What Kind of Tree Are We Becoming?

Jesus said:

“A good tree produces good fruit, and a bad tree produces bad fruit. A good tree can’t produce bad fruit, and a bad tree can’t produce good fruit.”
(Matthew 7:17–18)

These words of Jesus are simple, memorable, and deeply confronting. He doesn’t talk about occasional behavior, public image, or religious language. He talks about trees and fruit—about what naturally grows out of a life.

Fruit Reveals the Nature of the Tree

Jesus’ point is clear: fruit is not accidental. What shows up on the branches reveals what is happening in the roots. Over time, the true nature of a tree becomes obvious.

In the same way, our lives eventually reveal what is shaping us on the inside. Our words, attitudes, reactions, and choices don’t come out of nowhere. They grow from our hearts.

This is why Jesus isn’t interested in short-term appearances. You can tape fruit onto a tree for a while, but eventually the truth shows. Real fruit grows organically from a healthy life.

Behavior Follows Being

Many of us try to fix our fruit first. We work hard at changing habits, managing our image, or behaving better. While effort matters, Jesus points us deeper. Healthy fruit flows from a healthy tree.

The question is not, “How do I look?” but “Who am I becoming?”

If impatience, bitterness, pride, or fear consistently show up, they are indicators—not just problems to manage, but signals pointing to something deeper that needs attention.

The Root Issue Is the Heart

In Scripture, the heart represents the core of who we are—our loves, beliefs, motivations, and trust. When our hearts are rooted in God, nourished by His Word, and shaped by His Spirit, good fruit follows.

This doesn’t mean perfection. Even good trees go through hard seasons. But over time, the direction of our lives becomes clear. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, faithfulness, and self-control begin to appear more consistently.

Fruit takes time. Growth is often slow and unseen. But it is real.

You Can’t Produce Fruit You’re Not Rooted For

Jesus also makes a sobering statement: “A good tree can’t produce bad fruit, and a bad tree can’t produce good fruit.” In other words, we cannot consistently live one way while being rooted in something else.

If our lives are rooted in fear, self-reliance, or approval from others, that root system will eventually bear its fruit. But if we are rooted in Christ—drawing life from Him—our lives will increasingly reflect His character.

This is why spiritual formation matters more than spiritual performance.

An Invitation to Honest Reflection

This teaching invites us to slow down and ask honest questions:

  • What kind of fruit is consistently showing up in my life?
  • What do my reactions under pressure reveal?
  • What am I rooted in right now?
  • Am I allowing God to tend the soil of my heart?

God is a patient gardener. He doesn’t give up on trees easily. He prunes, nourishes, and waits for fruit in season. But He does call us to pay attention to what our lives are producing.

Becoming a Good Tree

The goal of the Christian life is not to manufacture fruit, but to abide—to remain connected to Jesus, the true source of life. As we do, good fruit follows naturally.

So the question Jesus leaves us with is not about appearances, but authenticity:

What kind of tree are we becoming?

Because in time, the fruit will tell the story.


Posted in Bible, God, Health, Holy Spirit, Jesus, Leadership, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Keep On Asking, Seeking, and Knocking

There’s something profoundly simple—and yet deeply challenging—about Jesus’ words in Matthew 7:7–8:

“Keep on asking, and you will receive what you ask for. Keep on seeking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened to you.”

When most of us hear this, we instinctively think of prayer—asking God for something we need. But notice what Jesus emphasizes: keep on. He’s not describing a single moment of prayer, but a lifestyle of persistence. Faith isn’t passive; it’s active, relational, and resilient.

The Rhythm of Persistence

Asking, seeking, and knocking form a rhythm—a growing progression of engagement with God.

  • Asking reflects trust: the belief that God hears and cares.
  • Seeking reflects desire: the willingness to pursue God’s will rather than just our wishes.
  • Knocking reflects boldness: the courage to press in until a door opens.

Sometimes the answer we seek doesn’t come easily or quickly. But each stage deepens our dependence on the Lord. What begins as a petition often becomes a journey of transformation.

God’s Heart Behind the Promise

The next verse gives the reason for this invitation: “For everyone who asks, receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And to everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.” That’s not a formula—it’s a reflection of God’s character. Jesus invites us to approach the Father as children who know they are loved.

The doors God opens are shaped by His goodness and wisdom. Sometimes He gives what we ask for. Other times He gives what we truly need. Either way, persistence in prayer draws us nearer to His heart.

