January 24, 2007

Hour #2


Have you ever considered how things tend to come full-circle? There are a lot of those kinds of situations in life. In fact, life itself for many on this earth tends to come around to where it began . We start out as fully alive but fully reliant of others for the most basic necessities of life. We need help with everything...we can't even feed ourselves! As we get older, we get stronger, more capable and more independent. Many of us have the opportunity at some point of raising children of our own and helping them begin life in their weakness. By the time our natural life draws to a close, however, our strength usually fails us, our mind often slows and we become reliant on others for the basics of survival. What a strange moment when we realize we are once again in need of someone else to feed us. It all comes around. It is life in its most honest of moments. Death comes to all and it is the great equalizer.
For God there is a cycle unfolding as well. Being outside of time, however, this cycle is only measured within His relationship to humanity. But, there is an end that is very familiar to the beginning and God is waiting for it to be realized. As He dwelled with humans in the initial season following creation, enjoying their presence walking among them, He waits and works toward the day when He will once again dwell with His people and we will experience His presence. Revelation 21:3 tells us...
"Now the dwelling of God is with men, and he will live with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away."
Amazing! God is going to end this phase of eternity by bringing it all around to the way it was supposed to be. It is in His heart that we should be in His presence forever. He longs to be closer that we feel Him in this age. He knows that, for now at least, this level of nearness to His unrestrained presence is almost the maximum we will experience. And yet...
It is our conviction that if we ask for more of His presence in our city, that He will come and dwell in our midst in a more substantial way. It is what revivals are made of, actually. It is not a new concept, just one less frequently experienced than we would wish. We at Sanctuary want to be a place where God can come and dwell in the midst of us. We want a city where He is not striving with His bride to be like Him and act out their lives as He would have them. We want Him to come with power in this age, even in part, and remove sickness, pain and bondage from this place. We want His kingdom to come now in our city as it is in heaven (ie. as it will be in the fullness of time when He dwells with us).
So, hour #2 of our Sunday setlist is dedicated to this concept. We sing and pray through passages related to the increase of God's dwelling presence among us, His advancing kingdom and what it will look it when it is fulfilled, and how we need to live in this process. We are called to move in step with Him, forsaking sin at every turn, and living lives of servanthood as worship unto the Bridegroom, King and Judge. We are called to minister to Him, to please His heart and to enjoy Him in all of it. We ask that He change us, this city and all involved. Do whatever is necessary, God, but bring changes that will allow for more of your presence dwelling richly and powerfully with us. For we are in love with you and long to have you with us.

Next time, I will tell you what it sounds like...you're gonna love it!

Brian Creary
Ministry Director

January 17, 2007

More on Hour #1


This past Sunday, I sat in the prayer room while one of the teams led us through an hour on Ephesians 1:17-18. It was Hour #1 and I loved what I saw!

First of all, it needs to be said that our format is an unusual one if you are more used to a Sunday morning worship set experience. Instead of a leader and a band backing him or her up, we function with more of a team approach. There is a leader, of course, but there is much more reliance on each part of the team to accomplish the purpose of the meeting. For example, the worship leader will lead in a song, but it will be the singers who will carry the bulk of the spontaneous singing around the specific passage (in this case, the Ephesians passage). In addition, it is a prayer leader who will inject thoughts, prayers and ideas into the mix as the set goes along. The music never stops. The ideas keep coming. Many are creative. Some are prophetic. All of it is fascinating if you are new to this.

During last Sunday's set, I watched as our prayer leader launched his first statement into the flow. Cncerning the passage, he asked "what is the hope of our calling, God?" . It was this simple statement that set the whole hour in motion and it was so much fun to watch the singers look for phrases to sing along this line, digging for deeper understanding, praying under their breath for God to bring clarity and trying to sing something nice to listen to at the same time.

I love our singers! They are bold and confident. Most of them realized a long time ago that it matters less how you sound and matters more what God is seeing and hearing in the process. Is what you are doing coming from a place of integrity? Are you connecting with God? Are you listening to the Spirit and letting Him guide you to further revelation as you honour the scriptures? Our singers have it. They are singing because they believe it matters. Their hearts are increasingly softened by God and His truth. They are serving in their weakness and it all counts.

