“Your Grace Is Enough” from All The People Said Amen by Matt Maher.
Worship Video: Great Are You Lord
ALL SONS AND DAUGHTERS “LIVE”
Top 10 CCLI for week ending 2/14/15
1 10000 Reasons (Bless The Lord)
Jonas Myrin, Matt Redman
2 This Is Amazing Grace
Jeremy Riddle, Josh Farro, Phil Wickham
3 Oceans (Where Feet May Fail)
Joel Houston, Matt Crocke, Salomon Ligthelm
4 Lord I Need You
Christy Nockels, Daniel Carson, Jesse Reeves, Kristian Stanfill, Matt Maher
5 How Great Is Our God
Chris Tomlin, Jesse Reeves, Ed Cash
6 One Thing Remains
Brian Johnson, Christa Black Gifford, Jeremy Riddle
7 Cornerstone
Edward Mote, Eric Liljero, Jonas Myrin, Reuben Morgan, William Batchelder Bradbury
8 Our God
Chris Tomlin, Jesse Reeves, Jonas Myrin, Matt Redman
9 Holy Spirit
Bryan Torwalt, Katie Torwalt
10 Mighty To Save
Ben Fielding, Reuben Morgan
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YouVersion Devotionals: Chris Tomlin
In this devotional series inspired by the music from Chris Tomlin you will explore the scriptures and themes featured on the album Burning Lights
[gpp_button color=”blue” url=”https://www.bible.com/reading-plans/456-devotions-from-chris-tomlin-burning-lights” title=”themes” icon_left=”month” target=”_blank” size=”large” display=”block”]start this plan[/gpp_button]Sample Devotional: Whom Shall I Fear
I know Who goes before me. I know Who stands behind.
The God of Angel Armies is always by my side
In Exodus, Moses told the Israelites, “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again.” (Ex.14:13)
In Psalms, David says, “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?” (Ps. 27:1).
In Luke, the angel says to Mary, “‘Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God.’” (Luke 1:30).
In Hebrews, Paul says, “So we can confidently say, ‘The Lord is my helper; I will not fear; what can man do to me?’” (Heb. 13:6).
Notice a theme? Throughout scripture, we are told to not be afraid and to replace fear with the assurance of God as our helper. Moses, David, angels, Paul—those who we see as walking closely with the Lord in scripture often pleaded that we not fear. What did they understand about God that allowed them this strength? Three things: 1.) Our strength is founded in Him. 2.) We are saved by Him. 3.) Victory is His.
My strength is in Your name for You alone can save. Yours is the victory.
When we know that our strength is in God, we no longer rely on ourselves. We don’t rely on ourselves for anything–not the work presentation we’ve been losing sleep over, not the big move we’re about to make, not even the illness we’ve been diagnosed with. We apart from God do not have the strength to overcome obstacles. But if we believe God’s strength is endless, we do not fear our own weakness.
When we know that we are saved, we don’t have to strive to be good enough. We often fear we are making too many mistakes and our sin is too big. But if we believe we are saved and that our salvation is always there, we do not fear our own inadequacy.
When we know victory is His, we do not have to fear evil. In those times when we fear being at the mercy of evil in the form of an abuser or a terrible circumstance or a corrupt leader, we can take comfort in the fact God has already won and this temporary evil is just that: temporary.
God knows our tendency to fear. That is why his Word is full of reasons not to.
Worship Video: Forever
Music video by Kari Jobe performing Forever.
Worship Video: Revelation Song
Gateway Worship- Revelation Song (Extended Version) led by Kari Jobe.
5 Ways to De-Professionalize Your Worship
Doug Lawrence says the primary complaint he hears from congregants is that the worship is too much of a show.
Here are some ways to put the corp back in corporate.
Stop being a slave to glitz!
It is a commonly held belief among worship leaders that the expectations are that they are going to create a fabulous “show” week in and week out. No, the word “show” is never mentioned, but the reality is that church pastors want their congregations to be whipped into a mild frenzy before they get up to speak. This is no longer just true of Pentecostal churches.
Most large churches, whether they are evangelical or not, believe that they must create a worship format that resembles a sales meeting or grandiose concert. It must have things that are memorable!
Most Episcopal and Catholic churches don’t feel compelled to do that because their services are liturgy-driven, not driven-driven. A sure way to tell if you are in a “driven-driven” church is to measure how much applause you EXPECT to get, not how much you actually get.
Start seeing congregations as people instead of numbers!
The more we rate our congregations by how many of them showed up instead of how those of us in leadership provided for their need to be in community, the more we defeat our real ministry purpose.
We talk about money and attendance too much. It motivates our interactions with people and it defines our feelings of success or failure in ministry. That’s probably not a good thing.
Let people see worship as part of their offering instead of just yours!
Are you puzzled why more people don’t sing in worship? Some do, but a lot don’t. Through many years of thought and study on the subject of worship participation, I have come to a single and sad conclusion.
We don’t actually do a very good job of encouraging congregations to participate. We say we want them to “join” us but we don’t give them very much “space” to do so. Our agenda is very closed and we don’t give a lot of breathing room for folks to penetrate our rigid timetables.
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