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Archives for November 2010

Nov 17 2010

Which Drink Are You?

My post for this morning may seem vain at first sight. But this is for real. No joke. I’m sitting in Starbucks and I’m baffled once again by how much money people pay for coffee. I mean, people stop in here 2-3 times a DAY for their drink. Starbucks is an experience so many people can’t miss…daily. Amazing.

I’m probably a once or twice a week Starbucks drinker (since we use a fabulous Keurig at home).

I typically get a tall bold in a grande cup. My bro taught me this. Usually they’ll give you a grande size, and if not, you get plenty of room for cream.

So will you help me with my research? I’m dying to know, which drink are you?

Written by dsantistevan · Categorized: Uncategorized

Nov 15 2010

How to Turn Setbacks Into Stepping Stones

There is something that I believe with all my heart.

There are no setbacks for the man or woman of God. Only stepping stones.

“What are you talking about,” you may ask?

Well, when Satan attacks. When trials come. When sickness and pain rack your body. When your faith is tested. All seeming setbacks. But for the Christian following Jesus, God uses those very trials as stepping stones into greater faith, destiny, and influence.

Consider:

  • David – anointed to be King but then hunted like sport for years before he saw the fulfillment
  • Joseph – given a dream that he would be a ruler but sold into slavery and put in prison for wrongdoing not his own
  • Jesus – the Son of God becoming a man to bear our cross and carry our sin

All seeming setbacks at first glance. But from God’s perspective, merely necessary steps in the process towards Christlikeness and powerful destiny.

What do you consider your setback today? How could you shift your perspective and begin to believe God for greater faith, destiny, and influence through it?

Written by dsantistevan · Categorized: Uncategorized

Nov 12 2010

What is the Primary Purpose of Corporate Worship?

I’m curious to know what your thoughts are on corporate worship. What is the primary purpose of us gathering together to sing?

Do we gather primarily to sing and align our hearts with truth?

Do we gather primarily to experience the breakthrough power of the Holy Spirit?

Do we gather primarily to sing well performed worship songs?

Do we gather primarily because we like the worship leader?

Do we gather primarily to give our praise to God?

Do we gather primarily to receive blessings from God?

I’d love some comments here. Where do you stand when it comes to corporate worship?

Written by dsantistevan · Categorized: Worship, Worship Leaders

Nov 11 2010

How to Write Better Worship Songs (Part 2)

*If you are a songwriter, consider these posts a ‘songwriting checklist’. By no means is it an exhaustive dictionary on songwriting. For the first post on how to write better worship songs, go here.

  • Always Be Prepared to Capture Ideas – remember that time you had a great idea but you waited to write it down only to forget it? Maybe you don’t remember that. But it happened. I think. Oh well, I don’t remember. The point is to set up a simple system for capturing ideas. I personally use Evernote. I can capture ideas in different ways – write out lyrics, sing melodies, etc. Plus it syncs to all my mobile devices. Brilliant. But you could also just use a notebook, voice recorder, etc. Just carry something with you at all times.
  • Sing Your Prayers – don’t try to be too innovative or cool in the early stages. Start by just singing your honest prayers to God. Listen to what others are praying. What is your pastor preaching? Write what you hear.
  • Write with other people who are better than you – it’s OK to admit it. Actually, if you want to improve you need to realize right now that you are not the best. Many promising songwriters are stifled by their pride & arrogance. They won’t adjust their ideas. Another person can you give you some much needed perspective on your song. Plus they may be better at lyrics, melody, theme, etc.
  • Test your song – the best songs are songs that people engage with. But how will they engage if they’re only sung behind the scenes? Here’s my suggestion: find small groups of people to test your song on. A small group. A prayer meeting. Your spouse. Your church staff. Start small and see how it goes. Not every song you write needs to be done corporately. Maybe it will need more work. But go ahead and test it. I once heard someone say, too many ideas are born and lost in isolation.
  • Spend time worshiping
  • Revisit your ideas the next day – when struck with inspiration, your emotions are high. You think you’ve just written the greatest song ever. Chill out and revisit your idea tomorrow (given you’ve captured the idea in Evernote). You won’t be quite as impressed but it will force you to work hard and make it a great song.
  • Check your theology – run the song by your pastor for theological insight. A great melody mixed with lots of passion and bad theology is not a good song, whether “God gave it to you” or not. A trusted pastor can help you determine if your song is actually true, if it’s too me-centered, or if you’re just worshiping your own worship 🙂

Songwriters, help me out. What helps you write better songs?

Written by dsantistevan · Categorized: Songwriting

Nov 10 2010

How You Can Create Great Art Every Day

Do you ever feel bogged down by having to go work for another day? Are you overwhelmed and not slowing down enough to actually enjoy what you do?

I think all of us find ourselves in this place from time to time. Allow me to challenge your thinking.

You are an artist…and everyday presents an opportunity for you to create great art. But you may not consider yourself an “artist”. I mean, you don’t write songs, sing, play an instrument, paint, sculpt, listen to the Beatles, grow your hair extremely long, or just chill out for a living. Maybe you do. Or maybe you’re a pastor. Or a business man or woman. Or a nurse. A doctor. A sales clerk. A retail salesman. A waitress. A computer programmer. A teacher. Fill in the blank.

Seth Godin so brilliantly conveys in his book, Linchpin, that the world of work is changing. If you want to stand out and really make a difference, you need to create art. No longer are you just a replaceable cog in the machine who is told what to do. You are an artist.

What does this look like?

  • Ask, “Who can I bless today?”
  • Bring solutions to your boss instead of problems.
  • Focus on people.
  • Don’t just generate ideas. Get them done.
  • Don’t just say. Do.
  • Ask, “What’s something I could do that’s different or ‘out of the ordinary’ for my line of work but would make a positive difference?”
  • Pray over your projects.
  • Pour passion into your projects.
  • Ask, “What can I do to be remarkable today?”
  • Ask, “What one project will make the biggest difference today?” and do it.
  • See every interaction as an opportunity for the Holy Spirit to use you.

See? No paint brushes or guitars required. But by all means, use them if you can.

What art will you create today? What difference will you make today?

Written by dsantistevan · Categorized: Leadership

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