Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts

Worship Matters

Posted by Randy | Labels: , , , , , , , | Posted On Wednesday, February 8, 2012 at 10:33 AM

A man woke up one Sunday morning and just lay in bed. His wife encouraged him to get up. It was time to get ready to go to church, but he continued lying there. He complained, "I'm tired. I want to sleep in. Everybody else does - why can't I?" His wife looked at him and told him, "It's Sunday, and we're going to church. Being tired is no excuse. Staying away because others do is no excuse. And besides...you're the pastor and you have to be there!"


Yes, I've felt that way a time or two, and probably just about every pastor and even dedicated Christ follower has, too. In my early years in the ministry I met a retired pastor who was quite "colorful". There were so many stories about him. He was never afraid to speak his mind, and he did it quite bluntly at times. 


One Sunday evening, when Sunday evening services were still quite common, his wife walked into the living room to find him sitting in his recliner, in his pajamas, watching television. The front door was open, so that anyone could see in through the screen door and see him sitting there. Let me add that their home, a parsonage provided by the church for their pastor, was located right next door to the church. So, his wife was concerned that as church members walked by the parsonage to the church they would see their pastor lazily sitting there in front of the television in his pajamas. She encouraged him to get up and get ready to lead the evening's worship service, but he refused to get up. Finally, he said, loud enough for anyone outside to hear, "Only a handful of our folks come to the evening service, so I decided to stay home tonight and see what the attraction is!" I've heard this story enough times, including from him, to believe that not only did it happen, but he meant it!


Worship seems to have become a very personal activity, subject to our feelings and whims. It's easy to decide not to attend a weekly worship service because we don't feel like it. And everything about our culture encourages that consumer approach to worship. If it's not convenient, if it doesn't meet all my needs, if I have other things I need to do, if it goes a few minutes long, then I think I'll pass. But there's a danger to this understanding.


From Genesis to Revelation we see a pattern of God's people coming together to offer Him praise and thanksgiving (and I don't mean just the one day a year holiday). The word "worship" comes from an old English word that essentially means to assign worth to another - worthship! Jesus tells us to worship in spirit and truth. Nothing in all these understandings begins with what I am feeling or whether it's convenient or not. Worship is an act of offering up a sense of worth to my God. It is a choice to affirm He is worthy of worship, in spite of what the world around us says or how I'm feeling today. Worship is first and foremost about God rather than about me! True worship is not about what I get out of it but what I put into it!


So, we make the choice to come to worship not because we have to or even because it's our tradition. We make the choice to worship because God is worthy of our worship, and I choose to worship Him. We make the choice to worship because as human beings, we were created with the need to recognize Someone beyond ourselves - God Himself, as definitively revealed in Jesus Christ. 


Yet, the reality of sin in our lives corrupts this desire to worship God into worshipping not Someone but someone(s) or something(s) else. All too often this isn't God, or at least not God exclusively. That's why God proclaimed that we are to have no other gods but Him, and we are not to worship idols (First and Second Commandments, Exodus 20:3-6). 


We take on the characteristics of that which we worship. And since we were created in the image of God, it is His characteristics we were created to take on. But the enemy from the very beginning (Genesis 3) has attempted to corrupt us by encouraging us to put something other God first in our lives; by assigning value and worth to another thing or being or idea rather than the Lord God, Creator of heaven and earth and Father of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.


Of course, worship isn't limited to something we can or should do only once a week in a worship service with other followers of Christ. In fact, worship should become a part of our lifestyle, of living in the constant awareness and awe of God and often throughout our day in informal or quiet ways offering Him praise and gratitude. 


The practice of the early church was to gather together on the first day of the week - in remembrance of that first Easter when Jesus rose from the grave - to offer God thanks and praise for all He had done, is doing and will do. There is power when the body of Christ unites together with the purpose of worshipping God together. It's an outward and visible act of assigning worth to God, of reminding ourselves what and Who ultimately matters, and it's something we're called to do in spite of our feelings or even our convenience. 


In fact, worship can and should fly into the face of any consumer orientation that life and faith are all about me. Only life that begins in God, that loves God with all our heart, mind, soul, and strength, and loves our neighbors as ourselves is a life rightly ordered. Anything else harkens back to the serpent's first temptation and lie - to try to be like God or replace God with something or someone else.


Over the years I've heard the oft-repeated statement that we can worship just as well on the golf course or out on the boat as a justification for not attending corporate worship. And it's certainly true to a degree - we can worship on the golf course or out on the boat. The question, though, is - do we? And is this a replacement for corporate worship? A life of worship means we should worship in those places, but we should also choose to be a part of the body of Christ's regular corporate worship, too. 


