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Worship
When
The Music Fades:
The Eternal Truth Behind "The Heart of Worship"
by Paul Martin
Since
1993, God has been doing something special in a
working class town on the outskirts of London -
something called Soul Survivor. What started as
an evangelistic outreach to youth in Watford, England,
has snowballed into an annual youth conference,
a local congregation, and now a worldwide interdenominational
youth initiative organization. Led by its' founder
Mike Pilavachi, Soul Survivor has since spread to
Canada, Holland, South Africa, Australia, and the
United States.
Matt
Redman, writer of such well-known worship songs
as "Heart of Worship," has emerged as
one of the worship leaders for Soul Survivor ministry
in the United Kingdom. Centering themselves on the
values of worship, relationship and getting out
there and "living the life," the conferences
in England currently draw 17,000 people over three
weeks from across the globe.
To
bring to light the story of what God has done in
Soul Survivor and the life-changing lessons He has
taught them, WLW Magazine has asked Paul Martin,
leader of Soul Survivor here in the United States,
to write our feature article. Our intent is that
in reading this feature, you will be compelled to
move beyond being "connoisseurs" of worship
to full-fledged participants.
We
are a culture of critics.
Movies,
music, television, restaurants - it seems nothing
is safe from our analytical eye. But what happens
when that same mentality creeps into our worship
of God?
It's
amazing how similarly we answer these fundamentally
different questions:
"What
did you think of that movie last night?"
"How did you like the worship this morning?"
"I
think it was great."
"Kind of boring."
"I fell asleep."
| "We
had forgotten that we are ALL the performers
of worship and that God is the audience." |
Is
this dynamic normal? Is it right or wrong, good
or bad? Shouldn't people, especially the worship
team, engage in expressing their views?
Pastor
Mike Pilavachi, from London, tells the following
story of a season in which his church wrestled with
this very issue:
"Since
it began, Soul Survivor has always given plenty
of time over to worshiping through music. Over the
years, people have poured out their hearts to God
through it, and there have been plenty of examples
of great things happening as a result. However,
there was a season when we realized that something
was 'up' with our worship.
At
first, it was difficult to put our finger on the
problem. On the surface, everything was just fine:
the musicians were tuning their instruments and
the soundmen were getting out of bed on time. Each
service contained a block of songs that focused
on the cross and gave people the chance to get down
to business with God. To make this easier, the music
was (nearly) up-to-date, the chairs had disappeared
and the lights were low - What better atmosphere
for young people to worship God?
"Yet,
we seemed to have lost the spark. We seemed to be
going through the motions, but I noticed that although
we were singing the songs, our hearts, were far
from Him. Was it Matt Redman's fault? I listened.
He wasn't singing any more off notes than usual.
Then one day it clicked; we had become connoisseurs
of worship instead of participants of it.
In
our hearts, we were giving the worship team grades
on a scale from one to ten: 'Not that song again,'
'I can't hear the bass,' 'I like the way she sings
better.' We had made the band the performers of
worship and ourselves the audience.
We
had forgotten that we are ALL the performers of
worship and that God is the audience. We had forgotten
that sacrifice is central to biblical worship. We
are called to offer our bodies as living sacrifices
- this is OUR spiritual act of worship (Romans 12:1).
We are called to offer our sacrifice of praise (Heb.
13:15).
We
were challenged to ask ourselves individually, 'When
I come through the door of the church, what am I
bringing as my contribution to worship?' The truth
came to us: worship is not a spectator sport, it
is not a product molded by the taste of the consumers.
It is not about what we can get out of it; it is
all about God.
We
needed to take drastic action. For a while, in order
to truly learn this lesson, we banned the band.
We fired Redman!
Then
we sat around in circles and said that if no one
brought a sacrifice of praise, we would spend the
meeting in silence. At the beginning we virtually
did! It was a very painful process. We were learning
again not to rely on the music.
After
a while, we began to have some very sweet times
of worship. We all began to bring our prayers, our
readings, our prophecies, our thanksgiving, our
praises and our songs. Someone would start a song
a cappella and we would all join in. Then someone
else would take it on to another song. The excitement
came back. We were not having Church; we were once
again meeting with God. With all the comforts stripped
away, we worshiped from the heart.
When
we had learned our lesson, we brought the band back.
It was at this point that Matt began to sing the
song he had written out of this experience. I wept
as we sang it for the first time. The words expressed
exactly what was going on."
When
the music fades,
All is stripped away, and I simply come
Longing just to bring
Something that's of worth
That will bless your heart
I'll
bring you more than a song
For a song in itself is not what you have required.
You search much deeper within
Through the way things appear;
You're looking into my heart.
I'm
coming back to the heart of worship
And it's all about you
All about you Jesus.
I'm sorry Lord for the thing I've made it
When it's all about you,
All about you Jesus.
King
of endless worth
No one could express
How much you deserve.
Though I'm weak and poor
All I have is yours, every single breath.
When
I [Paul Martin] first heard this story, it nearly
knocked the wind out of me! As a musician who had
been very involved in worship training and recording
for years, I regretfully realized that church had
become more like a night out at the movies, an opportunity
for me express my expertise, and to rank "how
good it was."
If
you are involved in worship at your church, I would
humbly ask you to search for a balance between heart
and sound. Yes, we are encouraged in scripture to
"play skillfully" before the Lord. But
this must always follow a heart that is yearning
to bless Him.
Paul
Martin is the Director of Soul Survivor-USA www.soulsurvivor.com
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