Friday, July 31, 2020

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (August 1, 2020)


I have posted All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (August 1, 2020) on the All Hallows Murray weblog.

The order of service for this service is taken from the Anglican Church of Canada’s The Book of Alternative Services (1985), as has the order of service for the preceding services. This order of service was selected for its flexibility and adaptability. It also incorporates features of the ancient cathedral (or popular) office of Vespers, which predates the monastic cycle of prayer. These features include the ancient lamp-lighting hymn Phos hilaron and the penitential evening psalm Psalm 141. The cathedral office of Vespers uses a limited number of variable psalms selected for their suitability to the evening.

The Phos hilaron is the “O Gladsome Light O Grace” from the traditional Anglican hymn repertory.

Psalm 141 is Randall DeBruyn’s arrangement of the Camoldolese Monks OBS’ setting of that penitential evening psalm from the Grail Psalms, an English translation of the psalms modeled upon a French translation. This setting may be sung antiphonally between two sections of the choir or the congregation or responsorially with a cantor or cantors or the choir singing the verses and the congregation singing the antiphon as a refrain. Responsorial singing of the psalms was widely used in the early Church.

The psalm prayer that follows Psalm 141 comes from the Lutheran Book of Worship Ministers Edition (1978).

Psalm 93 is the variable psalm. This metrical version of the psalm is taken from the Scottish Metrical Psalter of 1650, also known as The Psalms of David in Metre. It is set to common meter. In the video it is sung to the tune PEMBROKE. I have not been able to identify the composer of the tune. The style in which this metrical psalm is sung was common in England in the seventeenth century, eighteenth century, and well into the nineteenth century. It is associated with what is called West Gallery Music.

The psalm prayer that follows Psalm 93 is taken from the Church of England’s service book, Common Worship (2000).

The reading is Mark 8: 1-9.

The homily is titled “Hard Tack and Sun-Dried Sardines.” The thrust of the homily is that in feeding the four thousand Jesus models for us the compassion which he taught that we should show others.

The Gospel Canticle is Lucien Deiss’ antiphonal setting of the Magnificat, the Song of Mary.

The Prayers of Intercession are taken from Praise God in Song: Ecumenical Daily Prayer (1979). Praise God in Song influenced the order of service for Evening Prayer in The Book of Alternatives Services (1985) and the order of service for A Service of Light in A Prayer Book for Australia (1998).

The dismissal hymn is Albert Bayly’s “What Does the Lord Require.” The hymn tune is Eric Routley’s SHARPTHORNE.

The benediction is a form of the Aaronic Blessing that may be used by deacons and lay persons.

I recommend lighting a candle at the very beginning of the service and then after saying the versicle and response, “Jesus Christ is the light of the world…,” lighting additional candles. The candles should be extinguished at the end of the service. The lighting and extinguishing of the candles help to set the time of prayer apart.

The link to the service is: https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2020/07/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_31.html#more.

Please feel free to share the link with anyone whom you think might benefit from the service.

I hope that the service will be a blessing to you and will provide a fitting beginning to your Sunday.

Friday's Catch: Habits of Generation Z and More


7 Habits of Generation Z That Your Church Might Be Ignoring

There’s no doubt that Gen Z has some different habits than previous generations. Thanks to the internet and smartphones, the environment that we’ve grown up in is completely unique, and unlike any generation before. We spend more time online, go outside less, and care about wildly different things than our parents did when they were kids. You might look at these habits and think that these habits are “just a phase” or that we’ll “grow out of it.” We won’t. Read More

3 Ideas for Growing Your Church during a Pandemic

Here are three easy-to-incorporate tips to ignite growth in your church or small group this week. Read More

Keep Your Distance: Words of Advice for Churches from the Surgeon General

Jerome Adams, Surgeon General of the United States, offered important medical guidance for faith communities today. Read More

New Research: Most Churches Cautiously Holding Services Again

Churches are gathering again, but services and programs remain drastically different from the beginning of the year. Read More

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Thursday's Catch: Pivoting in the Midst of a Pandemic and More


Pivot the Way You Connect With Your People

Prior to COVID-19, we could connect with those in our congregation and communities almost whenever we wanted. We could have lunch with them, meet at local sports games and of course see them before or after the worship experience. However, now those options really do seem to be things of the past. I am sure though that we would all agree that connection in life and in church are of the upmost importance. But how do you pivot? Read More

Faith, Freedom and Face Masks

People in other countries are genuinely dumbfounded by our “mask” divide. To have something as basic as wearing a mask in the midst of a pandemic in order to control its spread become a partisan issue is confusing to many Americans as well. Why is there such a belligerent attitude toward wearing a mask in public in the name of public health? Read More
I read a lot of articles from around the world. From my reading I gather that the United States is more divided over how to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic than any other country in the world. Where divisions do occur outside the United States, they can be traced to the United States. The United States has often been a positive influence in world affairs but, in the case of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is emerging as a negative influence. How this came about is complicated. But it does suggest that the United States may no longer be the world leader that it once was and the events of the past four years have contributed to its declining leadership role. The leadership role of a nation in world affairs is tied to the positive influence that it exerts. As that influence shrinks so does its leadership role.
Ministries Face the Real Trafficking Crisis During COVID-19

Desperation and isolation put vulnerable populations at risk. Read More

Do Christians and Muslims Worship the Same God?

Here are three alternative questions which help to elucidate the underlying issues that the question-as-posed obscures. Read More

Top 10 Practices of the Best Leaders I Know

This following list of practices may appear simple. My challenge to you is, don’t focus on the level of simplicity or difficulty to understand each one, instead, evaluate how well you do in each area. Read More

Leadership Savvy Doesn’t Make a Pastor

I imagined pastoral work would be pedestrian and marginal—a sacrifice of my potential and plans. Nothing could have been further from the truth. Read More

On Sermon Introductions

Here are nine ways to get your sermon off to a good start. Read More

Your Online Worship Services AFTER Live Gatherings Resume

This is NOT a post about when live worship gatherings should resume, which is a highly debated and increasingly divisive topic.... But this post is about what a church should do with their online gatherings after the church starts to meet again, whenever the church starts to meet again. Not all of the people in a church will be ready to gather. Read More

Who's Really Discipling Your Congregation?

The American Church has a discipleship problem. The issue is not a lack of discipleship, however, but rather a glut of discipleship coming from the wrong sources without being filtered through the only right source. Read More
I would define the problem as both "a lack of discipleship" AND "a glut of discipleship coming from the wrong sources," based upon my own observations. One way that you respond to the latter is to increase your discipling of church members and attendees. A lack of discipleship creates a vacuum which the wrong sources that Aaron Earls identifies will fill. Where the influence of Jesus' teaching and example are absent, political views, for example, can fill the empty space and become the dominant influence in a Christian's life.

