How Great Is Our God: Living a Worship-Led Life in a Me-Driven World
By Chris Tomlin, JD Walt and Max Lucado
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About this ebook
Living in a me-driven world means being the king of a small, earthbound kingdom. Chris Tomlin posits that when you choose to live a worship-led life instead, you will eventually gain welcome to God’s eternal kingdom. After spending over two decades as one of the most successful worship musicians in the market, he’s learned that he wasn’t just called to sing but to lead others to God. He shows with his writing how God is all around us, encouraging us to reject the worldly notion of living for ourselves and instead decide to live for Him.
Tomlin uses his experience as a worship artist to detail what it means to truly live a worship-led life, including:
- Exploring how his songs emphasize a God-centered life,
- Explaining how Christians can redefine worship in their everyday lives,
- And breaking down Bible verses that celebrate God’s greatness.
How Great Is Our God calls readers to remember the true meaning of worship—singing God’s praises both inside and outside of church. When you live a me-driven life, you choose to focus on yourself, but when you live a worship-led life, you choose to focus on God and others. Follow along with Chris Tomlin as he considers the importance of reshaping your world around God and laying yourself at His feet.
Chris Tomlin
With 12 albums, 16 #1 radio singles, a Grammy Award, 21 Dove Awards, and two platinum and five gold albums to his credit, Chris Tomlin is among the most well-known and influential artists in music. His songs include “How Great Is Our God,” “Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone),” “Our God,” and most recently, “Good Good Father,” to name a few. It is estimated that each week 20–30 million people sing one of Tomlin’s songs in worship. He also cowrote the bestselling children’s book, Good Good Father. More than anything, Chris loves being a husband to Lauren and a daddy to Ashlyn and Madison.
Read more from Chris Tomlin
Holy Roar: 7 Words That Will Change The Way You Worship Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Holy Roar Bible Study Guide: Seven Words That Will Change the Way You Worship Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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How Great Is Our God - Chris Tomlin
DEDICATION
I dedicate this book to my beautiful daughters… Ashlyn, Madison and Elle… that some day these words might inspire and remind you of why your dad leaves the house with his guitar to inspire and remind others… how great is our God.
FOREWORD
by Max Lucado
I never grow weary of telling the story of a nine-year-old housebound boy who was diagnosed with a case of mononucleosis. The doctor ordered him to stay indoors for the entire summer. He was a rambunctious, athletic, outgoing kid. To be told he must spend a summer indoors? No Little League baseball, fishing trips, or bike rides? Might as well trap an eagle in a birdcage.
This was a nine-year-old’s version of a tempest.
The boy’s dad, however, was a man of faith. He resolved to find something good in the quarantine. He sold guitars in his drugstore and wasn’t a half-bad guitarist himself. So he gave his son a guitar. Each morning the dad taught the boy a new chord or technique and told him to practice it all day. The youngster did. Turns out, the kid had a knack for playing the guitar. By the end of the summer, he was playing Willie Nelson tunes and beginning to write some songs of his own.
Within a few years he was leading worship in churches. Within a few decades he was regarded as the most sung songwriter in the world.
I
Few among us haven’t been blessed by his songs: How Great Is Our God,
Whom Shall I Fear,
Our God.
Chris Tomlin has spent a lifetime teaching us to do what he learned to do that summer—exchange his misfortune for music. Under his direction, millions of us have lifted our eyes off of ourselves and our own version of summer setbacks and set our eyes on our Father and His heavenly goodness.
I think the world of Chris. It’s an honor to call him a friend. We’ve traveled and ministered together on many occasions and in many places. He is a minstrel to our generation, reminding us that God is greater than any problem we face.
In this wonderful book, Chris does more than sing; he teaches. He shows us how to expand our view of God through worship. He calls us out of the me-driven world and into a worship-led life. As God grows larger, self and even our struggles seem smaller. You will find this volume to be full of insight, encouragement, and guidance. Chris bids us all to do what he learned to do as a youngster: focus less on our self-oriented pursuits and more on the greatness of God.
I never endured what Chris did. I was never stuck indoors, but I was stuck in a storm. In the early pages of my childhood memory, I see this picture. My father and I were fishing. Small boat on a huge lake on a great day for catching bass. Out of nowhere a storm swooped down upon the water. In a matter of moments, the lake was white-topped and the boat was bouncing. Gray clouds billowed, lightning zigzagged, rain pelleted the water surface and my ten-year-old heart bounced in my chest like sneakers in a clothes dryer. Fear had me in her talons. What other emotion could I feel? Every direction I looked was bad news. Look up and see the storm. Look down and see the waves. Look forward, I can’t see the beach.
But then I looked back. I looked at my father. He was driving the boat. His face was calm. Soaked and dripping, but calm. Who knows why, but it was. With hand on the throttle, he resolutely motored the boat toward the shore.
At that moment I realized something. I could behold the storm and find fear or behold my father and find faith.
