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From The Presbyterian Banner: June, 1996
The following discussion of the nature of worship
by the Editor was first published some years ago, and is reprinted
here with minor changes.
WORSHIP OCCUPIES an important place in the life of every
church; every Christian would agree on this. But what is worship? Is
worship what happens when you have praise and prayer and sermon? Does
an 'order of service' create worship? Isn't everything a Christian
does 'worship'? What's so special about church services? Do we really
need them?
The Presbyterian Church of Eastern Australia
takes a strong position on what should take place during a worship
service: we believe that God has told us how He wants to be
worshipped - yes, even the songs to be sung (the 150 psalms). But is
it possible that by focusing on the details of worship services, we
may miss seeing the big picture?
CHURCH SERVICES
There are some who say that 'the whole of life is
worship so there is no place for worship services now in this New
Testament era.' The Lord Jesus Christ answers this very clearly. John
ch.4, contains the account of his conversation with a certain
Samaritan woman. Recognising that he was a prophet (v.19), she asked
him a question. It was an important question for her and her fellow
Samaritans (though she may well have asked it because the Lord was
worrying her conscience, and she wanted to change the subject! What
better than a question about religion!?). She said, 'Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain, and you (Jews) say that in Jerusalem is
the place where men ought to worship.' Is it to be Mt. Gerizim in
Samaria, or Mr. Zion in Jerusalem?' Her question obviously concerned
what we might call 'liturgical' worship - worship in the sense of a
'church service.' It is important to note not only what Jesus said in
reply, but also what he did not say. He did not say, 'An hour is
coming and now is when liturgical worship will no longer be
relevant.' No, he did not deny the assumption implicit in the woman's
question that there was to be a definite something called 'worship.'
But he did say that, 'An hour is coming when neither in this mountain
nor in Jerusalem shall you worship the Father_ An hour is coming and
now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit
and truth, for such people the Father is seeking to be his
worshippers' (John 4: 21-23).
Jesus told this lady that no longer would the
place of worship be significant: the important thing would be
to worship 'in spirit and truth.' We will return to this statement
shortly, but please note at this point that our Lord did not abolish
worship in the special sense which was implied in the woman's
question. No, he affirmed its importance, saying even that the Father
is 'seeking' such worshippers. How wrong then are some evangelicals
who, in reaction to rigid ritual, proclaim that 'all of life is
worship,' and reduce church services to 'sharing times' and
entertainment sessions!
Let us not forget, firstly, then that our
heavenly Father is seeking worshippers. (Nowhere else in
Scripture, to my knowledge, is the Father ever said to be seeking
something; this again highlights the importance of the church's
worship services.)
Much more could be said on this point, but let
us now take up the question I raised at the beginning: what is
worship? What is the essence of worship?
THE ESSENCE OF WORSHIP
I have already mentioned the important place that
the Psalms occupy in our worship services. (What a pity they have all
but disappeared from use in many churches. Even if 'psalms, hymns and
spiritual songs' did not refer only to the 150 Psalms, we might hope
that one third of praise in Christian churches should comprise the
inspired Psalms. But sadly it is not so...)
As those for whom the Psalms are so important
we should readily be able to identify a major theme which runs
through the book of psalms: the psalmists' love for God. For
examples,
How lovely are your dwelling places
O LORD of Hosts!
My soul longed and even yearned for
the courts of the LORD;
My heart and my flesh sing for joy
to the living God.
I love the LORD, because he hears
my voice and my supplication.
Praise the LORD, all nations;
laud him, all peoples!
For his loving kindness is great toward us,
and the truth of the LORD is everlasting,
Praise the LORD!
(Psalms 84, 116, 117.)
Many other passages could be quoted as
examples of the controlling and overpowering influence of divine love
in the psalmists' hearts. Even the hard expressions of hatred for
God's enemies are demonstrations of utter love for God above all
else. We should not be surprised at this: after all, is not the first
and great commandment that we shall love the Lord our God with all
our heart soul, mind and strength? (Matthew 22:37, Deuteronomy 6:5.)
What is worship? Above all else, worship is
responding to God in love. Worship is the highest expression of our
love for him. In worship we say, 'O Lord our God, how we love you!'
Reader, is this how you approach worship? Do you come to join with
your brethren in saying to God, with heart and voice, 'O Lord, we
love you!'? Or do you come just to hear a sermon, replenish your
theological arsenal, meet your friends, be seen to be there?
A LIFE OF WORSHIP
Once we have recognised this cardinal principle,
it helps us deal with the question which often comes up; 'What's the
difference between worship and the rest of life? Aren't we to glorify
God in whatever we do, as 1 Corinthians 10:31 says?'