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Wednesday's Catch: The Role of the Church in Solving Local Problems and More


One in Four U.S. Adults Believes the Church Should Lead in Solving Local Problems

Should the Church be involved in helping solve issues at the local level? Read More

10 Signs Your Organization's Culture Is Toxic

How can you tell your organization’s culture is toxic? Read More

Supreme Court Issues a Surprising—and Divisive—Decision on Churches and Pandemic Restrictions

Despite what appears to be a blatantly unconstitutional infringement of religious liberty, five Supreme Court justices are allowing Nevada to hold churches to a stricter standard than casinos. Read More
Nevada, I believe, was discriminatory in applying a strict standard to religious organizations alone. Nevada in my estimation should have applied the same standard to the casinos and other businesses. "What's good for the goose is good for the gander," as the old saying goes.

What concerns me most is that Nevada in what was clearly discriminatory application of a stricter standard to religious organizations has provided ammunition for those who are opposed to the more reasonable public health measures that states like California and Kentucky have implemented. It has helped make public health measures affecting religious organizations a political issue that politicians whose states have a poor track record in containing or slowing the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus can exploit in the next election.

A small group of Republican senators are already urging President Trump to support a number of measures that they are proposing and pressure state and local governments into relaxing public health measures affecting religious organizations on the grounds that they are an infringement of religious liberty. They are urging the president to use the threat of withholding federal aid to force state and local governments into relaxing public health measures that affect religious organizations, primarily Christian ones. The timing of their proposals suggests that they themselves, if they are standing for re-election, are hoping to garner more votes for themselves while at the same playing to the willingness of the president to do just about anything that might help his re-election bid. They are also hoping to portray the Democrats as the enemies of religious freedom and damage their prospects in the upcoming election.

These proposals will not only intensify the divisions in Congress and the nation but will also are bound to end up in the federal court system. They can also be expected to contribute in a variety of ways to the suffering and loss of life, caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, and undermine state and local efforts to contain or slow the spread of the virus.
Remixed Religiosity in Our (Still Very) Religious Culture

As religions and their creeds are maligned in secular society, so too are all institutions and channels of authority. Institutions, in a godless world, instead have been replaced by intuitions. Read More
Despite the decline of organized religion in the West, superstition has been flourishing. This phenomenon is not limited to the West. It is also evident in China among the atheistic Communist Party elite and in Japan whose conformist culture discourages any form of religious enthusiasm.
A Pop Quiz for Pastors and Church Leaders

Based on what I’ve learned about church leaders via years of church consulting, here’s a pop quiz for pastors and other church leaders. Many leaders with whom I’ve worked could not answer these questions – questions I believe strong church leaders should be able to answer.... Read More

12 Questions I Might Ask a Pastor Search Team

In response to a question students frequently ask him: “What questions would you ask a pastor search team if you were their candidate?” Chuck Lawless provides a list of 12 helpful questions. Read More

6 Tips on How Pastors can Help Others Discover their Spiritual Gifts

The more we pastors help people discover, develop, and deploy their spiritual gifts, the healthier our churches become. In this post I suggest 6 tips that can help others discover their gifts. Read More

How to CRAFT a Sermon

I don’t care what you call your preaching style, but our preaching should lead to life change. I’ve developed my sermon-preparation method around that goal. I call it the CRAFT method. Read More

Churchgoers Read the Bible with Both Confidence and Confusion

Most churchgoers say they can address doubts others have about the Bible, but half admit they have problems understanding Scripture on their own. Read More

6 Things Your Church May Be Doing Illegally

As a best practice to ensure your church is acting above reproach in honoring copyright law, survey the below list and seek to avoid the following six things that may be putting your ministry at risk. Read More

How To Respond to Social Media Enemies

If our social media world has given us new ways of making friends, it has also given us new ways of making enemies. Read More

Helping One Another Persevere in the Faith

The entire Christian life is lived in light of the tension between what we already are in Christ and what we hope ultimately to be some day. Read More

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (July 29, 2020)


I have posted All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (July 29, 2020) on the All Hallows Murray weblog.

The music selection is the same as last Sunday Evening’s service with the following changes. The variable psalm is Anna Letitia Waring’s paraphrase of Psalm 23, “In Heavenly Love Abiding,” sung the hymn tune PENLAN, composed by the Welsh composer David Jenkins. PENLAN is the tune to which this hymn is most often sung in the United Kingdom. The hymn may also be sung to Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy’s SEASONS, the Finnish folk tune NYLAND or KUORTANE, and other tunes. The dismissal hymn is Henry Alford’s “We Walk by Faith, and Not by Sight,” sung to the hymn tune SHANTI, composed by the American hymn writer and composer Marty Haugen. The hymn may also be sung to DUNLAP’S CREEK McFarland), LOB GOTT IHR CHRISTEN, and other tunes.

The psalm prayer following the variable psalm comes from the Church of England’s service book, Common Worship (2000).

The reading is Matthew 19:13-15.

The homily is titled, “Jesus Ever the Same.” The Jesus who told his disciples to let the little children come to him and to not hinder them is the same Jesus who awaits us when we seek him in prayer.

The link to the service is: https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2020/07/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_29.html#more.

Please feel free to share this link with anyone whom you think might benefit from this service.

I hope that the service is a blessing to you and to those with whom you share the link.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Love Your Enemies


“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven.” (Matthew 5:43–45)

Is our view of who we should love and who we should hate more like the view of those to whom Jesus spoke or more like the view of Jesus?

Jesus said to His Jewish hearers, “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’” That was what this Jewish audience had heard. It was presumably a principle they were living by or else Jesus would not have bothered to mention it. But is it not also something we hear continually? Is it not, for example, exemplified in the form of discourse modeled by millions of participants on many social media platforms--the places where most young people are now learning the basic rules of how to interact with other human beings?

In the United States, as in many countries, there are different groups who take different positions on all manner of issues. Quite often, those in one group have heated and angry disagreements with those in other groups. Each group tends to view those in other groups as the enemy. Sometimes, those in one group treat those in "enemy" groups with hatred, contempt, and even violence. In some of our local communities, there are members of different groups physically fighting one another in the streets. In many of our virtual "communities," there are members of different groups verbally fighting one another in the comment boxes.

