This is this week's setlist and Sunday recap from Lighthouse Fellowship Church and Gospel Light Community Church.
Today was a great day. We were a little short-handed, which meant that I was on drums today instead of guitar. It's been a couple of months, and I'm a tad rusty, but all went fairly well for my part. But the services both went really well from a worship standpoint. Here are the lists.
We did a 9:30 worship service at LHFC:
Friend of God (Gungor/Houghton)(E)
To Worship You I Live (Houghton/Houghton)(E)
Healer (Guglielmucci)(A)
Then onto our main service at GLCC:
Opening:
He Is Exalted (Paris)(E)
Main Set:
Friend of God (Gungor/Houghton)(E)
O Praise Him (All This for a King)(Crowder)(A)
Healer (Guglielmucci)(A)
All Who Are Thirsty (Brown/Robertson)(A)
He Is Exalted (Paris)(E)
Offering
David Danced (Gandy)(Dm)
For the early set, we did a medley with "Friend of God" and "To Worship You I Live," which makes all the sense in the world. For the GLCC set, we did it with "O Praise Him," which was a little more challenging. We had to change the key of the Crowder tune down from the Bb we usually do it in.
The set at LHFC was especially powerful this morning, I thought. We'll be there again next week, as they have a special event going on, and they asked us to come.
How was your service this week? Check some others at The Worship Community.
This past week's lesson at the Integrity Worship Institute was specifically on "praise," but the discussion question and assignment touched on what worship "in spirit and in truth" was. Here's my reflection answer"
In John 4, Jesus told the disciples that there would be a new way to worship, that worship would be “in spirit and truth.” This was a radical concept. But what does it mean?
Prior to Jesus, worship was confined to particular places. There was a physicality to worship; it had to be done properly in the right place, in the right time, in the right form and with the right accouterments. One could make proper worship by doing these things correctly.
Jesus tells us that where, when and by what form one worships is less important than how they worship. To worship “in spirit and in truth” means that we do not worship with outward physical signs and demonstrations, but by linking our spirits to God himself, entering His very presence. It means to offer a worship that is genuine and from the soul, not from the body, or objects such as animals or incense.
To worship in truth means genuine worship based on the scriptural commands of God (obedience is better than sacrifice) rather than symbolic worship – which is closer to idolatry than true worship.
So, what do YOU think?
Here's this week's service recap from Gospel Light Community Church. We had a great service today, full of a lot of great worship! So let's get into it!!
Opening Song:
Come Thou Fount (Wyeth/Robinson)(D)
Main Set:
Turn it Around (Houghton/Lindsey)(E)
He Reigns (Furler/Taylor)(C)
How Great is Our God (Tomlin/Reeves/Cash)(C)
Oh Lord, You're Beautiful (Green)(D)
Offering:
Eres Todopoderoso (Salinas)(D)
Special:
Fix My Eyes (McKinnon)(D)
There are about a dozen versions of "Come Thou Fount." We do a four-verse arrangement that has the "ebenezer" lyric, and also tags with a verse that Gateway Worship does. ("Come thou font, come thou king...")
We had a group of our 7-9 year-old children present a special song today. We've been working on the story of Pentecost and the Gifts of the Holy Spirit. My buddy and un:shaken bandmate Fred McKinnon has a song called "Fix My Eyes
Hope you had as blessed a service as we had! Check out others at The Worship Community.
Being in a small church, I have a problem with most worship conferences. Actually, I have two problems:
- They are ridiculously expensive.
- They are aimed at large churches.
So I'm starting week 6 of the Integrity Worship Institute. It's been quite the interesting journey. Throughout the past five weeks, I've been discovering some simple truths that I'd either forgotten or simply glazed over.
One of the great things that is part of the syllabus requirements for the class is a weekly "Word of Worship." This is a short research essay (200-500 words) in which we are to explore a particular scripture as it regards to the process of worship. Generally I try to relate it to the topic of the week. My buddy Alastair posted one of his essays a while ago, and it was great seeing what others have to say. We interact in a discussion forum, but reading Alastair's essay was great, and you should read it.
I admit, the first couple of weeks I kind of "whipped something out" for this assignment. Our professor, Dr. Pete Sanchez, challenged me to get a little deeper into it, so I've been studying the words used in some of the scriptures. Here's my essay from this past week.
