The Hebrew of Psalm 65:2 reads, “To you silence is praise, O God.”

Every form of worship needs time, room for contemplation. We need time to think. When there is too much talking, too much music, and too many distraction, we can’t focus on God effectively and we cannot worship as we should.

When worship is true and life-changing, it will lead up to the point when speaking is insufficient for the Subject of God and even really good music becomes unnecessarily intrusive. For us to think about God we need periods of silence.

Teaching and proclaiming the Word of God are essential to Biblical Worship. But silence is needed, too. Silence is a recognition of God’s presence and it is a specific time set apart to think of him without distraction. But with no silence in the service, the teaching doesn’t have a chance to be received into the mind or the heart. Thousands of words in a sermon demand time to take in — to process. We need silence to sort through all those words. Quiet Please.

Silence is missing in most contemporary worship services today. Worship has become performance. The service can resemble a rave or a rock concert, filling every second of the event with words and sound from beginning to end. Screaming guitars give you no chance to contemplate. They drown out thoughts. The service is designed only so you will feel something. But silence is needed if you are to think.

Silence gives the words we have heard in proclamation “room” to inform and challenge the heart, and to be embraced by our will. This takes some time. If there is no gap, no break, no opportunity to collect ourselves in worship, we miss most of what could have been revolutionary and life-changing in our approach to God. Silence gives space for the contemplation of God and it can prepare us to hear his holy Word.

The Psalmist felt that silence was an offering of praise to God. Praising God with our silence may be the key to acknowledging God and entering into his powerful presence. Without silence, we may be entertained by what we hear, but we need the space that silence creates, to be alone together with God.

Psalm 46:10, “Be still and know that I am God.”

Silence may be our best reply to God when our sins are exposed by faithful teaching. It may be the only thing that we ought to do when our sins are laid bare. We make no defense, offer up no excuses, we know that there is no adequate justification for our sin. We just stand silent before God in a knowing quietness. We know who God is and we know who we are and what we have done. Then we choose at that moment to be silent — utterly quiet because any word or song would be an intrusion upon God’s presence in that moment of pure and glorious worship. We have nothing left to say. Silence is all the praise that remains. This is extreme worship.

Praise can be silent. But it’s so hard for us to be quiet! We demand a word, “Somebody say Something!” Our sins SHOULD stop our mouths from speaking, or singing. As we are confronted with sin, God moves us toward silence in confession, and he teaches us and comforts us when we are silent and broken.

Sadly, it is sin that wants to break the silence. If even a little gap in the barrage of noise and words is given to us in a worship service, we quickly get uncomfortable. We get fidgety. We get distracted and find anything else to focus on (cell phone, the people whispering next to us, the crying baby, or the soft and distracting music that is being played over the prayer or the preaching). We aren’t use to silence.

But we get precious little of it today. Silence is almost completely absent in young churches. Silence is almost never experienced by young worshippers. Respect for God’s holiness demands silence from us. Sin wants us distracted, unfocused, or in an emotional riff.

Silence allows us room to think of God, and to contemplate him. It gives us time to capture what God has said. It allows confession to move to the heart so it becomes far more than simply repeating religious words. It takes descriptions of God so we can reckon with who God is. Confession — deep, and real — comes most beautifully when we are silent.

There is a need to recover silence in worship. Those who plan and lead worship should include times to be still within the service. We need fewer words and less distraction. So we can turn our silence into praise.

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Philosophy of ministry.

Silence is praise.

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Philosophy of ministry.

How Glory makes us better.

Glory silences the bragging self-congratulating pride of people. Worship ought to take our thoughts off of ourselves, if just for an hour or so. It considers the nature, the attributes, the perfections of God, and in that glimpse many benefits are set free to work in very personal and even confrontational effect.

The majesty of God is instantly humbling. And it moves us to admire, to extol, even to drive us to God with wonder and then to measure ourselves by that glorious vision of God. The goodness of God ought to expose our sin, but more, it should lead us to a love of the perfections of God, and call us to honor our Savior for his sinlessness. If we allow these splendors to do their work in us, there may result a yearning for the help of God that we might live as we ought.

No vision of God can leave us unaffected. Every perfection in God is worthy of worship. Seeing God gives us a clarity about ourselves that is acquired in no other activity.

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Who is serving Whom?

