Rhythms of Grace: How the Church's Worship Tells the Story of the Gospel
W**G
One of those 10/10 books I wish I read when I first started serving in music ministry
GENRE: Christian ministry / worshipSIZE: 223 pages. Just 10 chapters and 3 Appendices. I read through the whole thing in 2 days, and again more slowly over the course of several weeks.WHAT'S THE BIG IDEA?The gospel is all about worship - once broken by sin - restored in Jesus. Worship, whether scattered or gathered, is all about rehearsing the gospel story, and being shaped by it.Amazingly Mike starts not by defining worship. Instead, for the first 4 chapters he walks the reader through how the Bible describes worship - from Eden, the wilderness, in Israel, and then in Jesus (biblical theology).Chapter 5 is the clincher where Mike unpacks the "Worship 1-2-3″ paradigm he uses to summarise what worship means for the local church (first described in this interview - [...] Basically, worship has one object (the Triune God), two contexts (gathered and scattered), and three audiences (God himself, the gathered church, and the watching world). With this paradigm, Mike shows how many of our disagreements about worship comes from overemphasising one of these aspects. For example:"You'll find that many of the heated battles of the worship wars erupt when these categories get confused. For instance, the well-intentioned seeker-sensitive movement seems to have lost sight of the church as an audience in worship (and a crucial one). Those who would rather lie in bed and watch The Masters on Sunday have lost sight of the call to gather with God's church. Those who compartmentalize their "church" life from their hellish "secular" life forget that they are living sacrifices, and all of life is an act of worship. (p.86)"Chapters 6-8 focuses more on defining and fleshing out gathered worship as spiritual formation, as historically rooted in the story of the church, as an opportunity to rehearse the gospel story (he terms it "rhythms of grace", hence the title). Chapters 9-10 address singing as worship, and the pastoral responsibility of planning and leading worship.The appendices are also helpful as they include sample service orders from a few different churches, a list of recommended resources, and a discussion about audio/sound engineering in gathered worship (with a rocket of an anecdote in it!).EASY TO READ?Yes for me. Mike writes creatively, and spins wonderful prose throughout the book to describe and explain the nature of true worship, and to answer questions about it.If you're not a worship leader or church musician some of the terms and references may be a bit new, as Mike assumes the reader is aware of things like "worship wars" and other in-house concepts. But he does try to explain each new term as it comes up, and his storytelling style is definitely easier to digest than the more academic styles of Bryan Chappell, DA Carson and David Peterson.WHAT I APPRECIATEDI finished this book loving Jesus - our true worship leader - more, and inspired to press on in retelling the gospel story when we gather as a church.Reading the first four chapters of the book is biblical theology at its breathtaking best, imaginatively told and left me (numerous times) grateful for God's redemptive plan throughout history. If that's where the book ended, it would already have been a worthwhile read!When tackling more contentious issues of musical style, sound, vision etc. Mike has a gracious tone coupled with a rapier wit that leaves you embarrassed to disagree with him, and appreciative of the wisdom he's curated from many helpful thinkers. I particularly appreciated:- his great explanation of John 4:24′s worship in Spirit and in Truth"- his critique of the Temple Model of worship planning (leading people into the throne room of God in music)- his appeal for worship planning and leading to be seen as a pastoral task.- his appeal for repetition and using non-singing elements in gathered worship (e.g. prayers, creeds, readings)Most churches lack any real theology for worship, and most church leaders don't know why the church is gathering, and what the goal is. Mike gives a concise yet thorough primer, rooted in Scripture and history, to answer all this. He doesn't answer every question in-depth, and you don't get a stand-alone, one-sentence definition of worship. But after reading this book you'll definitely understand worship from a more biblical, gospel-centred, historically-rooted and theologically grounded perspective.WHO I'D RECOMMEND IT TO:Anyone remotely interested in what we should do when we gather as Christians, especially worship leaders. This is one of those 10 out of 10 books that I wish I had read when I first started out serving in music ministry. I'd rate it even higher than books like Worship Matters and Worship by the Book, just because I think it's a more accessible read and is so gospel-saturated.NOTABLE