Worship

What is worship?

There are many places to go in scripture to find information on worship. We find one of the clearest passages about this topic in Paul’s epistle to the Roman church.

Romans 12:1-2

I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Spiritual worship in verse 1 is also translated as ‘service’ or ‘divine service’.  The mercies of God are offered to us as an invitation to His family and true life and an escape from sin and death.  These mercies of God are also the motivations for us to worship Him because He is worthy of our lives since He has ransomed them by His blood and as our creator.

Right away we see a definition of what ‘spiritual worship’ is.  This is to present our bodies as a living sacrifice.  We are not left in the dark on what that is either.  It is to deny the world and to have our minds transformed by God.  That through our trials or testing, we will have opportunities to discern the will of God.

But why ‘spiritual worship’?

When Jesus was speaking with the woman at the well, He gave us the answer.

John 4:20-24

‘Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, but you say that in Jerusalem is the place where people ought to worship.” Jesus said to her, “Woman, believe me, the hour is coming when neither on 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 the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.”

There is a lot to unpack in this passage, but we will stick with the objective.  The Samaritan woman at the well starts to explain that they used to be able to worship God at their mountain but that the Holy of Holy’s was now in Jerusalem where God was to be worshiped.  Jesus responds with letting her know that the time is coming (present) when anyone from anywhere can worship the Father.  This was represented when the veil tore at the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in Matthew 27:51. But that this worship was to be in ‘spirit and truth’.  The limitation of worship is not one of location but of heart.  Jesus sums this up precisely in the last sentence. “God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”

What does it mean to worship in ‘spirit and truth’?

In Romans 12 we see the call to a transformed mind, but we know that this is truly a call to a transformed heart.  This is what God promises, and this is what he is after.

Ezekiel 11:17-21

Therefore say, ‘Thus says the Lord God: I will gather you from the peoples and assemble you out of the countries where you have been scattered, and I will give you the land of Israel.’ And when they come there, they will remove from it all its detestable things and all its abominations. And I will give them one heart, and a new spirit I will put within them. I will remove the heart of stone from their flesh and give them a heart of flesh, that they may walk in my statutes and keep my rules and obey them. And they shall be my people, and I will be their God. But as for those whose heart goes after their detestable things and their abominations, I will bring their deeds upon their own heads, declares the Lord God.”

Jeremiah 31:33-34

For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, declares the Lord: I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts. And I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his neighbor and each his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the Lord. For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.”

Ezekeil 36:25-27

I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you shall be clean from all your uncleannesses, and from all your idols I will cleanse you. And I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you. And I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to obey my rules.

In all these verses we see not only what God promises but what He desires.  God wants our hearts back.  He promises to those who come back to Him that He will wash away their sins and make them clean.  He will take away the old heart and give us a new one.  One that resembles His.  And He will put in us a new spirit.  We will have a heart and Spirit that will desire the things of God and to do the will of God.  Why?  Because of His mercies.  He offers us a place. He will wash us clean.  He will give us a new heart.  He will put a new Spirit within us. God will dwell in us.

Romans 8:9-11

You, however, are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if in fact the Spirit of God dwells in you. Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, although the body is dead because of sin, the Spirit is life because of righteousness. If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.

So how do we worship in Spirit and truth?  Let’s look at what we have learned so far and we can rephrase the question into a statement. 

‘Worship’ is defined as presenting your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.

‘The Spirit’ is by and through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit which is offered to us by Christ Jesus and put there by God the Father.

But what about the ‘truth’? 

Romans 10:9-13

If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved. As Scripture says, “Anyone who believes in him will never be put to shame.”[ For there is no difference between Jew and Gentile—the same Lord is Lord of all and richly blesses all who call on him, for, “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

‘Truth’ is not of a false faith or one that you borrowed from a family member.  It is not about an intellectual ascent to knowledge but rather something deeper.  It is about knowing Jesus and Him knowing you.  Not just facts or bible verses but the personal intimate relationship He offers to you.  It is about your heart.

The word “worship” gets used in a lot of ways. It is not limited to any one specific act or function. It is a call for those who say yes to making Jesus their Lord and Savior to live as He did and asks them to do also.  To follow Him and to deny one’s own self and the world around them.  To love God and to love others.  It is to praise His Holy name and to repent from sin.  If we make ‘worship’ only something that happens at church or singing when chords are playing, we have missed the mark.  If you thought of your daily life as a form of worship, would you rethink how you live?  Would He find your worship acceptable if we took the definition offered through scripture within the context of what He calls us to?

