It brings me joy when I see maturity begin to catch up with potential.
Potential, or raw talent as we often call it only gets us so far. The mastering of that ability takes time, effort, focused attention, dedication, commitment, and sometimes just plain rudimentary practice.
When I was in the fourth grade I went to play for the National Piano Guild auditions. We performed before a judge at our local university and received a critique afterward. I had a love/hate relationship with those auditions. I would practice for weeks and feel the greatest surge of relief when it was over. Kind of like banging one’s head against a brick wall only because it feels so good when you stop and then convincing yourself you really like head banging as a hobby!
On this particular year a judge called my mother in and asked me to wait in the hallway after my performance. This had never happened before and I feared that I had hit a new level “suck” that had previously only been lived out in my nightmares.
On the ride home my mother asked me if I would be open to a new piano teacher, taking at the university preparatory school, studying with a college professor and taking music theory classes as well. It was a fairly pricey endeavor and my parents wanted to know that I felt a certain level of commitment before shelling out those kinds of bucks on piano lessons and music classes.
I jumped at the chance. I had learned to fake my way through previously relying on my ear to avoid learning to sight-read music. I was learning poor technique and my classical pieces reflected. While the judge gave me excellent scores, he noted that I was picking up the habits of a lazy musician but said that he saw extremely high potential in me.
My new instructor told me that it was important to get proper training and establish good habits so that one day my hands would be able to play the music that I was hearing in my head that couldn’t quite get out yet.
Potential and maturity meeting up was life changing for me.
Transformation is quite another matter. It comes from a deeply spiritual place and often from a place of desperation. Unlike potential, spiritual transformation seems to be more about letting go than digging in. God brings forth his vision in us when we give up our preconceived ideas about what we think things should look like.
Transformation is about progress and not perfection. Unlike potential, it isn’t a performance issue. We turn it into one when we realize it isn’t happening fast enough to suit us and take matters into our own hands.
Transformation is authentic when noticed more by those around us than by ourselves, and it may even be the beginning of that maturity which eventually fuels potential.
Our services this Sunday will address the subject of transformation.
Our Call to Worship God is 2 Corinthians 3:17-18 (NIV)
17 Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. 18 And we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his image with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.
Our worship in song set includes the Charles Wesley hymn text, O For a Heart To Praise My God, As It Is In Heaven, Hail To the King, and The Same Love. These songs share a theme of a liberated, renewed heart.
Our offertory is a song by the band, The Afters entitled, For the First Time. It is a great tune about what it feels like to enjoy the transformation of the Spirit in our lives.
Mike Smith will be bringing our message and we will conclude the worship time with the benediction in song, The Risen Christ.
Our read benediction to close the service will be from Romans 12:1-2 (NIV)
Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship. 2 Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is —his good, pleasing and perfect will.