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Weekly Devotional
September 21, 2009
This week at SOG:
God’s Peace be
with you all.
Psalm 145:1-8 I
will extol you, my God and King, and bless your name
forever and ever. 2 Every day I will
bless you, and praise your name forever and ever.
3 Great is the LORD, and greatly to be
praised; his greatness is unsearchable. 4
One generation shall laud your works to another, and
shall declare your mighty acts. 5 On
the glorious splendor of your majesty, and on your
wondrous works, I will meditate. 6
The might of your awesome deeds shall be proclaimed, and
I will declare your greatness. 7 They
shall celebrate the fame of your abundant goodness, and
shall sing aloud of your righteousness. 8
The LORD is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and
abounding in steadfast love.
One of the traditions that I greatly love about
the church is chanting. Not only do I feel a power and
closeness to God when I hear the liturgy chanted, but I see
chanting as a personal time of prayer. For me, being a part
of a service that is chanted links me with the traditions of
the many saints that have gone before us, and there
ritualistic way of worshipping. Last week while I was at
Fall Convocation, the musical clinician was a gentleman by
the name of Mark Sedio. He is serving at a very large
congregation in Minneapolis, and part of his message to us
was about chanting. What I learned from him is that you
don’t have to be able to sing perfectly, or even to hit the
right pitch, because chanting relies as much on the melodic
roundness of the notes as it does on the pitch. There is a
style to chanting, and slowly, it is being lost because
churches are turning more toward a contemporary style of
worship.
One of the things that has gotten lost in our
With One Voice (WOV) service is chanting the psalms. Many
of you may remember chanting them before the WOV came out.
Many of the psalms are seen as prayers to God from God’s
people. They are also meant to be sung. Part of the beauty
of “praying the psalms” is singing them. The full richness
in the emotion comes out in the singing, whereas by reading
them we often lose the full range of human need and
emotion.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: “What matters is not what we
feel like praying about, but what God wants us to ask him
for. Not the poverty of our own heart, but the riches of the
Word of God must decide how we are to pray.”
The psalms are one of the first places that I go
when I feel like I need to pray and need scriptural
guidance. There are so many different lenses that you can
look through as you go about praying with the psalms. You
can look at it as poetry, or from a theological aspect, or
through the witness of the Gospel, through themes, your
thoughts, and from the words themselves. They can give
comfort, joy, happiness, provide counsel, and relieve our
grief. The psalms truly are one of the greatest assets of
the Bible. If you have never really opened the Bible to the
psalms (other than on Sunday mornings), I invite you to do
so. I think you will be surprised at the wealth of
prayerful knowledge that they contain.
In our
prayers this week:
Doris, Mary Netta, Ann,
St. John’s Lutheran Church, Joseph, Lisa, Jane, Irene,
Kim, and Michael
God’s
Peace,
Pastor Judson
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Mailing
Address:
P. O. Box 161000
Boiling Springs, SC 29316
(864)
599-8802
Worshiping
at:
7420 Highway 9
Inman, SC
29349
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