My “Wake Up” Playlist on Spotify

Posted in Bill's Blog, Music, Spirituality, Worship | Leave a comment

By My Side

January 22, 2014
9:17 AM

Like most mornings I awoke to my iPhone “Wake Up to Worship” mix at 5:45 AM, but unlike most mornings I let it play rather than rushing to hit snooze or turn it off. Boy was I blessed! Laying there half asleep, half awake, as I listened to the third song, By My Side by Daniel Bashta, my heart turned to prayer for two friends who recently lost a loved one. I prayed for them, bearing the burden of the loss for a moment with them and then feeling such hope and strength from the truth conveyed in that song. Some songs speak Scripture directly and others are based upon Scripture. By My Side is the latter – a song poetically capturing and holding our hearts with the truth of God when he says, “Behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:20b, ESV) That promise stated once by Jesus was stated over and over by God through the prophets in the Old Testament and affirmed by the psalmists as they worshiped him. It made me wonder if there is any promise in all of Scripture that is more central than this one. Evidently, it is very important for us to know and affirm that the Lord is indeed with us.

He is by your side and promises to never leave you nor forsake you. If you feel alone today, or tomorrow, this promise is for you. Truth informs our feelings; our feelings do not necessarily convey truth. You may feel alone, but the truth is that you are not alone! May you know the nearness of God as you listen.

If you have never embraced God as your Father, then receive and believe in Jesus. It is through faith in him that we become children of God. “But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God,” (John 1:12 ESV) Sometimes children just need to know that daddy is near, arms spread out inviting us to come and be held by him. You were never meant to be alone.

If you can, take a moment, close your eyes and listen to By My Side with these words from God in mind:

“Fear not, for I am with you;
be not dismayed, for I am your God;
I will strengthen you, I will help you,
I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” (Isaiah 41:10 ESV)

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Bill's Blog, Music, Spirituality, Worship | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Draw Near, Hold Fast, Stir Up!

As I’m looking ahead to 2014 I want to look to God’s Word with the leading of the Holy Spirit and consider how I ought to lead our congregation. I want to be courageous in my leadership, never forsaking humility and gentleness, exhorting and encouraging our congregation with boldness, mainly in the area of worship for that is the role/influence I have been given. So, Father, lead me as I think and write now. Here’s where it’s at for us:

 “Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, 20 by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, 21 and since we have a great priest over the house of God, 22 let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. 23 Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful. 24 And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, 25 not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” (Hebrews 10:19–25 ESV)

There are three “let us” statements here that should guide our personal and corporate worship practices this year. Let us draw near, let us hold fast and let us stir up. Each of the ‘let us’ statements is coupled with a compelling reason why we ought to do it.

Why are we called to draw near to God? Because we have confidence that we’re invited by God himself to draw near. There is no fear of judgement or rejection, because we are covered by the blood of Jesus. A new and living way has been made for us, the curtain of separation was torn when Jesus uttered his “It is finished!” cry from the cross. Jesus himself is our Great Priest who ushers us into the very presence of God, the holy of holies. This is for all time, not just the gathering of the church to worship. The Jerusalem temple is no longer the dwelling place of God for now he dwells within believers. Our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit. When you are waking in the morning or falling into bed exhausted at the end of the day, doing your job in between, when you are living righteously, or when you are giving in to sin and are sad with remorse, the Father’s invitation is to draw near. The conditions are simply to have a true heart, sprinkled clean. The heart is his dwelling place after all, so it makes sense that God demands it be clean. Truth brings confession of sin, confession brings forgiveness and cleansing (1 John 1:9) and that has been made possible by the blood of Jesus. We are never to doubt that we’re worthy to draw near – that’s full assurance of our faith. Earlier in Hebrews we are told to boldly approach his throne of grace to find grace and to find help in time of need. Thank God that those who believe in him draw near to a throne of grace, not of judgement!

