Laughing With

on Tuesday, July 7, 2009

I received an email yesterday from therebelution.com. They had an interesting article about suffering and pain. At the end of the article they shared the lyrics to a Regina Spector song called "Laughing With" which was written for the "Prince Caspian" movie.

I don't know much about Regina Spector or her music but it seemed appropriate to share this song on this blog.


“Laughing With” Lyrics:

No one laughs at God in a hospital
No one laughs at God in a war
No one’s laughing at God when they’re starving or freezing or so very poor
No one laughs at God when the doctor calls after some routine tests
No one’s laughing at God when it’s gotten real late and their kid’s not back from that party yet
No one laughs at God when their airplane starts to uncontrollably shake
No one’s laughing at God when they see the one they love hand in hand with someone else and they hope that they’re mistaken
No one laughs at God when the cops knock on their door and they say “We’ve got some bad new, sir,”
No one’s laughing at God when there’s a famine, fire or flood

But God can be funny
At a cocktail party while listening to a good God-themed joke or
Or when the crazies say he hates us and they get so red in the head you think that they’re about to choke
God can be funny
When told he’ll give you money if you just pray the right way
And when presented like a genie
Who does magic like Houdini
Or grants wishes like Jiminy Cricket and Santa Claus
God can be so hilarious
Ha ha
Ha ha

No one laughs at God in a hospital
No one laughs at God in a war
No one’s laughing at God when they’ve lost all they got and they don’t know what for
No one laughs at God on the day they realize that the last sight they’ll ever see is a pair of hateful eyes
No one’s laughing at God when they’re saying their goodbyes

But God can be funny
At a cocktail party while listening to a good God-themed joke or
Or when the crazies say he hates us and they get so red in the head you think that they’re about to choke
God can be funny
When told he’ll give you money if you just pray the right way
And when presented like a genie
Who does magic like Houdini
Or grants wishes like Jiminy Cricket and Santa Claus
God can be so hilarious

No one laughs at God in a hospital
No one laughs at God in a war
No one laughs at God in a hospital
No one laughs at God in a war
No one’s laughing at God in a hospital
No one’s laughing at God in a war
No one’s laughing at God when they’re starving or freezing or so very poor
No one’s laughing at God
No one’s laughing at God
No one’s laughing at God
We’re all laughing with God

Laughing With by Regina Spektor from the album Far

How Sweet The Sound?

on Saturday, May 23, 2009



Witness the passion. Celebrate the glory. Be a part of the Search for the Best Choir in America. Register your choir today. Then tune in to BET on Sunday, May 31, 11:00 AM EST for an extraordinary look at the people who were part of How Sweet the Sound 2008. You’ll find yourself cheering with the crowds, clapping to the music, and sharing backstage tears of joy. You’ll feel the anticipation, excitement, and passion. Don’t miss out in 2009! You only have until June 15, so register your choir today.

We want to send out a big “Thank You!” to the many Choirs who have already sent in their registrations and audition tapes. How Sweet the Sound 2009 began April 1 and the search for The Best Church Choir in America is officially off and running! So don’t miss this opportunity to get in your registration and show us why your church choir is the Best in America. Get your registration information together so your choir can compete to win up to $50K in cash and prizes!


I'm not quite sure how to comment on this. An American Idol of church choirs? Really? Put singing songs to God to a competition? Really? Enough said.

One Of Us

on Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Just one of us can put a thousand to flight
And two of us can send the legions fleeing
Just one of us can put a thousand to flight
And two of us rout evil principalities

O there are many of us here
Exalting the name of the Lord
And in His name we declare
Our victory in spiritual war
We bind the powers of the air
By wielding the Word as our sword



Yep. Because we are soooo powerful!

The Worship Service

on Monday, May 11, 2009

Many Christians attend Church (service) without giving much thought to the Church Service itself. In reality, very often Church services are carefully orchestrated. Preachers prepare the sermon, Musicians attend practices. And the Ushers, Greeters, Light and Sound crews faithfully serve week-in week-out.

It is easy to understand the need for preaching, worship, and even hospitality; But not all components receive equal attention. Some components receive less attention (and thought). This includes some very traditional aspects of doing Church. Such as....