Worship is a byproduct of the life of one who has been saved and knows the truth of the cross and the God who made a way for us.  I am by no means perfect, but this type of study has transformed my mind in a way that I now see what was once mundane as opportunities to lift up the name of Christ in all that I do. I love how this was stated in the verse below.

1 Corinthians 3:2-3

You are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read by all men; clearly you are an epistle of Christ, ministered by us, written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh, that is, of the heart.

Paul’s epistles have been mentioned a few times so far, and many brothers and sisters in the faith have found the work of the Holy Spirit through Paul’s writings to the early church as revolutionary for their theology and relationship with the one true God.  Your epistle may not be bound between Genesis and Revelation, but it is just as captivating to those around you and more readily accessible throughout their day.  If we can come to see that we are called to live in worship in order to glorify our God who raised us from the dead and as a witness to those that are around us, we will see the power of God in ways we never imagined.  Oddly enough, even though we worship God due to His worthiness, have you ever noticed how when you worship Him, you are also rewarded?  There is great joy that one feels when in the presence of a loving Father.  He is so good to us. Even when we do what we know we should to honor him, we are rewarded. It was not about us. Think about what Jesus told the woman at the well, “whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”  We do nothing to make ourselves worthy of the gift God offers.  He pays the cost Himself.  Yet, we are rewarded with mercies and gifts that benefit us.  He is infinitely worthy without having done any of this. This makes worshiping Him from the heart so much easier.

Are you still struggling to get a practical application on how to understand how to worship?  I would encourage you to meditate on these verses in silent prayer. Ask for God to speak during this time.  Read from Hebrews 12:28 until you finish the book of Hebrews.  Spend some time understanding the fear of the Lord and the law of the Old Testament.  Look at the life and teaching of our Lord. Consider how our Savior Jesus Christ shows us to ask Him to reveal His will through His word.  Approach God personally. Tell Him that you accept His call to a deeper personal relationship and to the family of believers He adopts you into.  And in doing any of this, you are intentionally seeking Him at the cost of your time and life while renewing your mind, which is acceptable worship.

Prayer: The Road Ahead

Lord, I am struggling with what I think the roads ahead may look like.  Though I have not seen them, the roads I am currently on are getting rough.  My previous experience and assumptions of what lies ahead have put me in a place of fear.  My trust in myself has limited me from seeing the good beyond this turn.  Please increase my faith and remind me of all You have done that has proven me wrong so frequently in the past.  Build me up with Your strength in my weakness and increase my understanding of Your power, love, and peace.  Help me get back on the road as I sit here parked on the shoulder with the engine off.  I feel lost and need refreshed in the knowledge that You go before me and are with me at the same time.  Thank you for your grace and patience with me Lord.  Forgive me for my pride and arrogance.  I look forward to coming home, which I am not deserving of, but You have invited me into by Your blood on the cross and Your resurrection.  All glory and honor belong to you Jesus.  Thank you, Lord.  It is in Your name, the name of Christ Jesus that I make this prayer.  Amen.

Reflections:

  • Did God put you on this path or did you take the wheel to get here?
  • Looking back, has He shown up when you were here before?
  • Sometimes we need to pull over for rest, but are you resting in that time or running to distractions and anxiety?
  • How often do you listen to God’s direction in your life compared to taking the turn and hoping for the best?
  • God is always right on time.
  • Journal a list of 10 times that God showed up. 5 from scripture and 5 from your own life. Reflect on these times and praise Him for each one. Thank Him for His Fatherhood over your life and His patience with us when we are fearful and prideful.

Proverbs 3: 5-8

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, And lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths. Do not be wise in your own eyes; Fear the Lord and depart from evil. It will be health to your flesh, And strength to your bones https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs%203&version=NKJV

Be Honest

Genuine honesty is hard to come by in this day and age. Words are either carefully chosen to bypass any potential opportunity to offend or they are ridden with malice while guided with animosity. Regretfully, I have been known to be heavy handed with my honesty. Once, I was called hawkish which ended with me taking a trip to dictionary.com to find out what I was being accused of at that moment. This word along with the rest of their response, led me to realize people saw my honesty as a militant demand of action or as a passive accusation with some truth at the core of the comment surrounded with unnecessary judgment. For others, they reduce the strength of truth in hopes to ease the assumed sting of persecution for the sake of the person on the receiving end. This tip toe act of warming the pot to slowly boil usually ends with the desired temperature never fulling being achieved thus resulting in fruitless results or an undercooked lobster. There have been beneficial results using these methods; however, they are typically not recommended as everyone receives information differently. I call this the “cell phone” effect. The signal on both ends must be up to par to have a clear line of communication. For many, this is a commonsense idea that has no need to be in an article on my page or on anyone else’s. My response would be, how often are you honest with yourself? How often are you honest with God? Today, I will be honest with all of you.

