One of the most highly respected worship leaders and songwriters CHRIS BOWATER has recently released a new album. He spoke in depth about the project and his whole attitude to worship to Lukas Willcocks.
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Lukas: What is a prodigal worshipper?
Chris:
"Someone who has left, for whatever reason, the Father's heart. It is
a common statement that this is a time when prodigals return. I put it
more than just a returning to faith. There are a lot more people who
are going through the motions of worship and are living away from
Father's house. When I talk about a prodigal worshipper, I talk about
coming back to Father's heart. Again, come back to a true focus about
what true worship is all about. It's amazing how you can be present in
body and absent in spirit!"
Lukas: A lot of this is a testimony to your life, being
brought up in a Christian home then going to London and the jazz
lifestyle, then returning to God!
Chris: "My story is a
prodigal story, yes. It's not a period in my life I was very proud of,
but in all things working together for good, part of Scriptures, it
was an important part of shaping me. If you don't learn from
experiences like that, you're very, very stupid. You live with the
scars of it, but we all live with the scars of our decisions. Scars
don't hurt, they are there as a reminder. Somebody once said, I think
it was me!, 'Heaven can make scars beautiful.'"
Lukas: How did you start the School Of Creative
Ministries?
Chris: "It started 13 years ago. There are
up to a dozen training courses every year, covering keyboard, worship
leading, dance, guitar, songwriting, a whole array of seminars. Over
13 years we've reached thousands of people, from many, many churches,
across the nation even into other nations."
Lukas: Was it something you woke up one morning and said, "I
am going to start this," or what?
Chris: "I am a teacher
by profession, that is my training. So something of the teacher within
me wanted to see that out worked. When I first came to Lincoln the
vision that was given to me was to build a kind of music academy
situation. I think it's been worked out by this kind of process,
because I think it's more seeker friendly and it's more accessible to
people. So, the idea was always there and it was a case of I'd have to
do it one day and so 13 years ago we started it. We also have an
International School for more extended periods of time. We have people
from Poland, Portugal, France, Spain, Romania, Switzerland, Greece,
Germany, Canada, USA, Philippines and Malaysia. There's a real sense
of a touching point with the nations there."
Lukas: Has the vision changed?
Chris: "It has
changed in as much as in the early days, I did everything. Now we
bring in our own teaching staff and musicians like Johnny Markin and
Trish Morgan and musicians. I've slipped very comfortably into an
overseeing role. But the vision is in transition, as we are in the
process of planning a three-week International School in France and
one similar in America. We have also been invited to Greece. We have
also been approached to host a Creative Ministry school in Scotland
and Ireland. That's an interesting departure as everything has been
based here in Lincoln. Now we're moving out with the same formula
seminar in what we're aiming to do. So we are equipping people for
their local churches, touching grassroots and hoping to lift the
standards within the local churches, whether it be 25 people or 250,
just to uplift. I'm excited about Scotland and Ireland becoming
Creative Ministry centres. We'd continue here in Lincoln as we
wouldn't necessarily draw too many from Scotland or Ireland. So we can
service it in that way."
Lukas: You mentioned your son Daniel who runs the professional
outfit here. What's your input here?
Chris: "My input is
to be a resource and a back up to Daniel's skills, he's hugely gifted.
I want to make sure there's as much excellence as we can physically
do, so that it's an environment for Christians and non-Christians to
work in, so that they will be enhanced by the experience of coming
into the studio. We want to see the studio as a gift into missions as
well, producing projects that will go into other countries that we are
funding in effect. But we also need the commercial work here to make
that kind of thing possible. So that's our vision/strategy really.
It's hard doing any kind of business these days, but we've had a great
start, we're encouraged. We keep the prayer mat out all the time."
Lukas: Going back to the album, track seven, "I Need You",
talking about the desert of business. How do you focus on Christ in
the maze of activity you're involved in?
Chris: "I was
asked this question recently, about prioritising at New Life. I think
sometimes the error we make is putting priorities into shopping lists.