Living in Expectant Faith

To “keep on asking” is to live with open hands. It means believing that God is not reluctant, but ready to respond. It means continuing to trust when we don’t see results yet—and learning to rejoice when the door finally opens.

So today, wherever you find yourself—waiting, searching, or knocking—don’t give up. Every act of faith moves you closer to the heart of God. Keep praying. Keep seeking. Keep trusting that the One who hears you is already working behind the scenes.


Posted in Bible, God, Jesus, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Lessons We Can Learn from the Book of Job

The book of Job is one of the most challenging—and most honest—books in the Bible. It doesn’t give us easy answers to suffering, and it refuses to wrap pain in neat spiritual clichés. Instead, it invites us into the deep waters of faith: trusting God when life makes no sense.

Job was a righteous man who loved God, yet he experienced devastating loss—his children, his health, his livelihood, and his reputation. If Job’s story teaches us anything, it is that faith is not proven when life is easy, but when it is hard.

Here are some of the main lessons we can learn from the book of Job.

1. Suffering Is Not Always the Result of Personal Sin

One of the clearest messages of Job is this: bad things do not only happen to bad people.

Job’s friends assumed his suffering must be punishment for hidden sin. They were confident, logical—and wrong. God Himself later rebukes them for misrepresenting Him.

This corrects a shallow theology that says:

  • If you’re suffering, you must have failed
  • If you’re blessed, you must be doing everything right

The book of Job reminds us that life is more complex, and God’s purposes are often hidden from us.


2. God Is Bigger Than Our Understanding

Job desperately wants answers. He asks why again and again. When God finally speaks, He does not explain the reasons behind Job’s suffering. Instead, He reveals who He is.

God asks Job questions like:

  • “Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?”
  • “Can you bind the stars or command the morning?”

The message is clear: God is sovereign, wise, and at work on a scale far beyond our comprehension. Faith does not require full understanding—it requires trust.


3. Honest Lament Is Not the Same as Unbelief

Job pours out his pain with brutal honesty. He questions. He grieves. He wrestles with God. Yet Scripture never calls him faithless.

There is a difference between:

  • Turning away from God, and
  • Turning toward God with our pain

Job teaches us that God can handle our questions, our tears, and our confusion. Honest prayer—even when it is messy—is still prayer.


4. Well-Meaning Friends Can Still Be Wrong

At first, Job’s friends do the right thing: they sit with him in silence. That may be the best moment in their entire story.

Their mistake was opening their mouths too quickly and speaking for God without understanding His heart.

The book of Job warns us to:

  • Be careful with quick explanations
  • Avoid clichés in moments of deep pain
  • Learn when silence is the most loving response

Sometimes the ministry of presence matters more than the ministry of words.


5. God Is Not Our Servant—We Are His

Job’s story challenges the idea that faith is a transaction: If I obey God, He will protect me from pain.

Job remained faithful even when obedience did not lead to comfort. In the end, Job declares:

“I had heard of You by the hearing of the ear,
but now my eye sees You.”

Suffering deepened Job’s relationship with God. His faith moved from secondhand knowledge to firsthand encounter.


6. God Is Faithful Even When Life Feels Unfair

The book of Job does not deny suffering—but it also does not end in despair. God restores Job, not because Job earned it, but because God is gracious.

The ultimate lesson is this:

  • God is worthy of trust, even when we don’t understand His ways
  • Our hope is not in explanations, but in God Himself

Final Thought

The book of Job teaches us how to suffer without losing our faith—and how to trust God when life feels unjust, silent, or overwhelming.

Job’s story reminds us that faith is not the absence of questions, but the decision to keep trusting God in the middle of them.

And sometimes, that is the deepest kind of worship.


Posted in Bible, God, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Perfect Love Drives Out Fear — Even the Fear of Disease

In recent years, fear has taken on a very specific shape for many people. Fear of germs. Fear of disease. Fear of getting sick—or making someone else sick. We sanitize, distance, mask, monitor symptoms, and watch the news, often with a low-level anxiety humming in the background.

While wisdom and care are important, fear can quietly move from being a caution to becoming a controller.

The apostle John speaks directly into this kind of fear:

“There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear…” (1 John 4:18)

This verse doesn’t call us to recklessness. It calls us to freedom.

When Health Awareness Turns Into Fear

God designed our bodies with remarkable resilience, and He also calls us to steward our health wisely. But there is a line where awareness becomes obsession and caution becomes fear.

