Discovering the Church, the Culture, and the Truth
May 19th, 2009

Where are we leading?

I met with my mentors, some of the teachers in my life, today and one of them brought a few things to light in my life that I thought should be addressed in a public forum… since much of the road I’ve taken to get where I am was in public forum this just seemed right.

He said something like this: Micah, you lead people. But is your main concern leading them towards Christ or away from other things?

Let me break that down. As you well know, if you’re a faithful reader of this blog (hi mom), I’ve run numerous posts on what I would call impurities in the church, heresies, etc. The very self reflective question I have to ask myself is “am I so concerned with showing people how wrong this pastor or this author is that I forget that the much bigger goal is to show them how great Jesus is?”

I fear the answer… for the most part in the past few months has been… yes.

Does this mean that I’m not going to call people out or attempt to purify the DNA of the Body? No. But it does mean that I do believe relaying Christ’s love is much more important than relaying His disapproval. Blogs are especially not the ideal place to discuss the impurities in the Church. If that is my means of communicating the speck I find in my brother’s eye, then I am doing exactly what I criticize him for doing: publicly generalizing and criticizing the body of Christ and using Him as the excuse to do so.

Yes, there are problems that need to be addressed. Yes, churches and pastors need to be held accountable for the way they present Christ. But so do I. And until I make leading people towards Jesus central, rather than leading them away from the flaws of man, I am but an infant in my understanding of the gifts of prophesy and teaching.

May 19th, 2009

Tell your story, shape your story

I’m  a mass media major that loves a good story and loves to talk about what God’s doing, so Nick Charalambous’s article about story-making was a must read that I just wanted to pass on. I hope to see more about this, a little more in depth in the future.

And to see one way I think this looks, check out the stories coming from the Radius community in Greenville.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Media, The Culture | No Comments » | Tags: , ,
May 18th, 2009

Worship leadership 101: planning a set

Dr. Duncan recently posed the question on his blog: “can we use just anything in worship?” In this article, as well as others, he addresses secular, and even further, completely inappropriate songs being used in a worship service.

At this moment I would like to dig a little deeper into this initial question and at the same time, look at the broader scope of how a worship leader plans a musical worship set. This stems from my 3 years in experience of worship leading, two years of doing it wrong and learning from it, observations of scriptural worship, and my conversations with other worship leaders. So, for what it’s worth, here’s the very little wisdom I have to offer, and much more that I am restating that I have learned from others.

First and foremost: every song must communicate the gospel well.

This is such an important point and many… probably most worship leaders miss and I myself just recently learned. The function of worship is to bring glory to God. The best way to do this is to look to scripture to see how it’s done. All of the psalms model this. Depravity, brokenness, salvation in Christ Jesus resulting in hope and joy from the Lord.

This of course, immediately rules out all secular music. The excuse that it is making a point for the service is not only an inadequate excuse, but is really just downright ignorant of the Word, oblivious of the calling of worship, and shows severe lack in the faith that the Gospel can communicate in its own merit.

Beyond just secular songs, this also rules out a large number of worship songs and even hymns. It started in the 90s when Contemporary Christian Music (CCM, it’s an organization actually, not just a title) realized that worship was a big hit. Ever since, mediocre artists have been substituting Jesus’ name into bland love songs, overproducing them, and selling the sheet music for loads of money. The result is an influx of shallow, theologically incorrect, trite songs void of any substance. Somewhere in the mix we have Michael W. Smith and a dozen others focusing worship on the worshiper, singing Jesus

“took the fall and thought of me above all”

which does not at all hold up to scripture!

“For my name’s sake I defer my anger, for the sake of my praise I restrain it for you, that I may not cut you off.” - Isaiah 48:9

Communicate the gospel. That is the worship pastor’s (just like any other pastor’s) first and foremost goal. That requires a sound judgement, theological discernment, and sound doctrine.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, Music, The Church, Worship | 12 Comments » | Tags: ,
May 17th, 2009

Mission trip to India

So as some of you know, and many of you don’t, I’m leaving at the end of this week to go to India for the summer. I will be in the country for about two months. In that time I will be staying in the Chamba area (Northern India), living with shepherds. and spreading the Gospel. I leave May the 23rd and I will be back on July 13th (just in time to see Transformers II).