The church is the servant of God. God is not the servant of the church. Measuring the church by how much we enjoy it, or what it has done for us, or by how much we like the people, or how much we agree with the focus and mission — they all miss the mark.

We would hope that people might be helped, healed, moved toward maturity, taught, and helped to live more holy lives. But that is not the focus. That is the result of knowing God and of being in the presence of his glorious Son, by the Spirit he has given us.

The church exists for the praise of God and for the evangelization of the world. It does not exist for the benefit of the people. The church is for the praise of the glory of the grace of God. The people of ancient churches saw their lives as absolutely expendable if the Gospel would be spread by their sacrifice. They would never have made a decision to be part of a church because of the benefit to them. That would be utterly alien to them. It would have been denounced as a fundamental misunderstanding of what the church is as the Body of Christ.

The glory of Christ is not focused on meeting the needs of people. His glory is accessible and it is transformative in the lives of those of us who meet him and serve him. People who love God continually offer our lives to God to do with as he pleases — not as we please.

Therefore we must get away from such ideas as choosing a church because of what it does for me. Looking for a church that I enjoy. Wanting a church with programs. Desiring a church that does this or that mission or outreach. Rather, we should seek a church that brings us to maturity; that challenges our sin; that teaches us about the character and nature of God; a church that gives us the whole of the Biblical message; and especially, a church where the glory of Christ is preeminent and where the glory of Christ is in conflict with anything that might seek to diminish or lessen his glory directing and empowering our lives.

Simple Questions to ask:
Am I in a church for my needs to be met, or because God is glorious and deserving of all my love and praise?
Does the gathering of the church result in the honor and praise of God; or in addressing the needs of people?

God’s people are ministered to most when they engage in the praise of God and in loving him with everything they have and are.

Who is serving Whom? We are serving God. And in serving and loving him, we are made more holy, and more whole.

Philosophy of ministry.

Who is serving Whom?

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Glory of God, Philosophy of ministry.

Leadership in the glorious church.

Leaders of the local church do not direct people in what they do insomuch as they continue to uplift the vision of what the church must be. They do not create programs, opportunities or ministries. They keep God’s people focused on God.

The failure of national Israel ought to teach us that people can have tremendous spiritual experiences (Plagues, Pillar of Cloud and Pillar of Fire, Exodus, Law) and fall away almost immediately when the experiences wane.

Churches today run from experience to experience, often needing to create better and more elaborate experiences, more and more hype, needing to invent new ways to drive the emotions, create new passions, or to stimulate some change for the consumers who demand the programs and the show.

Leaders in Scripture that are most praised (Joseph, Joshua, David, Daniel, and their kin) are not so much successful in terms of conquest or even in numbers of those influenced by them, as much as it was that they exemplified what men who know God must do and how men who love God should live. They worshiped God and they finished well because they kept the vision of God in the center of their affections and in the heart of all they do.

The leadership of today’s churches too often seem concerned about impact, draw, growth, and money. But the leaders in Scripture seemed to be overwhelmed by God.

Paul teaches in 1 Thessalonians 2:4 that we have been “entrusted with the Gospel.” This trust is a matter of faith on God’s part (the Greek here is the very same word for “believe” as in John 3:16, and it makes it difficult to translate this verse into English). God, it would seem, believes in us to hold the treasure of the Gospel, to live the Gospel, and to be the means by which the Gospel spreads to others and itself flourishes and creates new life and purpose in those who believe it. We believe, God believes and trusts us, and the Gospel works in and through us.

Leaders receive from God the trust — the faith-gift of the Gospel. They uphold the vision of the Glorious God. They direct the people to live for God as they themselves are living for him. And so we see by this measure that, by and large, most of the programs, activities, structures, methods, and all the rest that consumes our lives in the contemporary church, are completely disconnected from this glorious work and they would appear to have no direct connection with it except as people who have faith interact with others. But the programs and structures themselves, are completely unnecessary.

Focusing on the glorious nature of God and his Gospel requires all the leaders’ energy. The people may want them to melt their gold into a Great Calf, or to hide the treasure of the Word of God in a Wall. They may desire another king to rule them. They may refuse to trust in God as little children or never desire to love God’s will with all their hearts. They may struggle all their lives to desire God more than they cherish their own lives.

People will fight their leaders all the way until some come to see with the same eyes of faith and grasp with the same joy and hope the glory that God is sharing with his people. And a few of them, too, will become protectors of that vision of glory. And little by little, the church will shine with the very glory of God himself, and his people will be illuminated by his glory, and it will be that glory that others will experience working in their lives.