Why are we called to hold fast to the confession of our hope? Because he who promised is faithful! Herein lies the main theme of worship throughout the Bible: God’s faithfulness and his loyal love. These are always the foundation of our reason to worship him! We only need to look back to the verse right before our passage to see a central promise he has and will continue to faithfully fulfill. “I will remember their sins and their lawless deeds no more.” (Hebrews 10:17 ESV) The Lord’s faithfulness to forgive our sins, the demonstration of his great love through Christ’s death on our behalf is why we can hold fast. Here is a major benefit of gathering corporately to worship him: we proclaim and rejoice in the the confession of our hope, Jesus! He is the greatest demonstration of our Father’s faithfulness and loyal love! We rally around the gospel of Jesus Christ that saves us and keeps us and transforms us. We do this in the songs, sermons and stories that flow out of the changed lives of our church family. Nothing compares with the effect corporate worship has on our faith when we fully engage!

Why are we called to consider how to spur one another on to love and good deeds? Because the Day is drawing near. The Day refers to the day of the Lord’s return and it carries with it two ideas. First and most obvious is that we want to be ready; faithfully living our lives for the glory of the Lord while we await his return. But the main reason we are called to stir up one another is that we need to be encouraged to be ready. The closer we get to the Lord’s return the harder being a Christ-follower is going to be, the more we will suffer for our faith. The temptation is for us to hide it and live in fear. I think we’re starting to experience this in the American church as our society continues to morally decline. Taking a stand for biblical truth is causing persecution both in the secular and sacred realm. Yet boldly declaring our beliefs alone is not evidence that we are truly followers of Jesus. Love and good works are our greatest witness. They are the hands and feet of our worship to God. Our love for one another is how all will know we are his disciples (John 13:35) and faith without works is dead (James 2:26). We cannot forsake these critical marks of being followers of Jesus, and that’s the main reason we are told to gather together as the church.  This is where we encourage (come alongside and strengthen) one another more and more because the day of Christ’s return is drawing near.

So here is a charge to all Christ-followers and worshipers in 2014: let us draw near to God, hold fast to our hope in Christ, encourage and stir up one another to love and good deeds. Let’s do these things all the time, but especially when we gather on Sunday mornings to worship our Great God and Savior Jesus Christ!

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Bill's Blog, Church, Spirituality, Worship | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Christmas Eve Services Sneak Preview

ImageChristmas has been my favorite time of year for as long as I can remember. I love the extra beauty of Christmas music, the joy of family gatherings, Christmas programs and the traditions of cookies and decorations and gift giving and receiving. I’ve got so many Christmas songs running through my mind right now that I’m a little ditzy, forgetting things, like that there was a scripture reading planned for our worship service last Sunday. (Sorry Kirk and Michael!)

This Christmas season has been extra special because of the music I’ve been practicing for our Christmas Eve Services. The more I listen to it and commit it to memory, the more deeply my heart, mind and soul is filled with worship and awe for our Great God and his eternal plan to rescue the world through Jesus Christ. That’s what Christmas is all about! We’re going to present a musical telling of the Christmas story – Andrew Peterson’s Behold the Lamb of God. Cast in the folk-rock genre, it tells the story of the coming of Christ within the context of the whole biblical narrative. We take five of the eleven songs to chronologically arrive to where we usually begin the Christmas story with “It Came to Pass.” Here is a sneak preview of a few of the songs. (For a more detailed review you can check out friend and worship leader, Sam Blakey’s blog.)

One of my favorites to sing and play (in DADGAD tuning) is So Long Moses. Beginning as the Israelites enter the Promised Land, we journey with Joshua, Saul, and David, all the way to the devastation of the divided Kingdom of Israel. Then we end with the Israelites crying out for another King like David. “We want a king on a throne full of power with a sword in his fist. Full of wisdom, full of strength, the hearts of the people are his.Will there be another king like this?” The prophet Isaiah says, “He’ll bear no beauty or glory, rejected, despised, a man of such sorrows, we’ll cover our eyes. He’ll take up our sickness and carry our tears. For his people he will be pierced. He’ll be crushed for evils our punishment feel. By his wounds we will be healed.” I sing that section (found in Isaiah 53) over an amazing musical riff that the whole band is doing in 7/8 time. Then we end with the promise, “From you, oh Bethlehem, small among Judah, a ruler will come ancient and strong!” From this complex full band sound, we move next to a simple lament consisting of one voice, acoustic guitar and cello. Like a Psalm, Deliver Us pleas, “Oh Yahweh hear our cry and gather us beneath your wings tonight!”

