Discover the Mystery of Faith: How Worship Shapes Believing
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What if the way we worship isn't just an expression of our faith, but is what shapes our faith?
The Church has believed this about the way we worship and pray together for centuries: The way we worship becomes the way we believe. But if this is true, it’s time to take a closer look at what we say and sing and do each week. Drawing from his own discovery of ancient worship practices, Glenn Packiam helps us understand why the Church made creedal proclamations and Psalm-praying a regular part of their worship. He shares about why the Eucharist was the climactic point of their corporate “re-telling of the salvation story.”
When our worship becomes a rich feast, our faith is nourished and no longer anemic. The more our worship speaks of Christ, the more we enter into the mystery of faith.
Glenn Packiam
Glenn Packiam (Doctor of Theology and Ministry, Durham) is the associate senior pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He is the songwriter of more than fifty worship songs, including "Your Name" and "Mystery of Faith," and the author of several books, including Blessed Broken Given: How Your Story Becomes Sacred in the Hands of Jesus and Discover the Mystery of Faith: How Worship Shapes Believing. He is also a visiting fellow at St. John's College at Durham University and an adjunct professor at Denver Seminary.
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Discover the Mystery of Faith - Glenn Packiam
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FOREWORD
One afternoon I received a call from my friend John Hartley at Integrity Music.
I have a great worship leader, named Glenn Packiam, who is making an album of liturgical songs. Would you be interested in cowriting with him?
John knew I would be more than interested.
I founded and led a nondenominational church that, over a ten-year period, drifted away from an attractional style of worship to one that was more liturgical. We carefully set the prayers and creeds passed down to us by the church fathers to contemporary music. Our sung Eucharist became the summit of our weekly worship. I leaped at the chance to spend time with someone who shared a similar passion.
A few weeks later, Glenn and I met in Nashville. Our mutual hope that the contemporary church would discover the transformational power of the liturgy and Eucharist forged an instant friendship between us.
We also wrote two songs. It was a good day.
As I travel the country, it’s clear that a movement is afoot. Worship leaders are exhausted. The weekly pressure to plan and deliver innovative, seismically moving, crowd-sustaining worship services is unsustainable.
Essential and far-reaching questions are surfacing: is contemporary worship compassing people toward a transfiguring encounter with God or pandering to our culture’s addiction to peak experiences, entertainment, and celebrity? Has the word relevant become code for keep the customer satisfied
? Do services designed around catchy themes address the longings of people in search of a spiritual narrative that will make sense of their lives? Have we become more focused on Lights, Camera, Action,
than on Father, Son, and Holy Spirit
?
More importantly, might reclaiming the liturgical practices and theology of worship of the early church help guide our much-needed course correction?
In this marvelous primer, Glenn Packiam demonstrates how important his voice is in this emerging conversation. In a theologically rich, gracious, yet clear-eyed way, he addresses these questions and many more. It couldn’t be timelier. Anyone who cares about worship and the contemporary church would be wise to read, mark, and learn from its pages.
Ian Morgan Cron,
speaker and bestselling author
CHAPTER 1
A PAUPER’S MEAL
The table was sparse, with only a green knitted circle for a place mat. On it was a porcelain dish bearing the words Do this in remembrance of Me. A large dinner roll sat safely within its borders. A ceramic cup held the grape juice off to the side. As I stood at this table, remembering not to rest my arms on it lest I spill more grape juice, I looked into the faces of the men and women I had come to know as my congregation.
We had just finished sitting in silence, allowing the Spirit to bring to mind the broken places in our hearts. We had then prayed a prayer of confession. On that Sunday, it may have been an adaptation of Psalm 51. Or it may have been the prayer of confession from the Book of Common Prayer. We had just looked at each other in the eyes and announced, as priests in Christ, that God has forgiven our sins in Jesus’s name.
Now, as I stood at the table, about to recite the words that have been said of the bread and the cup countless times over the centuries, it hit me:
I’ve never really stopped leading worship; I’ve just changed where I stand.
My earliest memories of worship music are from early Saturday mornings. My dad, whose conversion to Christ had been radical and beautiful, was convinced that the best way to be a priest to his family was to blast the latest Hosanna! cassette from our living room before the rooster crowed. We lived in the suburbs, so there was no rooster to compete with, but were one to appear, he would have been beaten to the punch. As if the music itself wasn’t loud enough, my father chose to sing along with it, adding a little Eastern vocal slide in the gaps of the melody, rendering the song atonal at best. My sister and I had no chance to sleep in.
I took piano lessons as a boy, and I dreaded them. My disciplined and responsible sister, three years older, mastered the scales and required exam pieces with gusto. I hated practicing, and the teacher frequently rapped my knuckles with a ruler for poor form on the keyboard. Most piano students in Malaysia learned piano from the Associate Board of the Royal School of Music based in London—which is a fancy way of saying that we spent half the year practicing two exam pieces and scales to perform for an examiner who flew in from England, and the other half of the year memorizing theory trivia to pass the theory exam. Royal Pain in the You-Know-What would have been a better name for it.
But I had good teachers who, despite the rulers-on-knuckles bit, worked hard to get me to practice. I did well enough to pass but found no joy in it. (Does a child find joy in anything that requires work?) I wanted to quit music.
Then, when I was ten, my family moved from Malaysia to Portland, Oregon, where my parents went to Bible school. It was there that I became transfixed by worship music
in a church service. We joined a church with a strong emphasis on worship, led by skilled musicians who paid attention to the Spirit’s work. I’m sure all that played a part in my budding love affair with worship music.
But there was also Steve. Steve was a good-looking youth leader in his twenties who was single and highly eligible. Every girl in youth group had a crush on him. You knew because every time he preached, the altar (in a nondenominational church, that’s what you call the front of the church by the stage) would be flooded. By girls. Crying. All hoping Steve would pray for them.
But Steve’s aura went beyond his winsome smile, tan skin, and frosted mullet tips; he could sing! Oftentimes he would get up on the keyboard and belt out a spontaneous song
that made all the girls spontaneously weep.
As a nerdy kid who was the only foreign student in the whole middle school, I adored Steve. If I could be like Steve, I would be cool! The girls would like me! I wouldn’t just be a kid from Malaysia.
Years later, when I found myself standing on the stage of a large arena with thousands of teenagers, leading worship
as part of the Desperation Band, I must have subconsciously felt that I had realized that goal. I was now Steve (I never thought this, but I know I felt something like this). Until a group of pimply-faced teenage girls approached me after the session. I bent down from the edge of the stage, confident that they were going to ask for an autograph—or at least for prayer. They asked, instead, what was wrong. I was confused. What was wrong? Nothing! I’m a rock demigod. What could be wrong?
What do you mean?
I said.
Well, your face on the JumboTron looked so terrified. We thought you were afraid, so we started praying for you.
I am not Steve.
We moved back to Malaysia right after my eighth-grade year, and though I had just been finding my way with friends in Portland, my three years in America gave me near-celebrity status with my peers in Malaysia. This newfound popularity came at the right time for my confidence. When you’re a teenager, confidence plus influence equals leadership. So leadership was