Archive for February, 2009

Trying Something New at Harmony Church

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Over the next couple of Sundays, we’ll be trying something a bit different. Here’s the rundown:

This Sunday will actually be a Sunday that is tweeted about…live. We’re hoping that people in the congregation will take out their iPhones (we have a relatively young congregation) and Blackberries and tweet the service live. We’ve set up a dedicated site for this here. If you want to show up and live-tweet, just do that. Use the hashtag #harmonychurch so that others can read what you have to say! You can follow Harmony Church on twitter here, and you can follow me on twitter here. This could go pretty well…or be awful publicity…depending on how mean people decide to be :) .

Next Sunday, our worship leader (Pablo) will be out of town for marital counseling. Instead of bringing in another worship leader as we will be doing later in the month and next month, we will be having a pure liturgical service…no music. There will be a call to worship, a reading response, a call to confession, a confessional prayer, a reading, the whole 9 yards. It will be WAY out of our comfort zones (including my own), but it’s important that we remember that worship is not a Christian term for music, but that rather it is the act of attributing everything to God and keeping Him central to all things…including a church service.

Should be fun over the next couple of weeks!

Before the Throne of God Above

Friday, February 27th, 2009

This past Sunday, we sang the hymn “Before the Throne of God Above”. I took a moment to go through the lyrics, because they are so vital to what we believe at Harmony. If you want to hear a great version of the song, check it out below.

What I Mean By Reformed

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Originally posted here, found on Matt Adair’s blog (here). I wholly agree with the following statements.

When I say am I am Reformed I mean:

I marvel at God’s holiness, that he is independent, pure, good, and utterly beyond me.

I glory in God’s goodness, that he should save a wretch like me, totally undeserving, bent toward evil in all my faculties.

I rejoice in God’s sovereignty, that he chose to save me for the praise of his glory, not owing to anything I did or would do or any potential in me.

I find my hope in the second Adam who gives me life and imputed blessing, triumphing over the first Adam’s imputed death and curse.

I am grateful for God’s power by which he caused me, without my cooperation, to be born again and enabled me to believe his promises.

I take comfort in God’s all-encompassing providence, that nothing happens to me by chance, but all things–prosperity or poverty, health or sickness, giving or taking away–are sent to me by my loving heavenly Father.

I praise God for his mercy, shown to me chiefly on the cross where his Son died, not just to make a way for me to come to him, but died effectually in my place such that my sins, my guilt, and my punishment all died in the death of Christ.

I find assurance in God’s preserving grace believing with all my might that nothing–not even myself–can separate me from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord which he began in me and will see through to completion.

I rest secure in God’s covenant love, depicted in both the Old and the New Testament, showing me the incomparable blessings of knowing that the Lord is my God and I am his beloved son, that God is a God to me and my children after me.

I stand amazed in the justifying grace of God whereby I am acquitted of all my sins and clothed with new garments in the presence of my King and Judge, not because of anything I have done but only because of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus in which I trust.

I delight in the glory of God and in God’s delight for his own glory which brings me, on my best days, unspeakable joy, and on all my other days, still gives purpose and order to an otherwise confusing and seemingly random world.

I cherish the word of God because it is all true, because I see Christ in it, and because its rules and precepts are for my good,

I rely on the power of the Holy Spirit to illumine my mind, convict me of sin, and make me holy as God is holy.

When I say I am Reformed I mean that God is the center of the universe and I am not. I mean that I am a worse sinner than I imagine and God is a greater Savior than I ever thought possible. I mean that the Lord is my righteousness and the Lord alone is my boast. By Reformed I mean all this, and most of all that my only comfort in life and in death is that I am not my own but belong, in body and in soul, to my faithful Savior Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory forever and ever, amen.