Godly leaders must only be filled with a vision of God. It is that vision that they offer to their people. It is all they have to give them. That is all the leaders have. And it is all they and their people need.

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Glory of God, Philosophy of ministry.

On idolatry and qualifications for spiritual worship.

“How God is to be so distinguished from idols that perfect honor may be given to him alone.” 

J. Calvin, Institutes, 1, 12, 1.

“Nothing do men act for more than their glory.”

Stephen  Charnock, Works, Vol. 2, 119.

The glory of men is the greatest idol and the most hostile opponent to the glory of God. Even in the very act of worship, men must wage war against their desire to receive honor, glory, and praise. Even when doing the most self-sacrificial service, the sinful heart rises up  with imaginations of praise for that service, for honor for living so beautifully, or for being an example for others. 

But the human heart must be tamed by the Spirit of Jesus Christ before it can offer any true and beautiful praise to God. The confession of idolatry, the declaration of our inadequacy, the admission of sins are so important because they are the natural outpourings of the heart toward a Holy God of anyone who comes into his Presence by faith in Christ and, in that place, desiring with all the heart, soul, mind, and strength, to worship him in holiness and in truth.

God’s holiness is not simply brightness, but it is a brightness that can burn, destroy, and that comes into conflict with human evil.

Those who worship God and bring him glory must, like the priests of old, prepare, repent, pray, and consecrate themselves to this tremendous work. No one should rush into the presence of God. No one should presume on God’s grace. No one should foist his own righteousness as a qualification for entering into the presence of Almighty God. 

Calvin again (Institutes, 3, 13, 2, p. 764):

“…  Man cannot without sacrilege claim for himself even a crumb of righteousness, for just so much is plucked and taken away from the glory of God’s righteousness.”

It is the glory of God that determines who can come, who can pray, what must be confessed, who can be restored, and who may be forgiven.

Worship is not presumptuous theft of entry into the Holy Place. It is overwhelmed, unqualified, sinful people coming to God by the merits of Jesus Christ. It is people who cannot qualify, being qualified by the Cross and the Blood of Christ. It is people whose sin God must punish with Hell and sorrow, being completely forgiven because Christ has purchased us by his sacrifice.

The glory of God reminds us that we bring no righteousness to God. We bring no glory to God. We add no holiness to God. He possesses it all and nothing can be added to the sum of them.

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“There is nothing like seeing what God is to make men sensible what they are (Isaiah 6:5).”
“The sight of God’s glory changes the nature and makes it abhor sin, and so renders it more sensible of it. The sight of the glory of God’s nature is transforming light, changing the soul into the likeness of God’s holiness (2 Corinthians 3:18).
“‘I am a man of unclean lips.’ He probably mentions the uncleanness of his lips in particular to show, in a sense, how imperfectly he had been wont to speak of God, and to pray to Him and praise Him.”

Jonathan Edwards, The Puritan Pulpit: Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758), 131, 133, and 141.

Seeing God's glory makes a human being aware of who they truly are.

Textures that are seen only in the light.

Philosophy of ministry.

Seeing God’s glory makes human beings aware of who they truly are.

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“The glory of God is the happiness of all those who love him. Nevertheless, it is the glory of God at which the Christian aims, not at his own happiness. But his happiness comes as a by-product when he is not seeking self-interest any longer.”

John Gerstner, The Rational Biblical Theology of Jonathan Edwards, Vol. 3, 12.

The Glory of God brings the greatest happiness to us.

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The glory of God is the intentional focus. It is the obsession, the goal, the central matter of life in the believer. And in pursuing the glorious God, we discover all the treasures we had longed for and had never found before. They are all found in him. The aim of God’s glory is the fulfillment of human happiness.

Philosophy of ministry.

The glory of God brings the greatest happiness to us.

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Philosophy of ministry.

Glory over everything else and anyone else.

“I beg you: Show me Your glory.”
Exodus 33:18.