Trinity’s FOUR band (along with a few guest musicians) has been working hard on some of the most challenging music we’ve ever played. In fact, sound tech Joe Cornell has his work cut out for him as we’ve never had so many musical instruments on stage. I’m playing 4 guitars throughout the piece each with a different tuning! Friend and luthier Phil Gruenler built and finished a hammered dulcimer for the occasion and will additionally play mandolin & electric guitar. The cello, played by high school student Jason Bennett, paints each scene with emotion and beauty. Lane Schneider is playing bass guitar and brushing up on the bass violin for a special song. Her husband Greg adds percussion and violin to the symphony. John Guminiak plays his accordion, keys and may even bring a few laughs to our evening together. Corey Schwarz plays drums, percussion and sings. Charissa Marron graces the project with her sweet voice. Finally Chris Doughty displays his musical genius on the electric and acoustic guitar and sings a majority of the songs.

Accompanying the music will be media, drama, dance, all to tell the most wonderful story in the very best and most beautiful way we can. Our team is excited to share it with you! We are distributing free tickets this year to make it easy to invite folks to join you at one of our services. We look forward to seeing you on Christmas Eve!

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Christmas, Music, Worship | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Whose Pleasure am I Seeking?

November 20, 2013
10:19 AM

During an inspiring lunch conversation last week with a young worship leader, Daniel, he was telling of his growth as a worshiper and said something profound. Basically, he was highlighting a recent shift in mindset from coming to corporate worship seeking his own pleasure to seeking God’s pleasure. As a result, he loves singing songs that spotlight Christ and the gospel! As he was explaining this to me, I realized that it is not a matter of one or the other (my pleasure vs. God’s pleasure), but simply a matter of priorities between the two. John Piper’s Desiring God has forever ruined me as a pleasure seeking worshiper of my Lord! Piper’s basic premise was that God is most glorified when we are most satisfied in him. Therefore, we ought to seek our pleasure in him … in fact worshipping God should be one of the greatest pleasures in life! Ever since reading Piper’s book, I have joined King David in declaring:

 “You make known to me the path of life;
in your presence there is fullness of joy;
at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” (Psalms 16:11 ESV)

However, if I come to the worship service seeking my own pleasure first, am I not coming to God on my own agenda, with myself as the focus? Elevating my experience first and foremost is anti-worship to God. It is idolatry, worshiping the worship experience. This is a subtle and dangerous shift of priorities! The desires to experience God are not wrong, in fact, often very good. I am deeply moved when we sing songs that cry out for a greater manifestation of the Holy Spirit in our lives and in our church, moving our hearts to repentance, and faith demonstrated by works of extraordinary love, evidenced by the fruit of the Spirit. But when my personal desires become the main thing, it leads to putting too much emphasis on the experience, too much responsibility on those planning the service, leading worship, or preaching to make it an extraordinary experience for me. This creates critical worshipers, often unsatisfied and having to blame others when it doesn’t measure up to their expectations or desires. On the other hand, if I come seeking first and foremost to bring pleasure to God, I will find myself utterly satisfied and full of joy in his presence every week. I will find equal pleasure and sing with equal passion whether I’m singing a new hymn about the person and work of Christ (Daniel’s favorite song, Sovereign Grace Music’s All I Have is Christ), or a Hillsong United prayer asking God for a deeper faith, being led by His Spirit (Oceans). While I can point to weeks where the Holy Spirit moves more powerfully in my life in the worship service, there is never a week where I walk away unsatisfied from fixing my eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of my faith. It all comes down to my priority in worship, my pleasure, or God’s pleasure? God’s pleasure is my greatest pleasure!

Please join me each week at Trinity or with your own church family, experiencing great joy in the Lord’s presence together because we come seeking to bring pleasure and delight to our God who is worthy of all praise!

