If you could plan four worship services – using anyone throughout church history – what would they look like?
Last time, I mentioned which venues, musicians, and vocalists I’d select, along with the hymns and praise songs.
Today, I’m choosing the performance songs, readings, and preachers.
Next, I’m choosing various artists to sing one performance song at each venue.
Bono and the boys from U2 will sing “Magnificent.”
Bob Dylan will sing “When He Returns.”
Twila Paris will sing “How Beautiful.”
Chuck Girard will sing “Little Pilgrim.”
During communion, we’ll have readings from these Christian books, which have meant so much to me over the years:
*Celebration of Discipline by Richard Foster
*The Cross of Christ by John Stott
*Knowing God by J. I. Packer
*Loving God by Chuck Colson
The preachers?
They have to be biblically accurate, Christ-centered, passionate, and touch both the head and the heart.
That certainly narrows the field considerably. My selections:
*Charles Spurgeon. He is still widely read today, 177 years after his birth. I read from the collection of Spurgeon’s writings Beside Still Waters: Words of Comfort for the Soul every day. He was stout and smoked cigars, but Spurgeon loved Jesus, and everybody knew it. He could have you laughing one minute and weeping the next. Since I’m unaware of any recordings of Spurgeon preaching (he died in 1892), my guess is that many believers would flock to hear the Prince of Preachers just one time. By the way, you can buy many of his best writings on Kindle for next-to-nothing.
*Charles Colson. In 1986, I attended the Congress on Biblical Exposition in my hometown of Anaheim. It was an all-star cavalcade of preachers: John Stott, Chuck Swindoll, Howard Hendricks, Stuart Briscoe, Stephen Olford, J. I. Packer, and many others. It was the first time I had ever heard Colson speak, and he blew me away. The man is fearless, a true prophet of Jesus Christ, who proclaims the truth with confidence and wisdom. Time after time, when the mainstream media wants a leading evangelical Christian to comment on a news story, they select the wrong people. If they just went to Colson every time …
*Bill Hybels. It’s been fashionable to criticize Willow Creek recently, not for their message, but for their methodology. In typical fashion, no one has been more honest about his church’s shortcomings than Hybels. Bill is humble, wise, strong, and a master communicator. More than anyone else, I’ve patterned my preaching style after his. Years ago, I used to write my message and then listen to his tapes because if I heard him preach first, I’d want to steal everything he said. A pastor friend introduced me to him one time, and he seemed genuinely interested in me – a rarity among Christian leaders. God bless you, Bill. What a treat it would be to hear you preach among all these great preachers …
*Dr. Curtis Mitchell. Dr. Mitchell taught Bible at Biola for many years. I had six classes with him, and while my grades fluctuated, he taught me more about the Bible than anyone ever has. Whenever I heard that he’d be preaching somewhere in Southern California, I’d try and hear him speak. Mentored by J. Vernon McGee (whom he brought to class one day as a guest lecturer), Dr. Mitchell eventually became an interim pastor at Nutwood Street Baptist in Garden Grove (where I ended up on staff several years later). When he preached for an hour, it seemed like a minute. He wasn’t great interpersonally (Kim’s dad invited me to join him and Dr. Mitchell for dinner one night, and he seemed uncomfortable), but he was both convincing and humorous in the pulpit.
How about this for a service lineup?
“Magnificent” – U2
“My Glorious”
Welcome and Invocation – Johnny Cash
“Holy, Holy, Holy”
Reading from The Cross of Christ by John Stott
Communion
“At the Cross/When I Survey”
Prayer
Message – Charles Spurgeon
Offering
“There is a Redeemer”
Benediction
Well, that’s my lineup.
Want to try constructing one yourself?
Go ahead – dream a little!





















Who Introduced You to Your Favorites?
November 16, 2011 by Jim Meyer
I have a little Thanksgiving project for you.
Think about all the people and things in life that you love the most: your spouse, friends, TV shows, books – you get the idea.