Sacraments
What is a Sacrament? Seasoned Church-goers will probably identity the Sacraments as Holy Communion and Water Baptism. But what are the Sacraments about, and what makes them different from other Christian practices?

Doxology
What is the Doxology? Praise God from Whom all blessings flow? According to Wikipedia, the words 'doxology' comes from the Greek doxa, belief or opinion + logos, word or speaking. What does this reveal about the Doxology and how we should approach it?

Benediction
What is the Benediction? Is it just a closing prayer?

Your service might not have these three components. This is just an introduction to get you thinking. Your Church service might also include others (e.g. Invocation, Call to Worship, Tithes and Offering, Prophecy and Tongues, etc).

What do you do? Why do you do what you do? Are they really necessities? Does the order matter? These are all questions that can make a difference in how we commune with God as a Church body.

There are also historical Christian terms that we are unlikely to move away from. Here are three to get you started:

Hosanna... Hallelujah.... Amen!

What is the meaning of these words? Do we use them the same way the Bible does? And what do we understand when we use them in song?

Just for fun, here's how the Compact OED describes them,

Hosanna: exclamation, a biblical cry of praise or joy.
Hallelujah: exclamation, God be praised.
Amen: exclamation, said at the end of a prayer or hymn, meaning ‘so be it’.

Cheers & Happy thinking.

*Helpful addendum* Hosanna is often interpreted as a cry for salvation, "God save me" or "Save, now!"

Such A Thing As Too God Centered?

on Tuesday, May 5, 2009

I am not approving or condemning this song, nor the artist, but I find the topic very interesting. I heard this song on one of our popular radio stations here semi-local and following the song, one of the announcers stated that they sang a modified version of it in their church on Sunday. I began to think about the context and realized that it was lyrically supposed to be God singing to us.

I do believe that there is an appropriate time and place to a song of this nature, and have heard a wonderful song written by a friend that tells a story of someone crying out to God, and then God responding. This song, is simply God telling us he loves us and is with us. Two other songs that come to mind are 'I Have Always Loved You' by Third Day, and 'I Am The Way' by Mark Schultz, both songs I have enjoyed listening to.

The first question of the day is when can we sing a song that is first person from God to us, without in some fashion deciding that we are God? My 5 year old son in church today recited John 14:6 which says, "Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." He immediately stopped and said, "Well Daddy, you know not through me, but God right?" Just the fact that he said it sparked his conscience to realize that the words he spoke were flawed if they were coming from him.

Secondly, is it ever appropriate for us to sing this manner of lyric, and why?

Thirdly, doesn't singing as though God is singing to us automatically make it 'me' centered?

Here is Matthew West's "More".

Take a look at the mountain
Stretching a mile high
Take a look at the ocean
Far as your eye can see
And think of me

Take a look at the desert
Do you feel like a grain of sand?
I am with you wherever
Where you go is where I am
And I'm always thinking of you
Take a look around you
I'm spelling it out one by one

I love you more than the sun
And the stars that I taught how to shine
You are mine and you shine for me too
I love you
Yesterday
And today
And tomorrow
I'll say it again and again
I love you more

Just a face in the city
Just a tear on a crowded street
But you are one in a million
And you belong to me
And I want you to know I'm not letting go
Even when you come undone

I love you more than the sun
And the stars that I taught how to shine
You are mine and you shine for me too
I love you
Yesterday
And today
And tomorrow
I'll say it again and again
I love you more
I love you more

Shine for me
Shine for me
Shine on, shine on
Shine for me

I love you more than the sun
And the stars that I taught how to shine
You are mine and you shine for me too
I love you
Yesterday
And today
And tomorrow
I'll say it again and again
I love you more
I love you more

And I see you
And I made you
And I love you more than you can imagine
More than you can fathom
I love you more than the sun
And you shine for me

Singing In The Spirit

on Sunday, May 3, 2009

The following is an article written by Dr. Joe Nesom, the Pastor of First Baptist Church in Jackson, LA. I found it very edifying. The original article can be found by clicking on the link above.