As Christians, we live in the midst of a world that teaches us by word and deed to "hate our enemy." Jesus instructs His followers to respond to our enemy differently. So, do we respond as Jesus commanded by loving our enemy and praying for him? Or do we respond the same way so many unbelievers do, by hating our enemy? Where are we going in order to learn what our response to our enemy should be? Scripture or Twitter? <b>Read More

Tuesday's Catch: Barna on the New Sunday Morning and More


One in Three Practicing Christians Has Stopped Attending Church During COVID-19

Recently, we revealed findings about “The New Sunday Morning,” highlighting trends in church attendance and engagement since the nation’s response to COVID-19 began in March of this year and social distancing pushed services online. Barna researchers identified a few types of churchgoers in this unique era of digital Church: Christians streaming their pre-COVID-19 church online, Christians streaming a different church online and Christians who have stopped “attending” church altogether. (It should be noted, there is a segment of those who, prior to COVID-19, were not attending church and are now attending online during the pandemic—however, this group is currently too small to be considered statistically significant and is not reported on here.) Read More

Beware, Sin Thrives in Isolation

As the second wave of Coronavirus overtakes our city, Melbournians are being forced back into isolation. Other than for four specific reasons, it is officially unlawful for us to even leave our homes. These restrictions might be frustrating but they are necessary. Extreme times call for extreme measures. Staying home saves lives. But while our homes may be places of physical safety, they are also places of spiritual danger because sin thrives in isolation. Read More

The God of Good Manners?

For those already weighed down with the burdens of the past few months—staying healthy, keeping the finances afloat, maintaining some semblance of normalcy—the severity of his lordship can threaten to strain us to the spiritual breaking point. Perhaps this is why I was charmed by Julian of Norwich’s discernment of another dimension of God’s lordship: his courtesy. Read More

Even Among Well-Meaning Christians, ‘Born Again’ Is Often Misunderstood

Being called a “born-again Christian” can mean many things to many people. In New Life in Christ: What Really Happens When You’re Born Again and Why It Matters, Steven J. Lawson moves beyond today’s (mis)use of the phrase to recapture its biblical meaning and extraordinary significance for the Christian life. Read More

2 Characteristics Church leaders Must Display during Cultural Crises

“Teach us to number our days carefully…” Really, Lord? Whether we think “numbering our days” means taking an account of what you’ve done at the end of every day, or considering the time that’s passing, or counting the days since some of us were in a worship service filled with people, numbering our days in a pandemic can be a little depressing. It’s not surprising then that the psalmist’s next word to the Lord is this in verses 13-15.... Read More

21 Great Practices You’ll Never Regret Adopting

You probably already have some regrets as a leader. I know I do. Not only as a leader, but as a husband, dad and friend too. Leadership is so complicated that sometimes it’s hard to know what to focus on. Add a global crisis into the mix and it’s even more confusing. So why is it that so many of us keep making mistakes at work and at home? It’s easy to blame your crushing workload, the people around you, circumstances or just about anything that moves. But if you look for common threads, you’ll often discover the problem was not in the situation, it was in how you responded to it. Read More

13 Mistakes When Seeking a New Place of Ministry

Most of us change places of ministry during our career. I realize, of course, that making changes now during COVID may seem unwise, but below are 13 mistakes I’ve seen leaders make in this process of “courting” a new ministry. Read More
I would also recommend talking with previous pastors of the church and other individuals who may be familiar with the church if it is at all possible. They can offer invaluable insights into the church. These insights may help a pastor determine whether he would be a good fit with that church.
Don’t Just Preach about Christ. Preach Christ!

"We can know a lot about Jesus and "follow" him as our "friend’ and yet still not know him very personally. Preachers can actually aid and abet an impersonal knowledge of Jesus by preaching about Christ while not actually preaching Christ. They present his Facebook page rather than personally introducing people to Jesus. Read More

The Benefits of Online Small Groups

While some people may feel forced into their groups meeting online, there are some definite benefits of online small groups. Online small groups aren’t new. After all, I started my first online group on CompuServe in 1994. They aren’t new, but online small groups are next. Read More

Diagnosing Your Church's Discipleship Problem

The local church has a discipleship disease. And without the proper diagnosis and treatment plan, we will do more harm than good. Read More

How to Be on Mission When Your Mission Trip Is Cancelled

"If COVID-19 caused my trip to be canceled, can I still be on mission this summer?" The answer is an emphatic yes! Read more

Monday, July 27, 2020

Rendering to Caesar and to God in the Midst of a Pandemic


By Robin G. Jordan 

Readers may be following the debate that has followed the issuance by James MacArthur and the elders of Grace Community Church, Sun Valley, California of a call for US Christians to join that church in a campaign of civil disobedience against the public health measures that state and local governments are implementing to contain or slow the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus. I have not posted links to any related articles until I have gathered enough articles that are representative of the different views involved in this debate. Among the issues is whether churches are free to adopt their own course of action or must they, as MacArthur insists, follow his lead.

MacArthur’s position is reminiscent of the position that the extremists among the Puritans in the sixteenth and seventeenth century took. They argued that there was only one right position on a number of issues—theirs. All other positions even those for which there was support in the Holy Scriptures were wrong. They were right, everyone else was wrong, and that settled the matter. At the outbreak of the English Civil War they argued that the Bible mandated only one form of church government—presbyterianism. On the other hand, the English Reformers and later Anglican divines maintained that the Bible does not prescribe any particular form of church government.

At the conclusion of the English Civil War the Presbyterians did not emerge victorious. Rather congregationalism won the day. Oliver Cromwell’s New Army backed the idea that the local church was free to determine for itself how it was to be governed and by whom.

At the Restoration episcopacy and The Book of Common Prayer were re-established as the form of church government and the form of worship in the Church of England. Pastors who refused to accept the authority of the bishops and to use the Book of Common Prayer were ejected from their livings.

MacArthur is arguing that civil disobedience to the restrictions that state and local public health measures impose upon places of worship, worship gatherings, and other church meetings is the only course of action that Christians may take. Otherwise, they are disobeying God. His argument resonates with some Christians. Others, however, conclude that the matter is not as cut and dry as MacArthur would have us believe. The kind of civil disobedience that MacArthur is advocating is not warranted at this stage if at all. While these public health measures may at times be onerous and in the case of Nevada’s restrictions on worship gatherings patently unfair, their intent is not to persecute Christians or local churches but to protect the healthy and safety of the public, including Christians.

Jesus taught his disciples to render to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s. Among the duties of the Roman Emperor was to protect the empire from its enemies and to safeguard persons and property in times of danger. Implementing public health measures to contain or slow the spread of an epidemic falls within his sphere of authority. It is what is Caesar’s, as is collecting taxes. When we comply with the public health measures that state and local governments implement and which the federal government may eventually put into effect such as a national face mask mandate, we are rendering to Caesar what is Caesar’s.