Do you remember that scene in 'Fiddler on the
Roof' where the gentleman asks his wife, 'Do you love me?' and she
replies to the effect, 'I wash his clothes, I prepare his meals, I
make his bed -- and he wants to know, Do I love him?'
But it wasn't enough for her to do
things for him - he needed to hear her say 'Darling, I love you.'
Such precious words: there is no substitute for them, is there? (Of
course, the words can be uttered meaninglessly, when our behaviour to
someone says, 'I don't love you.' They can be used to manipulate
people too, when one person wants to take advantage of another for
selfish ends. The life must back up the words, and the words must be
used to communicate what the life expresses.)
So it is with worship, the expression of our
love for God. The Christian tries to serve God in the whole-of-life:
he tries, by God's grace, to bring every thought captive to Christ.
His goal, whether he eats or drinks, works, sleeps or plays, is to
glorify God and to enjoy him! The person who has experienced God's
love in Christ wants to say to God by his life, 'O Lord, I love you.'
This is worship in that wider sense of the word and it is one which
we may not neglect.
But we are also created with the capacity and
need to say to God our Father, 'I love you; we love you.' This
is worship in the narrower sense. And one aspect of this worship is
when the church assembles publicly to do just that: to say with one
voice, 'O Lord our God, we love you.'
Could it be that the modern depreciation of
worship in this sense is related to the all-too-common depreciation
of verbal revelation, in favour of 'experience'? And also related to
the growing departure from belief in the Bible as the inerrant
Word of God? We affirm that experience is based upon, and
controlled by, God's verbal revelation of himself, and so it is very
appropriate that our response should be verbal: 'We love you, O Lord
our God.'
Worship that is mere ritual, mere form - why,
that is like emptily repeating the words, 'I love you,' simply
because it is expected of you; or worse, because you want to
manipulate someone. It is a hollow deception, a mere going through
the motions, the uttering of an empty phrase. God, who looks upon
your heart, cannot be deceived or manipulated by external
performance!
Jesus reminds us that the Father is seeking
worshippers who worship him in spirit and in truth - I believe
the reference here is to the human spirit. (Many would hold that
Jesus means the Holy Spirit. This is plausible in the light of John
14: 17, 15:26 and 16: 13. However, I think the context requires a
reference to the human spirit - the emphasis is upon the internal
attitude of the worshipper as being far more important than the place
of worship. However, even if we accept 'Spirit' as being correct
here, it is clear that the worshipper's heart condition is of crucial
importance. For to worship in the Spirit cannot mean any less than to
have one's own spirit fully engaged in worship.) The point is that
it's no good having the 'truth' (Psalms only, etc.) if you lack the
right spirit. If there is one thing the Lord hates, it is a hypocrite
- and that is exactly what you are if you presume to draw near with
your lips, when your heart is far from him (Mark 7: 6). Saying to
another human being, 'I love you' when in fact we do not is bad
enough.... how much worse it is to try to lie to God, the one who
searches our hearts!
KNOWING GOD'S LOVE
How may we stir up in ourselves and each other
this love for God, of which worship is the expression? As with all
else in true religion, we must start, not with ourselves, but with
God. With God's expressed and communicated love for us.
In his first letter, John says it clearly:
.'We love, because he first loved us.' (1 Jn 4:19). And how do we know
God's love for us? 'In this is love, not that we loved God, but that
he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.'
(1 Jn 4: 10).
Unless you believe in the gospel, and put your
trust in Jesus as Saviour and Lord, you do not know the love of God.
Do you know him? Are you following him daily, allowing the
gospel to control and direct all your life? Do you love to read and
study his Word? Do you delight to draw near to him in prayer? If none
of these things is true, if you have lost your first love, or indeed,
never found love, then do not wonder that you find worship to be
formal and unsatisfying!
I wonder how often our yearning for novelty,
gimmicks, and so on is a reflection of our lovelessness. No doubt
some so-called services of worship may be a stumbling-block for the
believer's devotion - I do not dispute this. But let us be careful
not to blame external factors before we examine our own hearts. Are
you really in love with God?
Don't think that you can switch on worship on
Sunday when for six days your life has said to God, 'I don't care
about you.' Don't blame your minister, or the forms of worship if the
real problem is within. Rather, cast yourself again on the mercy of
God in Christ, and plead that you may be filled with the Spirit of
love.
God the Father is seeking people to worship
him in spirit and truth. Let us strive to disown and repent of
all hypocrisy, so that our churches may be known not for their
different form, but for the love and joy which fills the worship of
those whom God has set free in Christ.
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