Praise: Sometimes It’s A Sacrifice

Praise: Sometimes It’s A Sacrifice

I’ll praise when outnumbered
Praise when surrounded
‘Cause praise is the water
My enemies drown in”

Praise, Elevation Worship

15 Through Jesus, therefore, let us continually offer to God a sacrifice of praise—the fruit of lips that openly profess his name. 16 And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.”

Hebrews 13:15-16: NIV

It used to be, in the Old Testament, that a sacrifice would inevitably cost something its life.

The first thing that comes to mind is the two Shofars sitting in my living room. I have one made from a Sabel horn, and another, made by a dear friend who has since passed on to be with the Lord, made from the horn of a seemingly large Kudu.

These are instruments of praise and warfare.

In Ancient times these horns would serve to sound a warning or signal an attack.

As a ritual instrument the Hebrew peoples used it to announce the New Moon, sound the Sabbath and celebrate the anointing of a king, It was a call to worship and rejoicing.

At Rosh Hashana every year the Shofar is sounded to call the Jewish people to spiritual reawakening and revival.

It is a powerful instrument with some very powerful connotations attached to it.

At the Sinai Revelation in Exodus 19 we read that the coming of the Lord was accompanied by thunder, lightning, fire and smoke – but also the loud blast of a trumpet that made the people tremble.

The Psalmist writes that God is enthroned, triumphantly, amidst the loud shouts of His people and the blasting of the trumpets. (Psalm 47).

And the trumpet – made from the horn of a ram – is the product of sacrifice.

A life was given for the worship to sound.

The Sacrifice of Jesus upon the Cross, much like the blowing of the shofar, is a call to worship.

We are called to worship Christ, not just by paying lip service, but by living a life worthy of the one He gave.

We are called to follow in kind by laying our lives down upon the altar of His love.

One of the definitions of sacrifice is to give up something valued for other considerations. We are called to give up the things we value and value Him above all else – give what He considers valuable priority in our lives.

This is what true worship is – it’s not a song or a reading on a Sunday morning – it goes far beyond. It is a lifestyle.

We have often made very arbitrary distinctions between praise and worship – but in a lot of cases they are the exact same thing. Praise is an expression of admiration, reverence, respect and gratitude towards another.

When the Shofar sounds it often sounds like crying or wailing.

Even in our darkest days we are called to worship. God is worthy of our praise and our adoration no matter what it is we are going through. And often this is where praise is a sacrifice.

When we worship God in our crying and our wailing – when in sorrow we turn to song instead of despondency.

We are often surrounded by situations and circumstances. We often feel outnumbered – overwhelmed – but in all these things, if we can adopt a posture of praise, we will see Jesus come in our situation.

I have suffered from clinical depression for a very long time, and on my bad days – when I don’t even feel like getting out of bed – the best thing I can do is grab my guitar and sing my love to the Lord. The best thing I can do is get up and go and love my neighbour – as the author of Hebrews says – to do good and share with others.

And when we do this, when we carry the light of our salvation out to others, we see the light of Christ shine all the brighter in our own lives.

The depression lifts. The darkness dissipates.

And this often feels like a sacrifice. What the carnal mind and body wants in that moment is a pity party. I want to wallow in it. I want to hide in my cave. I want to bewail my situation.

The last thing on my mind when something horrible happens is to praise God, much less to go do good to others.

But when we adopt the posture of praise even in our darkest days and make this sacrifice of praise we will see God enthroned amidst the loud shouts of our hearts and the sounding of the trumpets.

When we adopt this posture of perpetual praise we will see God enthroned amidst the loud shouts of our hearts and the sounding of the trumpets – and your bad days will seem less and less – as your focus shifts from staring into the abyss towards looking up towards and beholding the beauty of His grace.

God is worthy of our adoration and worship no matter how we are feeling – and when we make the sacrifice of praise, even in the midst of our misery, we will see God turning graves into gardens as He revives, reawakens and restores us.

Prayer: Lord, help me praise You in the storm today. Give me the wisdom to set my eyes upon You. Let me not look to the left, nor to the right. Do not let my feelings come between us, oh Lord, for You are worth more than my feelings – You deserve my praise and my love on my good days and my worst days. You deserve all of me – whether on the mountain or in the valley. Let me rejoice in hope even when I feel hopeless. Open the eyes of my heart Lord and help me see that there is no shadow of turning with You – you are unchanging and eternal – and though my feelings might be fickle, Your promises are trusted and true. You have promised to never leave me nor forsake me. Let me dwell in the house of the Lord forever, postured to praise, no matter what my situation might be – be enthroned in my life. In the Mighty Name of Jesus. Amen.

Highlands: Worship Devotional

Highlands: Worship Devotional

“In the highlands and the heartache
You’re neither more or less inclined
I would search and stop at nothing
You’re just not that hard to find…”
Highlands: Song of Ascents, Hillsong

7 Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. 8 Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. 9 Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. 10 Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up.”

                                     James 4:7-10:

Over and over we hear this promise in the Bible – scattered throughout scripture – and apt in every season: IF YOU SEEK ME YOU SHALL FIND ME.

It is easy for us to think of God as a ‘far-away’ God – like a Wizard of Oz type character sitting behind a curtain pulling levers and pushing buttons. I mean, for much of the Old Testament that is exactly what Israel understood – that God was behind the curtain.