At some point during this Sunday set, the picture was getting clearer. It's hard to explain, but sometimes at this stage of a set, as the singers and prayer leader are responding to one another as well as to the passage in question, a singular idea will emerge that everyone knows is coming from God and is "greater than the sum of our parts". It's these lines that we will sing in unison over and over, letting anyone in the room join in and interact with God around the ideas themselves. Someone on the team (I'm not even sure who...which is the way it should work) came up with the phrase "you will give us robes and crowns and we will rule with you". And there it was! Eternity was coming into focus, in a new phrase and with a melody attached, but it was a view we know about but so easily forget. The answer to the original question was being answered in a way that was inspiring our hearts and resonating in our spirits. It was causing us to think about the brevity of our life here on this earth and what was waiting for us next. Sure, we could have all sat around a table and done a bible study with commentaries on the passage. And, that would have been just fine. But, there is something about receiving revelation in the midst of worship, prayer and community that stirs the soul. God was here and helping us...it was thrilling.

And this was just the first hour....:) There were 6 hours that followed. I have much more to write, I guess. Wait until you hear what the Spirit uncovered for us in our set devoted to the Song of Solomon!! Or, what came as they sang through passages related to the Second Coming of Jesus and the end of the world.

Join us if you are in the area.

Brian Creary
Ministry Director

January 09, 2007

It's a Whole New Year!


Welcome to Sanctuary in 2007! We have made changes to our schedule that you need to know about, ones that incorporate new themes and new leaders. This is going to be fun.

Our first set of each Sunday is going to be focused on praying through an Apostolic Prayer. These prayers are found in the letters written to the churches and are amazing treasures of language and understanding of what God has on His heart for cities. Sanctuary is committed to using the bible as our prayer-book. It is God's written word to us and has power in the hearing, praying and understanding. We have found these prayers to be exceptional aids in saying it well when it is time to pray for our city. The years have passed since these were first written (centuries, actually) but the truth contained in them is timeless.

One of our favourites is found in Ephesians 1:17. This passage documents Paul praying for the church in Ephesus mid-way through the first century. He is writing to encourage them and give counsel, as he did for all the churches in his care, and as he arrives at v. 17 he is on a roll. He has just given the richest description of how God feels about them, what He has given them through this joining that has happened in Jesus giving Himself up for them and how it is all going to end. It is powerful stuff if you let it soak in to your spirit a bit. Verse 4 is a wonderful start to this discussion: "Long before he laid down earth's foundations, he had us in mind, had settled on us as the focus of his love, to be made whole and holy by his love." Imagine the implications of this. God knew about you before this all began and had AT THAT TIME decided that you were the focus. You were going to be the reason for it all. It was you that had won His affection and He was going to work toward having you whole and holy at the end. Amazing! Grasping this can go a long way to helping us change our approach to everyday life in its most mundane moments. There is reason and purpose to it all, and He waits for us in eternity. He is not waiting for you to get it right and attain to something...He is working for you to see that it happens!

Verse 10 tells us that God will have it all under one head when He draws this earth to a close. Everything in heaven and on the earth will come together. God will dwell with us and we are going to love it.

With all this fresh in his mind and heart, inspired by divine truth and probably buzzing from the presence of God at the mere writing of it, Paul goes on to pray for these people. Verse 17 tells us that he asks for something unexpected but obviously critical to their growth, stability and increasing joy: "I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better." This is an amazing request, one that we draw on again and again in our meetings. God, show us more of who you are! If we can see more, know more and comprehend more of who you are, we will see it correctly, live well and please you. It is a critical prayer in this hour for all churches and we pray it for Winnipeg's church family all the time. To know Him is to love Him. To see with His eyes is to get priorities right.

Come for our first hour and join with us as we sing and pray through this prayer and the many others like it in the New Testament.

Brian Creary
Ministry Director