All these articles I write have one thing in common… these are areas where I have failed. It happens and is expected. Having my brutal type of honesty is also reflected internally so subtle reminders are needed often. I once read a meme that said “satan says you are a disappointment to God, and you should give up; while God says I knew everything you would do before you were born, and I still called you. I am not done with you yet.” This is such a powerful example of my own battles. After my last article, I made a common mistake due to my old wound of rejection. I questioned myself. A mentor of mine gave me an amazing complement on my writing. He called it “spiritually brilliant.” But as I started to feel that pride lift, I knew there was more to come as God calmed me to brace for impact. When he finished his brief pause, he looked me right in the eyes and stated, “but you, are not.” This was not said to hurt my feelings but to regulate my ego. He even told me God asked him to tell me that. It took time but I came to find this was to remind me of what I already knew but forgot at crucial times. That God was sharing this wisdom through me and I had taken credit. The enemy knew this and made me feel like a plastic Christian. My faith came into question. I was spiritually rocked for a day or two, but I am just now getting back to my fight. My strength has always been to show my own weakness.

When writing I am not pursuing praise or adoration. The feeling of conviction and responsibility from God is what gets me to log on and start writing. Putting these thoughts into paragraphs often help me walk through the season I am in. Honestly, I wish I did it more often. But if I am to be genuinely honest, I do not want to write which leads me to a confession. God may be the reason I write but He is not the motivation I always seek after I write. I tend to chase the fruits of my labor much more than I enjoy doing them for God. These writings start humbly and end with me looking at ratings and comments. My fulfillment of a calling or purpose becomes what comforts me while God has been put on the waiting list for my time. I have thanked God for a gift by praising the results of that gift above him. This is like loving the response you get from others when posting pictures of the dog your father gave you that you never wanted and do not care for. Now that I have seen this fleshly side of me, I must crucify it every day. I have to remember who Jesus Christ is, what He has done for me, and what He continues to do for me every day. Anything less than that is a disservice to His sacrifice and grace.

This brings me to the question that God has placed on my heart these past few days. This is a question we all must ask ourselves and answer with genuine honesty. Is God enough? Before you answer that, quickly think of these partnering inquires that weighed heavy on my heart while I chocked down the gravity of what was asked of me. Will you inconvenience yourself for God? Do you need a reward to follow through? Did you really surrender? Is God really your motivation?

What are you not being honest about in your life.

The Live Ones Hurt

This past week I felt a dryness to I have never experienced before.  For those who live around me, they will immediately perk up to respond with “We have had so much rain!  What dryness?!”  Even though everything around me was soaked, spiritually I was experiencing a separation from God for reasons I was unable to ascertain on my own that left my heart cracking like a dried riverbed.  A series of events led me to uncover myself hidden within a shelter of fig leaves I had built around my own heart.  Keeping it from anyone and everything including God.  I had noticed my poor actions prior to layering the walls with clay ridden mud because I didn’t know what to do besides keep building.  The more I pondered over this reaction, the more I began to barricade myself inside with no concern of the dryness that was spreading to my full body.  This dark place felt familiar and safe even though I knew it was going to be the death of me.  Purposeful starvation of love seems so obviously bad for me in hindsight, but I was basking in the dry darkness that had once been my home for so long.   

  The factors that lead me here were only brought to the surface when I finally confessed in a mentor of mine.  This was not the original plan for the conversation, but it quickly changed when he noticed my face and demeanor.  Physical pain is something that has always thrown off my balance.  The weather around me of consistent rain gave me a more accurate determination of the barometric pressure outside than the weather app could ever do.  He asked me if what I was feeling was just physical since he noticed how awkwardly I was sitting.  I swallowed my accountability pill and decided to tell him about the days prior to our meeting.  

  While I suffered a silent internal war of physical pain, a church group of mine had started to fall apart.  Some had revoked their commitment to an open discussion conversational group based off readings inspired by and containing God’s word.  This was one of my safe places with people I felt connected with through faith.  A scheduling conflict arose in our group chat and that was the start of the collapse.  Texts were sent and emotions were heightened for some including myself.  One of the members informed us he was no longer planning to attend since he made other commitments that now did not align with the groups schedule.  One of the brothers made a few comments that I was not happy to see.  I felt singled out when I offered two possible ways to keep the group meeting that were meat with an assumption of me overstepping my role.  This was mostly unwarranted in my mind because there were no roles or leadership positions, but he made it clear that I was not the “leader”, and I was not the one to make any decisions even though I only offered options.  This disappointing outcome combined with my physical pain drove me to a dark place of anger I have not seen in several months.  

