The worship team at Fellowship has been hard at work on their newest album, Closer to the Start. You need to check out their journey:
You can also find more behind the scenes info on Pace’s blog. I can’t wait for this thing to come out!
The worship team at Fellowship has been hard at work on their newest album, Closer to the Start. You need to check out their journey:
You can also find more behind the scenes info on Pace’s blog. I can’t wait for this thing to come out!
The Bible draws a picture of the Lord as our portion. It’s an interesting thought: God is completely and totally all you need.
So many times in my life, God is not my portion, He plays a part of what I need, mixed in with everything else.
What would it look like if God was our portion? If everything we needed came from Him? Could it be we would go through a week without the empty longings for things in the world? Could it be we would feel freedom like never before from the things that hold us back? Could it be the guilt we carry from our past no longer crushes our spirit?
The problem we have when God is not our portion is that He cannot shape and bless our lives to the fullest because we have pushed Him out of so many places.
Living with God as our portion is all about pushing everything out we have come dependent on for our life, outside of God, to make room for our dependance on Him. It is finding the things we are dependent on and asking God to refocus our dependance on Him. It is finding the areas we are captive to and praying our hearts out for redemption. Living with God as our portion is about taking our focus off the small time we live here on earth and moving it to the greatness of God and the story of His kingdom.
For more see Psalm 119:57 and Psalm 142:5.
Interesting conversation going on at flowerdust.net.
In silence we find ourselves uncomfortable. There is too little going on. Every day, a host of distractions vie for our attention - threatening to take passion, energy and attention from our worship.
This has always been the case.
In the Old Testament the player’s weren’t TV, nice cars or adrenaline rushes - they were idols. Little statues that demanded time, required sacrifice and incited desire.
One of the key players in the Old Testament is the culture of the Philistines. The Philistines were as culturally rich as they were powerful, and controlled much of the Ancient Near East for large periods of history. One of the Philistine’s key gods, if not the key god, was an idol named Dagon. Half fish and half man, Dagon was said to rule over the other Philistine gods and be the source of their harvest each season.
His record in Scripture is intriguing, to say the least:
YHWH totally destroyed Dagon. He declared victory over the idol and completely incapacitated him.
Have the things that take my attention from God been totally destroyed or do they still stand in my temple?
Where do I spend my time? What am I sacrificing for? What desire is the strongest in my life? These places are where I will find my God.
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This post was adapted from my previous blog (I liked it too much to leave it…)
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