Monday, October 13, 2014
Thursday, October 9, 2014
The Constant
So many thoughts swiveling my mind as I go about my daily
chores, yet pondering, reflecting on life. But I as sift through the clutter I
know there is a thought that constantly drags me back to ponder on it and mull over it
over and over again. I watch the days turn into weeks, the weeks turn into
months and the months swiftly turn into years, even decades.
I also wonder how time has gone by so quickly with so much
water under the bridge, so many changes, so many adjustments to various seasons
of life, so many changes in a world that this growing increasingly small thanks
to the internet and high speed travel.
What is starkly
different from the era gone by and this post modern era is, that it has come to
be defined by a generation with a very short attention span. Very few have the
tenacity to see things through over the long haul. “Bored” has become
fashionable and not an anomaly anymore. Today we see people chasing after
fleeting fads, the latest in music, fashion, relationships, job, gadget, car, home.
There is an in satiated hunger and perusal of the “next” whatever that may be
in the hope that that will fill the gnawing emptiness that needs to be filled
somehow.
And yet, in all the
clutter of our commodities, ironically, often unknown to us, what we are
actually in desperate search of the very opposite of “the next”! We all need that constant in our lives. It is that “constant” that grounds us,
keeps us rooted, is our internal compass when life throws a curved ball at us. It’s
what defines us, who we really are.
Sadly many are growing up in this existential world with no
concept of this compass in life, therefore are tossed by every “ googly”
life throws. Often we don’t know right from wrong therefore the choices
made are often just looking at things with a short term perspective not
understanding that everything we do has far reaching consequences not only for
ourselves but for those around us, for society at large and even for the one we
care about the most. The cause and effect of our actions have a ripple effect through the sands of time right into eternity.
That constant that we need and unknowingly are in search of
cannot and does not come from a life that is always changing. It has to come
from that which is not governed by the limits of time, culture, tradition or the finite mind of man. This constant must
transcend time – it is timeless.
Reflecting on
this I know that I have found this
constant in my life: unchanging, unwavering, rack steady to the very end. This
constant is not a thing. This constant has a name : Jesus. I am reminded of the
old hymn “all may change but Jesus never, glory to His name”. He is the
uncreated ONE who alone creates and sustains everything.
Not only is He eternal but I am always amazed at HIS unfailing,
unflinching, unflagging faithful love. This is constant and unchanging. There
is no situation too dark or big or messy where His hand cannot reach into and
pluck me out. He has been my north star, my constant in a very fast changing
world that lives in a tornado of the temporary.
In life’s journey that is full of wonderful memories and
painful ones; a journey checkered by uncertainties, shifting sands, fickle
relationships, health challenges etc, the one constant that I could throw
myself upon without any hesitation has been Jesus.
He is the one that faithfully leads us through thick and
thin, through the highs and the lows in our lives. He is my guiding light, my
moral compass, my salvation, my savior my faithful friend.
Reflecting on my 4 decade walk with him I felt the lyrics to
a song stir within me and so I wrote it as a testimony to this constant in my
life. It is a song of gratitude to my constant ever faithful God. My prayer is
that you will know Him as your faithful GOD and Constant too.
You can listen to a recording of this song by CLICKINGHERE
Faithfully you lead me
You restore my soul
Faithfully you keep me
When life seems out of control
Faithfully you hold me
In the palm of your hand
Faithfully you lift me up
And you help me stand
Faithfully you comfort
In the darkest night
Faithfully you strengthen
To stand up and fight
Faithfully you bind up
And heal a wounded heart
Faithfully you make a way
For a brand new start
Chorus
You’re my God through the valleys
You’re my God through the storms
You’re my God when I am broke
When all my strength has gone
You are God
Faithful God.
Faithfully you will finish
What you have begun
Faithfully you help me
To face and overcome
Faithfully you’ll give back
What was broken and lost
Giving beauty for ashes
So faithfully, O God
Bridge
Keeper of my heart and soul
I know you will make me whole
I have put my trust in you
I know you will make things new
To make all things new
©Navaz D’ Cruz, Aug 2014
Saturday, March 29, 2014
One thing remains Part 2
Part 2 |
In part One of this blog reflected on what true worship looks like. If we don’t remind
ourselves to keep the main thing the main thing we will quickly be reduced to
but an empty shell – a form lacking content.