We are also rendering to God what is God’s. In his teaching Jesus expanded upon an earlier revelation of how we should act toward others—toward outsiders as well as those within our particular in-group. He did not add to this teaching but drew attention to its breadth. We are to love all human beings as ourselves. Jesus spoke as God commanded him to speak. As he pointed out, his words were not his own but the Father’s. They came from God.

Jesus emphasized loving God as well as loving others. Love of God and love of others are inseparably intertwined. We do not love God if we do not love others. In a number of places in the Old Testament we learn that God is not as interested in our acts of worship as he is the way we live. Indeed, our acts of worship are offensive to him if we do not frame our lives upon Jesus’ teaching and example. In showing our love for the Son in obeying his word, we show our love for the Father.

Caring for the health and safety of others is an important way that we show our love for them. Jesus himself had harsh words for the Pharisees who, while they claimed to be wholly devoted to God, endeavoring to fulfill the minutia of the ritual law, they showed little or no mercy and compassion toward their fellow Jews, even their own parents. While MacArthur’s statement on the surface appears to be God-honoring, it has the feel of the Pharisee about it.

One is faced with the question, “Will our worship gatherings and other church meetings really honor God if they cause human suffering and cost human lives?” Jesus urged his disciples to be like God. When we imitate God, when we are merciful and compassionate like he is, we are honoring God. God who is eternal and exists outside of time and space will not miss our worship gatherings for a season. But he will take note of our lack of mercy and compassion.

Don't Just Learn from Church History - Look to the Global Church Too


In all the discussion about how to navigate the consequences and implications of COVID-19 for churches and believers meeting together, historical events have often been alluded to. From the efforts of Christians to care for the sick in Roman times, Martin Luther's refusal to leave Wittenburg when bubonic plague came, to the Great Ejection of the Puritans in 1662, people have drawn analogies with what Christians have done in past centuries.

This is right and good. The Bible is of course our authority but we have a lot to learn from those who have gone before us in how they interpreted and applied Biblical principles to real life. We sometimes talk about being in uncharted waters now, but there are those who have navigated similar waters in the past and we do well to carefully consider their examples and decisions.

But wouldn't it be better if instead of reading their words and about their situations, we could talk to them? Wouldn't you like to hear the voices of those early Church believers who lived through such difficult times and yet still rejoice in Christ? Wouldn't it be good to have a conversation with the brothers and sisters in Christ who have had to weigh up the hard decisions about whether or not to meet in person and the dangers of hymn singing? Wouldn't it be great to be able to talk with the Puritans about when and how civil disobedience is required?

Those believers are in heaven now and we'll have to wait until we get there for the in-person conversations. But the global church is full of people who have either wrestled with analogous issues in the last fifty years or are still experiencing them today. Christians in the West would do well to remember that they can draw on the breadth and depth of experience within the global church - and then actually do so. Read More

Also See:
Coronavirus: A Biblical, Historical Perspective
The Chinese Church and the Culture, Part 2: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

The Practice of Prayer during a Pandemic


How to Pray When You’re Feeling Anxious or Depressed

Prayer is hard at the best of times, but it’s hardest during anxious or depressed times. During such seasons, most of us find it hard to concentrate, we feel God is far away, and we despair of God hearing or helping us. All of this makes prayer so difficult and discouraging.

How can we make prayer easier and more encouraging to us in such dark and disturbing spells? Here are five words I give to people to help them with the how of prayer when they are anxious or depressed.... Read More
This article is part of Crossway's How to Pray series.
20 Prayers to Pray During This Pandemic

In recent days, as COVID-19 has been declared a global pandemic and countries have taken urgent measures to stem the spread of infection, I wish I could say that my first impulse has been to pray. It’s probably more honest to say that I’ve obsessively refreshed my feeds.

The crisis is urgent, and I feel powerless. But perhaps feeling small is the best reminder to pray. Prayer is how we actively practice believing, so simply, so confidently, that God has the whole world in his hands. It’s where we “let petitions and praises shape our worries into prayers, letting God know our concerns” (Phil. 4:6–7, The Message). Prayer is never the last resort of God’s people. It is our first point of action.

With that in mind, I’ve put together a list of 20 prayers to pray during this pandemic. Each one addresses the specific needs of a specific community. I’m fortunate to be a part of a church with many medical professionals, some of whom gave me advice on how best to pray for them at this time. I’ve included their responses here. I’ve also tried to think broadly about how the rest of us are impacted by the current crisis.

This list isn’t comprehensive, of course, but it’s a good place to start. My hope is that it can provide words for us as we pray collectively (if also virtually!) as a church body. We believe there is a God who bends his ear to listen, and so we pray.... Read More

Monday's Catch: The Elusive Trait of Reasonableness and More


The Elusive Trait of Reasonableness

To be reasoned means that your opinions are well thought through. To be reasonable means you are open to persuasion. Read More

Getting Past the “Ain’t It Awful” Kind of Preaching

Rick Warren says a lot of what pastors are feeding their people is “ain’t it awful” preaching. I am so in agreement on that. Read More

COVID-19 Is Disrupting Americans’ Engagement with Scripture

A recent survey reveals how COVID-19’s disruption of in-person church attendance is directly impacting Scripture reading. Read More
The Bible is not a magical book that can fix our troubles. While we can benefit from reading the Bible, we will not experience the full benefits of our Bible reading until we live what it teaches, where its teaching is consistent with Jesus's message and witness. I suspect that a belief in the magicalness of the Bible along with the notion that we can win God's approval and stay in his good graces by reading the Bible may account in part for the decline in Bible reading. The pandemic has created doubt and Bible reading is a casualty of that doubt.
Churches Plan to Host Students During Remote Learning

In some communities, empty buildings and eager youth ministers offer safe places and supervision for families facing school closures. Read More
The concept is not a bad one provided that the church hosting the remote learning students takes proper steps to prevent a child from one household infecting children in other households and through them other members of the household or other individuals with whom the members of the household have contact such as elderly relatives and relatives with pre-existing conditions. A South Korean study found that older school age children--those 10 years of age and older--can infect other people as much as adults and more likely to infect members of their household than any other member of the house except older household members--70 years of age and older. Younger children can become infected with the virus and can infect other people with the virus but the extent to which they are a transmission risk has not yet been determined. The children whom the church is hosting will require close supervision to keep them from having contact with each other. The church will also need to monitor the children's households closely in case a member of the household or someone with whom the house hold has contact develops symptoms or tests positive. Based on my niece's experiences as an early childhood development teacher's aide and my own experiences as a child welfare case worker parents will drop off sick children at early childhood development centers, nursery schools, and day care centers even when they are asked not to. Parents will also send sick children to school although they are asked to keep them home. The spaces that the children use for remote learning will also need to be adequately ventilated. This may prove difficult as the weather grows colder. The use of church restrooms will in addition present challenges of its own. 
Evaluating Your Church Database

After countless migrations and even an attempt at no database (a true nightmare), I’ve realized there are three questions to ask when evaluating your current solution. Read More

Sunday, July 26, 2020

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (July 26, 2020)


I just posted All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (July 26, 2020).