Fear of disease often shows up as:

  • Constant worry about contamination
  • Anxiety around being near people
  • Suspicion of ordinary human contact
  • A sense that safety is fragile and easily lost

When fear dominates, it begins to isolate us—from others and sometimes even from joy.

The Root of Health-Related Fear

Fear of germs and illness is ultimately fear of losing control. We want certainty that we’ll be okay, that our loved ones will be protected, and that the future will be predictable.

But Scripture gently reminds us that our security does not come from perfect conditions—it comes from a perfect God.

John explains that fear “has to do with punishment.” In other words, fear thrives when we believe something bad is always waiting to happen and that we are powerless to stop it.

God’s love speaks a better word.

Perfect Love Anchors Us in Trust

“Perfect love” is not denying reality or ignoring risk. It is trusting that our lives are held by a loving Father who knows our days, numbers our hairs, and walks with us through every season.

When we are rooted in God’s love:

  • We can take reasonable precautions without panic
  • We can care for our bodies without being ruled by fear
  • We can live fully instead of merely trying to stay alive

Perfect love reminds us that our lives are not random, fragile accidents but purposeful gifts in God’s hands.

Knowing the Source of Perfect Love

Fear does not disappear simply because we read a verse—it fades as we grow in relationship with the God who is love. Perfect love is not a concept to memorize; it is a Person to know.

We come to know God’s love in three essential ways:

Through prayer.
Prayer shifts our focus from what we fear to who we trust. As we bring our anxieties honestly before God, His peace begins to replace our worry. Prayer reminds us that we are not facing life alone.

Through Scripture.
The Bible continually reorients our thinking. As we read God’s Word, we are reminded of His faithfulness, His promises, and His unchanging character. Scripture corrects the lies fear tells us and anchors us in truth.

Through Christian community.
Fear thrives in isolation, but love grows in community. Being with other believers—worshiping together, sharing life, praying for one another—strengthens our faith and reminds us that God often expresses His love through His people.

Fear Cannot Be Healed by Control

No amount of cleaning, avoiding, or monitoring can eliminate every risk. Fear always demands more—more rules, more barriers, more distance.

Love, however, invites trust.

Trust doesn’t mean nothing bad will ever happen. It means that nothing can separate us from God’s love, no illness, no diagnosis, no unknown future.

Choosing Love Over Fear

Overcoming fear of disease is a daily choice. Each day we decide:

  • Will fear dictate my actions?
  • Or will love guide my life?

Perfect love casts out fear not by removing every threat, but by replacing anxiety with assurance.

We live wisely.
We care deeply.
But we refuse to let fear rule our hearts.

Perfect love casts out all fear—yes, even the fear of germs, disease, and the unknown—because God’s love is stronger than anything we fear.

Posted in Bible, Church, Family, God, Healing, Health, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Where Your Treasure Is

Jesus once said something both simple and deeply unsettling:

“Wherever your treasure is, there the desires of your heart will also be.”
(Matthew 6:21)

It’s a diagnostic statement. Jesus isn’t primarily telling us what to do—He’s revealing what’s already true.

Treasure Reveals Direction

We often say, “My heart is in the right place.”
Jesus says, “Show Me your treasure, and I’ll show you your heart.”

Our treasure is whatever we value most—what we protect, pursue, worry about, and invest in. It’s where our money goes, yes—but also where our time, energy, thoughts, and emotional weight go.

If you want to know what matters most to you, don’t listen to your intentions. Watch your investments.

The Heart Follows the Investment

Notice the order Jesus gives. He doesn’t say, “Where your heart is, your treasure will follow.” He says the opposite.

This is crucial.

Our hearts often follow what we choose to invest in. When we give ourselves—our resources, attention, and effort—to something, our affection grows there. That’s why generosity is so powerful. Giving isn’t just an outcome of love; it’s often the pathway to love.

When we invest in God’s kingdom, people, and purposes, our hearts slowly align with heaven.

Competing Treasures

Jesus said these words in a teaching about money, possessions, and anxiety. He knew how easily good things become ultimate things.

Money itself isn’t condemned. Comfort isn’t evil. Success isn’t wrong. But when they become our primary treasure, they quietly take control of our hearts. What we treasure most is what we fear losing most.

And fear is a terrible master.

A Question Worth Asking

This teaching invites an honest question—not a guilty one, but a clarifying one:

What currently holds the greatest pull on my heart?

  • What do I think about when I’m free to think?
  • What do I worry about most?
  • What do I celebrate, protect, or chase hardest?