This is the essence
of worship: that God is glorified and exalted and He comes to us with his
tangible presence. It’s his presence that distinguished us from every other
people group on this earth. When people
encounter His presence, they are changed forever because they have encountered
the living God. This is what happened to Abraham. Moses, Jacob, Joshua, the
disciples, Paul and you and I.
Concluding thoughts for Worship leaders and Worship bands.
Therefore we stand there to firstly worship ourselves and
then to facilitate the congregation to worship. We are always pointing to Jesus and the finished work of the cross.
Therefore our preparation is vital. We are seeking God through the week on what
we ought to focus on, we craft our set list based on our meditations and what
we feel the Holy Spirit prompting us to do. The songs selected need to strong
in doctrine and cross centered. The people should hear the gospel through the
worship and not just the preaching. There needs to be a running theme – a clear
direction as to where we are going in the worship. It’s not a bunch of my favorite’s
songs or what makes me sound good.
I have often heard this said “If you come with a set list
you are leaving no room for the Holy Spirit to work”. I find that a lame excuse for laziness and lack of preparation. We
belong to a God who speaks to us and who foretold of His son’s sacrifice
thousands of years before the event took place. Can He not prompt us and guide
us with our set list a few days before Sunday? Having said this one must always be open to a
change in direction and the promptings to the Spirit in that moment. However
more often than not, we have found the worship, the prayers, the public reading
of scripture, prophecies, the preaching all in complete sync with each other
because it is the same Spirit at work. What a wonderful demonstration of the
power, presence and unity in the Spirit. This
is what it is all about.
On the one hand you
can have one musician and usher in the mighty presence of God and on the other
you can have a 5-8 piece band and have great music but no presence.What a
tragedy!!! Let us resolve never to go there.
I am not saying big bands cannot usher the presence of God. I am not against being relevant to the youth etc . My plea is to pursue His presence and exalt Jesus Every Sunday I pray a Mosaic prayer which is for God’s presence to be with us or else
how will the people know that his favour is with us, how will the unbeliever
know that God is in our midst? Let’s not settle for anything less.
As a worship leader I am first of all to be a worshiper myself. Then when I worship public ally, I am also a servant. I am there to
serve my congregation and my band. I am there to help my congregation engage
with God. I am sensitive to where the congregation is at, sensitive to my
worship team and where they are at. This is a far cry from some of the super
star images we sometimes see in the Christian circles.
As I close my reflection I want to add a footnote on a very
important but neglected area :
A note on TEAM
It’s not about a superstar and everybody else in the band is
their side kick. It’s TEAM. Together
we worship, and we lead together. Together
is very important. I have been in bands where there have been several egos
on display. There has been no cohesion or unity; there has been no considering
of the other musicians.
Keys are chosen without taking so many other parameters
into question viz most importantly can the congregation sing in that key? Are
all the musicians comfortable with the key etc? Do you turn up your mike or
instrument up and drown everybody else out and not care? Can you hear the
others on the monitors? Do we make room for other members of the band to
contribute musically, vocally, in prayer, prophetic song etc. The worship leader does not have to lead
out every song in order to lead.
It is team work – the whole team carries the worship in their
playing, singing and in their hearts. They
do not zone out but are actively engaged in the worship and participate. When
we do this it catches on and it also
helps the congregation engages in a meaningful way.
One of the comments I have often heard from visiting
preachers to our church is how the entire band is involved in the worship in
that they are praying, prophesying, singing out etc. This will happen only when we are Band Leaders make this a part of our
culture and practice, making room for everyone’s gifts to emerge for the glory
of God.
When we engage in true worship it takes the performance out
of it and it becomes a sweet sound in our God’s ears.
So let’s go and worship our God and if you are a worship
band leader/musician/singer etc. , let’s remember to pursue His presence always
and keep the main thing the main thing.
Navaz D'Cruz
Navaz D'Cruz
Thursday, March 27, 2014
One thing remains.
Lights, sound, action!! There is a roar as the music starts.
The musicians wear this very intense focused look, gazing down at their instruments.
The lead singer prances about the stage encouraging the audience to join in and
connect with what is happening on the stage.
It’s really good on so many levels – the musicians, sound
quality, enthusiasm on the part of the audience etc etc are top quality. There is great participation, a sense of
oneness. Everybody seems happy and are enjoying themselves. But one thing
remains!!