The order of service and the music selection is the same as Saturday evening’s service with one exception. The dismissal hymn is James Quinn’s “Christ Be Beside Me,” a paraphrase of St. Patrick’s Lorica, or Breastplate, also knowns as The Deer’s Cry, a prayer attributed to St. Patrick. The hymn tune is ST. ROSE, composed by Laura Wasson. “Christ Be beside Me” may also be sung to the Scottish traditional melody BUNESSAN or the Irish traditional melody GARTAN.

The reading is 1 John 2: 3-6.

The homily is titled “Mirrors of Christ” and briefly explores the implications of the passage for ourselves.

The link to this service is: https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2020/07/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_26.html#more.

Please feel free to share this link with anyone who might benefit from the service.

I hope that this service is blessing to you and to those with whom you share the link. May it provide a fitting conclusion to your day.

En Plus: 3 Ways Attractional Churches Need to Change to Reach the Next Generation


In an era in which everything is changing so fast, it can be really difficult to discern what’s next.

That’s doubly true in church world. While the mission stays the same, the expression or model keeps changing.

The dominant model for growing churches over the last two decades is what many people call attractional church.

Often (but not always) attractional church takes the form of a little less worship (3-4 songs), hosting that explicitly welcomes unchurched people into the room, running everything through a filter with the guest in mind and often (but not always) includes topical preaching. Over the last few decades, that approach has helped thousands of churches reach hundreds of thousands—or millions—of previously unreached people.

But as culture changes, the church needs to adjust. When what used to connect doesn’t connect anymore, you either change or you settle for reaching fewer people.

So what exactly is changing? Read More
I believe that it would be helpful to draw attention to the different kinds of charismatic worship. Yes, there are different kinds of charismatic worship. Some charismatic churches give more attention to Paul's teaching concerning edification and orderliness and to discerning the spirits than do others. In charismatic Anglican churches like Holy Trinity Brompton one is likely to find not only the use of the more recent worship songs and enthusiastic congregational singing but also an attitude of expectancy that God will be present and that he will answer prayer. One may witness manifestation of the sign gifts. However, one will not find the rawness that one may encounter in Pentecostal churches or the kinds of manifestations that are attributed to the Holy Spirit but which other charismatic have concluded many be manifestations of the flesh.

En Plus: 5 Simple Practices That Will Improve Your Preaching Online


If you preach with any regularity, you know the pressure that comes with staring at a blank screen with a deadline approaching.

And if you communicate regularly within the context of the local church, like I do, you quickly discover that Sundays come around whether you’re ready or not.

I get asked regularly what I do to prepare for my messages, and there are a few things I practice and that I’ve seen other leaders do that I think can gain any communicator an edge. Now that a large portion of your audience is watching your preaching online, these 5 things are even more important whether you’re preaching to an audience or simply to camera. Read More

Saturday, July 25, 2020

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (July 25, 2020)


I just posted All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (July 25, 2020).

The order of service is adapted from the Anglican Church of Canada’s The Book of Alternative Services (1985).

The Phos hilaron is David von Kampen’s a cappella choral arrangement of the Lutheran Book of Worship’s translation of the ancient lamp-lighting hymn, “Joyous Light of Glory.”

The penitential evening Psalm is Tony Alonso’s responsorial setting of Psalm 141, “Like Burning Incense, O Lord.”

The psalm prayer is taken from the Lutheran Book of Worship Ministers Desk Edition.

The variable psalm is “O God You Have Searched Me, and You Know Me,” written by Bernadette Farrell. The hymn tune RADIANT was also composed by Ms. Farrel. The hymn is a paraphrase of Psalm 139 and appears in two Anglican hymnals, Ancient and Modern: Hymns and Songs for Refreshing Worship and Anglican Hymns Old and New (Revised and Enlarged).

The psalm prayer is taken from the Church of England’s Common Worship (2000) .

The reading is Matthew 18: 21-35.

The homily is titled “Do to Others as You Would Have God Do to You.” It examines Jesus’ teaching about forgiveness and the implications for ourselves.

The gospel canticle is Anne Carter’s paraphrase of the Magnificat, “My Soul Proclaims the Lord My God,” sung to the American folk hymn tune NEW BRITAIN. It may also be sung to ST. PETER (Reinagle) and ST. COLUMBA.

The intercessions are taken from Praise God in Song: Ecumenical Daily Prayer (1979).

The dismissal hymn is Nancy M. Raabe’s arrangement of Rosamond Herklott’s hymn, “Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive” for SAB voices and piano. This version of Ms. Herklott’s hymn comes from Evangelical Lutheran Worship (2006).

The link to the service is https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2020/07/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_25.html#more.

Please feel free to share the link with anyone who may be interested.

I hope that this service will be a blessing to you and will serve as a fitting beginning to your observance of the Lord's Day.

Saturday Lagniappe: Making the Best of the New Normal and More


Optimizing Online Services Without Cannibalizing In-Person Services

I keep hearing people say, “When it is back to normal …” Well, that ship has sailed. Even when it is “back to normal,” it will never be the same again. It will be a new normal. Church as we know it is over. The debate about online church is over. Online won. Read More

Supreme Court Rejects Nevada Church’s Appeal to Reopen Like Casinos

A sharply divided US Supreme Court denied a rural Nevada church’s request late Friday to strike down as unconstitutional a 50-person cap on worship services as part of the state’s ongoing response to the coronavirus. Read More
Also see, Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to Coronavirus Limits on Church Services
Sex Offenders Can Find Hope in Christ But Not Necessarily a Place at Church

Churches that suspended in-person gatherings during the pandemic have pledged not to welcome their congregations back until they’re sure they can be safe. While the risk of coronavirus spread is the major concern right now, LifeWay Christian Resources is urging leaders to use their reopening plans as a chance to also revisit their policies to prevent sexual abuse. Read More
Churches do need to prepare for the possibility that a sex offender may attend the church in order to gain access to children but they also need to be aware that most incidents of child sexual abuse do not involve a stranger but someone known to the child and to learn how to recognize the signs that a child may be being sexually abused at home. The sexual abuse perpetrator may be a respected, long-time member of the church. They should develop in consultation with the local child protection agency procedures for reporting suspected child sexual abuse.
Understanding the Roman Catholic ‘State of Grace’ 

Protestants and Roman Catholics often use the same words but understand them differently. Simon van Bruchem explains the difference between how Protestants and Roman Catholics understand grace. Read More

Making the Most of Time

Tyrone Barnette offers suggestions on how church leaders might use their time more wisely. Read More

My Church Fired Me as Pastor. Now What?