I chose my father’s face.
So can we.
This life comes with storms. The presence of problems is inevitable. We cannot choose a storm-free life. But we can choose where to stare in the midst of one.
Thank you, Chris, for showing us how to look into the face of our Father.
I
. Chris Tomlin Most Sung Songwriter in the World,
CBNNews.com
, July 2, 2013, www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2013/july/chris-tomlin-most-sung-songwriter-in-the-world/?mobile=false
.
INTRODUCTION
The scene stunned the watching world. Coco Gauff, the teenage tennis phenom, had just defeated her last opponent to win the US Open Tennis Championships. She fell to the ground in relief. After congratulating her opponent and hugging her parents, she made her way to the bench where she sat down and burst into uncontrollable crying. Her next move? She knelt in front of her bench, folded her hands, and began to pray. ESPN captured the image well but completely whiffed on the caption:
@CocoGauff took a moment to soak it all in after winning her first grand slam title.
The celebrated football coach Tony Dungy couldn’t let it stand. He wrote back:
I hate to break this to you SportsCenter but Coco Gauff was not ‘soaking it all in’ at this moment. She was praying. She has been very open about her Christian faith in the past. It seems obvious what she is doing here.
To make it abundantly clear, Gauff later said, I don’t pray for results. I just ask that I get the strength to give it my all. Whatever happens, happens. I’m so blessed in this life. I’m just thankful for this moment. I don’t have any words for it, to be honest.
It is a picture of remarkable contrast. Coco Gauff, at the pinnacle of achievement in her career, pauses as though to say, How great is our God,
and the watching world suggests she is soaking it up in self-satisfaction. Gauff shows us a picture of a worship-led life in a me-driven world. That’s the purpose of this book. It’s what I have sought to make the purpose of my life: leading people to worship God.
Clearly, we are living in a me-driven age. Everyone clamors to build their personal security, to craft their own brand, to make a name for themselves. Meanwhile, there is only one name worthy of worship. His is the name above every name: Jesus. It’s why I write songs. Just so we’re clear, though, a worship-led life is not about songs and singing. That’s why I’m writing this book. The songs are the soundtrack. The life is the story. In these pages I will share the wisdom I have gleaned and some of the stories behind some of the songs, but the point is to call and inspire you—not to merely sing the songs but to live the life.
From the earliest days of our fallen human race, we have sought glory for ourselves. From my earliest years, I have felt this me-driven spirit so strong around me, vying for my heart. At the same time, I was growing up in a family and in a church that were both pointing me to the greatness of God. Thank God His whisper is louder than the world’s shout.
One afternoon I was sitting in my apartment in Austin, Texas, with my Bible open, reading Psalm 104. It’s a beautiful song of praise that begins with this:
LORD my God, you are very great; you are clothed with splendor and majesty. The Lord wraps himself in light as with a garment; he stretches out the heavens like a tent. (vv. 1–2)
The Psalm continues with several verses layering high praises that celebrate the greatness of God.
Songs are mysteries, and I still don’t understand where they come from, but I remember grabbing my guitar one day when I read that psalm. And I began to sing out a simple chorus:
How great is our God. Sing with me, how great is our God, and all will see how great is our God.
I remember thinking to myself, This chorus is way too simple. It will never work. Weeks later I began to frame the verses around that chorus as I went back to Psalm 104 for inspiration. I worked hard to keep every lyric pointed to the greatness of God, with nothing about me or you in there.
Songs about our human need for help and deliverance are good, and certainly the Bible is filled with them. The Bible is also filled with Scriptures and songs devoted exclusively to the glory of God. I call the former songs of deliverance and the latter songs of transcendence. I have noticed over the years that the church tends to sing more songs of deliverance than songs of transcendence. It’s understandable, because we have such desperate need for God’s help. Yet I have noticed something else over the years: every time, without fail, those songs of transcendence completely change the room. They take our eyes off of ourselves and our needy situations and put them on God alone.
The more conscious we become of the greatness of God, the more we lose sight of ourselves and all the complex challenges of our lives. When we enter into new depths of relationship with God, our perspective and posture toward our problems also change. Maybe it’s why Jesus said things like this:
"So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well." Matthew 6:31–33
This is one of the biggest keys to the worship-led life: if we want to break free of me-driven living, we must begin with God, not ourselves. Even in our songs, we tend to start where we are—at our point of desperation and need. But when we begin with ourselves, we never quite get our focus on God. If we instead begin with God and bring our exclusive focus to His greatness and glory, we mysteriously find our challenging situations lightening up and even lifting off of us. When we seek Him first, He takes care of the rest. Songs of deliverance tend to naturally find their place and rise up in the wake of songs of transcendence.
This is the point of a worship-led life. We all come to the table broken and needy. That fact is inescapable. We are all sinners, which is to say we have a self-centered gravity. A self-centered gravity leads to a me-driven world. In a me-driven world, everyone is desperately trying