Showing posts with label SA Equip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SA Equip. Show all posts
Monday, October 8, 2012
NCMI SA Equip (Part four)
3 things that may have escaped your attention during worship at this years SA Equip:
1. Jono Warmington forgetting to switch on his amp
-picture this...opening night, Cornerstone Church bursting at the seams, the masses pushing right up to the stage counting down (almost to the state of delirium) with the countdown on the main screen, the kickdrum and bass come in right on queue, crying babies go unnoticed, every eye is excitedly rooted to the stage AND...worship leader Jono Warmington realises that his Vox AC 30 amp which is being mic-ed in the backroom had been forgotten to be switched on!
2. Stage dives on Night two
-On Friday morning, Grant Crawford and a panel of interviewees attempted to ask the question, "what does success look like?". Probably a more pertainent question after Thursday night's wild worship would have been, "what does a successful stage dive look like?". And I would have been the first to put my hand up in shouting out the answer, "anything except Werner Derckson's!"
After the usual fare of Bruce McAlpine and 5 excited teenagers (averaging 50kgs each) leaping off the stage into the outstretched arms of the seething crowd, a moment of pure joy was when Werner (not the lightest guy) prepped himself like an olympic athlete for his assault on gravity. The corporate groans of apprehension from the rest of the worshippers was only matched by the fear in the eyes of those who were going to have to perform a modern day miracle in catching the jump. That not one of them backed away shows that Tyrone Daniel's message of being Partners and not just Friends had truly hit home!
3. The red-hot worship of the Son of God
-for three days, over 5000 hands were lifted and +-2500 voices were raised, as together we exalted Christ Jesus. From all cities and towns from around Southern Africa, from churches big and small, black, white, rich and poor, young and old, the worship of our King became our common language and theme. This is the heartbeat of our lives and our mandate. Worship, that is not contained to a moment, to the church walls or to a certain key or style, but discipling nations to bow their hearts and bend their knees to the One and Only.
"Mission's exist because worship does not" (Matt Redman)
We've always known this, but something of this was recaptured in our hearts this past week.
Flight tickets to Joburg from Cape Town and back: R1800
Food for the week: R450
Buying that pretty girl a coffee: R10
Moments like these: priceless
Labels:
Bruce McAlpine,
Cornerstone Church,
Grant Crawford,
Jono Warmington,
Matt Redman,
NCMI,
Partners,
SA Equip,
stage dive,
Tyrone Daniel,
Vox AC 30,
Werner Derckson,
worship,
worship leading
Friday, October 5, 2012
NCMI SA Equip (Part three)
Thursday was a good day.
A morning filled
with moustaches and Mexican gang terminology (Terry Kreuger), New Zealand
accents and distasteful All Black references from Bruce Benge and rounded off
with the stories of plane crashes and fearless courage from Hennie Keyter, I
joined the chip and dip queue for lunch with a heart stirred afresh as well as with
the very unsanctified thought of who I would least like to meet in a dark alley
out of the three morning speakers. 20 minutes later the stirring had become
more of a heart-burn as I ate my salty lunch way too fast, but I digress.
By the time 7pm rolled around and the countdown clock
moved swiftly to zero, the prophetic voices were released to fearlessly declare
new seasons and unmarked paths as well as to remind us of God’s original
intent. Gill Patterson, Ash Bell and finally Mike Hanchett masterfully lead us
through a very organic evening of refreshing and empowering. Definitely an
unscripted evening, but the fingerprints of heaven were all over our gathering
as the Spirit of God moved amongst us.
As Tyrone and others have echoed on numerous occasions,
we are through transition and God has us in position. And if Thursday was a day
of increased positioning, I have no doubt today we are ready to be launched.
And in terms of the dark alley question, I polled
extensively (three guys nearest me at the time) and we all agreed that we
feared Terry Kreuger the most.
That moustache alone would kill you.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
NCMI SA Equip (part two)
3 things to bring you up to speed about night one...
1. It
was FULL
-upstairs, downstairs, the
side hall, the mom’s rooms and even the floor space at the back was filled with
lines and lines of people crowding into Cornerstone Church. And this was only
just Wednesday night!
2. It
was LOUD
-it’s always a great indicator
of the temperature of hearts when the band are being drowned out by the
passionate voices of the rest of the worshippers. Fresh new original songs were
picked up on quickly and belted out with gusto while old favourites stirred
hearts once again. The floor and roof was rattling and our souls rejoiced.
3. It
was UNIFIED
-agendas, histories, regions,
individual church issues were left at the door as from the get go we set our
eyes corporately on the object and the subject of our worship, Jesus.
“What unites us is not just
our purpose, but chiefly it is our captivation with our King”
And if you missed last night
but want to sound as if you were there, then make it a priority to throw in the
phrase “it’s go time” into as many conversations as you can.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
NCMI SA Equip (Part One)
I remember it just as if it was yesterday.
Every year the
announcement would go out at church for leaders to register for “Bloem”. The
fact that a city was being referred to in its shortened state as a simile for a
5 day leadership conference was not lost on anyone. As the announcements became
more frequent in the lead up to the September school holidays, so too did the
increasing rate of the church’s excitement. The 7 hour drive in convoy from
Durban on the early Monday morning, the bets being placed on who would “open
the batting” in the first session, counting down the times someone said the
words “in our togetherness”, Dudley Daniel’s insistence to “avoid fame like the
plague”, massive choirs, Mimosa Mall hangouts with our best mates from around
the country who we saw only once a year and all the way through to the
inevitable and yet heart stirring culmination with “Be thou my vision”, “Bloem”
never failed to leave an impression as we all left determined to change the
world.
Now years later, the journey continues after many
mountain top highs and valley lows. The venue has changed, fresh voices have
appeared, new songs have been written and we even have had to become used to
new terminology (“Equip”). But the mission and very heart-beat of the motley
group of men and women who come together in friendship and mission from all
over the globe under the name of NCMI remains the same. For the King and His
Kingdom, we still believe that the local church is the hope of the world, the
nations are our inheritance and He will not return until every tribe, tongue
and people group have heard.
This is what courses through our veins!
So once again we gather “in our togetherness” in the
third term holidays. But this is no mere conference or inspirational get
together. We gather to be scattered afresh with the Gospel at our centre and
with the nations in our line of sight.
As Alan Frow year in and year out fearlessly declared all
those years ago, “we will go for the sake of the cross, we will go for the sake
of the lost”
(NCMI SA Equip 2012 - 3rd -5th October at Cornerstone Church in Joburg)
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