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Worship
Defining
Worship Part 5: Worship as Everyday Life
Bob Kauflin
Sovereign Grace Ministries
In 1997, after being a pastor for 12 years, I had
the opportunity to take a position where my main
role involved equipping and training worship leaders
and musicians both in my local church and the 50-plus
churches related through Sovereign Grace Ministries.
Soon after my arrival, I realized that much of what
I had been teaching about worship was drawn primarily
from my own experience and the experiences of others.
When I did use verses from the Bible in leading
worship, it was usually to support what I was already
doing.
As I dug into Scripture, I began to see that my
view of worship were focused almost entirely on
the singing portion of Sunday mornings. Books like
Engaging with God by David Peterson and Systematic
Theology by Wayne Grudem helped me understand that
our worship of God not only extends beyond singing,
but involves every moment of every day.
In
this series, we've seen how the Bible speaks of
worship as exaltation, expression, encounter, and
event. All of these are contained, however, in worship
as everyday life.
There are many Scriptural references to worship
as a lifestyle, but the best-known may be 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."
Paul
is taking Old Testament language here and applying
it in a new way. The sacrifices that please God
are no longer bulls, rams and sheep, but our very
lives. Of course, animal sacrifices were never meant
to replace humble devotion to God, but were to serve
as an expression of it. Psalm 51:17 reminds us that
"The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit;
a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not
despise."
We typically think of giving our hearts to the Lord
in worship. Here God has Paul intentionally use
the word "bodies." In his commentary on
Romans, John Stott explains, "Paul is clear
that the presentation of our bodies is our spiritual
act of worship. It is a significant Christian paradox.
No worship is pleasing to God which is purely inward,
abstract and mystical; it must express itself in
concrete acts of service performed by our bodies."
In other words, worship isn't something we simply
feel. Worship isn't the name we give some experience
that we seek while singing, lifting our hands, or
closing our eyes. It's something we DO with our
bodies in all of life. We can worship God through
our eating, drinking, typing, speaking, cooking,
driving, and countless other ways. We worship God
whenever we perform an act out of a desire to draw
attention to His greatness, especially revealed
in sending His Son as a substitutionary sacrifice
for our sins.
I've often heard someone who is an expressive singer
described as "a real worshiper." Whether
or not we are a real worshiper is better determined
by how quickly we forgive those who have offended
us, how we handle our finances, and what we do when
no one is looking.
When we become Christians, we automatically become
worshipers of God. The rest of our lives is simply
a brief preparation for what will be an eternal
occupation: giving God grateful, wholehearted worship
which will never be exhausted, even in eternity.
May God give us the grace to get a good head start
in giving Him constant, complete, and passionate
worship.
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