If an outsider came into your Sunday meeting and observed you worshiping, what would he conclude you think about God?
Does your expression of worship say how great and glorious,
delightful and exciting you think God is? Does your worship say you’ve
found God to be faithful and good, loving and satisfying? Would an
outsider conclude you believe God to be real and present?
Or does your worship say you find God about as exciting as an exam on
protein chains (maybe you bio majors would get excited about this – I
wouldn’t). Do you sing with all the enthusiasm of someone who has just
been asked to shovel 2 tons of manure? Does your worship say you
believe God is distant and uncaring?
What does our worship say about what God did for us? Do we sing like
those who have been redeemed eternally from the wrath of God? Like those
who have been seated with Christ in heavenly places? Like those who are
grateful to have every sin wiped away? Do we rejoice like those who
have the king of the universe living inside them?
We should worship God expressively, not for a show or to impress others, but as a way of saying to him how much we love him. That we consider him to be infinitely great and glorious and majestic. That we consider him to be praiseworthy.
Worship is primarily an issue of the heart. So someone could worship
God wholeheartedly and not show it on the outside. But I like what I
once heard John Piper say – worship begins in the heart but should not
stay there. It should be expressed.
Our glad hearts should overflow with thanks for all God did for us in
Christ. Hey, Jesus DIED for us. He was tortured, spit on, mocked,
pierced, so that we could be with and enjoy God for ever and ever.
Essentially, Jesus went to hell so that we don’t have to. Isn’t that
worth getting excited about?
We should worship like rich people! Because we are.
We’ve been given every spiritual blessing in Christ! We should sing with
more enthusiasm than if we just found out we won the lottery.
We should sing like those who know God is working all things for good
in our lives. Like those who are being transformed into the very image
of Christ. Like those who will worship around the throne for eternity.
God has designed us to express delight in things excellent and
beautiful. We gush when we see a glorious sunset. We clap and shout at
Coldplay concerts and Steeler games (well, maybe not if you’re a
Cleveland Browns fan). We give standing ovations for outstanding
accomplishments. Our cheers show what we think of that diving catch or
that guitar solo.
Again, our worship isn’t some kind of performance we put on for
others. Our worship is for God. But it says something about what we
think about him.
This Sunday let’s show God what we think of him and sing the roofs off our church buildings.
Originally posted on The Blazing Center blog, by on October 19, 2012.