Jesus isn’t trying to shame us. He’s inviting us to freedom. Earthly treasures are temporary and fragile. Heavenly treasure is secure and eternal.

Re-Treasuring Our Lives

The good news is this: our hearts are not stuck.
Because if treasure directs the heart, then we can redirect our hearts by choosing where we invest.

  • Invest in God’s presence, and hunger for Him grows.
  • Invest in people, and compassion deepens.
  • Invest in the kingdom, and eternity comes into focus.

Jesus isn’t calling us to poverty of joy, but richness of life.

A Final Thought

Every day, we place treasure somewhere. There is no neutral ground.

So Jesus’ words gently press us toward wisdom:

Choose your treasure carefully—because your heart will surely follow.

And where your heart ends up shapes the kind of life you live.


Posted in Bible, God, Jesus, Leadership, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My Top Worship Songs for 2026

Picking great songs for your congregation and worship band is one of the most important tasks of a worship leader. Great songs have a sense of God’s Spirit on them. Great worship songs make you want to sing them again and again. Great songs cause your spirit to rise in worship to the Lord.

I try to regularly update and reduced my worship list to 35 songs. For me, these songs are the best of the best, although it was hard to narrow it down to just 35. I also put in my preferred keys for strong congregational singing and guitar friendliness. (Using the Rule of D: i.e. the top note is around a D). The first key is for male leaders and the other key (in brackets) is for female leaders (the top note around a A-Bb)

Here is my list, let me know what you think. What great worship song am I missing from my list? 

Faster Tempo Songs:

  • Praise (Lake, Moore, Brown) – D or Eb (A-Bb) 
  • Great Things (Myrin, Wickham) – G (D)
  • My Testimony (Lake, Brown, Furtick) – F (D)
  • The House Of The Lord (Wickham, Smith) – E or F (D)
  • This Is Our God (Lake, Wickham) G or A (Eb or F)
  • This Is Amazing Grace (Riddle, Wickham, Faro) – G (E)
  • Take You At Your Word (Carnes, King, Hastings) – A or Bb (F-G)
  • Glorious Day (Ingram, Smith) – C (G)
  • I Thank God (Butler, Bow) – G (F)
  • The Joy (Holt, Wong) – G or A (F)

Medium Tempo Songs:

  • I Know A Name (Furtick, Lake) – G or Ab (D or Eb)
  • Goodness Of God (Fielding, Johnson, Cash, Ingram) – A, Bb (G-Ab)
  • Trust In God (Lake, Brown) – G or Ab (F)
  • Battle Belongs (Wickham, Johnson) – Ab (G)
  • Made For More (Baldwin, Wiggins) A or Bb (F or G)
  • Same God (Lake, Furtick, Barrett) – A (F)
  • Firm Foundation (Carnes) – E or F (C or D)
  • Graves Into Gardens (Lake, Furtick, Brown, Hammer) E or F (D)
  • God I’m Just Grateful (Moore, Furtick) G – Ab (E-F)
  • Yes I Will (Hoagland, Smith, Fields) A (F)
  • Raise A Hallelujah (Stevens, Helser, Skaggs) – E (D)

Slower Tempo Songs: 

  • Holy Forever (Tomlin, Wickham, Johnson) A or Bb (G)
  • Praises (Be Lifted Up) (Baldwin) – G or Ab (F)
  • Worthy (Furtick, Brown) – D (C) 
  • Who Else (Gamboa, Funderburk, Rowe) – A (Ab or G)
  • Jesus Be The Name (Furtick, Hudson) – E, F (C or Db)
  • Build My Life (Younker, Redman, Barrett) – E (D) 
  • Living Hope (Johnson, Wickham) – C (A-Bb)
  • Fall Like Rain (Maddox, Younker) – F, G (Eb)
  • Gratitude (Lake, Bow, Hastings) – G, Ab (E)
  • I Speak Jesus (Smith, Reeves, Prince) – Ab or G (F)
  • Worthy Of It All (Brymer, Hall) – F, G (D,E)
  • Make Room (White, Farro) – Ab-A (G-Ab)
  • Way Maker (Kalu, Egbu) B (A)
  • What A Beautiful Name (Fielding, Ligertwood) – E (D)
  • Great Are You Lord (Leonard, Ingram, Jordan) – E, F or G (D)
  • O Praise The Name (Anastasis) (Hastings,Sampson) – A (G)
  • King of Kings (Ligertwood, Ingram) * – Eb/D (C)