The New Testament does not prescribe a specific model of church governance. Faithful Christians have organized themselves in many ways. It doesn’t dictate architectural styles for buildings. Some are simple and utilitarian, some are overly ornate and superfluous. There were no programs mentioned in the Acts, nor were meetings scheduled in Galatians. But there were commands and burdens that these people obeyed and bore.
Buildings for churches didn’t exist for more than 300 years. The early church did not market their meetings. They didn’t offer classes to order the mess of lives lived in sin. But what they did was to know God and to learn to live in his presence and to see him as great and holy and glorious.
Churches today look at the biggest, the fastest growing (the most alluring) churches in the land and even the smallest churches lust to be big.
The early church (as evidenced in the New Testament) was about Christ’s glory, and his exaltation of the glory of the Father, by means of the Holy Spirit — and that focus was the power and the light of the churches, of the people of God.
Churches today (not all, but most) have become service centers. They have become focused on people, rather than being people focused on God. You cannot imagine the disappointment I experienced when I began serving as a pastor in 1977. The tedium, the pointless meetings, the endless vacuity of what was to be done, and most disappointing, the view widely held, of God as One who needed them, their money and their time. A view of God as One who was lucky to have them show up an hour a week. The view of God as One who was there to make them happy, or content, or wealthy. But with few exceptions, there was not a passion for God, neither in the local church nor in any church or gathering. There was a toleration for God. As though his presence was a complication and an inconvenience to the plans and contrivances of people.
But the Scriptural faith first shows Jesus Christ overcome with passion for the glory of the Father (see in Old Testament and New). His entire life was focused on glorifying God. And those who followed Christ saw Christ as glorious, glorious in the extreme. They knew him and were overwhelmed by his Majesty, to the point where they would give their very lives for him.
Many churches today would complain about extending worship by 5 minutes; what would they say if they were to give up their very lives for the One they worshiped?
There is a disconnect in American evangelicalism between the faith that is witnessed in the Bible and the faith that is experienced in the worshiping community. This gap must be closed.
Who God is must drive all that is done. What God has said must fill our worship experience. What God has commanded must be heard and paid attention to by those who dare to call themselves believers. For God is not our guru, he is not merely our helper and provider, he is the Glorious God, deserving of all praise in life and in worship. There is nothing that the church should do that is not glorious. To say it positively: All that the church must do, and nothing else, must be glorious in praise to God alone.

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Philosophy of ministry.

The fruit of More Glory

For almost three years I have been working on a book on the glory of God. This began as a study to balance out a painful but eventually liberating work on the sin nature in the life of the believer, called Sin Less.
But as the study of God’s glory grew there was an expansion and solidification of some deeply held commitments in my heart that the church today has largely lost focus of the glory of God in what we do and in why we exist. As a pastor, much of what I did was to run programs and to manage the calendar and money. My call to lift high the majesty and glory of God was overwhelmed by the sea of inconsequential and wholly unnecessary activity.
The study on glory and a five year hiatus from daily pastoral responsibilities watered my thirsty soul and renewed my longing to engage in something far more significant than what I had been spending my life doing for more nearly 30 years.
The study of glory put in sharp focus why the church exists and what it ought to be about. Reading and contemplating glory simplified a view of ministry and it created limits to what ought to be central in the life of local worshipping church and what should be left undone.
This is not intended to criticize others nor is this wanting to impugn their motives or sincerity. But the glory of God is so overshadowing that it rises to challenge anything of lesser importance and has become the driving passion for ministry and the compelling longing to see how it might be recovered as the non-negotiable essential of Church life. The recovery of glory in the church is all the more important in the day when marketing, not evangelism, entertainment not discipleship, and self-help not growth unto spiritual maturity are what draw the time and talent of God’s people away from God’s glory.
Glory is not just a composite of church life. It is the life of the church.
Glory is not just a subject. It is the subject of all we do. If an action, a worship service, a mission, a class is not about the glory of God in some important way, the church has lost its purpose.
The one thing that the church is equipped to do, shown how to do it, and given the example of The Lord Jesus Christ and taught by apostles to do well and extensively, is to glorify God. Yet in our day we scarcely know what that even means.
It is time to focus on glory.

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First worship.
Simple structure so our needs and preconceptions don’t get in the way of giving praise and glory to God.
Focusing on the language of praise in Scripture.
Having time to pray. To reflect on the Gospel. To express love and praise to God.
Not driven by expectations of worship from the culture.
Driven by grace and the Holy Spirit with us who brings us the inheritance of grace.
Experiencing the sufficiency of the spiritual blessings we have in Christ, as all we will ever need.

Getting Started begins by considering what the glory of God demands of his people.

Philosophy of ministry.

Getting Started begins by considering what the glory of God demands of his people.

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