Worship Musician August 2020 | Page 44

WORSHIP LEADERS “THE BLESSING” BUILDING UNITY | Grant Norsworthy Nothing brings about unity between people more effectively than overcoming an obstacle together. Unity is a natural bi-product of having a shared goal - a common challenge to overcome - and together… achieving that goal. Working with one another to get the job done. Successfully defeating a common foe. "Those who love their idea or dream about community [common-unity] will destroy it. But those who love those around them will create it.” Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906 to1945) A group of people in disagreement might all want agreement - a “common-unity” - but if those people try to bring that about with their focus on manufacturing unity itself, they will usually (almost always) fail. If I try to bring about unity, I will tend to want to drag other people towards my concept of what unity should look like. In other words, I try to make people agree with me! That is more likely to cause an argument - emphasize disunity - than bring about true and lasting unity. But, instead of working directly on unity, we might be able to find a project to do together. Motivated by love for our fellow human beings we should be able find enough common ground to identify something - anything (even a small thing) that we could come shoulder to shoulder with each other to work on. A goal that we all see value in achieving. As we work together to achieve that goal and especially if we are able to accomplish observable, measurable success, we may find that our differences are not so different. Not such a big deal after all. Or perhaps that we are more willing to simply agree to disagree on a few, peripheral issues. We may find that we have a growing love for one another and a willingness to move on to the next challenge together. For the past few months in my [WM] articles, I have written about and shared videos of the “virtual choir” phenomenon that has built up around the Elevation Worship song “The Blessing”. To me, these wonderful videos are a huge encouragement and a powerful example of people willing to work together to achieve a common goal. There are plenty of things that I love about the growing collection of The Blessing “virtual choir” videos on YouTube, but the best and most heartening thing to me is the beautiful picture of Christian unity that they paint. Singers, instrumentalists and technicians have come together - drawn from a broad and diverse cross-section of churches - to overcome an obstacle together. They have not spared a thought for their differences, but instead, have chosen to sing God’s words of blessing together and to share that message with the world. I have often been troubled as I observe the Christian Church’s inability to agree, to get along, to be in community with one another or even work together. My heart aches when I am confronted with examples of disunity between followers of Jesus, especially in the light of the prayer of Jesus Himself that we - His Church - would be one (John 17:21). But The Blessing “The New York Blessing: 100 Churches Singing a Blessing Over New York City” “The Celtic Blessing | Celtic Worship & Friends” 44 August 2020 Subscribe for Free...