“Sunday Setlist” #1
So I am jumping in and joining up with a bunch of other worship leaders.
“Sunday Setlist” is an opportunity to share with you a quick recap of our worship experience from the weekend. I will highlight the focus of our gathering and also list out the music used in our time together.
This weekend’s setlist…
I Will Boast – Paul Baloche
All – Joel Houston
Hallelujah(Your Love Is Amazing) – Brenton Brown, Brian Doerkson
You’re Worthy Of My Praise – David Ruis
Come Thou Fount, Come Thou King – Robert Robinson, Thomas Miller
The Solid Rock – Edward Mote, John Bacchus Dykes
This weekend was the final weekend in a series called “Flawed”. This weekend focused on the life of Solomon. Solomon was King considered to be the greates of all, but he lost sight. He took his eyes of of what God saw him to be and began focusing on himself. Something that stood out to me was that Solomon compromised. His character changed. He focused on sexual sin and ended up totally sold out to his own pleasure. We were challenged to reset our priorities and recommit to what we know is Godly and good. We closed the message time with Gateway Churches version of the hymn, “Come Thou Fount”. I have always loved this hymn. The words in the final verse spoke perfectly to Solomon’s plight and in turn spoke to us.
“Prone to wonder, lord I feel it.
Prone to leave the God I love.
Here’s my heart Lord, take and seal it.
Seal it for Thy courts above.”
We also had an all church BBQ this weekend, so their was an awesome time of just hanging out and eating together. What a blast. Great way to end the Summer.
If you’d like to listen to the message from this weekend, you can check it out at the Table Rock Website, or you can subscribe through iTunes to recieve the messages each week.










“Come Thou Fount” is one of my favorite remixes
dorothy (vicar of vibe)’s last blog post…Sunday set list…
Brent,
I love those same lines in Come Thou Font.
Billy Chia’s last blog post…Getting a God-Sized Vision
Actually we’re not talking about typefaces here – I’ll call it “Come Thou Fount.”
Billy Chia’s last blog post…Getting a God-Sized Vision
I love closing out sermons with worship. It can really help drive home the message as we connect to God.
Gary Durbin’s last blog post…Worship Confessional 08.24.08
I’ll take all of these on CD and lets call it good! hahahaha!!
I am SERIOUSLY craving some good worship music! No joke, I think people here don’t know what music is.
Brandy’s last blog post…Divine!
Brent …
Yeah, boy … ’bout time you got on Sunday Setlists!
Seriously, thanks for posting … great setlist .. like the others, I love Come Thou Fount. Oh yeah, and congrats on Alltop, btw!
For the Kingdom,
Fred McKinnon
http://www.fredmckinnon.com
http://www.theworshipcommunity.com
Fred F. McKinnon’s last blog post…Sunday Setlists #5 – Post Your Worship Experience
I can sing all but two of those in my head and they’re going round and round, a different line from each one everytime. HAHA!!
“I will boast” is the the best!
Okay, bye now.
he he he
Brandy’s last blog post…Divine!
Dorothy, I love it!
Billy, I just thought you were going graphic’s cool
Gary, a good song can really drive it home. takes what’s being said and makes it easier to remember.
Brandy, I promise i am working on it this week!
Fred, I surrender dude, I had to get in on this
brandys cracking me up! girl…if you keep on him like this he will definitely get you a cd!
tam’s last blog post…a better understanding…
So we’re all agreed on “Come Thou Fount.” Just curious, did you do the “here I raise my Ebenezer” line?
I love “The Solid Rock,” too, especially as a “closer.”
I’m desperate. What can I say?
Yesterday at the church we went to, Jake described the music like this: Two little boys singing side by side.
It was two teenage boys standing there with microphones singing to a piano. I kind of wonder if they’d hit puberty yet?
I didn’t just say that. Ignore me.
Brandy’s last blog post…Divine!
I love me some David Ruis.
hey, brent! i’m glad to stop by & see you’ve joined the sunday set list crowd i like to follow.
just thought you might want to know that ricky & i were just talking about churches we’ve attended in our entire past together (14 yrs). in terms of wrshp services, we agreed that we had the most intimate & most varied wrshp experiences there at Table Rock. You’ve always done a great job with your set lists & delivery. thanks for ushering us in.
~ chelan
chelan’s last blog post…well, hello bello
oh, and bobby gilles – i laughed at your comment, cause my current worship leader does that song & does that line & it throws me EVERY time. i’m singing, the Holy Spirit’s moving, & all the sudden i’m envisioning myself in the WWF, about to body slam ebeneezer scrooge onto the pulpit – what tha?! i still have no idea what it means & why it’s in a hymn.
chelan’s last blog post…well, hello bello
Chelan,
Good to hear from you again, and know you’re doing well and using your wonderful gifts for His glory somewhere. Are you involved in this area or further away now? (I’m Nick’s wife, in case you have no clue — the barefoot guitarist is now my main’claim to fame’=).
As to Ebenezzer, there are two references in 1 Samuel about it:
One is 1 Sam. 4:1 regarding the place where the Israelites camped before meeting the Philistines and losing the ark to them in battle. That’s not a very good ‘memorial’ since they were presuming God’s protection by having the ‘object’ of His worship, but not His favor.
The other reference is 1 Sam 7:12-13 that happens after the Philistines return the ark:
“Then Samuel took a stone and set it up between Mizpah and Shen. He named it Ebenezer, saying, ‘Thus far has the LORD helped us.’So the Philistines were subdued and did not invade Israelite territory again.” NIV
That passage is the more likely use in the song I think. It is interesting that Samuel used the name related to the first ‘defeat’ in the latter ‘victory’ I think…a good reminder not to make the same mistake again for sure!
B, ’sorry if I beat you to answering it yourself. I knew it was in the Old Testament somewhere, but didn’t remember exactly, so was challenged to check it out.
I know those lyrics aren’t in the newer version you guys do, but it does add meaning to the verse if it is sung:
“Here I raise my Ebenezer, hither by Thy help I’ve come
And I hope by Thy good pleasure, safely to arrive at home…”
D-
(If someone else comes in with the answer too, ’sorry for the duplication)
Those words are in the one we do.
We actually built an Ebenezer at camp one year to teach our youth about it.
dorothy (vicar of vibe)’s last blog post…graphics…
Bobby, we have definitely never sung that verse before.
Brandy, I’ve attended churches like that as well
Chelan, welcome! And thanks do much for the kind words. Music can be awesome and dynamic and creative. As long as God is always. the focus of it, it can truly be and intimate and moving time.
D, thanks so much for your insight on this verse. i can honestly say i had forgotten about it till Bobby mentioned it and was very curious as to it’s basis. Thanks!
Dorothy, that is cool that you have taken time to teach about something like this.
Glad to see someone else feeling some Baloche. “I Will Boast” rocks…
Paul J.’s last blog post…Sunday Retrospective – August 24, 2008
Paul, welcome! I have always been a Baloche fan. Easy songs to sing, great melodies and incredibly sound lyrics.