Worship

Celebration worship

Welcome To Church
Bart Millard was born in 1972 in Greenville Texas. Bart dreamed of playing football like his dad, but an injury caused him to look elsewhere for a purpose. He found it in a relationship with Christ at a young age and founded the band MercyMe in 1994. The band’s song “I Can Only Imagine”, sold a lot of albums, and made a lot of money. Yet, Bart will tell you that it was a season of suffering that gave Mercy Me staying power. Bart’s son, Sam, had contracted type 1 diabetes. This season of suffering was so awful that the late Pastor Billy Graham invited Bart to bring his son to one of his Crusades in Dallas so Billy could pray for him. Sam’s disease disrupted the safe world of Bart and his wife. The future suddenly looked uncertain, and the daily fight to keep his little boy healthy began with no end in sight. Yet in the middle of his exhaustion and fear, Bart began to sense God whispering to his heart: “Will you still praise Me, even if nothing changes?” Out of that season came Mercy Me’s song “Even If,” a declaration that faith is not built on outcomes but on the unchanging goodness of God. “I know you’re able, I know you can, save through the fire with your mighty hand, but even if you don’t, my heart is for you alone.” Bart later said, “The song was simply written on a bad day… but it reminded me that what Christ has already done will always be far greater than whatever season we go through.” His story reminds us that true worship is rooted in a choice: “I will praise the Lord at all times.” Friends, I must confess, that choice is tough for me. At all times, even when circumstances are bad like serious illness or the loss of loved ones? What is Jesus trying to teach me, and us? Christian Faith doesn’t avoid sorrow, it works through our sorrow, in the hope that Jesus is enough — even if the healing hasn’t come, even if the answers never arrive. Like Bart, we can choose to praise God not because everything is right, but because Christ always is. On All Saints Day, as we remember those who have passed on to glory, I want to talk about how we can continue to praise God, even as we suffer and miss those who have gone on to the church triumphant in heaven.

I want to be clear, this idea of praising the Lord always is not a cure-all. You will have bad days still happen and you will never forget seasons of suffering, but with Jesus, you can manage the loss, one day at a time. My prayer is today will equip you to manage, one day at a time.

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We can praise the Lord at all times, because of what God has done for us: “I sought the Lord, and He answered me; He delivered me from all my fears.”- Psalm 34:4. Consider Horatio Spaddford, the author of the classic Hymn “It is Well.” Horatio had established a very successful legal practice in Chicago as a young man. He was also a devout Christian. Among Horatio’s friends were several evangelists including the famous Dwight L. Moody, also from Chicago. Unfortunately, Spafford’s fortune evaporated in the wake of the great Chicago Fire of 1871. Having invested heavily in real estate along Lake Michigan’s shoreline, he lost everything overnight. In a saga reminiscent of Job, his son died a short time before his financial disaster. But the worst was yet to come. Hymnologist Kenneth Osbeck tells the story: “Desiring a rest for his wife and four daughters as well as wishing to join and assist Moody and [his musician Ira] Sankey in one of their campaigns in Great Britain, Spafford planned a European trip for his family in 1873. In November of that year, due to unexpected last-minute business developments, he had to remain in Chicago, but sent his wife and four daughters on ahead as scheduled on the S.S. Ville du Havre. He expected to follow in a few days. On November 22 the ship was struck by the Lochearn, an English vessel, and sank in twelve minutes. Several days later the survivors were finally landed at Cardiff, Wales, and Mrs. Spafford cabled her husband, ‘Saved, but alone. What shall I do?”

At the news of the loss of his four daughters, Horatio immediately set sail for England. At one point during his voyage, the captain of the ship, aware of the tragedy that had struck the Spafford family, summoned Horatio to tell him that they were now passing over the spot where the shipwreck had occurred. As Horatio thought about his daughters, words of comfort and hope filled his heart and mind. He wrote them down, and they have since become a well-beloved hymn: When peace like a river, attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea billows roll—Whatever my lot, thou hast taught me to know. It is well, it is well with my soul. He then records why his soul remained well. Of all the lines in the hymn, this one comforts me the most. Horatio’s soul is well, not only because he will see his children again, but because of what Christ did on the cross for His sin to get Horatio there.