What I have just described has now become the ‘normal
experience” of what a charismatic church meeting may look like every Sunday
morning. Yup!! I was not describing a rock concert, just in case you thought I was!!
Before I make enemies with my music/worship band fraternity
let me explain. I am not passing judgment or criticizing on this form of worship.
Also, this is not an exhaustive study on what worship is but a reflection on just
a few aspects. A whole blog series would be needed to cover all the aspects of worship.
I have been a musician since the age of 7 and been a part of
several worship bands (but mostly with the local church that I have been a part
of) since the age of 11 spanning a little over three decades. I have been a part of a Methodist church in
the early years of my life. So I have seen the transition from church organs,
to tambourines and guitars to full -fledged bands with grunge pedals, smoke
machines , lights and all the other trappings; from clergy –laity divide to the
priesthood of all believers upheld and celebrated. So please don’t get me
wrong.
It’s not the form of
worship that is in question or is a problem. Not at all!! Societies go
through change - from one decade to another. Technology is making huge advances
and pervades all of our lives. So it is only natural that some of it will spill
into ecclesiastical quarters as well. The style of worship therefore will reflect
the culture in which it is practiced and it should in order to be culturally
relevant (though biblical sound at all times). In fact history shows that
church music and art was the fore runner of the Arts influencing the other
expressions of art in society.
I have, and continue love the grand old hymns and The Handle’s
Messiah as much as I love Matt Redman and his contemporaries. What then is the
point of this reflection? What is on my mind? What am I getting at?
As I said earlier, one thing remains. Let’s think about it. Come
reflect with me if you may.
I have often paused to ask these questions to myself and the
worship team I have the privilege of leading. If we
don’t remind ourselves to keep the main thing the main thing we will quickly be
reduced to but an empty shell – a form lacking content.
So what is this “main
thing? “ .
So here are some questions I ask myself and those I mentor.
1. Who is worship
for? Jesus made it very clear, “Love the Lord your God and worship Him
only”. Therefore worship needs to be God ward. Songs need to be song primarily “to” God and not just
“about God”. We need to praise His attributes which are so many. We need to
declare truth that is found in scripture. We sing about His love, his
faithfulness, power, sacrifice, who He is, his return etc.
2. What is worship? Today there are many
songs being written, the object of which is unclear because there is no
reference to the person of Jesus or the cross. They could be sung to anyone or
any God. We need to be careful. It’s the content of the songs, the lyrics that
make song worship to Jesus or not. We need to be careful that we are not
engaging in singing “something”, but are engaged in worship to the living God.
3. Presence – This I believe
is the main thing. It’s sad to see worship being reduced to a performance
of some random selection of Christian “pop hits” “blockbusters’ “chart busters”
that have no focus or purpose.
The greatest privilege we as Christians enjoy is to be called a people of His presence. God
dwells in our hearts and when two or three are gathered, His presence is with
us and goes with us wherever we go. We
are the only people on the planet who can boldly and confidently say that God
we can speak to God and He hears us but more amazingly He speaks to us too.
In the OT when the Levites worshipped, God’s presence came
down and filled the temple and the people fell face down in worship.
This is it!! This is
the essence of worship: that God is glorified and exalted and He comes to us
with his tangible presence. It’s his presence that distinguished us from
every other people group on this earth. When
people encounter His presence, they are changed forever because they have
encountered the living God. This is what happened to Abraham. Moses, Jacob,
Joshua, the disciples, Paul and you and I.
When people come together to worship we want to engage their
whole being, not just their emotions where it becomes soulish and self centered rather than God centered.
Too often songs are sung about our longings and desires, and the whole worship
revolves around our needs rather than our God who is worthy of honour, praise,
thanksgiving and worship. We can worship
the desire to worship singing endless songs asking for His presence and the
Holy Spirit rather this presence.
I don’t think we are to dwell too much on
asking the Holy Spirit to fill us because the Holy Spirit Himself always points
to Jesus and wants Him glorified.( Having said that we are to ask Jesus to keep filling us with the Holy spirit. So "waiting on" and being filled with the Holy Spirit continually is a good thing).As we glorify Jesus we are filled with the
Spirit. When Paul and Silas were in jail they were exalting God and praising
Him and look what happened – the place shook, there was an earthquake and they
were set free. That should tell us something about the power or praise and exalting
Jesus name!
