Author name: Nathan George

Bringing Service Back to Worship

On the cover page of our weekly bulletin we print the words “A service of worship.” In the wider church culture we have essentially dropped the word service, or replaced it with something to do with experience. That’s unfortunate. Rarely would anyone object to the idea of service. We serve our communities, families, organizations, etc. […]

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What Should We Sing?

Those charged with the glorious task of planning for corporate worship must take seriously their responsibility to think carefully about the words we sing. They must also think critically about the tunes we use. Often, this means vetting newer tunes which have not been proven by the passage of time and may be problematic because

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Together

This past weekend was a gift. It was one of making music together, eating together, and worshipping together. I believe the process of creating, sharing a meal, and giving thanks to God is part of the gift of iron sharpening iron and helps us be more Christlike in our relationships. All this happened both with

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Turn it up! Turn it down!

It’s rare to have a conversation about church sound systems that doesn’t include some frustration. Sound systems are clearly a blessing and a curse. They enable the sound source to be heard, and yet they can make it unbearable. A post on sound could go on and on, but I will make just one comment

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The Freedom of the Regulative Principle

During the Reformation of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the church worked to find a biblical principle that would guide the way we worship. Two main approaches have become common. The normative principle of worship (typically practiced by Catholics, Anglicans, and Lutherans) says that whatever is not prohibited in the Scriptures is appropriate, while the

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Where’s the Joy?

Recently, I visited a church which meets in a wonderful historic building. The architecture was beautiful, the music was well executed, and even the sound was decent. Even better, the content was great, the preaching was solid, and the final hymn fit well with the scriptures. All in all, it was very good. Unfortunately, it

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