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Church, Music, Spirituality, Worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

God’s Agenda – The Purpose of Prayer

Wednesday, November 6, 2013
9:03 AM

I’ve been thinking about prayer lately … and trying to be more devoted to prayer. (Doesn’t do much good to just think about it!) In a conversation with a friend last week I realized that when I pray, I sense that the Lord begins to put his agenda on my heart through the leading of the Holy Spirit. His ideas begin to flood into my mind. “Call or email this person. See how they are doing. Apologize to this person whom you wronged… etc.” When I pray, I begin moving with him and not apart from him. Not only do I experience this personally but also when I pray with others. Some of my best memories of my early years of marriage were long walks with Julie, where we prayed and talked the whole way. It was as if God was not only a part of our conversation, but in a sense leading it. The three of us talking together in a very natural way as we walked. Boy I need to do that again!

Yesterday the pastoral staff gathered for a morning of prayer together. This was one of the best times I’ve ever had and this is why. It was as if we invited God into the very center of our discussion that morning. We had a lot of conversation (which we always do) but this time we had a real sense that we were on God’s agenda and not our own. It was if we were dreaming his dreams for our church. We didn’t just pray and then get on with business like we usually do. We prayed, talked, then prayed and talked some more, continuing this pattern for the whole morning. Colleague and friend, Dave Wilson came with a plan and led this time, but did so with a real sensitivity to the Spirit’s leading. Thanks to Walt Pitman for making this a priority ever 1st Tuesday of the month!

Mark Brown has done a tremendous job leading our church family through the book of Nehemiah. The pattern we see over and over is pray, plan, act. As part of the leadership of Trinity, I sense that we’ve made a faulty habit of planning and acting without the appropriate focus on prayer. Yesterday was all about prayer; I’m eager to continue on to the plan and act portion!

James says, “You do not have, because you do not ask. You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions.” (James 4:2–3 ESV) Without pulling this out of context I think we’re safe to say that God wants us to ask for things and for the right reasons. There are two mistakes we make in prayer. First, I think we don’t ask for the things we should ask for. The band Rend Collective Experiment has a lyrical prayer at the end of the song, Broken Bread, that says, “God let your dreams come true through us.” “Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, …” (Ephisians 3:20 ESV) We are not bold enough! God invites us to ask and think (imagine and dream), and then promises that he is able to do more than that! God’s agenda is better, bigger and way more exciting than ours will ever be.

The second mistake we make in our prayer life is doing all the talking and no listening. We’re thinking about our passions, asking for the wrong reasons. Praying throughout our day, conversations, or planning meetings, keeps us in listening mode and helps us better align ourselves with God’s will. The practice of continual prayer keeps us from both mistakes. After all, God really is with us. His Spirit lives within us. He wants to be a part of every conversation, every decision. Paul commanded us to “pray without ceasing.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17,18) He tells us that this is God’s will for us in Christ Jesus! When we do this, God’s agenda becomes ours, and that’s the ultimate purpose of prayer!

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Spirituality | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

2013 Worship Workshop Audio

Celebrating a great turnout and time at the 2013 worship workshop, Draw Near to God! I’m so grateful for the opportunity to partner together in worship ministry with the people God has gifted and given to Trinity Church for the building up of the body in love. Here is the audio from my address, Draw Near to God, Jeff Moore’s session, Living Worship, and Dustin Ceithammer’s session, What’s In Your Hands. I so appreciated the whole team that pulled off the event that morning. My main takeaway after attending Jeff Moore’s session was how much my thinking and worship practice was shaped by this man’s strong and gentle leadership as my worship pastor of 7 years. I want to publicly honor him for the legacy of worship he has instilled in my heart, and in the people of Trinity Church and for his continued influence in us to the glory of God!

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Worship | 1 Comment

Engaging in Corporate Worship

IMG_2051A month ago, I had the privilege of partnering with colleagues Mark Brown & Steve Springsted to give a sermon titled, Building the Body in Love. My part was on the value of corporate worship in the growth of our faith. Here are three practical pointers on corporate worship practices that will help us as the body of Christ, move toward the goal “until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ,” (Ephesians 4:13 ESV) 

 Show up to worship with a corporate mentality, not an individual mindset.
This is so hard to do with our individualistic American mindset! Everything in our society is shaped to my tastes, my needs, my desires! We tend to think of our worship experience like we choose a restaurant. When we bring this mindset to corporate worship, it will never be satisfying. The style of music, the style of preaching, the look and feel, the temperature of the room, it will never all be just the way I like it.  These issues matter, but are not of primary importance. The passage is clearly talking about the body of Christ corporately, and so we would benefit by thinking in community terms instead of individual terms when we show up to worship.