So, I pulled out the contact list and dialed this brother with the plan to clear the air. To my surprise, he answered calmly. Due to my current state of mind this response fueled my anger. I demanded he explain where this tension was coming from and asserted that he was making this personal. He responded with a timid tone lined with uncertainty. Feeling justified at every turn, I reciprocated with my quick-witted responses to every “um” or “er” he made. The relentless interrogation continued for a few minutes until we both received calls from other people. Shortly thereafter, the originator of the group called me and stated that he was “just a facilitator” and agreed with some of my statements in the chat. After a few short seconds of vindication, he then informed me that he would no longer be able to attend the group due to his other commitments to another group he was with before. I felt foolish for even caring about the group. That past hour of emotions felt like a waste to me at this point.

  Unsure of how to proceed, I reached out to another good friend who was in a similar group.  As far as I had gone down that angry path, I knew I needed help and just kept talking until he heard something he could point out to me.  He proposed I prayed over this and advised that I should ponder over if I was projecting my feelings on others.  This made a lot of sense.  I have always struggled with feeling accepted or respected.  Anger has been a problem for me in the not-so-distant past so of course I am in this place right now.  Meditation superseded the calls.  I thought about my words, my intent, my actions, and my emotions.  I did not use harsh language at any point, but over the phone my tone was shaped like a spear that was being hurled through the strength of mild manner vernacular poisoned with ill intent.  The transcript would appear like a rose with thorns, but unbeknownst to the reader those thorns were surreptitiously brushed with tetrodotoxin. This realization of my poor reactions was followed up with an apology which was immediately met with forgiveness from that brother, but I still felt out of place.  “Where was it coming from?” I asked myself.  “I thought I was doing better.  Why am I failing myself?… Why am I failing God!?”   

  For several days I laid in the carcass of my own ego and expectation.  The physical pain had me locked into a trap of anguish and my mental health was following suit.  So, I withdrew.  I hid myself not knowing what I truly felt.  I was lacking direction and choosing to not feel anything.  I built that shelter around my heart and eventually my whole self.  While in there I was shriveling up slowly dying.  I didn’t want anyone to see me like that, especially God.  While working, I was short tempered, irritable, and volatile.  The people I was supposed to serve with love were getting doused in gasoline with every question they asked with no idea that a lighter could be thrown at any time.  Awareness of these unchecked emotions spilling into my work life caused me to panic and start filling the cracks in the wall with whatever I could find and eventually withdrawing further into emptiness.  The next day is when I was scheduled a meeting with my mentor. 

  While in his office, I explained all of this to him in less articulate words.  He followed up with a few questions.  “Is this the first time any brother has let you down on this journey?”  I thought about this during the long awkward pause he left ringing in the air.  I realized that this was a place I was really hurting.  That hurt was from feeling rejected by my own community and the loss of the community itself.  “Was this group important to you?” he asked with an understanding look.  “Yes,” I replied with tears now resting upon my eyelids ready to break form down my cheek.  “Are you grieving?” he asked.  “Yes,” stumbled out of my mouth as I fought the crippling wave of emotions trying to overcome my stone like demeanor.  In those few questions I found the words for what I need to pray for and registered that I was denying God access to my heart.  I knew forgiveness was outside of my walls, but I was afraid I would hurt someone else or give them an opportunity to hurt me if I ever left.  In these moments my shelter was crumbling, and I felt the water rise from the once cracked riverbed.  In four days I had experienced abandonment and loss which led to self-isolation and anger with an unknown need to grieve during one of the most physically limiting periods of my life.  I cornered a brother based off an assumption of disrespect in a group chat.  Emotionally, I was ignoring my wife and friends.  At work I took out my hostility on people just needing some direction or for simply asking how my weekend was.  God was pruning me to better myself and I was retreating from the pain of the event after a branch I felt was “not so bad” was loped off.  Several weeks prior to this I told my mentor I thought God was punishing me and he quickly responded, “God does not punish us, he prunes us.”  I smiled and said “yeah… I can see that.  I am better for it.”  Then he responded with words I didn’t fully understand until now.  “It’s always great when he is pruning the dead branches, but the live ones hurt.”  Yeah… I can see that.  And I am better for it.