John Markum

Favorite Worship Music: “What a Savior”

First up in the list of Praise and Worship music I would like to share is “What a Savior” by Jeremiah Jones, performed by Laura Story (AMAZING voice!). Our Saturday night worship team learned and started playing this song about a year ago, and I’ve never gotten tired of it. Hope you like it too…

WHAT A SAVIOR (music/lyrics by Jeremiah Jones)

Verse 1:

Atoning sacrifice
Keeper of this life
Hallelujah! You are Savior
Beginning and the end
Forgiver of my sin
By Your mercy You have saved us

Chorus:

Jesus, You are stronger
More than any other
Hallelujah! what a Savior
Jesus You are higher
My soul’s deepest desire
Hallelujah! You are Savior

Verse 2:

You are the shepherd king
You lead us by still waters
Hallelujah! You are Savior
You are my only hope
Your kindness is my friend
In Your presence You restore us

Chorus

Bridge:

You are the way, the truth, and the life
You are my joy and my salvation
You stood in my place, taking my shame
Upon your shoulder

Chorus

Click here to watch/listen to is on YouTube.

Click here to buy it on itunes.

Click here to buy the hard copy CD.

Favorite Praise and Worship Songs

I have previously posted on some of my favorite hymns about 6 months ago. Now-a-days I’ve been blessed by a variety of amazing new songs that have come out from some of the most godly men, women, and bands out there. And I love a pretty healthy mix of most of them. Like my list of hymns, this by no means is the extent of the music I listen to or like. I’m specifically sharing some of my favorites from the Praise and Worship genre.

Regardless of your church background, I hope that you can at least be blessed by the power of the lyrics being shared here. And perhaps if you are skeptical of the newer songs (like I once was), this may serve as an opportunity to see what most of the newer Praise and Worship music is all about.

In addition to posting the lyrics of some of my favorites, I’ll give you a youtube link where you can listen to the song, and an itunes/retail store link where you can buy the song.

Blessings,

John

Dead Right

Have you heard the expression of being “dead wrong?” Dead wrong is not just having your facts incorrect. Dead wrong is being so blind to the fact that you’re wrong that you get argumentative, defensive, even belligerent about something, only to find out later that you were not even right to begin with. You end up feeling kinda stupid and ashamed for getting so fired about about something you didn’t even have right. You weren’t just wrong. You were dead wrong.

If there’s anything worse than being dead wrong, it’s probably being dead right. A friend I was talking to this week introduced me to the term, and it was a powerful thought. Being dead right is very similar to being dead wrong. When you’re dead right you have the correct information. Your facts are accurate. But because you know you’re right, you end up being more confident.

And so in an argument the person with the right answers or perspective makes stands that are not worth taking. They end up winning a battle but losing the war. Has this ever happened to you? You were right. They were wrong. The fight got out of hand and the other person walked away. You know you were right, but you still feel like it’s your fault. It might be because you were dead right.

This happens in marriages all the time. One spouse gets upset at something the other did/didn’t do. And instead of calling them out on it in a loving way that still shows care for the other person, they use their “right” position as a weapon to attack the other person. The end result? They end up dead right. Correct about their information. Incorrect in their approach. What was probably a simple situation now has great hurt attached to it. They said they were going to do the dishes and they didn’t. Now that you’ve humiliated them by verbally beating them up over it, the dishes are still dirty, and your wife/husband doesn’t want to even look at you. The dishes would have taken 20 minutes to clean. Now it’ll take several hours or even days to recover peace and harmony in your home.

You know what being dead wrong has in common with being dead right? You’re still dead. I would rather be wrong than dead right. Wrong happens. Wrong is fixable. Dead right is personal. Dead right stings. Dead right is not love.

Purpose in your heart now that you will refuse to be dead right. When some else has done wrong by you, you will seek forgiveness and reconciliation, and not character assassination of the other person. Decide that you will use your right position as an opportunity to help the other person, not break them.

Knowledge is knowing the right stuff. Wisdom is understanding how to use it.

Blessings,

John

The phrase no pain, no gain has been a mantra for athletes and fitness junkies for years. And what they understand about physical pain needs to be broadened to a much more general use in all of our lives. Pain hurts. That's the whole problem. No one enjoys it, and if someone does, we rightfully

The Premium of Pain