I have often wondered why, in Paul's Ephesian command to be drunk on the Spirit ("Here, here, I'll drink to that!) that the first means he proffers for acquiring this holy inebriation is by "addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart." That seems like a very loud and public thing to do.
It is ever the nature of us dyed-in-the-wool, conservative, "rightly-dividing" types to be cautious when it comes to the Pentecostal movement. It simply will not do to be excessive, and if one were to throw out a red herring here, it would be in the form of a dog-barking, aisle-storming Benny Hinn circus act (analogous to denouncing literature because Twilight was published). And with our caution we tend to let pendulum's momentum carry us, so that we become very wary of too much talk of this "Holy Ghost," or as Francis Chan calls him, our "forgotten God."
But it is by the Spirit that we can put to death the misdeeds of the body (to steal another Pauline segment), and it is
And it is very interesting the sort of power a good anthem has.
Consider 2 Chronicles 20. Here, the righteous king Jehoshaphat has a host of enemies descending on him, and his first reaction is the right one. He did not call his banners and ride forth immediately to meet the threat, he did not send out spies and backstabbers to infiltrate and rot his enemies from within. No, rather, he "was afraid and set his face to seek the LORD, and proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah." He sought Yahweh and got everyone else to do it too. He prays before God for righteous judgment, and God (ponder this) sends His Spirit to let them know that He knows who is righteous and who is not up in this mess, and He's gonna dispense some holy butt-kicking. So they get the army together go out the next day, and Jehoshaphat " appointed those who were to sing to the LORD and praise him in holy attire, as they went before the army, and say,
"Give thanks to the LORD,
for his steadfast love endures forever."
Do you see what happened there? He sent the singers before the army. Who does that? Surely a good troubadour has a better use than arrow fodder. In a normal battle, if armies clashed with singers between them, the singers would only squish, and contribute nothing to their side. So when does it make sense to send the singers before the army? The answer; when you're not the one doing the fighting. When God is on your side, song becomes a weapon, and singing a part of spiritual warfare.
So sing when your heart dims, when your sins burden you, when He seems far. Sing boisterously and often.
And don't sing Lady Gaga.
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hey brett! so i'm still in tulsa (surprise surprise) and it was intern appreciation sunday a couple of weeks ago...as we tried to get a hold of former interns, jared and i realized that we really didn't even know how to contact you anymore. :) then i rediscovered your blog today and had to smile at God's sovereignty because brother joe preached on jehoshaphat sending the singers into battle for his final intern charge this year! anyway, i'm still putting together former intern updates and we'd love to hear what you're up to these days and what God's been doing in your life. my old gmail (jillian.hazel) is still the account i use if you want to send an update.
ReplyDeleteAwesome, I will so totally email you.
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