Random repetitions of one liners of “come Holy Spirit” etc
is not worship. It is only an expression of a desire to worship therefore one
must not dwell on it too much but press into actual exaltation of a wonderful
Lord.
When worship is in
Spirit and in truth where the lyrics are solid, sound, biblical and full of
rich doctrine, faith begins to arise in one’s heart and we begin to truly
worship. It is no longer an emotional experience but a spiritual journey where
we encounter the living God , experience His presence, hear his voice speak to
us through the various gifts of the Spirit that begin to operate through the
worshiper And yes our hearts are touched and filled with joy and gratitude.
Worship of Jesus also releases the prophetic and people go
way with the certainty that God was in the place and that they met with God.
Even the unbeliever begins to testify to the presence of God. This is what they
take away with them rather than “the music was good, didn't she sing so well”
etc.
I have always encouraged our team to continually seek His
presence in worship. And as we have done
this week after week people tell us of how they met with God in the worship,
how they were comforted, some physically healed in the worship etc etc.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Simple Equations
In today’s world performance
outstrips everything else. All can be and will be overlooked if one brings
in the results – whatever that may be. The bottom line is the bottom line in a
balance sheet: do the profits look good? The
end is more important than means therefore collateral damage is the catch word.
Walking the straight and narrow is becoming a thing of the past or is certainly
under threat.
Ethics and Character have
no part to play in this game of success and being opportunity driven rather
than value driven is becoming the norm. One only needs to look at politics
to see it at its best.
All that is very well; we can moan about all the lack of
integrity out there and how rotten the system is, how immoral x, y and z and
shake our heads at “them”. But, what about us Christ followers? My daily Bible reading and meditations have
made me reflect much on this. Let me share my thoughts and reflections with
you.
I have been in the book of 1 John for some time now simply because it’s not an easy book to read through
and walk away from unchallenged or unprovoked.
John throws a challenge to the Christ follower to love. One
would think he is stating the obvious – of
course we are called to love !! Easier
said, than done !
I feel 1 John and 1 Corinthians 13 are two sides of the same
coin. One challenges our beliefs and allegiance to God and the other challenges
our practice of this confession and the attitudes of the heart that underlie
everything we do – even the use of the great gifts.
Often these days we are
willing to side step the character issues that crop up; turning a blind eye
simply because we are blinded by the gifting before us and to the opportunities
that are presenting itself to us.
While it’s all very well to point fingers, 1 John brings the
truth starkly home. He addresses “me”
and not “them”. He hammers away mostly at one point from every angle even at
the risk of over repeating himself in every little chapter in this even smaller
book. I think he knows how easy it is for us to want to skip what we don’t
want to hear to the other “interesting “bits that we want to .
But he comes at it again and again. He puts before us some
very simply equations so that we don’t miss it.
Here are some I have jotted down
1:5 God is light = no darkness In Him
2:3 Knowing God = obeying Him
John is establishing where he is coming from.
Then he homes in on what he wants to focus on.
2:5 Light= no hate
Hate = darkness. The
math is pretty simple, clear cut as black
≠ white
Let’s
go further
2:12-14 John
reassures us of our forgiveness and position of being over comers in Christ.
2:15-17 Love God = hate the world
John seems to have been contending with a
lot of liars and deceptive people!! Is it different today?
3:10 Children
of God = those who love their brother
Doing what is right = a child of God
3:11 Love one another is the bottom line
3:15 Hate
one’s brother = a murderer
Murderer = hell
3:6 Love = Jesus dying for us
Brotherly
love = laying down our lives for each other.
3:17 Love = meet each other’s needs.
3:18 Love = action
3:22 Obedience
to God = answered prayers
4:16 God is love = we should love = God lives in us
4:19 Hate
your brother = liar = hates God. WOW!! John is turning up the heat. He is
not mincing words.
4:21 Love God = Love brother
5:1 Love God = Obey God
In such a short book John packs a solid
punch! That’s a lot of emphasis on one point. Interesting to note John is not
encouraging us to love the unbeliever, the persecutor. He is commanding us to
love our brother!!!
What he is saying is (and I paraphrase) :
don’t you get it ? You don’t have a
choice in this one. You have to love. And if you can’t, there is no fudging it.
It’s as clear as crystal, as plain as day. There is no second interpretation,
no further explanations, contextualization’s and all the other lame duck
excuses you give not to obey a passage in scripture. Bottom line – you have got
to love your brother no matter what.