Top Hymns: 

  • How Great Thou Art – Bb (A)
  • Great Is Thy Faithfulness – C
  • I Stand Amazed (How Marvelous) – G
  • Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone) – E
  • At The Cross – G (F)
  • Holy, Holy, Holy – C-D
  • I Surrender All – C
  • It Is Well With My Soul  Bb-C

Contemporary and Modern Hymns

  • 10,000 Reasons – F (Eb)
  • Agnus Dei (Smith) – G or A (F)
  • Before The Throne Of God Above – D
  • Cornerstone (Morgan, Myrin, Mote, Liljero) – A (G) *
  • Here I Am To Worship (Hughs) – E, F, G (D)
  • Hosanna (Praise Is Rising) (Palm Sunday) (Baloche) – G (E)
  • How Deep The Father’s Love For Us – G (E)
  • How Great Is Our God – A (F or G)
  • In Christ Alone – Eb (D)
  • Living Hope – (Wickham, Johnson) C (Bb)
  • Lord I Need You (Nockels, Carson, Reeves, Stanfill, Maher) – E (D) *
  • Revelation Song (Riddle) E or D (C or D)
  • Shout To The Lord (Zschech) – A-B (G-A)
  • The Blood (Crouch) – G
  • You’re Worthy Of My Praise (Ruis) – F or G (D-Eb)

Bonus 2: My Favorite Communion Songs

  • At The Cross (Zschech, Morgan) – E (D)
  • Because of Christ (Holt, Clayton) – E (C) **
  • King of Kings (Brooke, Ingram) – D (C)
  • Nothing But The Blood (Redman) – A (G)
  • Nothing But The Blood  (Plainfield) – E (F)
  • O Come To The Altar (Brown, Brock, Furtick, Joye) – G (E)
  • O The Blood (Barker) – G
  • O The Blood (Miller) – G
  • O Praise The Name (Anastasis) (Hastings, Ussher, Sampson) – A (G)
  • The Blood Will Never Lose It’ Power  (Crouch) – G-Ab

Bonus 3: My Favorite Altar Songs

  • Available (Furtick, Fielding, Ingram) – G (F or E)
  • O Come To The Altar (Brown, Brock, Furtick, Joye) – G (D)
  • I Surrender All (Deventer) – C (Bb)
  • Lord I Give You My Heart (Morgan) – G (E)
  • Come Just As You Are (Sabolick) – F (D)
  • Come As You Are (Glover, Crowder, Maher) – A (G)
  • Just As I Am  (Bradbury, Underwood) – B (A)
  • Make Room (White, Farro) – A-Bb (G-Ab)*

Check out my new book.. “Leading Worship ~ Notes from a Grand Adventure available in Kindle or Soft Cover Editions.  This is a great gift for the musician or worshipper in your life.

This blog is part of my vision to train over 100,000 worship leaders around the world. If you would like to support this vision you can help by giving any amount via PayPal here.

Comment: Hey Mark, I was just working on my worship set for Sunday and opened your ‘Top Worship Songs’ for probably the 300th time in the last year. Just wanted to let you know how much I appreciate you sharing the info (I use it often) and I appreciate you updating the list. Blessings to you in your work and ministry. – Seth from Virginia

Posted in Church, God, Jesus, Music, Worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 28 Comments

God Will Provide

Few statements in Scripture are as simple—and as profound—as Abraham’s words on Mount Moriah:
“God will provide.” (Genesis 22:8)

Abraham spoke these words while walking up a mountain with his son Isaac, carrying the wood for a sacrifice. Isaac noticed something missing.

“Look,” Isaac said, “we have the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?”

Abraham’s reply was not a carefully reasoned explanation. It was not a theological lecture. It was a declaration of faith formed over decades of walking with God:

“God Himself will provide the lamb for the burnt offering, my son.”

Faith That Has Been Tested Over Time

By the time Abraham spoke these words, he was not a young man full of optimism. He was well over 100 years old. His faith had already been stretched by famine, long delays, mistakes, and disappointments. He had waited 25 years for Isaac to be born. Now God was asking him to place that very promise back on the altar.

“God will provide” is not the language of denial or shallow positivity. It is the voice of someone who has learned—often the hard way—that God can be trusted, even when the situation makes no sense.

Provision Often Comes at the Last Moment

As Abraham raised the knife, God intervened. A ram appeared, caught in a thicket by its horns. The sacrifice was provided—but not early.

