“…worship in the “yet.” The ruins remain visible. The resurrection remains certain. And we stand in between, saying with Job, “yet in my flesh shall I see God,” and with Jesus, “all live unto him.”
Author Archives: Josh Cehulik
Worship Refuses a Kingdom without a Cross
“…all of us face the daily choice between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of self. We are called to the same radical trust. To love enemies. To bless persecutors. To believe that God’s promises are more solid than what we can see. To live as people who already belong to the age to come.”
When Worshipers Call Upon the Lord
Calling upon the Lord isn’t just something we did once when we got saved. It’s the ongoing posture of the Christian life.
Wrestling with the Word Produces Worship
When we wrestle with God’s Word, we’re wrestling with Christ. When we meditate on Scripture, we’re learning Christ. When we persist in prayer, we’re following Christ’s example. When we continue in sound teaching despite opposition, we’re modeling Christ’s faithfulness.
Washed People Worship
washed people worship, “…worshiping people witness, and those who hear the witness enter the water themselves. Then they join the song, and the praise endures forever.”
Rich in Good Works: Worship that Invests in Eternity
We face Ali Hafed’s choice every day. Where will we invest our time, energy, and resources? Will we build our security on what we can accumulate, or on who God is? The scriptures call this choice being “rich in good works” versus being rich in this world. One investment pays eternal dividends. The other leaves us searching in all the wrong places for what we already had within reach.
Worshipping While We Wait
The waiting isn’t wasted time. It’s the space where worship becomes authentic, where faith becomes real, where we learn that God himself is better than anything we’re waiting for him to do.
The Price of Healing in a Broken World
Last week’s tragedy has left many asking hard questions about responsibility, failure, and whether healing is possible when trust has been shattered. These moments force us to confront uncomfortable truths about human nature and our capacity for both good and devastating harm.
Why We Can’t Stop Singing About a Crucifixion
Why did the Cross—an instrument of torture reserved for the worst criminals—become something people couldn’t stop celebrating?
For Love’s Sake I Choose To Appeal: Why True Worship Requires Both Sovereignty and Choice
We cannot worship what is not worthy of worship – God’s sovereignty, authority, creative power, and saving work establish Him as deserving of our complete devotion. However, we cannot truly worship without choosing to worship; forced praise is not genuine praise, but rather a programmed performance.