C. S. Lewis described the ideal "Christian society" as "full of singing and rejoicing." Historically, Christians have been a singing people and that is especially true of those denominations that have a reformed heritage. Still, not all those who profess faith in Christ are equally enthusiastic about music in the life of Christ's church. Many years age, a friend told me that he did not care much for the "preliminaries." He would have preferred to go to the sermon without any initial "distractions."

What does God's Word teach us on this subject? Should we sing? Why? Further, what songs are appropriate to the worship of our God?



Singing in the Spirit

Our Lord told the Samaritan woman, "God is Spirit, and his worshipers must worship in Spirit and in truth" (John 4:24, NIV). What is the meaning of the phrase "in the Spirit?" Without the motivation and aid of the Spirit of God, there can be no true worship. Those who would worship God in the manner that pleases him must be born of the Spirit and filled with the Spirit.

The new birth is a miracle of the grace of God. It is nothing less than the Holy Spirit's coming to the rescue of a soul that is dead in trespasses and sins and imparting to that soul the life of God. Without regeneration no one can do anything in the Spirit. The unconverted man does not have the Spirit of God. He is devoid of any legitimate impulse to adore our God. He may sing with the congregation of the redeemed but he does not sing "in the Spirit." His "worship" is not acceptable to the Lord.


But what of the converted? Is his worship always acceptable? Is it not possible for the regenerate man to fail in the practice of acceptable worship? Indeed it is. He must be filled with the Spirit of God; i.e., his worship must be the product of his faith in the Lord (Eph. 5:18).


Why Should We Sing?

We serve a master who is King of kings and Lord of lords. When he commands us we must obey.


God's word is filled with commands that call for his worship and many of these instruct his servants to sing his praises, "Shout with joy to God, all the earth! Sing the glory of his name; make his praise glorious" (Psalm 66:1-2, NIV). It is true that the Lord graciously invites us to sing his praises, but we must not err in thinking that singing the glory of the name of God is optional. God's gracious invitations are also commandments to be obeyed.


We also find a rationale for singing in that our God deserves such adoration. Psalm 66 calls us to "Come and see what God has done, how awesome his works in man's behalf" (Psalm 66:5, NIV). The psalmist recounts the great salvific acts of God and rightly calls us to worship. What greater motive for praise than the character and works of God? We are to sing because the Lord is praiseworthy.


A third reason for singing is that it is good for us. Singing is a useful means of edification. Paul taught the Ephesians to "speak to one another with psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs" (Eph. 5:19, NIV). We sing to the Lord but in doing so we speak to each other. By singing the great doctrines of the faith we build each other up in truth.
And, we sing because it is the most appropriate way of expressing the joy we find in our Lord Jesus Christ. James taught that a heart filled with delight should find a voice. "Is anyone happy? Let him sing songs of praise" (James 5:13, NIV).



What Should We Sing?

Psalms

Our God has given us a hymnal which was inspired by the Holy Spirit. It is the Old Testament collection of songs that we know as the book of Psalms. The word "psalmos" used by Paul in Ephesians 5:19 always denoted a song sung to musical accompaniment and was understood to refer specifically to the psalms found in the collection that constituted the prayer book and hymnal of ancient Israel.


It was inevitable that the church should also sing the praise of God using the Psalter and that she should model original hymns on the inspired hymns of the book of Psalms.
Baptists and other Christians have at times debated whether the church should sing anything other than biblical psalms.


Today, singing from the Psalter is virtually a thing of the past in most evangelical churches, but some of the great metrical versions of the psalms still survive. Perhaps the best known is the adaptation of Psalm 23 from the Scottish Psalter of 1650:


The Lord's my Shepherd, I'll not want;
He makes me down to lie
In pastures green
He leadeth me the quiet waters by.
My soul He doth restore again,

And me to walk doth make
Within the paths of righteousness,
E'en for His own name's sake.
Yea, tho I walk through death's dark vale,

Yet will I fear no ill,
For thou art with me, and thy rod
And staff me comfort still.

My table thou hast furnished

In presence of my foes;
My head thou dost with oil anoint,
And my cup overflows.
Goodness and mercy all my life
Shall surely follow me,
And in God's house forevermore
My dwelling place shall be.