God’s provision often comes at the point where we can no longer rely on our own solutions. That can be uncomfortable. We prefer advance notice, backup plans, and visible guarantees. But Genesis 22 reminds us that God’s timing is intentional. He is not late. He is never careless. And He is never absent.

Abraham named that place Jehovah-Jireh, meaning “The Lord will provide.” Not “The Lord did provide”—but will. It was a name rooted in confidence for the future.

God Provides What We Cannot

Notice something important: Abraham said God will provide the lamb, but God provided a ram.

God’s provision does not always match our expectations. Sometimes He provides a different solution than the one we imagined—but it is always the right one. Provision is not about getting what we want; it’s about receiving what God knows we need.

Centuries later, God would again provide a Son—this time, not spared. On another hill, God Himself provided the Lamb. Abraham’s words echo forward into the gospel.

Living with a “God Will Provide” Faith

To say “God will provide” is not passive. Abraham still walked up the mountain. He still built the altar. He still obeyed. Faith moves forward while trusting God to meet us on the way.

This kind of faith grows slowly. It is shaped by daily obedience, long seasons of waiting, and repeated experiences of God’s faithfulness. Over time, we learn that God’s provision is not only financial or material—it is strength, wisdom, peace, forgiveness, and grace for each day.

A Word for Today

Many of us are standing in situations where something is missing. Direction. Resources. Clarity. Energy. Hope.

Genesis reminds us that the truest response is not panic or control, but trust.

God will provide.

Not always early.
Not always how we expect.
But always faithfully.

And when He does, we will discover—as Abraham did—that the place of testing becomes a place of testimony.


Posted in Bible, God, Jesus, Leadership, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Never Too Old: When God Calls Later in Life

One of the quiet lies our culture tells us is that our best years are behind us. We are taught—sometimes subtly, sometimes directly—that usefulness belongs to the young, the energetic, the innovative. But when we open the Bible, we discover a very different story. Over and over again, God begins new and significant chapters in people’s lives when they are already well advanced in years.

Scripture reminds us that God is not constrained by age, calendars, or human timelines. In fact, some of His most important work begins late.

Abraham: Called at Seventy-Five

When God first called Abram to leave his country and step into an unknown future, he was seventy-five years old (Genesis 12:1–4). This was not a retirement plan; it was the beginning of a lifelong journey of faith.

Even more striking, Abraham did not become the father of Isaac—the child of promise—until he was one hundred years old. God deliberately waited until there was no doubt that the promise could only be fulfilled by divine power, not human strength.

Abraham’s story teaches us that faith can grow deeper, not weaker, with age—and that God sometimes waits until our self-reliance is gone before He acts most clearly.

Sarah: Fruitful Beyond the Natural

Sarah was ninety years old when Isaac was born (Genesis 21:1–7). By every natural standard, her season for fruitfulness had passed. Yet God chose her to demonstrate that His promises are not limited by biology or history.

Her laughter of disbelief eventually became laughter of joy. Sarah’s life reminds us that God can still bring joy, purpose, and fruitfulness long after we think the window has closed.

Moses: A Leader at Eighty

Moses was eighty years old when God called him from the burning bush (Exodus 7:7). After forty years in Pharaoh’s palace and forty years in the wilderness, Moses may have assumed his story was nearly finished.

But God was just getting started.

The deliverer of Israel, the lawgiver, the shepherd of a nation—this defining season began when many would consider life nearly over. Moses’ maturity, humility, and dependence on God were forged through decades of preparation.

God was not in a hurry. He was shaping a man.

Caleb: Still Strong at Eighty-Five

Caleb stands out as a remarkable example of sustained faith. At eighty-five years old, he boldly declared:

“I am still as strong today as I was in the day Moses sent me out… Now give me this hill country” (Joshua 14:10–12).

Caleb did not ask for ease or comfort. He asked for mountains, challenges, and unfinished work. His confidence was not in his physical strength alone but in the faithfulness of God over a lifetime.

Caleb shows us that courage and vision do not have an expiration date.

Anna: Worshiping in Her Later Years

In the New Testament, Anna the prophetess was eighty-four years old when she encountered the infant Jesus in the temple (Luke 2:36–38). She had spent decades fasting, praying, and worshiping.

When the Messiah finally arrived, Anna recognized Him immediately and proclaimed the good news to others. Her long years of faithfulness positioned her to recognize what many younger people missed.

Sometimes the greatest gift of age is spiritual discernment.