How were you first introduced to them?
While driving across the desert several days ago, it struck me how indebted I am to others for most of “my favorite things.”
For example, I am grateful to:
*my father for introducing me to Jesus, baseball cards, the Three Stooges, Christian books, the Dodgers and Lakers, and teaching me how to play sports.
*my mother for encouraging me to use the library, love Charlie Brown, enjoy The Good Twins – and for letting me stay home from Sunday night church to watch The Wizard of Oz.
*my brother John for making me a better player by playing baseball (with a tennis ball) in the backyard for years.
*my friend Lee who introduced me to comic books (at an early age), encyclopedias, and serious chess. (We played 98 games one summer. I won 49, he won 46, with three stalemates.)
*my grandmother, who gave an 8-year-old boy his first transistor radio, allowing him to hear Surfin’ USA and Puff the Magic Dragon for the first time.
*my friend Steve for deepening my love for sports, and whose burning desire to compete – making me a better player – resulted in our winning the “Top Jock” awards our senior year in high school.
*Mr. Remmel, my teacher in fifth and sixth grades, for introducing me to the soundtracks of The Music Man, West Side Story, and My Fair Lady, along with Peter, Paul, and Mary.
*my friend Ken for teaching me to play table tennis in his backyard and for inviting me to his church, where I later met my wife.
*my friends Kevin and Steve, who introduced me to baseball autographs when they acquired the signatures of Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim in the spring of 1967. (Several of us duplicated their experience – and their results – the following day.)
*my friend Dennis, who introduced me to the original Hawaii Five-O and playing one-on-one in the driveway.
*my friend Edmon who introduced me to The Beatles (on a camping trip) and Simon & Garfunkel (while playing chess at his house).
*my youth pastors John and Darryl, who introduced me to a serious study of Scripture while patiently answering my questions.
*my friend Dave, who introduced me to Bob Dylan, Johnny Carson, Breakfast Jacks, and humor in the sacred halls of our seminary.
*my father-in-law Earl, who introduced me to the wonders of acquiring a scholarly library – and allowed me to pursue his alluring daughter.
*my friend Tom, who showed me the latest Christian books and records at the Bible bookstore he ran, invited me to meet John Wooden, took me to see Star Wars, and introduced me to backpacking (in Glacier National Park).
*my son Ryan, who encouraged me to master Super Mario Brothers 3, Star Trek: The Next Generation, The Simpsons, Seinfeld, the Gin Blossoms, and the wonders of the Android.
*my wise and witty daughter Sarah, who introduced me to Napoleon Dynamite, the singalong versions of The Sound of Music and Les Miserables (she knows all the words), What About Bob?, The Office (on Christmas Day) and the importance of family heritage.
*my wife Kim, who showed me how to think big, go to plays and movies, travel overseas – and gave me a book on U2 (Walk On by Steve Stockman) that made me a lifelong fan.
*my friend Craig, who introduced me to Christian artists like Kim Hill, Susan Ashton, Iona, Margaret Becker, and Steven Curtis Chapman.
*my friends Russ and Ray, who showed me that a pastor and a former board chairman can be friends for life.
*Rick Steves, who introduced me to budgetary travel in Europe, thus broadening my thinking about the world – and causing me to constantly daydream.
*Dr. Archibald Hart, who introduced me to a wise integration of Scripture and psychology – as well as Mr. Bean.
*my friend Kimberley, who loaned me a DVD copy of Midsomer Murders, a British mystery show that allows my mind to travel back to England periodically.
I stumbled upon many other favorites myself, I guess, including the San Francisco Giants and 49ers, Van Morrison, the iPod and iTunes, Bach, Sherlock Holmes, 24, London, and Mozart, to name just a few.
How much poorer would my life be without all the wonderful people I’ve mentioned? I thank God for each and every one of them. Their willingness to share their passions and experiences with me have largely made me the person I am today.
It didn’t take long to compile this list. How about compiling one of your own?
If you send it to me, I promise to read it.
Happy Thanksgiving 2011!
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