  • The framework of our passage comes from Paul earlier in his letter highlighting how God took these two very different people groups, Jews and Gentiles, and made one man, one body with Christ as the head. Then earlier in chapter 4 we have this wonderful summary of why we are called to make every effort to preserve the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. He begins this list with these four words, “There is one body…”
  • You might read the stated goal in our passage and say, I want to attain the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God. I want to become a mature man attaining to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. Yet, the picture here is not of you, or just of me, but of the whole body corporately attaining maturity together. As goes the body so go the parts. As the entire body grows, each part will grow. But we need to change our mantra from how can I grow, how can I grow, how can I grow, to how can we grow? When we think that way, we begin to look for ways to serve because that’s how the body grows. And guess what happens within that context? We individually grow.

Show up to worship with a give mentality, not a receive mentality.
This rubs against every selfish fiber of our beings. It seems to run counter to the fact that we do come extremely needy. We should indeed come hungry and thirsty to know, experience and hear from God! However, we must again note that corporate worship is by very definition, corporate. This isn’t a time just for me! So while I come with needs, I must come first ready to give.

  • To give to the Lord “Bless the Lord, O my soul and all that is within me bless his holy name.” (Psalm 103:1) Worship is an active posture before the Lord. Come to bless the Lord! Engage body, soul, mind, body, intellect, emotions. Dance, sing, clap, pray, listen, question, examine, give your offering, give yourself action points.
  • To give to one another. Obvious way to give: serve! Today in TLC, our children’s ministry it took about 140 servants to serve our kids. Middle School & High School took about 20 servants. Add ushers, greeters, techs, band, communion preparers, servers, worship folder stuffers, and we have an additional 100 people serving to make this corporate gathering possible today. And there are plenty of needs, holes on these teams that are waiting to be filled.

Encourage each other. The most direct Scripture passage telling Christians to meet together says this. “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” (Hebrews 10:24–25 ESV) One primary reason that we should meet together is to encourage one another. Do you know that one reason I hear from people that they quit coming to church to worship is this aspect of encouragement? They don’t feel connected to or personally encouraged by the others who come that day. One way we can give to one another is to look for people you can encourage with a conversation, a hug, or a short prayer. The horizontal purposes of corporate worship are apparently very important to God. (In contrast to the vertical aspects outlined above, giving to God.)

Show up to worship and come alive! 
Last Sunday at Trinity Church, being led by our Light & Power worship team, I experienced a freedom in worship that was refreshing. Perhaps you did too. Jeff McNair brought us an excellent message, Disability Celebration Sunday, about the body of Christ reminding us that every part is necessary. Paul says that Christ is the head of the church and we are his body. That means that we are his hands and feet, his eyes and ears and mouth, the vital organs necessary to experience life. How absurd it would be to be a part of the body of Christ and not ever or rarely come together as the body of Christ. What we experience here on Sunday mornings, and when we gather in smaller groups for fellowship and Bible study, or when we join together with others to serve is what the body was made for – to be together, to be unified, to experience the unequalled joy that comes from being alive. Earlier in Ephesians chapter 2 it says, “But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved—” (Ephesians 2:4–5 ESV) Brothers and sisters we have been made alive and we were meant to experience alive! So let’s show up to worship and come alive! And you know what alive looks like? It means we’re growing. When we gather corporately to worship, the parts of the body come together for a brief moment to display the beauty of the body of Christ, alive in Him! Is that your experience on a Sunday morning? Growing in the unity of the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God together, we should feel a joy unparalleled by any other joy on the face of the earth.

