Worship Thoughts

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    Worship Thoughts

    Worship is the offering up of ourselves in totality to the Lord - sacrifice. It has little, if anything, to do with

    particular rituals, traditions or preferences. It has everything to do with love - that is, it has something to do with

    ethics. Worship will only occur as I give my heart to the Lord, however imperfectly or incompletely I may be able to

    do that at any given time - which is indeed all I have to offer and even that is beyond me accept as I live

    eschatologically. This, then, is the bottom-line of worship. The Lord will accept nothing less than all of me: And hewill demand nothing more then what I am able to give in that direction at a given point in time.

    Jesus, when asked by a Samaritan woman about worship (a woman dying of thirst so much so that the question

    that popped out of her mouth when she realized she was talking to a prophet, was something like, Our fathers tell

    us to worship at this mountain (Samaria) and you Jews say to worship at Jerusalem! Where am I to go to worship?

    (Where do I find God?!)) Jesus told her, Believe Me, an hour is coming when neither in this mountain nor in

    Jerusalem will you worship the Father. You worship what you do not know; we worship what we know, for

    salvation is from the Jews. But an hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in

    spirit and truth; for such people the Father seeks to be His worshipers. God is spirit, and those who worship Him

    must worship in spirit and truth. (John 4:21-24 (NASB95))

    What did Jesus mean be this? That is the question. It is a question that we must answer when we find ourselves atodds over forms, traditions, purposes and opinions (Samaria, Jerusalem (for the woman at the well); seeker,

    believer, traditional; blended, contemporary, convergent, emergent, worldterms used by those who are writing

    and reflecting on the current state of the art). My desire here is to express, if incompletely, some thoughts on

    worship in spirit and truth as I have come to experience it.

    Above I mentioned what must be the rock bottom foundation of any philosophy or practice of worship: Love! You

    shall LOVE the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, and strength (Mark and Luke add mind). Love, biblically

    speaking, includes all that we are, emotionally, materially, and mentally. Love is for sure a big word and we use it

    in many ways to describe many relationships with both animate and inanimate objects. We use this word for both

    the most narcissistic and altruistic of people. We use love for the most trivial and banal things in our lives as well

    as the most profound and sublime. Nevertheless, it is the word used to express the very nature and essence of the

    being of God- God is Love declares the Beloved Apostle, and thus my usage of love as the only possible

    irreducible essence of true and spiritual worship (For a stimulating and thought provoking discussion on love I

    recommend Robert W. Jenson, On Thinking the Human: Resolutions of Difficult Notions, chapter 6, Thinking

    Love).

    Love, at one level, is obedience to the revelation of God in how we think and how we conduct ourselves in the

    world. We understand this to be so because of the recognition that the greatest commandments are what we have

    just mentioned above along with, Love your neighbor as yourself. In these two commandments, all the law and

    the prophets are summed up and fulfilled, that is love, and that is worship. Thus, we find another dimension of

    worship in that if we do not address love for our neighbor we have yet to attain to a full expression of worship that

    would qualify as being in spirit and truth. Though we can say and must say that to love the Lord means at the very

    least, that we will keep his commandants, nevertheless, to equate love simply as obedience to a code, even the

    Biblical code, is often misleading, and, I think, is some of what causes confusion in our attempts to define and

    practice piety and worship. For in reality, love far exceeds the law and asks things of us the law is never able to.

    How, then, are we to understand the in spirit and truth part? The truth is that we cannot worship at this level if

    left to our own! This is the whole testimony of Scripture and it is the reason for the coming of Jesus into the world.

    He came to set us free and to provide for the possibility of new birth. That is, the fulfillment of the promise that

    God would remove our hearts of stone (an image that conveys our utter inability to love and thus to worship!) with

    hearts of flesh (an image that conveys a new capacity to actually be able to love and thus to worship). These are

    words of life in the sense of empowerment. Freedom language is power language as is heart-of-flesh language.

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    As we come through faith to understand our position, our identity, as Klyne Snodgrass would have it, in Jesus

    Christ we come to understand the true nature of our being and the true nature of God. If we are able to embrace

    that truth, we experience new creation (born form above) and, filled with the Spirit of God who gives us our true

    humanity, we find ourselves to have hearts of flesh. We are alive and able to love, thus obey, and thus worship in

    Spirit and in truth. (I am uncomfortable with the use of obey here, though it is certainly appropriate to use the

    word. My discomfort is with our very real tendency to lapse into pragmatism in the sense that love is often not at

    all pragmatic. Love, as the defining essence of the being of the Lord God Almighty, cannot be circumscribed by anycodification of conduct that is comprehensible to our human minds. Jesus stretches our understanding of love both

    in his teaching (try again to read attentively the Sermon on the Mount) and in his actions. Paul gives us a summary

    of love in 1 Corinthians 13 that certainly outstrips our attempts to codify our relationships to one another. Love

    certainly encompasses the law, but it just a certainly transcends the law and any attempt on our part to codify

    righteousness, ethics, morality, etc.)

    Worship, then, is a way of life and includes times for gathering as the community for the purpose of mutual

    edification and praise to God. However, when we say that these gatherings are worship and then debate over the

    form of these gatherings we move away from worship not towards it. Where does that leave us? It leaves us at a

    place where we need to humble ourselves before the Lord and seek his grace and wisdom.

