Tag: worship

  • WORSHIP. Day 12 of Lent. How to Hallelujah.

    WORSHIP. Day 12 of Lent. How to Hallelujah.

    john423 spirt and truth

     

    I’ve often wondered what it must sound like in heaven on Sunday mornings when corporate worship is lifted up, rippling through time zones for hours.  Today 48 of the United States had precipitation of some kind-we were iced over in North Texas and church was cancelled. And I wondered, what must it sound like this morning as I sang a little Francis of Assisi. “All creatures of our God and King, Lift up your voice and with us sing, Alleluia! Alleluia! Thou burning sun with watermelon, Thou silver moon with watermelon! O praise Him! O praise Him! Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!” Yes. I did sing the infamous “Watermelon” -a word Nicole Peters taught me you can sing that substitutes for any song  lyric and even looks like you know the words while you keep tempo. Great if you ever have to lip sync. Alone I can sing it out, adding in the watermelons wherever necessary to keep me from getting hung up on the perfection.  And writing this, I think Hallelujah would also be a great filler for unknown words.

    I remember being at a service once at Woodmen Valley Chapel in Colorado Springs.  I don’t remember the song but the worship and the worshipers around me I will never forget. There was harmony echoing back to the praise team. A rippling of improvisation to the praise chorus. People just softly speaking out truth,
    “God you are good.”
    “Forgiving.”
    “My provider.”
    “Love.”
    People claiming, “Yes Lord, you alone are worthy” as worship was sung. Hands were lifted or held over hearts as people swayed. Some might think it sounds distracting, showy and self-centered instead of respectful worship.  I tell you it was spirit and truth and a holy experience.  Blind worship.

    Corporately I learned I worship best when I also come blind.  I close my eyes and enter into the worship with spirit and truth. It’s just God, lifted up. Not words, not even music, they are just tools to communicate what is often so hard to express, to arrange God’s attributes and sing what we know of Him or sing our petitions, what we agree with Him up and out. It’s never about how we look or sound or sing- that’s ego and pride. And if that is what we are worrying about, should we sing?  And if we come heavy burdened or heavy-hearted, guilt-ridden or grudge holding, should we not sing and remind our hearts of a great overcoming God? And if we cry, is that the overflow of pure worship? And if all stop judging if this is our comfortable style and decide to participate whether the beat is free-flowing contemporary or incense burning Latin, whether worshipers stand in rank or clap or shout or dance, hold hands high or keep them folded tight, close eyes or track each word in perfect respectful pitch as breath forms words-in spirit and in truth– song words that turn to scent, incense that lifts up, up, up and fills the hallowed heavens with a single word. It is all the great gathered hallelujah of worship.

    Hallelujah: a thankful cry to express praise or thanks to God

    If you were to spell hallelujah in Hebrew, you see four Hebrew letters that escort you into the realm of worship and praise.  Hallelujah is really two words. Hal-lu means praise, and yah is a shortened form for the most common name for God in the Old Testament that we pronounce as Yahweh or Jehovah.

    The first two letters are:
    yod

     

    hebrew letter hey

     

    Hebrew is written from right to left. So in Hebrew, the letters for yah appear in reverse order and look like this:

    yah Hebrew God

    Yah is spelled with a yod and a heh from right to left and we have Yah which is God.
    Hal-lu the Hebrew word for praise looks like this:

    Hebrew word praise

    Put together the Hebrew word for praise and the short form for the most common name for God in the Old Testament, and we have hallelujah.

    Hebrew word halleluyah

     

    Enjoy this 5 minute improvisation by CLOVERTON of one of my favorite songs: Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah

  • Abounding in Thanksgiving -5 ways to gratefully live loved- Colossians 2:6-7

    Abounding in Thanksgiving -5 ways to gratefully live loved- Colossians 2:6-7

    rooted in christ col 2

    1-Remember God’s faithfulness – Joshua 4, 1 Samuel 7

    Remember your very best days and your worst failures. And see God there. Memories reveal God’s presence, even if you didn’t realize it at the time. There are no coincidences. God is governing this world. “Thus far the Lord has helped me”-He is sovereign. God has forgiven and restored us yesterday, worked in us with sanctifying power today, and He is our hope in the future for glorification.

    Remembering what God has done prepares our hearts to live a life of thanksgiving.

    2-Keep the Conversation going all day in prayer – Philippians 4:6

    If you’re not praying about something you are worrying about it. Fear erodes are faith and makes us use are self-sufficiency to cope with life when things get out of our control. Prayer keeps us trusting. And a prepared prayer- one that is specific instead of general makes the answers clear. We see God working with purpose. Over 20 times in the New Testament God links ‘ask me’ with thanksgiving.

    Faith thanks God continuously for His ever-ready presence found in prayer.

    3-Generously give as we are called for His purposes- 2 Corinthians 9:11

    God’s Word links thanks and giving together. When we understand that God owns it all and how generously He has given to us our heart and hands are open to generously give of our resources of time, talent and treasure to His purposes.  God asks us to be cheerful givers and the way our hearts are grown is through the trust and faith of the ‘giving test’. Who gets the first of your time, treasure and talents?  If God did a spiritual audit of your spending this week what did you spend your time, treasure and talents on? “You will be enriched in every way to be generous in every way, which through us will produce thanksgiving to God.”

    Thankful hearts give and produce thanksgiving to God.

    4-Share your gratitude and gladness with others – Isaiah 12:4

    God is writing His story in your story and you are an eye witness of God’s active living power and love. A life of thanksgiving is lived as a witness of where God showed up.  We are like a tour guide in a museum, we know all about the “artist” and we point to His work, showing off His master pieces and telling of his creative work.  We all have a story of God’s faithfulness and only you can tell others your unique story. “Thank the Lord! Praise his name! Tell the world his wondrous love. How mighty he is!”

    Thankful people don’t let God be an anonymous giver, they tell the world about his generosity and share their blessings with others.

    5- Sing to God and about God – Psalm 147:7

    There are more songs written about Jesus than there are about love. Christianity is a singing faith. We sing songs about who God is in our worship and we sing songs to God about who we are in Him.  God invented music, filling the heavens with worship first then anointing men to express our hearts to him through songs. Singing restores us. Worshiping God refocuses us on Him instead of our circumstances. Words put to music give people a way to corporately all say the same thing together as we sing. So don’t just stand there, sing!  “Sing out your thanks to him; sing praises to God.”

    Expressing our thanks to God in song and worship restores us.

    Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving. Colossians 2:6-7

    5 Ways to Live a life  abounding in thanksgiving Colossians 2:6-7
    5 Ways to Live a life
    abounding in thanksgiving Colossians 2:6-7