Worship.
God as the creator of everything is
also the one who created music. Music is a wonderful means to worship
God. King David was one who experienced God in many ways and his
expressions of gratitude, praise as well as laments are all written
in the book of Psalms. These Psalms were set to music and sung in the
temple and were part of the worship. Asaph, was one of the worship
leaders in the Bible who led the people of God to worship. This was
done with such awe and wonder that the people could experience the
awesomeness of God through these times of singing. While there is
such historical precedence to worship music in the scriptures, there
is a divergence that has happened over a period of time where the
very purpose of music has been lost. I would like to write here some
of my struggles and reflections that I have had in my journey of
worship.
One of the misconceptions of the term
“worship” in the present day church is the reference to the part
of the service they spend in singing songs. While this is important,
we should know that worship does not end there. When this part is
done well some believe that the worship is complete. People with
hands raised and eyes closed go into an ecstasy and feel satisfied
that they have worshiped God. Little do they realise that they have
missed out on more weightier things than that when it comes to
worshiping an awesome God.
This according to me has been the
result of a saturation of so called “worship leaders” who are
most of the time more commercial than missionary, spinning out their
music albums year after year and going on world tours to promote
themselves than God. In the church, most of the time even the
presence of God is being alluded to the quality of the music. When
the music is good people "feel" the presence of God and
when it is not good they don't.
Taking a closer look at this phenomena
the question that arises is, "Why is this called as "a
time of worship” as if the other things done in the service are not
worship. To put things in perspective, everything that is done in the
house of God will have to be brought under the banner of worship.
Even the preparation for the service – cleaning up, arranging and
setting up everything is part of the entire “Worship”. Within the
service besides the singing – the offering, the testimonies, the
exhortation, the sermon, the communion, the serving and the prayers
will all together constitute worship.
Worship from within.
In the old testament times when Solomon
built the temple and dedicated it, it was meant to be a central place
where the people would gather for worship where the presence of the
Lord descended. However, in the new testament dispensation after the
ascension of the Lord and when pentecost ushered in the era of the
Holy Spirit, the presence of God is not limited to the physical
temple in Jerusalem, but to every believer who is indwelt by the
spirit of God all across the world. This extension became possible
when the apostles in response to pentecost carried the word to the
uttermost parts of the world. If we believe that the spirit of God
resides in us then worship has to begin from the temple of God within
us. St.Paul urges us to “present our bodies as living
sacrifices holy and acceptable” to the Lord which is our reasonable
service or a spiritual act of worship(Rom 12:1). Worship hence has to stem from
the depths of our inner being first. It results in a sense of awe of
God, it helps us with a constant reminder to how great and awesome
our God is, his love, his grace, his power and his greatness, his
desire to live in us in spite of us. It should help us realise our
frailty, our sinfulness and our finiteness before an almighty and
infinite God.
This attitude helps us to have an
upward view of God, an inward view of ourselves and an outward view
to carry out the task of being a witness. In other words worship is
how we live our lives deep on the inside and the values that govern our lives. True
worship should result in a sacrifice of all our “self” to allow a
selfless God to rule over our lives. Worship that does not change us is no worship. True worship takes a look on the
inside first!!
Worship – Beyond Music.
Music is only a means to an end and not
the end in itself, the end being glorifying God who has to be the
object of our worship. The singing and playing of instrument has to
be done for the audience of one – the one and only Lord our God.
Music aides the church to realize that the object of worship is Jesus
our Lord and nothing else.
There are possibilities when the means can become a
menace where God is not glorified and is no longer the object of
worship. The danger is when the object of worship shifts to someone
or something else other than God - it could be the worship leader,
the singers or the music itself, or it could be an accomplished
musician in the band or it could even be the whole so called
misplaced worship exercise where the people end up worshiping
“worship” instead of worshiping God.
The deception that we fail to notice is that most of these
so called worship concerts end up as just another good musical
experience rather than a spiritual experience. We hardly hear of a
concert these days where people attended it and had a personal encounter with God, came to a concrete
conviction of sin and returned in total repentance and surrender to
God, where their lives where transformed. Worship is not limited to
worship music or the leader but its beyond the worship leader, the
music and the songs.
Worship - The need.
The need of the hour is to come back to
the heart of worship in it's purest and truest sense - worshiping God
in truth and spirit (Jn 14:24). Coming to the presence of God with
conviction about the awesomeness of our God. Knowing this God in
concrete terms as our personal Lord and Saviour. Having a personal
encounter with Jesus as the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and an
intimate relationship with him as our very source of life. Worship
should come out of a realization of our dependence on a God who is
high above all, having a very high view and regard for this God who
deserves all honour and glory. Worship should come out of a deep
reverence to this awesome God who has to be the center of the
Worship.
Are we into a deception of having been
part of a service which had great worship music? Or are we trying to
look deeper than that?
Does our life reflect a worship unto
God?
Do our relationships reflect worship?
Do our values reflect worship?
Does our work reflect worship?
The day when we can confidently say "YES" to these
questions is the day we have actually arrived at "Worship".
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