QUOTESOn worship:"The story of worship as told in the Bible defines worship in a radically different and surprising way. It's a story that surprises us because we discover that it doesn't primarily feature us. The star of the story is God, who is at the center of all worship but is also at its origins in history and its origins in our hearts. The story of worship (like the story of the gospel) is all about God.""The story of God and Israel is the story of God and us. The bleary hope sung by the patriarchs became a tearful slave song in Egypt, and in the deserts on the other side of the Red Sea another movement of the song began. "God lives with Israel" was the title of the movement. Its rhythms were carved into the flesh of lambs and goats, punctuated by a river of blood flowing out of the temple and shouts of "glory, hallelujah" as the divine presence filled the tabernacle.""Like the beautiful movement of Psalm 22, the longing of the patriarchs, the weary blues of the wilderness, and the tear-filled lament of the exiles find themselves resolving into a glorious celebration hymn in the life, work, and song of Jesus. That's the story of worship: God creates, sin corrupts, but Christ redeems. And all of us get to sing along."On gathered worship:"Harold Best puts it like this: "We do not go to church to worship. But as continuing worshipers, we gather ourselves together to continue our worship but now in the company of brothers and sisters.""""Speaking the truth in love" is not so much about interpersonal boldness as it is about a community that shares a confession, a unified expression of faith in the God who saved them. The gathered body teaches the Word and proclaims it together; we speak the truth in love as we sing, read the Scriptures, and remember the gospel together.""...the gathering is unique not as an encounter with God (it is that, though God's presence is a constantly available comfort and help to the Christian); rather it's unique because it is an encounter with the people of God, filled with the Spirit of God, spurring one another along in the mission of God. Christ in me meets Christ in you.""We gather because we have work to do. Ekklēsia emphasizes the work of the people. We gather to do our work, which is to say, we gather to remember, to encourage, and to spur one another on."On musical styles and preferences:"So let's all acknowledge this fact: for better or worse, our worship, regardless of our tradition or musical style or culture, is shaping the hearts and minds of our congregations. We are always teaching, shaping, and painting a picture of what the Christian life looks like. It's in this light that we should evaluate our gatherings. What are we saying about "normal" Christianity? How do our services reflect the way the gospel changes our perspective on the world? What are we saying to those who suffer? To the poor? The rich? Those who are like us? Those who are unlike us?""My friend Isaac Wardell... asks whether we think of gathered worship as being more like a concert hall or a banquet hall. If it's a concert hall, we show up as passive observers and critics, eager to have the itches of our preferences and felt needs scratched. A banquet hall, by contrast, is a communal gathering. We come hungry and in community, ready to participate and share the experience with one another."On worship wars:"Whoever dubbed the debate over musical style a "worship war" failed to realize that worship is always a war. The declaration that there is one God, that his name is Jesus, and that he has died, has risen, and will come again is an all-out assault on the saviors extended at every level of culture around us.""Every hymn of praise is a little anti-idolatry campaign. . . . When we sing "Praise God, from whom all blessings flow," we are also saying "Down with the gods from whom no blessings flow."""Today, when many worship services are reduced to preaching and music, it becomes very easy to equate music with worship--and that's a dangerous slope to park your car on. If music is worship, then when you mess with someone's musical preferences, you threaten their access to God. No wonder the debates become so heated.""We need to remember that the hymn tradition, with its strict melodies and unity of voice, is but one stream of congregational song. There are other cultural traditions and other ways of participating in singing with the church.""The rock ensemble is part and parcel of our culture. It's how people celebrate, and I don't think it's going away any time soon. So go ahead and use it, but don't let it rule the gathering. Pull the band out for a song or two, leave choruses open so that voices can be heard. Train your musicians to restrain, restrain, restrain. If your church isn't singing, you're doing it wrong."VERDICT: Must read for pastors, worship leaders, musicians, anyone involved on Sunday morning. Good to read for all Christians.