Paul: Still Running the Race

While we do not know Paul’s exact age, his final letters were written near the end of his life. From prison, facing death, he could still say:

“I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith” (2 Timothy 4:7).

Paul did not slow into passivity; he leaned into legacy—encouraging, teaching, and strengthening the next generation.

What These Lives Teach Us

These stories tell us something essential about God:

  • God values faithfulness, not flash.
  • God works on long timelines.
  • God often does His deepest work after character has been tested over decades.
  • God delights in using people who know their need for Him.

The Bible never presents old age as a spiritual liability. Instead, it often presents it as a season of wisdom, authority, fruitfulness, and influence.

A Word for Today

If you are older and wondering whether God is finished with you, Scripture offers a clear answer: He is not.

As long as there is breath in your lungs, God can still call, shape, use, and send you. Your prayers, your counsel, your example, your worship, and your obedience may be more powerful now than ever before.

God is not done writing your story.

“Even in old age they will still produce fruit;
they will remain vital and green.” (Psalm 92:14)

And that is a promise worth believing—at any age.

Posted in Bible, Church, God, God Adventures, Health, Leadership, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Guidelines for Worship Team Ministry

Healthy worship ministries are built on both spiritual depth and clear expectations. These guidelines exist to create a culture of excellence, unity, and freedom—where worship leaders can serve with confidence and integrity.

Spiritual & Team Commitments

Worship team members are expected to:

  • Have a personal, growing relationship with Jesus Christ, evidenced through regular prayer, Bible reading, and active church fellowship.
  • Be a committed attendee and faithful giver at our church, including consistent participation in Sunday services.
  • Demonstrate technical competence as a singer, musician, or audio/media technician.
  • Be comfortable on stage, leading worship with visible engagement and sincere expression.
  • Maintain a faithful attendance record for rehearsals and services.
  • Commit to personal practice—a minimum of one hour per week on assigned Sunday songs.

Commitment to a Godly Lifestyle

Worship team members are ministers. Because we serve visibly, we are called to live lives that are above reproach, avoiding even the appearance of compromise (1 Timothy 3).

People often look to those on the platform as examples of Christian living. For that reason, it is vital that we:

  • Treat one another with grace and humility
  • Guard our hearts from pride, impurity, and division
  • Pursue integrity both publicly and privately

Our desire—and God’s desire—is for every worship team member to live a victorious, healthy Christian life, free from bondage. If you are struggling in any area, please reach out. This is a place of help and restoration, not judgment.

Issues That Must Be Addressed Before Serving Publicly

The following areas should be resolved prior to taking a public ministry role:

  • Alcohol or drug abuse
  • Sexual immorality
  • Prideful or divisive attitudes
  • Uncontrolled anger or rage
  • Inability to submit to leadership
  • Gossiping or stirring up strife
  • Any ongoing, unbiblical lifestyle

Dress Code

(Note: Dress standards vary widely by church size, culture, and context. What follows reflects what works in my setting. Your situation may look different.)

General Guidelines

  • Modest, neat, and culturally appropriate
  • Dressy, not sloppy
  • Avoid anything distracting to the congregation

Please avoid:

  • Overly tight clothing
  • Short skirts or dresses; low-cut tops
  • Sleeveless tops without a covering
  • See-through clothing without an undershirt
  • Gaudy or oversized jewelry
  • Footwear that looks unkept

Sunday Morning Attire

Men

  • Nice shirt and pants
  • Optional jackets, sweaters, or vests

Ladies

  • Nice top with pants, skirt, or knee-length dress
  • Tight pants, leggings, or jeggings should be paired with a longer top (mid-thigh length)

All

  • Dark, well-fitted dress jeans are acceptable
  • No ripped, baggy, or worn-out jeans
  • No hats on platform

Color Palette

  • Neutral tones work best: black, greys, browns, blues, dark purple, white, and off-white
  • Avoid loud prints or flashy patterns

Schedule Requirements

  • Team members are typically scheduled once or twice per month, based on availability and service needs.
  • Punctuality is essential. Arrive on time and fully prepared.
  • Strong rehearsals lead to freer worship on Sunday. The more prepared we are, the less we think about notes—and the more we focus on God.
  • Learn your instrumental and vocal parts before rehearsal.