One of the most enduring, simple and profound demonstrations of worship in the New Testament takes place during the Sermon on the Mount, where Jesus spent a day teaching thousands of people many things about the Kingdom of God. But, He also taught them how to worship, in the simplest, most effective terms.
We refer to the passage in Matthew 6, verses 9-15, as the "Lord's Prayer," because it is the way He prayed and taught us to pray. But it is also an intimate act of worship, especially the beginning.
"Our Father who is in Heaven, hallowed be your name. Your Kingdom come, your will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven." (Matthew 6:9-10, New King James Version)
The beginning of this prayer is a profound statement of worship. Jesus begins by praising God, by lifting Him up and acknowledging His position. The word "hallowed" has survived from the oldest English translations, and is in virtually every modern translation. It comes from the Greek hagiazo, which means to "render or acknowledge" or to "separate from profane things." (Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, G37)
Jesus' next phrase is "Your Kingdom come," The word basileia does not mean an actual "kingdom;" rather it refers to the "right or authority to rule over a kingdom." (Strong's, G932) What more of an act of praise is there to acknowledge God's holy name, set apart from all others, and to hope for and call upon His dominion over all things?
Worship need not be complex or difficult, couched in great language and deep thought. Worship can be what is referred to in modern literature as "high-concept" - that is, easily grasped, simple, plainly spoken. For within this simple praise, lies a deep and profound act of worship.
Here's the setlist:
Opening:
The Heart of Worship (Redman)(D)
Main Set:
All About You (Cruse/Ratcliff/Houghton)(E)
Blessed Be Your Name (Redman/Redman)(C)
Hosanna (Fraser)(E)
The Power of Your Love (Bullock)(G)
Offering:
Happy Day (Cantelon/'Hughes)(C)
We had a full band today, including bass, which was awesome. I had also changed string brands on my electric, mainly because someone gave me a couple of sets, and I like free stuff. But huge difference in tone and sustain was the outcome. (Guitar Research EGS-850s if you're wondering.) We did a lot with dynamics and arrangements today with all the instruments. I played electric on everything but the opening song, and was able to do a lot of accent stuff instead of carrying the rhythm, which I love.
I thought we played "Hosanna" as well as we've ever done it, but the real standout for us and for the congregation was "The Power of Your Love", which is an old Maranatha song. First verse, just one vocalist, piano and base. Some light arpeggios and some cymbals in the first chorus and second verse, then in full on the second chorus. Then back to just piano. It was a really nice arrangement.
We also led this morning at Lighthouse Fellowship Church. The setlist there was Blessed Be Your Name, Heart of Worship, Power of Your Love. Pastor Hector felt led to call us up after our set there, and have his congregation pray over us as a team while he anointed us. It was really a powerful and touching moment.
So how was your Sunday? Check others at The Worship Community. And check out our album below!
I was reminded yesterday of something that happened 5 years ago exactly, on July 4th, 2005. I've told this story often, but have never shared it on this blog, and I should.
A little background first. In 2004 I went on my first mission trip, a ten-day visit to Belize in Central America. We have an affiliation with the Belize Evangelical Mennonite Church, a group of churches spread across the country. In 2005, BEMC organized a Youth Congress, and invited us to participate.
I traveled to Belize in June of 2005 with twelve high-school students from Gospel Light and two long-term missionaries to Belize, to visit some of the village churches and participate in the Congress. That was an amazing trip, but not the point of this post. On Monday, July 4, I left Belize with the twelve students, headed for home. The trip included a connection in Miami.
For those who've never traveled internationally, the process works like this: you arrive in the U.S. at the international arrivals terminal. From there you go to U.S. Immigration, where they check your passport. From there you go to baggage and get your checked luggage, and schlep everything to Customs, where they search your bags and make sure you are not smuggling any fruits or vegetables. Everything else, apparently, is OK. Then you re-check your bags, and since you've been in contact with them, you have to go back through security at the domestic terminal, lest you have a contraband mango somewhere on your person. As you can imagine, this process - four separate lines - takes time, especially on a major holiday.
Our 1PM flight left Belize early, but somehow we landed at Miami International almost an hour late. This left us a grand total of forty-five minutes to navigate the aforementioned bureaucratic obstacle course. First stop, immigration. I actually got a very nice agent, who said "Happy Fourth of July, Mr. Mahoney. Welcome home." Sweet. Then down to baggage.
