I am passionate, purposeful, and persistent in this great endeavor of church security. I was called into this space, and nothing will turn me away from the message I’ve been given:
I will never forget the first time our worship team at New Life Church in Colorado led us through the song, “The Heart of Worship” (by Matt Redman). Our worship leader told us a little bit of the story behind the song and set me up to love it.
Redman was the worship leader in the Soul Survivor Watford Church in Great Britain. They did something very unique in the fall of 1996. Their church was dynamic, youthful and vibrant with all the electronic bells & whistles of an exceptional worship band. But they began to realize the worship service was predictable and mechanical. Almost (as I took it from reading about it) that the worship service itself was being worshipped.
One of the church leaders later said, “we had become connoisseurs of worship instead of participants of it.”
They took all the electronics off the stage, dismantled the band, and Redman even stopped leading for a season. During that season they studied and practiced worship without distraction.
They concluded worship is not a spectator sport; not a product molded by the taste of the consumers. It wasn’t about what they could get out of it; it was all about God.
When they slowly and prayerfully began returning instruments, microphones and people, Redman brought the song with him.
“I’m coming back to the heart of worship,
And it’s all about You, All about You Jesus.
I’m sorry Lord for the thing I’ve made it.
When it’s all about You.
All about you Jesus.”
Think About it
You may need to close your eyes during prayer from time to time to focus on what it’s really all about.

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