Since I will be in a very rural area, I’m not sure how much communication I will have internationally. However, the Mission Board has actually made it a requirement that we blog about our trip as ofter as possible.

Unfortunately, due to the mentality of the area we will be staying and so not to endanger the ministry of the long-term missionaries we will be working with, we cannot blog blatantly about Christ. Since this site is already flooded with intensely interesting and valuable Christian thoughts, I will be unable to use this particular blog. Yes, the Micah Taylor blog will not be getting much attention for two months. I know, sad.

I have, however, set up another blog where I will be journaling my journies in India. I will post later this week about the particular “code-language” of sorts that I will be using there (ie. “my father”=”God”).

I’m hoping to finish up transcribing my last few days from the Luke 10 Project before I leave, so I’ll be flooding this blog this week. Don’t worry, I’ll be back soon enough with the sickening cynicism (realism) and dashing intelligence you all crave soon enough. In the mean time, keep me in your prayers as well as the rest of my team. Thank you.

Grace and Peace to all,
Micah Taylor

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity, India, Missions | 1 Comment » | Tags: , , ,
May 13th, 2009

Furtick sticks foot in mouth… yet again

This is ironic: a “pastor” blogging slanderously about slanderous bloggers.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Ramblings, The Church | 3 Comments » | Tags: ,
May 9th, 2009

Spiritual discipline of service: part 2 - Humility

So it is humility that is fostered and fed by service. Humility produces true service. Richard Foster lists the the characteristics of true service

  • comes from a relationship with the divine Other
  • finds it almost impossible to distinguish the large from the small service
  • rests contented in hiddenness
  • is free of the need to calculate results
  • is indiscriminate in its ministry
  • ministers simply and faithfully because there is need
  • can serve by waiting in silence
  • builds community

Jesus portrayed all of these while walking the earth. Driscoll sates:

it is God’s love and Jesus’ example that compel us to humbly serve in love

True service comes from humility, and in serving with a true heart, humility is produced.

The opposite danger of humility in service is pride in being recognized. Service that is concerned with extrinsic rewards and seeks to draw attention to itself is self-righteous and displeasing to God. Any righteousness done for show and even that done to display holiness is self-righteous.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity | No Comments » | Tags: ,
May 4th, 2009

Spiritual discipline of service: part 1 - Jesus as a servant

Service is an outward discipline that flows from inward humility. Service is the product of a heart that seeks to lower itself in order to lift up the Father. Jesus was the complete example of service in that he was the perfect example of humility.

Mark Driscoll, in his article Spiritual Disciplines: Service, states;

“Service that is done in secret without the pursuit of human praise reminds us of how Jesus faithfully served us during His humble life on the earth.”

It is true that throughout Jesus’ life we see numerous cases of His service towards mankind. Mark 10:45 says “the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve.” Jesus’ highest claim was not that he was God come to earth as a ruler or king, but rather that He was God coming as a servant. Jesus did more than just speak grand words of instruction; He actually lived out his words by humbling himself and serving others. The most blatant display of this is when Jesus washes His disciples feet (John 13:1-20). He was their elder, their Rabbi, and their God. He was clearly the only one among them who had any claim to power, and yet He humbled Himself to wash their feet.

In His display of humility and service, Jesus completely changed mankind’s perception of true power and leadership. Jesus set one of the qualifications of being a leader as being a servant. Jesus tells a large crowd full of prideful people “whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave” (Matthew 20:26-27). While we often look to be exalted for our humble efforts and focus on our selves, Jesus broke down the walls of self-seeking-sacrifice.

In his book Celebration of Discipline, Richard Foster states that service calls us to

“experience the many little deaths of going beyond ourselves… to the mundane, the ordinary, the trivial”

Jesus set the example of humble service by serving the very least in the shadows, not the most grand in the spotlight.

by Micah Taylor | Posted in Christianity | No Comments » | Tags: ,
May 2nd, 2009

The Church [R]evolution Doccumentary: Clip 2

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by Micah Taylor | Posted in Film, The Church | 2 Comments » | Tags: , ,













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