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January's Promise (by John Chisum)
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John Chisum

About John Chisum
John Chisum is a well known worship leader, conference speaker, recording artist and the founder of Worship4Life and Firm Foundation Ministries. John is a regular contributor to PraiseCharts in the Worship Articles and Resources section.
 
Booking Info
For booking worship concerts, retreats, and Worship4Life Weekends with John Chisum, please contact Kortland Fuqua at Kortland@Worship4Life.org for scheduling information, or call John at 251-414-5832. Further information is also available at Worship4Life.org.
 
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I love January. I start looking forward to it by the middle of December even before we’ve all finished with trees, shopping, gift-giving, turkey and dressing, and pecan pie. For as much as I love celebrating Christ’s birth in December, there’s something exciting to me about starting out clean, starting out new again in January. It may sound a little silly, but it’s easy for me to imagine a giant cosmic clock that strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve and then we all get to start over a minute later! January just feels fresh to me, even if the warmer breezes of spring are still three or four months away and a bit of snow is still lingering on the ground outside. I seem to have some of my most creative writing days in January. I don’t think that it’s just because my birthday is in January (hint-hint!), though the annual reminder of my mortality does make me want to be as productive as possible in this New Year until the next one rolls around. January seems to remind me that God loves newness and new things, too.

The psalmist celebrated the new song God had put in his mouth (Psalm 40:3). Isaiah prophesied “a new heaven and a new earth” (Isaiah 65:17). Jeremiah told of the “new covenant” God would make (Jeremiah 31:31) and Jesus Himself inaugurated God’s new covenant with us in the cup of His shed blood (Luke 22:20). The Apostle Paul carried this theme of newness into almost everything that he wrote and newness is especially evident in texts such as 2 Corinthians 5:17, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!” God, in His eternal changelessness, delights in doing new things!

The seasons of the year are themselves reminders of God’s character, nature, and attributes, just as all of nature glorifies Him by revealing His unceasing creativity. Though He is without the tiniest “shadow of turning” (James 1:17)), each season reveals new dimensions of His ineffable nature, as if He doles out to us just what we are able to take in of Who and What He is as the awesome Creator. The natural evidences of God in His creation are delightful to us, if we’ll just pay the slightest attention to His splendid displays of sunrise, sunset, the ebb and flow of the great oceans, sun, moon, stars, and the four quarters of winter, spring, summer, and fall. Though January is still deeply embedded in winter, its promise reaches down to the taproots of nature itself and even to the deepest places of our humanity – we can almost smell newness beneath the frozen earth if we try – we can sense somehow that the treacherous beauty of winter will once again give way to the warmth and new birth of spring. January is a turning toward spring, a change of step that leads from one thing to another. January is a promise of the newness that we long for in our hearts.

Of all the months, worship may be most like January. Worship is a turning of our hearts from the staleness of our own seasons to God’s ever-springing presence. Worship is the turning of our steps from the worn paths of our sins, depression, and disease into His forgiveness, grace, and endless joy. Worship lifts our hearts from the circumstances we face to His beautiful face, the face of the Father who loves us. The promise of worship is the promise of winter’s change – January’s promise – a change from glory to glory. “Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into His likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit” writes Paul in 2 Corinthians 3:17- 18.

Sometimes winter seems to drag on, even with all the newness of my January. I remember one of my employees walking into my office one winter day and, after noticing the depressed look on my face said, “Chisum! Get a sun lamp!” On days like that I need most to recall the words of Isaiah 43:18 – 21 (KJV) “Remember ye not the former things, neither consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it? I will even make a way in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert. The beast of the field shall honour me, the dragons and the owls: because I give waters in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert, to give drink to my people, my chosen. This people have I formed for myself; they shall shew forth my praise.” We can “shew forth” God’s praise in every season, of course, but it seems to me that He delights in giving us new reasons in every season to praise Him! As you begin this New Year, open your heart to the newness of God’s covenant with you – purpose in your heart to live deeper in His word, deeper into His promises to you in Jesus Christ, the promise of something new, something fresh – January’s promise. And, by the way, my birthday’s on the 14th.


Heavenly Father, You are the God of newness and the God of promise. May Your plan unfold in my heart and in my life each day of this New Year for your glory. May I be changed from glory to glory and cling each day to the promise of January, the promise of Your will being done as surely as the changing of the seasons attest to Your faithfulness. In the Name of Jesus I pray – amen.

Effective Worship Leading Tip for January
Always lead from the overflow of worship in your own life.

One of the greatest challenges for leaders of any type is to stay fresh, avoiding the pitfalls of burning out on the job. Because worship leaders operate on multiple levels, employing natural and spiritual leadership principles, the potential for burnout is much greater. Local church worship leaders must be great musicians, great politicians, great administrators, and great worshipers simultaneously. This is no small task and not one for the faint of heart!

The best thing a worship leader can do for himself/herself is to make personal devotion the highest priority of their lives. It is just too easy for most of us to become swallowed up in administration and organization to the point that personal devotion is lost. When this occurs, joy in worship leading is lost even if the technical aspects of a service are flawless. When personal worship is lacking, the worship leader is left standing on the platform questioning their own sincerity in proclaiming God’s goodness - when they do not feel it themselves, it seems degrading to try to “pump others up” in praise and worship. This reduces the event to a musical performance instead of an authentic corporate worship experience. This is a dangerous spiritual place to be in, a position that the enemy can use to undermine your very relationship with God.

Richard Foster, in his classic book A Celebration of Discipline, identifies worship as just one of twelve primary Christian disciplines. When we, as leaders or not, reduce worship only to that which occurs on Sundays, we’ve lost an important concept of worship as the daily practice of Christians. The Book of Acts tells us that the early Christians met from house to house every day breaking bread and communing with one another in worship. Paul wrote in Ephesians and Colossians that we should always go about singing “psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, making melody in your hearts to the Lord” (Colossians 3:16). For a leader to feel and to be genuine in public worship requires a healthy private worship life. When worship is happening all day, every day, the local worship leader has great spiritual and even emotional resources from which to draw on for rehearsals, administration, and the weekly corporate celebrations of praise and adoration. Always lead from the abundance, or overflow, of worship in your own life. Never run on empty!

© Copyright 2007 by John Chisum. All Rights Reserved. For reprints or other permissions contact Worship4Life with John Chisum at 251-414-5832.

 
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