Though Satan should buffet, though trials should come, Let this blest assurance control, That Christ has regarded my helpless estate, And has shed His own blood for my soul. My sin, oh, the bliss of this glorious thought!My sin, not in part but the whole, is nailed to His cross, and I bear it no more, Praise the Lord, praise the Lord, O my soul!

We can praise the Lord at all times because we remember the good He has done before: “Those who seek the Lord lack no good thing.”-Psalm 34:10. Oftentimes, we make a lot about the Lord providing for physical needs. Remember, context is everything! A Jew in the Jewish community doesn’t go to God like a genie, He goes to God for renewal, and comfort. God tells the Psalmist “Those who seek the Lord will lack nothing!” I find it profoundly comforting that the disciples would have known this Psalm at the Last Supper of Jesus before His crucifixion, and after His resurrection. At the Last Supper, they were about to lose their friend, Savior, and Lord to the Romans to be crucified. How does Jesus provide for the disciples so they lack no good thing in the bad moment that is coming? He asks them to remember Him. He charges the disciples that as often as they eat the bread, and the cup, to remember Jesus who was given, and whose blood was poured out for them. This reminder should be profoundly comforting in the life of a believer.

Remembering what Jesus had done before: was a needed memory when I was serving in Troup Texas. Rhiannon and I got called 7 times to pick up Evan at TSBVI for seizure related issues and hospital visits. I remember the first time well. Rhiannon called me and said she was on the way home because Evan has been sent to the hospital with 10 seizures throughout the day and had not consistently returned to baseline yet. The longer you don’t return to baseline after a seizure, the more damaging that can be for the one suffering from the seizure. It means the body and brain have not returned to normal function and awareness. The longer the brain is over stimulated, the more dangerous that is for a child, and can even kill him/her. Evan had not returned to baseline for over 10 minutes. THAT was Rhiannon and I were both fearful. Why is Evan having a seizure out of nowhere? What is now a very much under control condition with measures Rhiannon has fought for and hospitals and doctors have put in place, simply weren’t there that first time Evan had a string of seizures. Rhiannon came home and packed a bag in the event she had to stay in the hospital. When she threw her bag in the car to make the 4 hour car ride, she and I prayed together. Remember, praise and prayer are often the same, and rooted in the book of Psalms. Our prayer was that the Christ who was with His disciples in a painful moment, and made provision through His cross for all who turn to Him, would be with Evan, his doctors, and Rhiannon and I.

When Rhiannon hit the road, we felt that we needed to rope in as many people as possible of what was happening. We asked for prayer in a facebook post, and from there the Lord moved. People, churches, even folks we didn’t know were commenting they were praying for us. The abundance of prayer from others taught me this principle: Proximity to people of prayer inspires my own desire to pray. “I praise the Lord at all times” does not have good feelings in the job description: It is a choice to seek God in the presence of others, that can be a hard choice to make. That night, seeing this much response to Evan’s condition inspired Rhiannon and I to choose to pray more on the way down, scared as we were! As Rhiannon hurried to Austin, all we wanted was for the Lord to be near Evan and the staff, and us, no matter what happened. That is what the Psalmist wants us to consider, in bad circumstances, in loss, What has God done? Once again, David gives a helpful answer: “I sought the Lord, and he answered me; he delivered me from all my fears. Those who look to him are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame. Fear the Lord, you his holy people, for those who fear him lack nothing. The Lord will rescue his servants; no one who takes refuge in him will be condemned.”-Psalms‬ ‭34‬:‭4‬-‭5‬, ‭9‬, ‭22‬.

Where do you need the comfort and deliverance of God today? Where are you hurting?Can you still praise Him? In a minute, I want to invite you to Communion, remembering Christ is with you and me, and always remembering the Saints we mentioned today. And remember, we can praise God at all times because He is the only one who understands what you are going through, and He weeps with you. In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, amen.

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Traditional worship