Tar River Baptist Association
  • Home
  • What We Believe
  • Our Priorities
  • Our Churches
  • Annual Meeting
  • Our Bylaws
  • Contact Us
  • TRBA Connection
  • AMS Search

TRBA Connection

Welcome to the TRBA Connection
​A shared space for collaboration, encouragement, and kingdom vision.


At the Tar River Baptist Association, we believe that churches are stronger when they’re connected—not just by geography, but by shared purpose, prayer, and the desire to reach our communities with the love of Christ.

The TRBA Connection is more than just a blog. It’s a space to share updates, highlight what God is doing in our churches, and offer encouragement to pastors and ministry leaders who are walking similar roads. Here, we’ll explore what cooperation looks like in real life—through conversations, events, stories, and shared wisdom.
​

You’ll find reflections from our gatherings, ideas for strengthening ministry relationships, and gentle challenges to build bridges between churches for the sake of the gospel.
​
​Whether your church has been part of the association for generations or you’re new to the area, this is your invitation to be part of something bigger than your own building or calendar. We’re in this together. And together, we can do more than we ever could alone.

Worship as a Way of Life

6/9/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture
What if worship isn’t just something we do on Sunday—but something that shapes our daily walk with Christ? In this post, we explore how worship, when practiced as a discipline, draws us closer to God and prepares us to disciple others well.

We often think of worship as something we do on Sunday—something we attend, lead, or sing through. But what if worship isn’t just a weekly event? What if worship is meant to be a discipline—a rhythm of life that shapes us day by day?


Spiritual disciplines like prayer, fasting, and Scripture reading are tools God uses to transform us. Worship belongs in that category too. When we treat worship as a discipline, it becomes more than a response to how we feel or what’s happening around us. It becomes a steady practice of turning our hearts toward God—whether we’re in a sanctuary full of voices or alone doing chores.


For those of us who lead worship through music in churches, this shift in perspective is vital. It reminds us that our role is not just about preparing a setlist or hitting the right notes. It’s about cultivating hearts (our own and others’) that are trained to honor God in every circumstance.

⸻

Worship Begins with Humility

Worship, at its heart, is an act of humility. It’s recognizing that God is holy, glorious, and worthy—and that we are not. Psalm 95:6 invites us, “Come, let us bow down in worship, let us kneel before the Lord our Maker.” To worship is to bow the heart before God, to surrender control, and to honor Him as King. Whether we lift our hands or fall to our knees, true worship always involves a posture of reverence and surrender.

⸻

Worship as a Discipline Means:

  1. We worship even when we don’t feel like it. Feelings matter—but they’re not the foundation.

    Like David in the Psalms, we sometimes have to speak to our own souls and say, “Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name!” (Psalm 103:1).

    Worship as a discipline means choosing to magnify God even when our emotions don’t match—because His worth never changes.

  2. We prepare our hearts before we worship. Jesus said, “This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me” (Matthew 15:8).

    Worship isn’t about songs—it’s about sincerity. The most powerful worship flows from a heart that is in tune with God long before joining with a congregation.

  3. We disciple one another in worship by modeling consistency. Paul exhorts believers to “present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship” (Romans 12:1).

    Worship isn’t confined to a stage or a service. As disciples, our everyday lives model what it looks like to worship God in spirit and truth (John 4:23–24). And when our people see worship as a lifestyle, they learn to carry it beyond the sanctuary.

  4. We grow in intimacy with God Worship draws us near to the heart of God. James 4:8 says, “Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.”

    As we practice worship regularly, we grow in awareness of God’s presence, His holiness, and His love. It forms us, shapes us, and anchors us in truth.
⸻

What would change if we treated worship not just as a church service, but as part of our daily discipleship?


Let’s not wait for Sunday to worship. Let’s sing, reflect, bow our hearts, and give God glory throughout the week. Not because it’s convenient or easy, but because He is always worthy—and because worship, practiced faithfully, shapes us into people who are ready to see Him face to face.

⸻

Reflection

How might your personal worship life change this week if you treated it like a spiritual discipline rather than just a Sunday expression?
0 Comments

On Earth as in Heaven: Worship in Revelation

6/3/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture
What would our worship look like if we modeled it after worship in heaven?

Revelation 4 paints a breathtaking scene—thunder and lightning, the sea of glass, living creatures crying out, “Holy, holy, holy,” and twenty-four elders casting their crowns before the throne. It is reverent. It is joyful. It is completely centered on God’s majesty and glory.

Paige Patterson, in his New American Commentary, makes a powerful observation: “When the saints assemble, the worship of every church ought always to be nothing less than a rehearsal for the day when we enter the heavenly worship described here.”

When we gather as the body of Christ, we are not simply filling a time slot in the week. We are invited to join together here on earth with those in heaven in praise of the One who sits on the throne.

Patterson continues: “While nothing ever attempted on earth can challenge, whether in grandeur or purpose, the worship of heaven, the best approximation of that worship ought always to be the goal. The standard of maximum participation in the worship experience, together with the centrality of Christ and a theological comprehension of him, must be the theme of genuine worship.”

So what does that look like for us in local churches?
  1. Christ-Centered Worship. Revelation shows us that worship is not about what we want, but about who God is. True worship is saturated with the glory of Jesus. Every song, prayer, and moment should point our hearts to Him.
  2. Participation of the Saints. Worship in heaven is not passive. Everyone is involved. In our churches, we must guard against performance and instead encourage participation. The congregation is not the audience—God is.
  3. Theological Depth. The songs of heaven are theologically rich: “You are worthy… for you created all things.” Our worship should reflect that same depth. We need words and songs that help us know God more and respond rightly to Him.
  4. A Spirit of Reverence and Joy. The heavenly scene is filled with awe, but not dread. It is joyful reverence. Worship is our response to the beauty, holiness, and majesty of God—and that should stir deep emotion and reverence.

Our churches—small and large, rural and urban—can be places of authentic, God-pleasing worship, a foretaste of what is to come. Let us plan and lead worship with heaven in mind.

It may not look grand on the outside. But if Christ is at the center, if hearts are engaged, and if the Word is treasured, then it will be a holy echo of the scene described in Revelation 4.

Because when we worship like heaven, we align our hearts with the eternal reality: Jesus is on the throne, and He is worthy.

We would love to hear your comments and encouragement of one another on how we can worship the way that Jesus would want.
0 Comments

    Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025

    Categories

    All
    Church Health
    Dear Pastor
    Discipleship
    TRBA Events
    Why Work Together?
    Worship

    RSS Feed

Telephone

919-496-7172 

Email

[email protected]

Hours

The TRBA Office is open for special events and by appointment.
​
The TRBA's Board Members are:
Ben McRoy - Moderator
Michael McCray - Vice Moderator
Kaden Williams - Secretary
Rich Cash - Treasurer
Mark Cottrell - Assistant Treasurer
​
Address
92 NC-56, Louisburg, NC 27549
  • Home
  • What We Believe
  • Our Priorities
  • Our Churches
  • Annual Meeting
  • Our Bylaws
  • Contact Us
  • TRBA Connection
  • AMS Search