Weekly Schedule for medium size church with permanent facility

  • Thursday rehearsal: 7:00–9:00 PM (mandatory only for those scheduled that week)
  • Sunday:
    • 8:15 AM – Rehearsal
    • 9:00 AM – Prayer
    • 9:30 AM – Service
    • 11:15 AM – Service

Weekly Schedule for small church with weekly set-up

  • Thursday rehearsal: 7:30–9:15 PM (mandatory only for those scheduled that week)
  • Sunday:
    • 8:30 AM – Set-up and Rehearsal
    • 10:00 AM – Prayer
    • 10:30 AM – Service
    • 11:45 AM – Tear-down

Tips for Better Platform Presence

  • Watch yourself in a mirror. Notice your posture, movement, and expressions. Adjust anything that feels awkward or distracting.
  • Don’t mirror the congregation’s energy. Lead with engagement, even when the room feels quiet. People often need permission and example to worship freely.
  • Be sincere. Worship from your heart. A genuine smile ministers more than you may realize.
  • Musicians:
    • Practice well so you’re not glued to your instrument
    • Memorize music whenever possible
    • Sing while you play
    • Use your space—still platforms often feel lifeless
  • Singers and musicians:
    • Develop eye contact with the congregation
    • Closed eyes all the time can unintentionally disconnect people

The very best worship teams do one thing well:
They worship God—and they help others do the same.


Reflection Question

What do you agree or disagree with in these guidelines?
What is currently working well for your worship team?


Recommended Resource
Check out my book Leading Worship: Notes from a Grand Adventure, available in Kindle and softcover editions. It makes a great gift for worship leaders and musicians.


Posted in Bible, Church, God, Health, Jesus, Leadership, Music, Wisdom, Worship | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Do You Know Jesus?

It’s a simple question, but it cuts deep.

Not do you know about Jesus. Not have you heard His name, grown up in church, sung the songs, or read a few verses. The real question is this: Do you know Him?

In the Gospels, many people knew about Jesus. They watched Him teach, saw the miracles, listened to the crowds buzz with excitement. Yet Jesus often exposed a painful truth—proximity does not equal relationship. Familiarity does not mean intimacy.

Knowing About Jesus vs. Knowing Jesus

It’s possible to know the stories and still miss the Savior.

You can know that He was born in Bethlehem, walked on water, fed the five thousand, died on a cross, and rose again—and still keep Him at arm’s length. Knowledge alone doesn’t transform a heart. Relationship does.

Jesus Himself warned about this:

“Not everyone who calls out to Me, ‘Lord! Lord!’ will enter the Kingdom of Heaven… I will reply, ‘I never knew you.’” (Matthew 7:21–23)

Those are sobering words. Notice what He doesn’t say: “You never knew about Me.” He says, “I never knew you.” The issue is relationship.

Jesus Invites Relationship, Not Religion

From the beginning of His ministry, Jesus’ invitation was deeply personal:

“Come, follow Me.”

Not sign up. Not agree with a statement of faith. Not try harder.
Follow Me. Walk with Me. Learn My ways. Trust Me.

Jesus didn’t just preach truth—He lived life with His disciples. He ate with them, corrected them, loved them, challenged them, restored them. He wasn’t forming religious consumers; He was shaping hearts.

Knowing Jesus Changes How You Live

When you truly know Jesus, things begin to shift.

  • You don’t just obey out of duty—you respond out of love.
  • You don’t just pray to get answers—you pray to be near Him.
  • You don’t just read Scripture for information—you listen for His voice.

Paul captured this beautifully when he said:

“I want to know Christ and experience the mighty power that raised Him from the dead.” (Philippians 3:10)

This wasn’t the cry of a new believer. This was a seasoned apostle who had given his life to Christ—and still longed to know Him more.

You Can Know Him—Today

The good news is this: Jesus is not hiding.

He invites the seeker, the skeptic, the weary, and the wounded.

“Look! I stand at the door and knock. If you hear My voice and open the door, I will come in.” (Revelation 3:20)

Knowing Jesus begins with humility—acknowledging our need, turning our hearts toward Him, and choosing trust over control. It grows through daily surrender, honest prayer, and time in His Word.

A Question Worth Sitting With

So let me ask it again—not to accuse, but to invite:

Do you know Jesus?

Not just in your head, but in your heart.
Not just on Sundays, but in everyday life.
Not just as Savior, but as Lord, Friend, and Shepherd.

If you know Him, keep pursuing Him.
If you’re not sure, He’s closer than you think.

And if you’ve drifted, His invitation still stands:

“Come. Follow Me.”

Posted in Bible, God, Jesus, Wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment