mins – at which point I realised I was meant to be sharing.

I talked about Running the race. Sound familiar? Paul talks about running ‘the race’. I blabbered on about that for a couple of mins, and then asked 2 questions:

- Are you running the race, Period? And if not, why not?

- If you are running the race, then are you running it in such a way as to finish well?

(Blog more about my stolen talk later.)

Then it was pretty much home time. We stopped of in Brugge in Belgium on the way back, and I went in search of some cultural munchies – ending up in Pizzahutt.

Over all – I was refreshed. I led worship for a WHOLE week. I loved it. I got to show people how to do one of my favourite things – Praise God.

At the top of a mountain... Belgium - Cathedral

‘When I survey…’ April 6, 2007

Posted by jonesy24 in Austria, Songs, What's happening with me..., Worship.
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I’m In Austria. I’ve been leading worship the whole week – which has been brilliant and tough at the same time. Brilliant in that I love to worship God – he’s worthy of my praise. Tough in that I’ve had a lot of attack during the week – something that seems to accompany me leading worship.

Speaking of which, I’ve only just came down from the ‘auditorium’… where we just had our meeting/worship time.

I’ve been really challenged this week. 2 or 3 times I’ve played ‘When I survey’ (celtic version) when I’ve been leading. Last night was out ‘extended worship time’, and the last song was ‘When I survey’. The last line, is… “Demands my soul, my life, my all…”.

I’d like to say that I love God and am living 100% for Him… but I’m not. It’s really struck home with me that God wants, and deserves my everything. How many little things get in the way, or are holding me back from being closer to God? Too many as far as I’m concerned. So… I’m to focus more on God. Focus on dropping the things that are holding me back from Him – in order that I can be more like Him.

Ramble…

Austria ‘07 March 31, 2007

Posted by jonesy24 in Austria, Prayer Requests, What's happening with me..., Worship.
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I’m leaving for Austria tomorrow for 10 days. 2 days journey in a coach/ferry to go skiing for 5 or 6 days. I’m also leading worship.

If you seek things to pray for, here’s some:

Pray that:

  • I follow what God wants me to do
  • I don’t or am protected from the attacks of Satan – I get alot of that when I lead
  • That I can be a good influence to the youth on the camp
  • etc

I’ll no doubt blog at some point while I’m there If I have time. Otherwise, watch out for Easter monday night… when I get back.