M**L
We learn to honor by God by how we worship together
This book is for the worship leader, for the pastor, and for elders who shepherd the flock of God. It is also for members who want to understand what is supposed to happen in congregational worship.Cosper provides an excellent introduction into the wise art of corporate worship. He tells us that we gather to be reminded of God's grace in the Gospel by how we worship together. That's right -- not in what we sing or what we preach, but how we worship. Cosper has taken a wealth of the proven wisdom of history and argued for congregational worship to be formed so that participants are shaped by the Gospel.He starts with four chapters that scan the storyline of history: Triune God, Creation, Fall, Law, Christ, Consummation. These chapters sing. They should not be skipped.He argues that this is the story in which believers live. And that this is the story which God reminds us of when we gather to worship. We do not come to have God fit into our story, but for God to write us in as actors in his great purpose of redemption.What follows is a careful argument for ordered congregational worship. He is fully aware of the diverse prejudices and objections that are offered, and answers them all in a compelling and gracious way. He walks through some of the issues of the worship wars, the seeker service, and the contextualization of worship for our day. He rightly insists that how we worship shapes the lives of the congregation. He insists as well that pastors are responsible not merely to sing good lyrics and preach good sermons but to make sure that the order of worship forms people with the Gospel shape.This book cuts against the grain of expressive individualism, "hang out" membership, and light show worship experiences. It moves us past stylistic debates. It looks behind worship as catharsis to worship as a pattern of living in the Gospel, learning to draw near to God through the true worship leader and sacrifice, Jesus Christ. He thinks that when people leave the congregational worship time, they should leave both encouraged and formed by the liturgy. We learn prayer and worship by practice, and the order of worship is practice not just experience.I think every pastor should ask -- what does how we worship teach our people? Does it teach them to pray? Does it make personal worship easier by giving a form or less accessible unless that have a powerful band? Does it orient them to God, his greatness and glory, their own standing before him, the glorious hope of the Gospel, access to God in prayer, the preached word and sacraments?This work is accessible -- a great introduction to be followed up with the reading he suggests. I found the examples of liturgy at the end most helpful. They show that proven wisdom in worship leading can be faithfully expressed in contemporary forms.
D**R
Great book on the heart and foundations of worship.
Cosper does a great job of laying the ground work for both understanding the spiritual discipline of worship and providing tools and direction for the worship leader.
K**S
Book
Great Product
R**S
Helpful Book
Rhythms of Grace, by Mike Cosper, was helpful as I learn more about worship. I thought the best and most helpful part of the book was found in chapter 8, Liturgy, and the Rhythms of Grace. I loved this chapter because it walked through the elements of a worship service, showing why each is important. Cosper also gave practical advice on how to do each part during a service. The element that challenged me the most was the confession and lament part. I have only been in one church where I feel like this was done well. It is easy to skip over this part in a service because it takes too long or it is not inviting to non-Christians. Cosper said, “What the church needs isn’t empty promises of success in exchange for faith and tithing, but a gospel message that assures us that suffering is purposeful and that we have a God who is present in our suffering” (132). If we skip the confession and lament part of the service, we can give the impression that life as a Christian should be one of no pain and if you are experiencing pain, it is your fault and you need to be better. This is not the gospel message and we need to communicate this during each worship service.
C**Y
An accessible introduction to the theology of worship
I read this with some of the worship leaders from my church. It's a solid and accessible overview of the theology of worship, pitched for those involved with leading congregational worship.Cosper retells the big story of Scripture with worship as the lens, then works through some of the key patterns, insights and discussions from church history. Each chapter has substance enough to prompt reflection, but the overall pace is brisk, and someone new to theology shouldn't get bogged down. Towards the end there are lots of points of practical application.Much will be familiar here for anyone who's already done some reading in the area, but chapters like the 'Worship One, Two, Three' have a clarity that elevates the book a good way beyond merely a beginner text. (I've been leading worship for many years and there was plenty that edified me!)This is now one of my go-to recommendations for people looking for a one-stop primer in the theology of worship.
K**E
Great book, incredibly helpful!
I've been thinking about issues of worship within the church for a while and have become rather confused by it all.Mike Cosper writes both sensitively and challengingly about these things, starting by describing what the subtitle says,'How the church's worship tells the story of the gospel', going through the gospel story and showing how the concept of 'worship' fits in with each part of it.He then considers how we can adapt what we learn there in our worship today.Although it has some good specific advice for pastors and worship leaders, I don't fall into either of those categories and I would recommend it for any disciple who want to get a deeper grasp on the issues.
D**E
A good read which a group of us shared on a ...
A good read which a group of us shared on a fortnightly basis. Some chapters more relevant than others but that will be different for everyone who reads this very helpful book.
J**N
it is hugely worth reading to help you form good solid reasoning
This is a really challenging book for anyone involved in worship music. Even if you don't agree with absolutely everything Mike says, it is hugely worth reading to help you form good solid reasoning.
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