Inaccessible to us. Off limits.

But the reality is that God is the God of nearby and all-around.

We see Him revealed in Creation all around us. Richard Rohr goes as far as to call Creation the first incarnation – God revealing Himself to us in a physical form. We see God in the strength of the mountains, the roar of the ocean and the splendour of the lilies.

We hear His praise in the singing of the trees of the forest and the whisper of the wind. (Psalm 96).

He is all around us – if only we were to open our eyes and look. If only we were to listen. If only we were to consider the lilies.

The reality is that God is the God of nearby and all-around.

His desire from the very beginning has been to dwell in our midst – to walk with us in the Garden, to be a part of our lives.

We see this over and over again in Scripture. This pattern – but for some reason humanity struggles to grasp it. We struggle to take a hold of it.

God wants to be God on the mountain and in the valley. He wants to sit with you under the fig tree and walk with you on the water.

God wants to be involved in the everyday nitty gritty of our lives. He wants to saturate and soak every fiber of our being, our coming and our going with His presence. His blueprint is and has always been relationship.

As humans we have a built in need for relationship. We are made in the image of our Father – He longs for relationship with us.

But every relationship is a two-way street.

In the story of the Prodigal Son we see that when the son once lost returned home his Father was waiting. Standing there – looking out.

The Father is waiting for His children to come home. He is already there. It is time that we show up.

God is not a God of far away. He is not an absent Father. He is the God of nearby and all around.

We are the ones who are far away. We distance ourselves from God.

It is time that we come home. It is time that we show up.

And it starts with us today resolving to do so. It starts with that decision to seek the Lord. It starts with taking the first step out of our situation of separation towards God.

“If you seek Me you will find me.” (Deut. 4:29, Jer 29:13, Matt 7:7, Isa 55:6-7).

The Lord calls us to desire relationship with Him and pursue it. He says: “You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.”

The irony is that the moment we become willing to climb every mountain and ford every stream – the moment we become willing to cross every river – the moment we become willing to step out of our boat to find Him, taking that first step of faith – we will find that He has been right in front of us all along.

Prayer: Lord, as I draw near in my brokenness today, draw near to me with Your wholeness. As I draw near in my mourning, Lord, draw near with Your joy. As I draw near, imperfect and hungry, come and flood me with Your perfect love. I repent today and renounce the things that have kept me distant from You. Through Your Holy Spirit, Lord, draw me deeper into Your Word. Call me to prayer. Set a fire here in my soul. Awaken a hunger that cannot be satisfied – a longing after You. In Jesus Name. Amen.

Hungry: Worship Devotional

Hungry: Worship Devotional

Hungry I come to YouFor I know You satisfy

Hungry, Vineyard Worship

“For the bread of God is the bread that comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” “Sir,” they said, “always give us this bread.” Then Jesus declared, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.”

John 6:33-3, NIV

Many of us have reached adulthood and have been privileged enough to never know real physical hunger. The hunger of not having eaten in days. The kind of hunger that leads to emaciation, fainting and convulsions.

Spiritually, however, most of us are in that state today. 

The kind of hunger that consumes and keeps consuming like a black hole.

The kind of hunger that no amount of drugs, sex, food, entertainment, money, fame or viral cat videos can satisfy.

I remember in our Gynecology and Obstetrics course at the Medical Academy, we talked about the cravings that pregnant women get – and how sometimes the cravings were misrepresented by the brain.

For example, a mom-to-be might crave ice or even sand – but eating these things will have negative consequences for the baby as it doesn’t satisfy the nutritional requirement being sent to the brain. What the baby really needs at that stage is IRON – so iron-rich foods or a supplement would be a better choice. Eating sand or ice would leave the baby with an iron deficiency instead.

And so it is with our spiritual lives. Our innermost craves reconciliation and communion with God. Our inner self knows that only Jesus can satisfy the longing and the thirsting of the soul – but the carnal mind misinterprets and misrepresents this craving – this hunger – and leads us down the path to deficiency instead.

Only Jesus can comfort, heal and restore. Only Jesus through the work of His Holy Spirit in us can satisfy.

Psalm 84:2: My soul yearns, even faints, for the courts of the LORD; my heart and my flesh cry out for the living God.

This is where we find ourselves today – right now – in this moment. Hungry, thirsty and trying to fill that hole deep inside with all kinds of things instead of turning to Jesus.

He is the Bread of Heaven. Those who partake in Him will never hunger again.

Jesus is calling.

He is saying, “come and drink the Living Water, come and thirst no more. Come and eat the Bread of Heaven – come and be satisfied!”

No more eating sand.

No more eating dirt.

Come and be filled. 

Pray with me: Lord, I am hungry, and I am thirsty. I realize today that nothing in this world can fill that hole except for You. It is a God-shaped hole. Lord, come and fill me. Come and restore, come and revive me. Jesus, come and satisfy the longing of my soul. Come and heal me of my loneliness, my emptiness – come and find me again. Come and fill me Lord with Your love, Your goodness and Your grace as I swing wide the doors of my heart to You anew today. Let me hunger and thirst for righteousness and live a life pleasing to You. In Jesus name. Amen.