Now, in those days, an international traveler flying American Airlines was allowed a carry-on, a personal item, and two seventy-pound checked bags. Each of us had been limited to one suitcase, and the other was filled with clothing, bibles, Sunday school supplies, etc... to leave in Belize. The result was we had about twenty bags, one portable display case and one guitar checked, plus about ten carry-ons to deal with. We waited at the baggage carousel for our stuff. And waited. And waited.
The time for our flight to New York to board - on the other side of the airport - came and went. I began to have visions of trying to get twelve minors re-booked on new flights to New York on a holiday. Nightmares, really. Right around the departure time, someone who had been on our flight shouted "Hey, my bags are over here!" Turns out they sent all our bags down the wrong carousel, three away. We run over there and start hunting for bags. We pulled them off one by one, and piled them in a corner. And that's when the miracle happened.
As I took the last bag - number twenty-two - off the carousel, I hear a voice behind me say "Do you have all your bags?" I turned to see a young woman wearing an American Airlines uniform standing there. "Excuse me?" I ask.
"Thirteen people, flight to New York, right?" she asks.
How did she know that? "Um, yes." I reply.
"Got all your bags? Got all the kids?" she asks. This is seriously the entire conversation. "Yes." I said. Then she says "We're holding the plane. Let's go!" With that she turns and just starts walking. We grab all thirty-some odd bags and run after her. Miami International is huge, and we must have been a strange sight running through the airport.
Now get this, and remember this is freshly post-9/11. No customs. No baggage check. As we approach the security checkpoint for the domestic departures area, there is a cadre of baggage handlers standing there. They just start taking stuff out of our hands as we ran until they had everything.
Finally we arrive at the checkpoint. The woman moves to one side, and opens a gate and waves us through. No metal detector, no ID check, no take-your-shoes-off. I stand at the gate and count heads. Number twelve goes through, and I turn to thank the woman. Except, she is nowhere to be seen. Gone. Vanished. Poof. Now, I can see a good sixty feet in all directions, and she is just gone.
We get on the plane, a sold-out 757 with three-hundred-plus ticked off passengers who've been on the plane for forty-five minutes waiting for us. But the angry stares could not penetrate the wonder at what had just happened.
You may believe in angels, and you may not. I do, and I sincerely believe that's who helped us through the airport that day.
A mixed bag today at Gospel Light Community Church. A scorching hot day, a full service, a little shorthanded for worship, but some great moments as well. Here's the setlist:
Opening Song:
Shout to the Lord (Zschech)(A)
Main Set:
Cover the Earth (Houghton/Cruse-Ratcliff)(D)
Glory to God Forever (Beeching/Fee)(B)
Higher (Fieldes)(C)
The Stand (Houston)(G)
Offering
Trading My Sorrows (Evans)(G)
(Just call us Hillsong Lite)
Daniel injured his hand this week at work; it was minor, but he was sore and was uncomfortable to play, which left me on guitar and Aquim on drums. We were also going to have "Hosanna" but we dropped it due to the lack of instrumentation. Everything sounded really good in rehearsal, so I felt good about the set, and the songs were some of the ones the congregation really likes.
About two bars into "Higher" I felt a string kind of twang flat. I'm not really sure how many people noticed, but I did, and it drove me crazy the whole song. I tried to play around it as best I could, but the barre chords sounded terrible. And of course, we were doing the whole song, with the tag and everything.
"The Stand" came our really well (after I tuned, of course) - I don't know why, but I really like that song. So did "Trading..." I've always liked the version of that song on Freedom, starting with just high-hats and a guitar riff. (Which, if I'm not mistaken, was Lincoln Brewster.) We played something like that today, Aquim on the hats and me running a little bassline riff on the acoustic, then coming in full on the "joy comes in the morning!" line. We actually got a big "Wooo!" out of the congregation when we kicked it in. Love it when they engage like that. We also do the bridge in three languages: English (Yes, Lord, yes Lord, ), Spanish (Si Senor, si, si Senor) and Creole (Oui Jesu, oui, oui Jesu).
All in all, a great holiday celebration, with Holy Communion, a mission report from Haiti, and a guest vocalist as well. So how was your Fourth celebration? Check out others at The Worship Community.
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