Missing Jewel
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Missing Jewel

Les Moir

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eBook - ePub

Missing Jewel

Les Moir

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About This Book

A. W. Tozer famously described worship as ‘the missing jewel of the evangelical church’. Since he penned those words in 1961, there has been an explosion of musical and lyrical creativity in churches across the United Kingdom. 
 
From encountering God in house churches to declaring His praise in Stadiums, contemporary worship has transformed the British Church and spread across the world. 
 
Les Moir had a front row seat for much of this time. Recording, producing and playing on landmark albums as well as shaping significant songs from 3 generations of worship leaders, including: Matt Redman, Martin Smith, Tim Hughes and Graham Kendrick.
 
In  Missing Jewel  he tells this story using his own experiences and inspiring first-hand accounts of the many musicians, songwriters and Church leaders who found themselves part of a journey that continues to bless and exhilarate new generations of believers.
 

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Information

Publisher
David C Cook
Year
2017
ISBN
9781434711632

Chapter 1

The 1960s—The Explosion

And then came the 60s.
For the paperback writers and dedicated followers of fashion, the 60s were definitely swinging. But not for the majority of the church. Many were anxious about the nation’s downward trend towards permissive values and believed that contemporary culture was best left alone.
So when it came to worship, it was more or less business as usual. Even the seating pattern stayed the same.
Yet the church did experience an explosion of its own. Evangelical Christians were encouraged by stories of thousands who ‘went forward’ at preaching crusades led by American evangelist Billy Graham. The trouble was, once they left the crusade tent and stepped over the threshold of their local church, all those fresh converts found themselves in an environment that hadn’t changed for generations. They shifted from Billy Graham’s polished programme, with contemporary sermons and celebrity guests that included a young Cliff Richard, to a foreign evangelical culture lovingly frozen in a formal environment, where hymns like ‘And Can It Be?’ and ‘O for a Thousand Tongues’ were the staple diet.
Many loved those old songs. Sung with dedication, they could still move the hardest of hearts. And they had endured too, many of them having travelled beyond church walls and into football grounds (‘Abide with Me’, ‘Guide Me, O Thou Great Jehovah’) and school assembly halls (‘He Who Would Valiant Be’, ‘Morning has Broken’).
But despite this unique feature of British hymns, the culture gap between church and world was widening. While Wesley and Watts were still gracing the hymn board, Lennon and McCartney were changing the face of popular music. According to worship leader and modern hymn-writer Graham Kendrick, both had their influence: ‘Every Sunday I would be in church singing the traditional hymns, then listening to the Beatles when we got home. When people ask me who my inspirations are, I typically say, the Beatles and the Baptist Hymnbook!’
Even though hymns were often sung with great gusto at the livelier end of the evangelical spectrum, worship was generally regarded as songs sung to warm up the congregation for the sermon. It was a preliminary to the preaching.
American preacher A.W. Tozer was among those troubled by an apparent imbalance in the church’s spiritual diet. Tozer’s ministry flourished in the fifties in the Chicago area, from where he edited the Alliance Weekly magazine. His articles were compiled into booklet form, one of them called Worship: The Missing Jewel in the Evangelical Church. Published in 1961, it made the claim that modern evangelical praise didn’t come anywhere near the standards set by the Old Testament worshippers, with their choirs, drums, flutes, and general burst of creativity. His observation was spot on: ‘It is certainly true that hardly anything is missing from our churches these days—except the most important thing. We are missing the genuine and sacred offering of ourselves and our worship to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.’ 1
Tozer’s challenge was a serious wake up call to the church. It was time to return to its primary calling; love the Lord your God with all your heart.
God was about to do something extraordinary, something that would see this precious jewel of worship being rediscovered and restored to its rightful place. From the early 1960s a number of men and women, in both independent churches and established ones, became involved in what turned out to be one of the biggest renewal movements in history.
It all began with thousands being filled with the Holy Spirit. Such powerful spiritual encounters radically transformed their view of worship. They split churches and sparked off many a heated debate in the wider church. But they also rejuvenated many people’s relationship with God and understanding of Him.
Michael and Jeanne Harper were among them. Michael was a curate with world-renowned Anglican Bible teacher John Stott, based at one of the ‘capitals’ of evangelicalism, All Souls, Langham Place in central London. While preparing to teach on the book of Ephesians, Michael experienced the reality behind the apostle Paul’s prayer that the saints in Ephesus would be strengthened by the Holy Spirit. 2 Michael received so much of the fullness of God that he had to ask God to stop giving him more. He returned home full of joy—leaving his wife wondering how to cope with a transformed husband.
At that time Michael was also chaplain to some of the shops on London’s busy Oxford Street. A young backslidden Christian named John Noble was working at a department store there and ended up attending a lunchtime service led by Michael. The Harpers reached out to John and his wife Christine, and eventually the couple committed their lives to God afresh. John also had an experience of the Holy Spirit: ‘I was so touched by the Spirit that I was crying and weeping and walking around praying for my friends without any inhibition.’