While there certainly are biblical and justifiable reasons for removing a pastor, what happens to those who are forced out or feel they have no choice but to step down? How should he think? What should he do? If this is you, here are five lessons I learned from being fired for what I see as wrong reasons. Read More

5 Ways to Get People to Pay Attention to Your Sermons

One of the most disconcerting feelings we pastors experience is when we prepare a sermon and pour our heart into it, yet feel that it didn’t make a difference in people’s lives. It’s equally frustrating when we preach to see somebody tuning us out. What can we do to help people pay more attention to our sermons? For when they do, there’s a greater chance what we say will stick in their minds to give the Holy Spirit time to ultimately change their hearts. Here are some neuroscience-based tips. Read More

5 Ways God Might Be Displeased with Your Worship

Adriel Sanchez looks at 5 ways that a church's worship gatherings might be displeasing to God. Read More

The Power of Your Personal Story

One of the most effective tools in your “spiritual tool box” is your personal testimony. You are an expert on your own story. You may not be an apologist, you may not be a theologian, you may not be a Bible scholar, but you are an expert on you. Read More

Friday, July 24, 2020

Friday's Catch: Findings of LifeWay Research on Church Regathering and More


Study: Churches Gathering Again But With Precautions

Churches are gathering again, but services and programs remain drastically different from the beginning of the year. Read More
What struck me about his article is that the precautionary measures churches are implementing are woefully inadequate. They do not reflect our current knowledge of how the COVID-19 coronavirus spreads and what are the most appropriate measures to contain or slow its spread. Churches, however, have been hampered in their efforts by a lack of reliable, up-to-date information and resistance to the implementation of precautionary measures from a small but vocal segment of the population, Christian and secular.

The CDC has repeatedly bowed to pressures from the White House and released diluted, unhelpful guidance. Its most recent recommendation that schools should be opened even though new COVID-19 cases are surging across the United States and the latest research findings are that older school age children--10 years of age and older--spread the virus as much as adults and even more so in their own households. This research has not ruled out younger children as vectors of the disease.

A growing body of evidence points to the airborne transmission of the virus. Poor ventilation and singing and loud talking have been implicated in its spread. So have virus particles shed by infected individuals in their urine and feces. The mechanical ventilation used in church buildings often recirculates the air rather exhausting stale air and replacing it with fresh air. Church restrooms are ideal settings for the airborne transmission of the virus.
Governor Asks Kentucky Council of Churches Congregations to Temporarily Suspend In-Person Services

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has asked the 1,100 congregations represented by the Kentucky Council of Churches to forgo in-person services for two weekends due to the a surge in COVID-19 cases in the state, said council President Kent Gilbert. “This is not an executive order from the governor. It’s a request,” said Gilbert, who also is pastor of the historic Union Church in downtown Berea. On Friday, Gilbert said Beshear made the request Wednesday to the council’s judicatory leadership during his weekly check-in with the group. Read More
Subscription may be required. The Lexington Herald Leader has several options. I use the Facebook option.
Murray Faith Leaders Call For Unity Amid Division Over Pandemic Health Measures

Murray faith leaders are creating a video for social media calling for unity and empathy amid divisions over COVID-19 safety measures including face masks. Read More
This article was posted on the local public radio website. The idea that brought Murray's faith leaders together is a good one. Both in Kentucky and elsewhere in the United States a number of politicians and church leaders have been promoting opposition to the public health measures that state and local governments are implementing to contain or slow the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, primarily motivated by a desire to draw attention to themselves and to make a name for themselves despite the religious overtones of their rhetoric. In Kentucky the State Attorney General and Agricultural Commissioner's opposition is quite clearly motivated by a desire to increases their chances of election to higher political office. It is a breath of fresh air to hear that the community's faith leaders are planning a call for unity and empathy amid the divisions over these public health measures.
Into This World, God sent a Savior

Joe McKeever helps put the incarnation of Christ into context. Read More

5 Signs Sin Has a Powerful Grip on Your Life

As believers, we struggle against sin and temptation. There will never be a time in our lives when we will not be striving against it. However, fighting against sin is one thing; sin having control is quite another. Sin can quickly gain power in our lives if we are not diligent. This is why John Owen said, ‘Be killing sin, or it will be killing you.” In his book, The Mortification of Sin, Owen does us an excellent service by providing us with five signs that sin has a stronghold on us. Take a minute to look through the following list. If you recognize any of these patterns in your life, be sure that you are in a dangerous condition of sin. Read More

Lukewarm Faith Shrinks as More Say Religion Is ‘Very Important’ or ‘Not at All’

Pew: Of 34 nationalities, Americans have declined the most in connecting belief in God to morality. Read More

What to Do with Your Choir These Days


During this season of social distancing and prohibitions on normal choir activity, worship leaders are seeking ways to keep their choirs together and involved in ministry. Technology has become a backbone of continuing many ministries in the church, and the virtual world can be a help to our choirs in these days. Here are some ways you can use technology to keep your choirs rolling.... Read More
This is a very helpful article. One of things that choir members miss is the companionship that choirs offer.

I would add the following suggestions. When using live singers, we might want to consider having them lip sync the songs to a recording that the church has made or purchased. In this way we protect not only the congregation but also the singers. If one of the vocalists is COVID-19 positive or even a super-spreader, actual singing increases transmission risks since the vocalist will be exhaling more virus particles when he or she is singing. Lip syncing is less likely to increase the exhalation of these particles.

Actual singing also requires deep breathing, increasing the risk the vocalists will inhale more virus particles. Lip syncing does not require deep breathing, thereby reducing the risk of inhalation of these particles.

We should make sure the space in which the vocalists are singing is well-ventilated to prevent the accumulation of virus particles in the air. Poor ventilation has been implicated in the spread of the virus. We might also consider separating the vocalists with Plexiglas or Perspex screens like those used to muffle the sounds of drummers. When they are not lip syncing, the vocalists should wear face masks.