"And let us not neglect our meeting together, as some people do, but encourage one another, especially now that the day of his return is drawing near." Heb. 10:25 NLT


I love the story about the elderly gentleman who showed up to church every week and sat on the front row. Over the years his hearing had almost completely failed. It required almost shouting into his ear for him to hear anything, and he certainly could not hear the message or the singing around him in worship. Finally, one day a young man asked him why he kept coming to church when he couldn't hear, and the wise old gentleman replied, "Because I want to show everyone Whose side I'm on!"


Worship shows Whose side we're on. It's an act of the will to offer worth to God, even when we don't feel like it. Sometimes it penetrates our souls and raises us to heavenly heights, and sometimes we may feel little. But that's not ultimately the point! It's not about me - it's about God!

Angels - Part 4: the Ministry of Angels

Posted by Randy | Labels: , , , , , , , , , | Posted On Wednesday, September 15, 2010 at 12:01 AM

I'm continuing my postings on angels, related to a series we've been offering at Gateway on Heaven. I began on Sunday offering an overview of angels. On Monday we looked at what we know about the origin and nature of angels. On Tuesday I listed the various kinds of Bibles as found in the Bible. And today, Part 4, we're looking at the ministry of angels, again as detailed in the Bible.

Angels minister in both heaven and earth, but what are some of the specifics that they do? We’ll look at their ministry in three areas: in relation to God, in relation to Christ, in relation to Christ followers.

In Relation to God: 
Angels’ primary ministry seems to be that of worship and praise of God (Isaiah 6; Revelation 4:6-11). Much, if not all, of this praise is in the form of song. Angels serve God and His purposes and are His messengers. Angels seem to carry out certain aspects of God’s government, including controlling nature (Revelation 7:1, 16:3, 16:8-9) and guiding nations. Angels protect God’s people, delivering them from wicked works (Psalm 34:7; Isaiah 63:9). God uses angels to execute His judgments, as in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19:1, 12-13), or bringing plaques on Egypt (Psalm 78:43, 49), or destroying many Assyrians in answer to Hezekiah’s prayer (2 Kings 19:35).

In Relation to Christ: 
While all that was said about God above would apply to Christ, there appear to be some special ministries of angels in relation to Christ. Angels predicted his birth (Luke 1:26-28) and announced his birth to the shepherds (2:8-15). They protected Christ as an infant when they warned his parents to flee to Egypt to escape Herod’s wrath (Matthew 2:13-15). They strengthened him after Satan’s temptation (Matthew 4:11). Angels announced Christ’s resurrection. Once he was resurrected the angels worshiped and served him. Angels have predicted his return (Acts 1:11). Angels will accompany Christ when he returns (Matthew 25:31).

In Relation to Christ Followers: 
Angels minister to Christ followers as signs of God’s love. They are “sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation” (Hebrews 1:14). God uses angels to reveal His will to people. They guide people, as in the case of the angel who told Joseph to take Mary as his wife and virgin-born son as his own (Matthew 1:20-21). On a few occasions the Bible shows angels providing for the physical needs, such as food, of people (Hagar and her son, Genesis 21:17-20). Angels protect people from physical danger, as in the three youth in the fiery furnace (Daniel 6:20-23) or when Israel’s king sent an army to capture Elisha at Dothan and an army of angels protected Elisha (2 Kings 6:16). Angels encourage, as in the case when an angel freed the apostles from prison and then encouraged them to continue preaching (Acts 5:19-20). Angels are sometimes agents in answering prayers.

An important distinction, however, is necessary. The ministry of angels is “primarily external and physical, whereas the ministry of the Holy spirit is internal and spiritual. Angels minister for us; the Holy Spirit minister in us (John 14:16-17; Hebrews 1:13-14). They guard our bodies and pathway; He guards our spirits and guides us in the right way. They may be agents to answer prayer, but He is the Prompter and Director of our prayers (Romans 8:26-27; Jude 20).”

What Angels Do Not Do: 
Though we’ve looked at many of the things angels do, we need to also say a few words about what angels do not do (from Angels: Dark and Light, Gary Kinnaman, pp. 78-80):



  • Good angels never try to change Scripture. Messages of angels never change or contradict the Bible. 
  • Good angels refuse to be worshipped. Good angels can be respected, but never worshipped. Neither are they objects of prayer. They may help God answer prayer, but nowhere in the Bible do we see any suggestion that we are to pray to anyone but God. Good angels always point people back to God, never to themselves. 
  • No one in the Bible ever initiates conversation with an angel. Pay particular attention to this. People may talk to angels, but angels always talk first. Some new age authors suggest you are to call on your angels like calling on a friend on the telephone. Good angels are always there, but they don’t answer our calls—only God does that! 
  • Angels are not omnipotent, omniscient, or omnipresent. They are not all-powerful, though they are very powerful. They are not all-knowing, though they are very intelligent. They are not everywhere at once, though they can be at any one place immediately. 
  • Angels do not violate the free will of humans. Angels play an important role in the purposes of God and affairs of people, but they do not control people or violate their free will.
Join me tomorrow as we look at the organization of angels and a little more about how they work in our world today.