Good comments.   My wife and I do not look to songs for didache  --  rather we score high a service that allows us to praise God and give Him His righteous due.   Perhaps reflective of how we approach the Faith in total. 
 
JD 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Christine Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, 3 Jun 2005 10:47:35 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: Re: [TruthTalk] Obesity

> It plays a very important part in
> the discipline of spiritual growth.

Amen. I realized recently that the worship songs I
sing have taught me a sort of spiritual jealousy,
where I wanted to mean those songs from my heart when
I sang them. This one song had a line "You can offer
her anything her affections are all for Him only,"
that showed me how I should desire my God. Though I
wouldn't rate it over preaching and teaching, as
quoted in Lance's post, I do love worship!

Blessings!

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>  
>   
>  
> Worship shapes our spirituality
> "...our spirituality is usually shaped more by the
> experience of communal worship than it is by
> preaching and teaching....the way we think about God
> and relate to God is influenced enormously by our
> experience of God in communal worship..Songs are
> especially formative. We are far more likely to find
> ourselves humming something we sang in church when
> we go home than we are to find ourselves meditating
> on a phrase in the sermon..(not one of yours, of
> course)..Christian philosopher and scientist Michael
> Polanyi spoke of knowledge that we simply absorb by
> a kind of 'osmosis' without even realizing that we
> have done so. This is what he refers to as 'tacit
> knowledge' Most Christians simply imbibe a theology
> through the way that they worship.
> .theology springs from right worship but theology
> also, in turn, guides and ensures right
> worship.There is a circular relationship between the
> two as healthy worship and theology support each
> other....how theology can guide the kind of worship
> that in turn shapes people spirituality.
>  
>  
> How very true, for my wife and I, at least.  Our
> "church of choice" is Valley Christian Center in
> Fresno.   It is a 2000 member congregation with,
> perhaps, the best comtemporary worship service in
> the area.   What Polanyi speaks of in the above
> quote is, perhaps, the same as that referenced by
> Paul in Eph. 5:18-20.   There, spirit filling is an
> experience received on any occasion the community of
> saints gather togather in the sharing of song and
> spiritual hymns.   It plays a very important part in
> the discipline of spiritual growth.   Too much
> attention to the negatives expressed by some saints
> (including ourselves)  often counters the joy and
> peace derived from these times of worhsip.  
>  
> Thanks for the words
>  
> JD
> 


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