I further recommend teaching the congregation how to subvocalize songs. "Subvocalization, or silent speech, is the internal speech typically made when reading; it provides the sound of the word as it is read." We can also subvocalize when we sing as well as read. Subvocalizing is a way of singing and making melody in our hearts, as the apostle Paul encourages us to do.

God does not look at our outward appearance--how well or how loudly we can sing. He looks at the heart, our inner selves, how we are oriented. Worship involves more than singing. It involves a life that is oriented to God and which honors him. If we cannot sing for a season, it does not matter to God. What matters to God is that, like the needle of a compass points to the magnetic north, our lives still point to him.

Thursday, July 23, 2020

What Should Churches Do Now That COVID-19 Is Spiking Again


With COVID-19 rates spiking in communities across the country, many churches are wondering what this means for their reopening plans.

Some churches have decided not to reopen until 2021, but others have already met inside or outdoors, have a return date set in the near future, or are still in the process of determining when and how to gather in person again.

No matter where your church falls along this continuum, it’s important to continually seek out up-to-date data and research and to humbly integrate this information into an ongoing decision-making process.

Here are three ideas to consider as you and other leaders prayerfully make decisions regarding your church. Read More
I have not reviewed Guide to Reopening Church Services so I cannot comment on it favorably or unfavorably. However, I do believe that the advice offered in this article is sound. Public health emergencies like the present one require flexibility of mind, particularly when it involves a disease that is completely new to us. Viruses mutate. They can become more infectious and spread more quickly. They can become more virulent and take more lives. We should not be basing reopening decisions on out-dated information. In March it was thought that young people, if they were not immune to the COVID-19 coronavirus, suffered only mild symptoms. University students went on spring break with that idea in their heads. Now we know that the virus can make young people seriously ill and, even if they experience negligible symptoms, they can spread the disease to more vulnerable segments of the population. Poor ventilation and singing and loud talking have been implicated in the virus' spread. We have been introduced to the esoteric subject of toilet plumes and the role that they may play in COVID-19 transmission. I posted the following comment in response to article on the Church Leaders website on Summit Church's plan to split into small "house churches" for the rest of 2020:
Meeting in smaller gatherings makes sense since it would be easier to do contact tracing with small gatherings. But unless those hosting these gatherings implement necessary precautionary measures, these gathering can still become epicenters of new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. Splitting into smaller groups by itself will not reduce transmission risks. To reduce transmissions risks, those hosting these gatherings will need to implement several layers of intervention—face masks at all times, social distancing, no food sharing, hand washing, decontamination of frequently touched surfaces, no singing or loud talking, proper ventilation of meeting place—doors and windows open, air not recirculated in the room but replaced with fresh air from the outside, etc., ventilation and decontamination of bathrooms after each use, and instruction of attendees in the proper use of the toilet, i.e., close the toilet lid before flushing. Implementing these layers of intervention take considerable effort and overtime those hosting a small gathering and those attending the small gathering are likely to become lax in their implementation, thereby increasing the transmission risks.

The Coronavirus Information and Resources posted on the Summit Church also do not take into consideration the latest research on how COVID-19 is spread. A recent study found that older school age children—those 10 years or age and older—spread the virus as much as adults do if not more so. They are more likely to infect members of their household more than any other household member except senior adults in their 70s. The research also shows that younger children are not immune to COVID-19. At the present time their role in spread the virus is not fully understand. When they are infected with the virus, they do breathe the virus into the air. Their height may be a factor in why they do not infect more adults. However, child care attendants who squat down at a younger child’s level would be at risk of infection. Airborne particles like COVID-19 particles can remain suspended in the air for up to three hours under controlled, research conditions. Some air conditioning systems that use floor level registers can waft the particles higher up into the air and unless the stale air is exhausted and replaced with fresh air from the outside, these particles will continue to circulate in the air of the room.

Studies of COVID-19 particle concentration levels in the air of hospital rooms found that they were high in mechanically ventilated rooms and low in naturally ventilated rooms, those with doors and windows open and a breeze bringing fresh air into the room. Bathrooms had the highest virus particle concentration levels. This was attributed to what has been described as “toilet plumes,” columns of air that rise when a toilet is flushed with the toilet lid open. People infected with COVID-19 not only breathe virus particles into the air but they also shed them in their urine and feces. Hospital bathrooms are also poorly ventilated small, enclosed spaces, the kind of space that has high transmission risks.

Church restrooms are a logistical nightmare for churches seeking to reduce transmission risks. They are poorly ventilated. The toilets often do not have lids. Toilet stalls can trap COVID-19 virus particles released while an infected person occupies the stall and when the toilet is flushed so that the next person to occupy the stall sits down in a cloud of these particle lingering in the air and inhales the particles while using the toilet. By splitting into smaller “house churches” the Summit Church is passing the logistical problem on to those hosting the “house churches” in their homes.

In The Coronavirus Information and Resources posted on its website the Summit Church does not advise those hosting the “house churches” to screen those who will be attending these gatherings to ensure that they and the other members of their households are conforming to state and local government guidance and that they or other members of their households do not have a fever or other symptoms of the virus, to take contact information them for contact tracing in event a “house church” becomes the nexus of new COVID-19 cases, or to notify the hosts if they or another member of their household or someone else with whom they have close or frequent contact develops symptoms or tests positive. The Summit Church also encourages church members to invite neighbors to their homes to watch their online services but offers very little guidance on what precautionary measures that they should take to keep these informal gatherings from spreading the virus. In the Commonwealth of Kentucky backyard barbecues and similar gatherings have been implicated in the surge of new COVID-19 cases in the state.

Bible Reading Drops During Social Distancing


Daily engagement had already been declining, but worsened during the pandemic, according to the annual State of the Bible report.

The COVID-19 pandemic is shifting Americans’ Bible engagement, with many who are socially distanced from their spiritual communities turning to Scripture less and those who have lost loved ones to the virus reading it more.

Between early 2019 and 2020, the percentage of US adults who say they use the Bible daily dropped from 14 percent to 9 percent, according to the State of the Bible 2020 report released today by the Barna Group and the American Bible Society (ABS).

A decrease of 5 percentage points in a single year was unprecedented in the annual survey’s 10-year history; between 2011 and 2019, daily Bible readers had basically held steady at an average of 13.7 percent of the population.

