we know this holiday fulness fades. The leftovers run out, guests return home, decorations come down, and regular rhythms resume. The Scriptures, however, point to a different kind of fulness—one that continues wave after wave, season after season.
Tag Archives: worship
Worshiping on the Road of Affliction
We follow a Savior who chose affliction over comfort, presence over distance, solidarity over safety.
Worshiping on Our Tiptoes
The blessed hope changes everything because it reframes everything. You’re a watcher, a witness, a herald announcing to others: “I’ve seen the light. Come and see. He’s coming—look!”
The God Who Keeps Singing His Promise
worship arises naturally when God’s people recognize that He remembers His word.
Worshiping Along the Highway of Holiness
The road stretches behind you, completed by Christ. The road extends before you, leading to the King. Walk it with songs and everlasting joy upon your head.
The Mightier One: A Worshiper’s Message
We have news to announce. Someone mightier has come, and we exist to make Him known.
Keeping Watch: The Rhythm of Christian Waiting
The church service you’ll attend this week is preparation for the eternal worship that’s coming. The difference between then and now? The “nearer than when we believed” gap will finally close. The thin veil will tear. The watching will be over because the Watchman will have arrived.
‘Remember Me’: Worshipers Pray for the Kingdom of the Son
The kingdom breaks in through death and resurrection. The king enters his reign by way of the cross. The thief enters the kingdom by way of faith in the crucified king. This is what all the prayers were pointing toward.
Beholding Worship: What Are You Looking At?
We’ve become a culture of beholders who immediately turn what we see into worship and witness. We behold the moment, we worship it by framing it perfectly, and we testify to it by broadcasting it to our followers.
Worshiping in the ‘Yet’ between Job and Jesus
“…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.”