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Music, Worship | Leave a comment

A Uniform Suggestion

clothing jpeg

August 7, 2013
7:46 AM

Do you spend much time thinking about what you will wear each day? I don’t, but my wife, Julie does. One of the ways she loves me is taking concern in the clothing I wear. Perhaps all of us might benefit if we spent a little more time making sure we put on the right clothes each day, and then helping each other also. I would like to suggest that we start wearing the same uniform. Yes, that we all put on the same clothing, not just when we come to worship, but for every waking hour of our lives inside and outside of our church gatherings. The Scriptures tell us to clothe ourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. This is a 5-piece suit that God’s Word tells us to put on! We must if we are to honor the Lord by loving one another well, our greatest testimony to the world that we are disciples of Jesus! “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” (John 13:35 NIV)

Our year plus of transition between senior pastors is a great time for us to grow together as we focus on following Jesus. However, there’s going to be a lot of change and we’re all going to have opinions about it. Some of us will have very strong opinions. I did quite a few years ago and started expressing those in my blogs when I began in 2007. I still have these strong desires, but I learned something important back then that I share with you now. Strong and godly desires are very appropriate for the people of God. But there is a danger about feeling strongly and that is that we forget the main thing. We forget to put on the right clothes, beautiful clothes, fashioned by God himself, modeled by Christ, given us through the Holy Spirit.

Compassion
Kindness
Humility
Gentleness
Patience

When people feel strongly, filled with good, God-given desires, yet move and speak without a commitment to these five principles above, other people get hurt. We make the 1 Corinthians 13 error. We can possess the faith to move mountains, it says, yet without love it profits us nothing! May I suggest you join me in memorizing a passage of scripture together? I have chosen to make this my guiding principle as I follow the Lord and seek to lead our church family in worship each week. May I present to you the new Trinity Church uniform:

Colossians 3:12-17
Therefore as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Bear with one another and forgive whatever grievances you may have against each other. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love which binds them all together in perfect unity. Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom, and as you sing psalms, hymns and spiritual songs with gratitude in your hearts to God. And whatever you do whether in word or in deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Church, Spirituality | 2 Comments

A community of Christ-followers longing to glorify God

July 3, 2013
11:15 AM

Our mission statement begins, “We are a community of Christ-followers longing to glorify God…” I would like to suggest that we, the Trinity Church family, ought to focus our prayers and efforts during this year plus of transition between senior pastors on our growth as a healthy community, following Jesus, and glorifying God. The quality of our community reflects most deeply in our relationships, how we relate to one another, forgive one another, bear with one another, value, encourage and serve each other. (There is a large list of “one another” admonitions in the Scriptures worth looking into… and putting into practice.) Following Christ is how we best do that. I am so excited that Rick Langer is taking us this summer through a series on Following Jesus!  Our shared commitment to growing as Christ-followers is what ultimately shapes the quality of our community and brings maximum glory to God!

It is also what makes us a great family into which God may place new believers. I have been reminded of an analogy for our church family since having the privilege of adopting 2 of my precious children. Our Father is in the business of adoption, reaching out to save abandoned, lost or hurt children (you and me included), and bringing them into his family. As a local church, we are one of many families into which he places his “new creations.” Toward this end, we ought to pray not only for ourselves, but also for the other local churches in our community. We need to be healthy, thriving, ready families who are truly following Jesus. This means that we not only stand firm in our faith and in our growing knowledge of God’s true Word, but also that the gospel of grace that saved us is making us more gracious and compassionate, desperately reaching out to the abandoned, lost and hurt surrounding us, joyfully partnering with our gracious Father in bringing them home!

God is also in the business of transforming this growing family into his image. It’s his work and not ours, but we must cooperate. The Scriptures say we are being transformed from glory to glory! (2 Corinthians 3:18) This only happens in the wonderful messy world of family, where we gather to worship God, devote ourselves to the teaching of his Word, experiencing his glorious presence together, and doing life as we grow and serve together. That’s why the Scriptures encourage us to not neglect meeting together.

“Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” (Hebrews 10:23–25 ESV)

My our great God be glorified as we continue to follow Christ, enjoying the wonderful community that he has established, brought us into and will continue to build.

bill-signature
Bill Born

Posted in Church, Worship | Leave a comment