Not a Camouflaged Soul

Category: Music

  • Fantastical Journey Part 5: What Is Orderly Worship?

    I was not invited to be part of the panel discussion at Fantastical, but I wish I was. One part of the conversation had me itching to answer, but, alas, I had no microphone.

    The question was posed by David Taylor: the Bible mentions that worship should be done decently and in order. Who decides? What is orderly worship?

    Differing opinions were presented. Is it cultural? Style? Instrumentation? Skill level?

    Here’s my answer: God makes it orderly.

    In every circumstance and location where God is worshiped, He has ordained who is present. He calls worshippers to Himself.

    I attended a breakout at the conference with the youth praise band leaders from Saddleback Church. They said that they stress the difference between “worship leader” and “worship pastor” to their students. A worship leader could potentially just show up to a worship service, lead the music, and leave. A pastor develops relationships and disciples others.

    In my particular circumstance, God has called me to <edited>. He has called me to serve there vocationally as the Minister of Music and Outreach. He has blessed me with the privilege to serve my King and my congregation with and through music. He has gifted me with the talents, abilities, and Spiritual gifts with which to lead effectively. And every follower of Christ in our congregation worships the same God, who has called each of them to worship Him with me.

    God has organized things to His liking in our faith family, as He does in every worship gathering. THAT is order. Our OBEDIENCE makes it decent.

  • Sunday Setlist 101010

    Hello, Worship Community and NoCamo readers! Here’s the Sunday Setlist from yesterday’s worship…
    Morning Worship
    • Crown Him With Many Crowns (instrumental, pre-service)
    • Hosanna (Praise Is Rising)
    • Only a God Like You
    • Lift Up a Shout (Celebration Choir)
    • Lord Most High
    • You Are My All In All

    -link to Planning Center script

    -link to YouVersion

    Youth Worship

    • The Altar and the Door
    • Friend of God
    • Second Chance

    -link to Planning Center script

  • Updated – Fantastical Journey Part 4: Rob Bell

    Rob Bell
    Image by Keegan Jones via Flickr

    Note to NoCamo readers: this post was written before the controversy concerning Rob Bell’s book, Love Wins, and his subsequent decision to leave his church. My intent was to merely write about what he said during his talk at the Fantastical Conference in October of 2010. I had never heard Rob Bell speak prior to this occasion, and did not research his background prior to writing this.

    I had never heard Rob Bell speak before I saw him at the Fantastical conference. I’ve heard his name mentioned, but never heard him speak.

    His message was about words, and how we as worshipers use them. As a musician and a wordsmith, I was anxious to hear what he had to say. Much of his talk resonated with me. Here are some take-aways from my notes…

    • Part of worship leading is placing words on people’s lips, as well as leading a group of people in breathing and saying words on pitch together (resonating intervals). Essentially, uniting our physicalities.
    • We tend to use too much definitive precision and technical description in our discussion of God and not enough parable, poem, rant, story, lament, proverb, remez, or question.
    • Job 38 – Sarcasm is Biblical!
    • Half of the Psalms are laments. Or, “God can handle your depression, too.”
    • Remez; Hebrew, meaning “tent;” quoting something everyone know so a person may discover truth

    3 Types of Language

    1. Atonement language – Paul used terms from other walks of life to make an impact

    • Ephesians 1v7 – redemption – economic term – to deem is to give worth to something, “re” = do it again
    • Romans 4v25 – justification – legal concept – guilty party set free from guilt
    • Colossians 1 – reconcile – relationship term – two people once at peace find peace again
    • Hebrews 9 – sacrifice – temple concept – offering of worth to make sure one is “on a god’s good side”
    • 1 John – victory – war concept – defeating an enemy (here, death)
    • Ephesians 1 – adoption – family concept – caring for a discarded child

    How could WE explain Jesus with metaphors from the world? In ancient times, the thought of being exiled and returning from exile was effective (“Ever feel far from home in your heart?”). Today, our culture responds to connectivity as in Genesis, where Earth was connected to its Maker (Sin disconnects: Jesus reconnects).

    2. Enthronement language

    Our country/culture does not identify with a monarchy. We have no king in America. Older songs were written during monarchies. Such language may be less effective today.

    3. Three-tiered language – heavens/earth/pit-grave-death. This type of language was more effective before space travel and deep drilling found no men in white robes or devils with pitchforks.

    Everything above came straight from my notes. Since I have returned home, I’ve been able to process some of what Rob said, and I take issue with one aspect in particular.

    I read a post by Bob Kauflin on his blog, Kingdom People. Bob also spoke at the conference, and I will be writing about his breakout session at another time. He wrote the following about Rob’s thoughts regarding creativity in the metaphors we use to describe the Gospel:

    While I appreciate relevance and clear communication, developing our own metaphors for the atonement potentially undermines and distorts the gospel. Yes, it’s important to recognize and communicate the vast and multiple effects of Christ’s death and the resurrection, and yes, Christians can overemphasize theological precision and definition at the expense of actually communicating the good news. But every description of Christ’s work on the cross is connected to our need to be forgiven by and reconciled to a holy God. If we fail to communicate this, we have failed to proclaim the biblical gospel.

    The problem with being critical of some of these forms of communication is that these forms of communication are IN THE BIBLE! We MUST use Scripture to describe atonement! I can turn a phrase as well as the next guy, but all my cleverness and technique pales in comparison to the Word of God.

    Finally, merely because I found it amusing, I Googled an interview Rob mentioned as an example of creative language. An interviewer asked Bob Dylan how he got into rock and roll…

    Carelessness. I lost my one true love. I started drinking. The first thing I know, I’m in a card game. Then I’m in a crap game. I wake up in a pool hall. Then this big Mexican lady drags me off the table, takes me to Philadelphia. She leaves me alone in her house, and it burns down. I wind up in Phoenix. I get a job as a Chinaman. I start working in a dime store, and move in with a 13-year-old girl. Then this big Mexican lady from Philadelphia comes in and burns the house down. I go down to Dallas. I get a job as a “before” in a Charles Atlas “before and after” ad. I move in with a delivery boy who can cook fantastic chili and hot dogs. Then this 13-year-old girl from Phoenix comes and burns the house down. The delivery boy – he ain’t so mild: He gives her the knife, and the next thing I know I’m in Omaha. It’s so cold there, by this time I’m robbing my own bicycles and frying my own fish. I stumble onto some luck and get a job as a carburetor out at the hot-rod races every Thursday night. I move in with a high school teacher who also does a little plumbing on the side, who ain’t much to look at, but who’s built a special kind of refrigerator that can turn newspaper into lettuce. Everything’s going good until that delivery boy shows up and tries to knife me. Needless to say, he burned the house down, and I hit the road. The first guy that picked me up asked me if I wanted to be a star. What could I say?

    Then the interviewer asked, “And that’s how you became a rock-‘n’-roll singer?”

    Dylan replied: “No, that’s how I got tuberculosis.”