|
Worship
Defining
Worship Part 2: Worship As Expression
Bob Kauflin
Worship Matters
Last
time, we began our series on different aspects of
biblical worship. We saw that worship is first and
foremost exalting God - His works, His character,
and His nature.
One way we do this is by declaring truths about
God that He has revealed to us in His Word. But
the Bible makes it clear that worship involves more
than acknowledging facts about who God is. We must
respond to what He has shown us.
Therefore, another aspect of worship is expression.
In his book, Reflections on the Psalms, C.S. Lewis
explains how he came to see that we naturally respond
to what we value. "The most obvious fact about
praise - whether of God or anything - strangely
escaped me.... I had never noticed that all enjoyment
spontaneously overflows into praise...lovers praising
their mistresses, readers their favorite poet, walkers
praising the countryside...My whole, more general,
difficulty about the praise of God depended on my
absurdly denying to us, as regards the supremely
Valuable, what we delight to do, what indeed we
cannot help doing, about everything else we value.
I think we delight to praise what we enjoy because
the praise not merely expresses but completes the
enjoyment." (John Piper, quoting C.S. Lewis,
The Dangerous Duty of Delight, pp. 23-24)
In
other words, to truly enjoy God, to truly worship
Him, we must express what is in our hearts towards
Him. Psalm 62:8 commands us, "Trust in him
at all times, O people; pour out your heart before
him; God is a refuge for us." Expression in
worship is an act of faith that God hears us and
that he delights in our response to His self-revelation.
Expression can be both physical and verbal. Physical
responses include singing, clapping, kneeling, bowing,
shouting, and lifting hands. (We took a more detailed
looked at these in my previous series on Physical
Expressiveness in Worship). Along with exaltation,
verbal expression involves communicating to God
our love and desire for Him, our need of His grace,
our gratefulness for His mercy, or our fear of His
holiness. Sitting quietly in God's presence is also
an appropriate way to express true worship before
God.
Corporate worship is not unlike a conversation in
which God speaks to us and we respond. Of course,
God can speak to us at any time, and we can walk
into a meeting overflowing with a desire to express
our love for God. But many times, God will give
us a fresh view or impression of His character while
we are singing to Him, and in that moment the most
natural thing for us to do is communicate our response.
That's why the best songs and services allow room
for both objective truth and subjective response
- exaltation and expression. Psalm 95 is one example
of that kind of progression.
The forms expression takes in worship vary from
culture to culture, denomination to denomination,
church to church, and even from person to person.
How do we know that what we're doing is pleasing
God? Here are some important questions to ask: Is
the focus of my expression God as He has revealed
Himself in Scripture? Does my expression have biblical
precedent and support? Am I offering this expression
through faith in the finished work of Christ? Answering
"yes" to these three questions assures
us that our expression is bringing glory to God.
When God is truly exalted, when hearts are fully
engaged in expressing devotion to Him, it typically
leads to a third characteristic of biblical worship,
encounter. We'll take a look at that next time.
|