Even as I write it send shivers down my
spine. This is ruthless coming from the apostle of love. It’s downright
radical. Take or leave it – that’s what John is saying.
Who is my brother? Is a clever devious question
I might throw to save my skin, in my defense trying to justify a lack of
brotherly love across borders or denominations, churches, apostolic movement I
belong to etc etc. Let’s not try and see much hate I can get away with. The truth is God is love and I have to love
at all times and EVERYONE. Jesus once said on the Sermon on the Mount “Love
your enemies…” There goes my last chance
at hate! – All excuses crumble at the cross.
The point I think John is making is –
guys love is not an option you can opt out of, we have to love everyone. If we
can be forgiving and tolerant toward the unbeliever, how much more our own brothers.
I find the book entirely rhetorical in
nature. John states the obvious because
sometimes it needs to be said. It’s like saying you drive a car you don’t push
it. If you push it around, it’s not a car anymore. Therefore get into the
car and drive for it to be a car!! Get it?
I think I
am getting it - therefore no room
for grudges, hurts, nursing old wounds, playing politics and all the others thing even we
Christ followers have got cozy with simply because rationalizing comes easy
when the shoe is on the other foot.
As I reflect I think of those I find hard
to love, I think of those old wounds that won’t heal because I keep pulling the
scab off, etc. Can we resolve to deal with these things before we grow old and
bitter and realize that all the hate was not worth it after all? There is so
much in life to appreciate and love and be thankful for.
So this brings me back to where I first started . I can be very gifted, very well known, very liked , even in the Christian circles but that does not really count. In the final reckoning of things if i do not have love I am nothing ( 1 Corinthians 13 lays it our starkly). In the final scheme of things "success" as everyone sees it may not necessarily be so because I have neglected this one very important thing called love. Sobering isn't it?
So this brings me back to where I first started . I can be very gifted, very well known, very liked , even in the Christian circles but that does not really count. In the final reckoning of things if i do not have love I am nothing ( 1 Corinthians 13 lays it our starkly). In the final scheme of things "success" as everyone sees it may not necessarily be so because I have neglected this one very important thing called love. Sobering isn't it?
Let’s
drop all that stuff and just do it – LOVE.
Navaz
Image credit - http://amandapanda84.wordpress.com/
Friday, February 28, 2014
The Pause
Life can sometimes seem to be an unending unstopping
treadmill that feels like a runaway train. This crazed pace is something a lot
of us have got used to; the nonstop humdrum of life.
In the midst of this there is also the challenge of the
pause.
Today everybody is in a hurry to get on in life, to get to the top, to
go somewhere, and to become someone. We
have very little tolerance for any delays, for waiting or, even for a pause.
And yet life is full
of pauses and waiting. I could react to them, kick hard at them; and punch
my fist into the air, scream, shout and get frustrated.
We all have dreams, desires, hope, longings that are
punctuated by pauses in our lives – the waiting that we would like to skip and
rush to embrace what we yearn for. Life does not always turn out the way we
want it. What should my response be? How do I cope?
As I reflect on this
I am reminded of the Psalmist who says: “Be still”
to “wait patiently”, to “trust in His unfailing love”. Romans
8 remind me that He will work all things out for my good. Ecclesiastics
tell me that God will make all things
beautiful in His time.
I look at the heroes of faith and see that many of them had
to deal with long pauses in their lives. Many received great promises and then
had to cope with long pauses. Look at Abraham and Sarah who were promised a
child and that their descendants would be more numerous than the stars. Look at
Isaac who had to deal with a long pause, so did Jacob and Joseph. What about
David and Moses?
What about those men and women who gave their lives for the
advance of the kingdom had to battle
long and hard for the first fruits? The list can go on All had to contend with very long pauses between the promise and the
possessing of it.
Actually when one thinks of the whole Christian life – we are in a pause period – awaiting His
glorious return. While there are things to be done here the greatest
longing and yearning of the Christian heart is the return of the King our
glorious savior Jesus. We live in the
greatest pause of all of history – between the resurrection and the return.
But we have a Hope that is steadfast and certain and that
will never spoil or fade away. So the
promises that are punctuated with this pause in life are pregnant with Hope.
This helps me wait patiently and to cope with the longings,
the dreams and desires and promises. I know that in His time He shall bring
them to pass.