It is important to observe that the psalms give us examples of both hymns of praise to God and songs that describe the experience of God's people. The book of Psalms is very much a complete hymn book for the people of God. Had no other hymn or spiritual song ever been written, we could hardly complain of hymnodic impoverishment.

Hymns

In classical Greek this word was used of a festive lyric written in praise of a god or hero. Therefore we understand a hymn to be a song that is of extra-biblical origin and employs us in the direct praise of the Most High. Such hymns are sometimes overtly "Christian," that is, Christ is the subject.

One such example is "All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name."

All Hail the power of Jesus name! Let angels prostrate fall;
Bring forth the royal diadem, And crown him Lord of all!

In a day when subjectivism and individualism threaten the cause of truth and genuine Christian experience, the singing of hymns provides a much needed corrective.


Spiritual Songs


There does exist a need for musical vehicles that express the many concerns of spiritual experience. The nineteenth century provided us with thousands of spiritual songs that have served the church well for many years. Many are exhortative in character. George Duffield wrote one of the best known.


Stand up, stand up for Jesus, The trumpet call obey;
Forth to the mighty conflict,In this his glorious day.
Ye that are men now serve Him Against unnumbered foes;
Let courage rise with danger, And strength to strength oppose.



Practical Warnings

The church is ever in need of reformation, and it is our responsibility to examine contemporary practice to see if it conforms to biblical precept. We have already alluded to the sad absence of psalm singing in the churches today. A revival of psalmody in the churches would be very welcome indeed. Can we go on pretending that our worship is "biblical" if we do not sing psalms?


But what of innovations that detract from the worship of God "in Spirit and in truth?" Can we have reformation in these areas?


The Show Business Syndrome

When I was a teenager I attended a youth camp where young people were encouraged to "give their testimony." Camper after camper paraded to the "altar" where a microphone was available. Most of the "testimonies" were primarily subjective in character but were sprinkled with pious sounding sentiments. One little girl got caught up in the spirit of the thing and told us her life story minus the "piety." She saw people performing and she jumped at the opportunity to take center stage for herself.

Today there is little embarrassment about such behavior. Religion is show business. The sacred desk, symbolic of the primacy of preaching, has been all but obscured by something that looks increasingly like a theatrical stage. In many churches the "audience" sits and is entertained by choirs and soloists. The "audience" often expresses its appreciation by applause. If hymns are sung few verses are used.

"Choruses" (which are not always to be despised) are preferred because they are short. The church that emphasizes hymn singing is a precious commodity in our day.


Balance

Little thought seems to attend the choice of songs in Christian worship today. Well-intentioned people often lead the congregation in several good songs, but they may all be hymns or they may all be songs of Christian experience. A mixture of the two would be far better. Best of all would be the inclusion of a psalm in every service as well as appropriate hymns and spiritual songs.


Musical Integrity

Finally, let us show care in the choice of musical settings. A "catchy" tune may be popular but inappropriate. Our God is a Sovereign of matchless dignity and therefore is worthy of our best offering. We may pander to popular taste and please man, but the worship--including music--that pleases the Lord God is that which reflects his glory.


Heaven And Hell

on Wednesday, April 29, 2009

“I’m always suspicious when we talk too much about ourselves. Somebody pointed out that hymnody took a downward trend when we left the great objective hymns that talked about God and began to sing the gospel songs that talk about us. There was a day when men sang ‘Holy, Holy, Holy,’ and ‘O Worship the King,’ and they talked objectively about the greatness of God. Then we backslide into that gutter where we still are where everything is about ‘I.’ ‘I’m so happy,’ ‘I’m so blest,’ ‘I’m so nice,’ ‘I’m so good,’ always ‘I.’ The difference between heaven and hell is the difference between God and I. Jesus Christ, by canceling His ‘I’ was the Christ of God, not as I will, but as Thou wilt. The devil by magnifying his ‘I’ became the devil -- when he said, ‘I will arise, I will raise my throne above the throne of God’.” - A.W.Tozer, Sermon, “Ezekiel”