This outpouring of the Holy Spirit was also affecting the worship at churches on Sundays. Terry Virgo, a young pastor at Vale Road Evangelical Church in Seaford, who eventually became a leading figure in the charismatic movement, recognised something had changed, even though the songs remained the same: ‘While singing old hymns at church, people would start putting their hymnbooks down halfway through the last verse. It had become so formal, but this was different—people wanted to tell God how much they loved him. I’d never known anything like it before. You felt a motivation to worship, a fresh love and intimacy—and a sense of the immediacy of God’s presence—which drew out worship from your heart in an unprecedented way.’
Driven by fresh encounters, they believed they were enjoying an increased intensity of the Holy Spirit—just as the early church had done in the book of Acts, which they were now reading with fresh urgency.
Many people were beginning to find it virtually impossible to be formal in their worship. Rather than proclaim grand doctrinal statements via faithful and familiar hymns, they now wanted to direct new expressions of love towards heaven.
Terry Virgo saw the impact: ‘Worship began to be restored, simply because we were enthused with Jesus and thrilled with the Holy Spirit. I don’t think we were consciously thinking that we needed to restore worship. I just think we started worshipping.’
Jeanne Harper eventually shared in her husband’s experience, and in 1971 the couple went on to form the Fountain Trust. As an interdenominational attempt to encourage ‘local churches to experience renewal in the Holy Spirit’, the Fountain Trust helped to spearhead charismatic renewal within the Anglican church. Michael started to hold meetings, with Jeanne leading worship on piano:
When I was baptised in the Spirit I had Charles Wesley hymns beside my bed and Michael had John Wesley’s journals. We tried to get the unedited versions of Charles Wesley’s hymns, because any allusions to the Holy Spirit or to feelings had been taken out. We did find that the worship grew, and the songs would express what the Holy Spirit was doing in people’s hearts.
I suppose we were very Anglican. Michael would be the priest and we would have a lot of silences during our worship. I would be at the piano and start to play something quietly, and he would sense it was right and off we’d go. The worship times became quite extensive. We were absolutely over the moon with God.
John Wimber, who was a major influence in the UK church, said in an interview with Worship Together magazine that historically every move of God has produced new music. 3 Sometimes the music actually precipitated revival, sometimes it occurred during revival, but music was always present in the aftermath. The new songs of the renewal were soon to be heard.
Interestingly, just as the charismatic movement began to find a foothold in Britain, a new wave of creativity was hitting the island’s shores, impacting the nation’s youth as it did. It came via a young Glaswegian called Lonnie Donnegan.
Lonnie was the unsung hero of the 60s’ explosion of pop music. He inspired hundreds of teenagers to start playing the guitar, and thousands of musicians all over Britain got their first taste of music through him and the skiffle music he played. It gave them hope. Years later, band leader Chris Barber claimed that Lonnie Donnegan had had a far greater influence on the development of rock music in Britain than the Beatles had ever had. 4 It was Lonnie who inspired Paul McCartney to become a musician and songwriter and John Lennon formed his first group, The Quarrymen, after listening to Lonnie’s records.
Joy Webb, founder of the Salvation Army group The Joystrings was caught up in it: ‘It was one of the summers of skiffle … an upsurge of pure home made music making. It seemed anyone could do it—and did! Every available tea chest in the country was commandeered as a substitute for a double bass. I plunged headlong into the new music with a beat. The Salvation Army had a veritable treasure chest of singable songs and choruses which adapted well into skiffle.’ 5
After Salvation Army General Frederick Coutts told the press about the new music coming out of his organisation, Joy was commissioned to pull together a group of girl singers who played a little guitar to appear at short notice on the Tonight programme for the BBC in December 1963. They went down well and were invited back by popular demand, this time complete with two male cadets, Bill Davidson and Peter Dalziel.
It was this appearance that was caught by a top executive of the giant EMI company, and before long they recorded the song ‘It’s an Open Secret’. It became an instant success. Reaching number thirty-two in the pop charts, it stayed there for seven weeks.
The success of The Joystrings was an inspiration to the many Christian groups that had been formed. But it was about more than fame and recognition; there was now an underground circuit of coffee bars being used for evangelism. There was a new tribe of musicians and artists diving into this culture and embracing the creativity that emerged within it, at the same time that they were experiencing a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit on His church. Something new was about to be birthed.
A group of young men in their twenties, who would go on to play a very significant role in the Christian youth revolution in the 60s and 70s, was about to emerge. Pete Meadows, Geoff Shearn, Dave Payne and John Webb were united in their quest for something fresh and vibrant. In time, they would inspire an entire movement of young Christians.
Pete and Dave were in a band called The Unfettered while Geoff was part of a band called The Envoys. In a remarkable God-incidence, Pete and Geoff were travelling in the same lift when Pete noticed that Geoff was wearing a Scripture Union badge. They started talking and Pete invited Geoff to a lunchtime fellowship that he and Dave had set up. The group was inspired by the work of an American evangelist, Bill Bartham, who started an organisation called Network which organised youth events in coffee bars.
Pete and Dave would travel to a town, decorate the church hall to look like a coffee bar, and advertise around the streets. They’d sing the gospel to people, but using rock music. They called it coffee evangelism and it created a circuit where many of the bands would play, allowing musicians to bump into each other. Pete started to organise day events which built into a significant conference in Swanwick where 2–300 musicians, artists and poets turned up. He also organised retreats for bands.
Dave was the deal maker and management type...

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