But the decline continued during the initial months of the coronavirus pandemic, and by June, the percentage of daily Bible users had dropped to 8.5 percent. Read More

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Praying the Daily Offices in the COVID-19 Era


By Robin G. Jordan

The prophet Daniel opened his window and prayed three times a day, once at dawn, once at midday, and once again at dusk. The apostle Paul urged the church at Thessalonica to pray without ceasing. In other words, to punctuate the day and the night with times of recurring prayer. The early Church, modeling its practices upon those of the synagogue adopted a daily cycle of prayer. It began the day with the service of Lauds shortly after cockcrow when the sun first peeks his face over the horizon and concluded the day with the service of Vespers when the evening shadows fell and the lamps were first lit. In this way the entire day was sanctified, set apart to the service of God.

While we may associate the offices of Lauds and Vespers with the monastic daily cycle of prayer, the dawn and the dusk offices predate the monastic round of prayer. They were originally popular services, in which the whole community participated, gathering each morning and each evening to praise God and to pray. In some communities the dawn office may have included a homily, a survival from an earlier time when the morning assembly was used for instruction.

The rise of monasticism in the late third century would lead to the disappearance of Lauds and Vespers as services of public worship. The two offices would be incorporated into the monastic cycle of prayer and would become the domain of cloistered religious. A few monasteries permitted devote laity to listen to the offices from a barn-like structure adjoining the monks’ church. This structure would evolve into what in later times was called the “nave” and the monks’ church, the “choir” and the “chancel.”

We do not see the recovery of the dawn and dusk offices as public services of worship until the sixteenth century and then by what may be described as a fortuitous accident. In England in the sixteenth century Archbishop Thomas Cranmer undertook the reform of the daily offices of the monastic cycle of prayer. He conflated them into two services—Matins and Evensong—and mandated the attendance of the laity. Clergy were enjoined to publicly read the offices and to ring the church bell to summon the parish to join him. Cranmer was a strong believer in the power of Scripture to transform the individual. He incorporated into these two services the monthly recitation of the entire psalter and the reading of the Old Testament once in year and the New Testament twice in a year. The purposes of the reformed offices would be “the setting forth of God’s glory and honor and the reducing of the people to a most perfect and godly living, without error or superstition.” They would be one of the primary means by which England would be transformed into a godly kingdom.

In more recent years a growing number of Anglican Churches have recognized the need for daily prayer services that are less didactic than the traditional Anglican services of Morning and Evening Prayer and more devotional. They have also recognized the need for more flexible daily prayer services which may be tailored to the occasion on which they are used and the size, resources, and other circumstances of the churches using them. Orders of service for Morning and Evening Prayer that reflect the growing body of scholarship into the evolution of the daily offices have been developed and published. The Daily Services and A Service of Light of the Anglican Church of Australia’s A Prayer Book for Australia (1995), The Divine Office of the Anglican Church of Canada’s The Book of Alternative Services (1985), Daily Prayer of the Church of England’s Common Worship (2000), and Daily Prayer and Psalter of the Scottish Episcopal Church are examples of these newer services.

The last century saw an explosion of paraphrases of the canticles, the psalms, and other Scriptural texts that could be sung to familiar hymn tunes. It also saw an outpouring of new tunes to which these paraphrases might be set as well as new arrangements of older tunes. A wealth of responsorial settings and choir arrangements accompanied this renewed interest in the music of the daily offices.

In Anglican Churches the English cathedral choir has dominated the music of the daily offices since the reign of Elizabeth I. Its repertoire, however, is beyond the abilities of the choirs and congregations of most Anglican parish churches, even more so the abilities of mission church congregations. The latter often lack strong musical leadership and have limited musical resources.

One might have expected that all the daily offices music produced in the last century and since then would have been a boon to parish and mission churches. But due to rigid notions of how Anglican churches should worship, few such churches have benefited from this music. They cling to the notion that cathedral music is the standard that they must attain. Being unable to attain this standard, they fall back on reciting the psalms and canticles and singing a few hymns. The result is rather dreary services that hold no appeal to anyone except who have become inured to worshiping in this depressing manner. While visitors to these services may be too polite to say that they experience the services as lifeless, it is what they are thinking when they leave and is one of the main reasons that they do not return.

As can be seen from the videos that I have been posting with the prayer services on the All Hallows Murray weblog, an abundance of music that is within even the abilities of the congregation of a small mission church is available to Anglican churches. While the COVID-19 pandemic is restricting how we can worship, it is also creating an opportunity to explore this music and to learn, practice, and master it. One of the reasons that I have been posting these videos is to show what music is available. I have been avoiding posting much cathedral music because I do not want to reinforce the notion that it is the standard for the daily offices.

I have also been using the newer orders of service for Morning and Evening Prayer to introduce readers to them. These orders of service have a greater degree of flexibility than the traditional Anglican services of Morning and Evening Prayer. This degree of flexibility makes them more adaptable to not only online use but also to the circumstances of a congregation—its size, its ministry target group, its musical leadership, its musical resources, the setting in which it gathers when it gathers, and the like.

The present order of service for Evening Prayer comes from The Book of Alternative Services. It is adaptable to a wide range of settings. In better times a small group of Christians could gather together in the living room of one of the group’s members and have a prayer service, using this order and singing the Phos hilaron, the psalms, the Magnificat, and the dismissal hymn without musical accompaniment. The group might use CDs, videos, or mp3s to accompany the singing. Such a gathering might serve as the group’s primary worship gathering for the week. Microchurches like the one which I just described may be the future of the Anglican Church in many parts of North America.

In the midst of a pandemic the praying of the daily offices is not only a good way to structure our time if we must stay at home and stay away from other people but also to draw near to God in a time of need. We can pray for others as well as ourselves. Among those who need our prayers are those who are sick, those who are dying, those who are caring for the sick and the dying, those who are mourning, and those who are out of work. Pastors and other church leaders also need our prayers as they make tough decisions—what may be life-and-death decisions.

Whether we use one or more of the daily offices or pray in silence or spontaneously, now is a time to recommit ourselves to prayer or to commit ourselves to prayer for the first time. It is the time more than ever to seek God's face.

I have always found it helpful to think of formal prayer as the prayer of the throne room and less formal prayer, extemporaneous prayer, as the prayer of the audience chamber in which we converse more freely with God. We approach God upon his throne with formal prayers, seeking a private audience with him. He graciously invites us into his audience chamber and to unburden our hearts to him. The One who greets us in the audience chamber is Jesus himself. In the privacy of that chamber we can share with him our joys and sorrows and plead for ourselves and others. When we stumble for lack of words, God who is the God of all grace provides us with the needed words for God himself in the person of the Holy Spirit indwells us.

We should not fear seeking God in prayer. If unrepented sin has become an obstacle to our prayer, he will provide a remedy. God desires to hear the prayers of his children and to answer them.