We have a kind of vertical list of priorities. The problem is anything
not in the top three, suddenly enters the guilt syndrome, because we
feel guilty we're not giving enough time to the priorities. So I've
begun to reassess how I view my priorities. If God is my priority, he
purveys everything. God isn't a priority in isolation from everything
else. My relationship with God is a priority, out of which everything
else ensues. Therefore my priorities are not a shopping list, but is
the horizontal in my life. So in that horizon are my finances, family,
friends and ministry. If God is my overall priority over all these,
then he's the one who puts the searchlight on to different things. I
trust him to direct my path. You have to give him the opportunity to
do this. It's good to have people around who are close enough to speak
the truth to you. Your family certainly will and have the right to. In
all my years in ministry, I've never been away for one of the
children's birthdays. That was a choice, a decision. Once I was away
on my birthday and I was put through hell by the kids. How dare you be
away on your birthday! Close colleagues and friends will speak the
truth, only those who love you have the right to."
Lukas: It's easier to walk through a door God opens than to
make a choice he gives you.
Chris: "I've never invited
myself anywhere in my ministry. I put in to practice, the choice of
five years of work, you couldn't possibly do in one year. What do you
do when everyone says God has told them to write to you. The choice
is, I can do that but am I supposed to be? I have the ability to do
that, but is that my calling? I never make it a financial issue or
size of venue. Choice is made in connection with the calling on my
life."
Lukas: What about critical reviews? How do you respond to
those?
Chris: "It happens! You have to accept people
have a right to an opinion. No one likes criticism. As long as it is
well informed and considered, then that's fine, I can handle it then.
Everyone wants to be liked."
Lukas: Where do you see yourself five years from
now?
Chris: "At the moment I'm concentrating on the
School Of Creative Ministries and travelling eight-twelve countries a
year. In five years' time I'd like to say, 'Chris, you've done all
that you were meant to do, at all levels of your life.' I want to have
created space for the creative side of me, as opposed to the giving
out side of me. I think that there is a danger that I spend more time
giving out than to that creative process of writing. There's a lot in
me I want to write about, a lot in me I want to write, musical
projects and book projects. Logistically I find it difficult to write
when I'm travelling as much as I am. So I'm hoping in the next five
years I'll master this issue. To give myself the space that will be
the fulfilment I'm looking for, satisfying the needs I've got to put
into words and music. In five years' time I'd like to see a full time
music academy in Europe. I hope more people will be released in their
gifting. I hope the studio will be well established as a genuine
resource centre..."
Lukas: Do you think you'll do a jazz album?
Chris: "Loads and loads of people have asked me that. Certainly
we're planning to do an instrumental album, which I think will have
some jazz influence. I'm passionate about jazz, you can make it
accessible to people."
Lukas: Finally, which is your favourite song on the
album?
Chris: "I think the arrangement on 'Gracious
Father' is beautiful and I'm happy for David Lyon from Scotland, that
we've been able to put that on. I think 'Creation Is Awaiting' is
potentially a big song, because I think we need to be living in this
eternal perspective. Not just living for time. I was brought up in
church with every other song being about the second coming. That went
out of fashion for a time, but it's still a truth, which we must not
ignore. I'm really happy with the way we've treated 'When The Music
Fades', and 'I Need You' has a credible passion to it, almost a Zulu
feel to it at one stage. It's difficult when you've lived with a
project, it's like asking which one is the favourite of my five
children."
Please can you forward this to Chris Bowater. A few years ago, at a CRE Exhibition, I asked him to pray for my elderly dad, who was not a Christian. Chris gave me a 'word' from God, that one day, in a different place, that I would simply be saying to my dad "I love you". On Christmas day 2015, my 90 year old dad was rushed into hospital. Up to 2 days before he died, he was not wanting me to speak about God with him. So I remebered what Chris Bowater had said to me a few years before, and I said to my dad, simply "I love you". He replied, "Why do you keep saying that to me". Then on 31 December I was called to the hosptal as my dad was dying. When I arrived, my dad was sleeping, and I was told he would never wake up again. So I put my hand on his head and very gently spoke into his ear, saying, "Dad - you are dying. But you don't need to be afraid, because God loves you. He loves you so much, that he sent Jesus to die on the cross for you, so that you can be forgiven from sin - from all things you have done wrong. But you now have a choice - the choice is your, and I can't make it for you. You need to accept what Jesus has done for you - to ask for that forgiveness and know that you can go to Heaven. The choice is yours, to accept what Jesus has done for you, out of God's love for you. Then as I was saying this, my husband pointed out to me that my dad had died. The machine that was showing that he was alive, had stopped. I had not noticed the point at which my dad died. He just kept on sleeping, as I was speaking into his hearing aid in his ear. From Diana