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Connecting the Gathering

I live and serve in the South. Cultural Christianity is alive and well in the Bible Belt. Having the external appearance of faith without a heart that grasps and truly responds to the Gospel is my short-hand description of cultural Christianity. It has the external appearance of goodness, or morality with a compartmentalized heart and understanding of the way our faith should influence and impact everything about the life of a believer:

Our desires and affections.

The way we view and spend our money.

Our thoughts and actions.

The words we speak, and the way we use social media.

Our interactions with our family, our neighbors, and our enemies.

Our engagement within our communities and around the world.

What we treasure, and what we reject.

To some extent, this is not a unique reality for Americans living in the South. Every human lives a compartmentalized life. We divide ourselves across work, family, friends, free time, money, and faith. But if we are called to be and make disciples, that is a call that must pervade every area and aspect of our lives.

When I started to see worship leading as a place of discipleship, I began to see the gaps between what we do on a Sunday, and how we live the rest of the week.

Sunday worship is the overflow of Monday through Saturday worship.

Sunday worship fuels and propels the people of God to live as worshipers throughout the week.

In gathering with the people of God are reminded that God is much bigger than we are, that we are never alone, and we encourage one another to live as followers of Christ.

In gathering with the people of God we are reminded of our dependence upon God and the gift of His Body.

In gathering with the people of God our attention and affection are refocused around the person and work of Christ rather than the desires of the flesh or the culture.

May our lives, and the lives of those we lead look increasingly less compartmentalized.

Other posts that might be of interest:

All of Life Worship.

How to respond to Current Events.

Growing as a Communicator

Connecting Songs and Sermons

September 14: Tuesday Refocus

“But when I remember that I am not my own, I offer up my heart, presented as a sacrifice to the Lord.” - John Calvin

When I was young I remember fearing that God may call me to live in some far-flung location to serve Him.  Maybe you too have feared that God may ask of you something you are not yet willing to give.  Followers of Jesus are not their own, but those who have been bought with a price (1 Cor 6:19-20).  Believing this truth carries with it the acknowledgment that if we are not our own, we do not have complete control over our lives.

As those who bear the image of God, we are called to give to God what belongs to God (Gen 1:27, Mark 12:17).  This can be both fearful and freeing.  Fearful because I have less claim over myself than I would desire.  Freeing because I know that God is a good Father who loves me and that presenting my body as a living sacrifice to God is the only way to find true freedom (Matt 7:11, Rom 12:1).  To find your life, you must lose your life (Matt 16:25).

Perhaps the only thing scarier than a heart presented as a sacrifice to the Lord - with the potential of being sent to a far-flung location - is a hard heart…  A life unwilling to be sacrificed in response to the Living Sacrifice.

Take myself, and I will be, ever, only all for Thee.  Amen.

For Thee,

AB

May 18: Tuesday Refocus

‘We want to avoid suffering, death, sin, ashes, but we live in a world crushed and broken and torn, a world God Himself visited to redeem.  We receive His poured-out life and, being allowed the high privilege of suffering with Him, may then pour ourselves out for others.’ - Elisabeth Elliot

Those who follow Christ live in His upside-down kingdom. 

In this kingdom… 

…it was the will of the Father to crush the Son (Isaiah 53:10).

…it was for the joy set before Christ that He endured the cross (Hebrews 12:2).

…we do not have a High Priest who is unable to sympathize, but in every way has been tempted as we, yet without sin (Hebrews 4:15).

…the last will be first, and the first will be last (Matthew 20:16).

…enemies become friends (Romans 5:10).

…you must lose your life to find your life (Matthew 10:39).

…orphans become heirs (Romans 8:17).

…sharing in Christ’s suffering means sharing also in His glory (Romans 8:17).

…we have been loved first (1 John 4:19).

This upside-down kingdom of Christ extends to the world, as His followers live upside-down in the world.

God, forgive our contentment with living in the wrong Kingdom, in the wrong direction.  Christ, You have taken the lowest place, although you deserve the highest place.  Forgive us for thinking of ourselves more highly than we ought.  Turn us upside down in your Kingdom.  Amen.

Living,

AB

April 20: Tuesday Refocus

‘For whenever the human soul turns itself, other than to You, it is fixed in sorrows, even if it is fixed upon beautiful things.’ - Augustine 

Our hungry hearts and souls are quick to exchange the truth about God for a lie and worship and serve creature rather than the Creator (Rom 1:25).  Since the fall in the Garden, this has always been our story (Gen 3:1-7).  We have found time and time again the words of the Psalmist are true: ’The sorrows of those who run after another god shall multiply…’ (Ps 16:4).

Where can we set our gaze to not be fixed in multiplying sorrows?  Toward Christ.

‘Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God.’ Hebrews 12:1-2

Instead of turning toward immediate relief from His suffering, He set His face like flint toward Jerusalem (Lk 9:51).  He set His face toward doing the will of the Father (Jn 6:38).  He set His face toward the cross.  And when we look to Him, we live. 

Lord, may we look to You.  May we run to You and away from the lesser gods, the lesser loves which so easily entangle.  May we look to You and live, in Your name, amen.

Looking,

AB