    It may be that in order to honor all the various ways of expressing worship in our corporate meetings is to simplyallow for and schedule several times of gathering, each marked by different formats (there are churches that do

    this with great impact on their communities). However, in the less than rather large congregation this is highly

    impractical, not to mention somewhat undesirable. A better solution is to spend the necessary time and energy

    before the Lord discovering how we can order our gatherings in a way that honors the God and Father of our Jesus

    Christ in spirit and truth.

    All this is not to say that any given format is better at creating an atmosphere of worship than another. In fact,

    if the format or order becomes the focus, well, my beloved brothers and sisters, we have lost the battle already

    since we have come to put the form, or format, or order in the place of priority instead of the Lord our God. That is

    not by any definition of the word, worship and in fact is idolatry (though when we do this we are usually not aware

    of it - thus making my comment here incomprehensible to those who are in reality doing this).

    Let me back up a little and give you what I would emphasize in our corporate gathering. For me, the primary

    purpose of our gathering on Sunday morning is for proclamation of the Word. Now, this could indeed include

    singing of songs and praying of prayers and more, I m thinking, for those in the habit of practicing non-Eucharistic

    services, coming to the table. However, if these things become points of division, dissension and frustration, then

    we are missing something and I do not know how to resolve this other than through seeking Jesus and his heart for

    us in our gatherings. The problem here arises with our tendency to approach such seeking with our own ideas

    intact and we tend to pray for the other persons mind to be changed. Though we say that Scripture is our sole

    source of faith, conduct and doctrine, we seldom take the time or effort to discover just what Scripture has to say

    on most subjects. That is not to say that we do not have texts that support our opinions on such topics as worship,

    nevertheless, to what extent are we willing to do the hard work of placing our understanding before the Word to

    be examined by that Word?

    Some issues at the core of this problem have to do with various ideas of why we gather and whom we are trying toserve through our gatherings. Is this a time to include the un-churched in a desire to reach them with the message

    of Jesus? Is it a time for believers to do the things believers do to show God our devotion? In other words, is our

    gathering on Sunday morning for the initiated or the uninitiated? Or is it somehow to be for both? Indeed, if the

    body is engaged in worship that is indeed in spirit and truth, will our worship exclude anyone?

    If it is for the uninitiated, what then is the best way to communicate the gospel to them? If it is for the initiated,

    which initiates is it for in this time of heterogeneous congregations (multi-generation, multi-ethnic (at least in a

    few congregations), multi-tradition)? We can always use such terms as emergent, blended, traditional,

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    contemporary, modern, post-modern and we can set up various templates, Traditional, Praise and Worship, Story,

    and Fourfold Worship, but none of these terms or models lead us to the actual act of worship. These remain at

    most human attempts at ordering the formal gathering of the church and may or may not have anything to do with

    our reasonable service of worship Romans 12:1ff).

    What we are after is a way to gather so that we are offered the opportunity to encounter the Living God, to

    encourage each other, to receive instruction from the word of God and to offer ourselves to him in new orrenewed devotion all of which are aspects of worship but none of which are worship in and of themselves. This

    must be a work led and vitalized by the Spirit of God.

    Still, all this does not answer the issue that has risen among us over the past several years, and I honestly dont

    know if the issue as it is being presented can be resolved, at least not with the wisdom that I have. Nevertheless,

    some kind of decision about what we are to do when we gather as a community to worship is necessary. And this

    then becomes a matter of leadership and our response to it.

    For my part I am not interested in a debate about the propriety or effectiveness of any given form of

    worship (and I must reiterate that if this is the debate then we have lost the battle already). What I prefer and

    what you prefer and what they prefer are all finemaybe Does Jesus really care?!

    When preferences drive our conversation about worship (even when we believe wholeheartedly that our

    preferences aren't personal/cultural preferences but are the actual truth of God) I fear that we find ourselves in

    the same place Isaiah's peers found themselves! Thoughtfully read Isaiah 2:10-20! It is amazing to me that we can

    read such a text and not fall to our knees in repentance and great sorrow but instead start right in on each other

    about... well about the foolish things we do and say about what we have self-deceptively practiced as worship.

    Yes, truly, Jesus does care deeply about worship and its place in our lives. You cannot read Scripture like the Isaiah

    text and think otherwise. So really, how in the world do personal preferences even fit into this conversation?

    If we carefully attend to such passages as I just pointed out form Isaiah, to worship in "spirit and truth" is not at all

    about the cult or liturgy that we normally associate with worship. Spiritual (God engaging, God pleasing) truthful

    (reality honoring) worship is taking place when we find ourselves becoming aware of the travesty of justice and theunrighteousness of our economic, cultural, political system and we do so in such a way that we actually lay our

    lives on the line to work against the powers that support and propagate such injustice and unrighteousness for the

    sake of the victims of our unjust and unrighteous systems.

    In this way we turn back to the opening thoughts about the association of love and worship. For the acts

    necessary to work against injustice and unrighteousness are acts of love and no one can claim to love and not be

    driven in some concrete way to try and do something for that individual who is being oppressed by the systems.

    The Beloved Apostle puts it this way, "If anyone says, 'I love God,' yet hates his brother, he is a liar. For anyone

    who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen. And he has given us

    this command: Whoever loves God must also love his brother."

    This then, I propose, is worshiping in spirit and truth and it has nothing to do with either "Mt. Zion" or the

    "Mountain in Samaria."