Coconut
Member
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2005
- Messages
- 4,663
Think of the ways we have of late made worship into such a self-conscious flurry: cutting it up into styles; segregating it away from other spiritual activities; idealizing or Utopianizing it; thinking of worship as an end point or a high point--an event instead of a process; making worship so heavily dependent on--overly consumed by-- music; music as the fulcrum, the catapult, the lubricant; separating worship away from witness and evangelism; making worship either into the emotional and experiential antidote to formalism or the formalized answer to emotion and spontaneity. We see worship as denominationally determined; worship as ethnocentrism or cultural separateness; worship this, worship that, conferences here, symposia there; source books, methodologies, cue sheets and, sadly enough, worship styles as litmus tests for spirituality. It just may be that, instead of worshipping, we have come to the dangerous condition of worshipping about worship or even worshipping worship.
I realize that Robert Webber likes to say that worship is a verb. This is a very important concept, for sure. Worship is action, but before we get to the action part, the verb part, we have to re-discover what's in the noun that drives the verb. There is an old adage that we use without realizing how fundamentally flawed it is: so-and-so is as so-and-so does, or more to the subject: worship is as worship does. This is the verb driving the noun, doing leading to being: the root of legalism, pure, simple, in all of its fallen nakedness. If we are sworn to the principle of justification by faith, we must correct this adage and say that so-and-so does as so-and-so is. Therefore worship does as worship is. This is-ness, this spiritual Bernoulli's law, is so easily overlooked, especially in our buzzing, driven, and pragmatic churches, chock full of achievers and doers. We must discover how easy it is to fall backwards into this trap of legalism, doing the deeds of worship in order to worship.
So this question: When is worship worship?
Strangely enough, it can only be answered in a circular way: There is no worship of any kind, anywhere in this world, that is not worship. We can put this even more bluntly: There is no one in this world who is not, at this moment, at worship in one way or another, consciously or unconsciously, formally or informally, passively or passionately. There is a law of worship fully at work which cannot be understood without a double inquiry into how God originally created us and how the darksome mystery of the Fall cut into the beauty of His work.
For there is a Bernoulli's law of worship, a common ground law of worship, authored by the Creator Himself from the eternities. This law was then turned upside down and into a lie by the Satan, but thanks to the indomitable force of Truth and the finished work of Christ, this law can once again be turned right side up. This law can issue in two kinds of worship: that of death unto eternal death or life unto everlasting life. For the question is not, When do we worship, or with what degree of intensity do we worship? Instead, it is, Whom do we worship and with what condition of heart? The answer to this second question constitutes the difference, quite literally, between heaven and hell, for worship will be fulfilled in both places.
For, you see, the desire to worship was created in us, not as an add-on, but as an intrinsic part of our very nature. We were created to live worshipfully, to be in adoring submission--celebrating the One whom we cannot help but adore and being adored by the One to whom we cannot help but submit. This relationship, unique in all creation, is based on the utter mystery of being related to God by being created in His image. Hence, worship cannot be a one-sided, apples-oranges affair, the sovereign One getting, the submissive one giving. This relationship is really a continuous exchange of gifts, because both the Creator and the worshipper are givers. Worship is a marriage of willingness: the willingness of all-sufficiency bonded to the willingness of dependence; the willingness of sovereignty bonded to that of submission, prevenient love bonded to responding love, transcendental worthiness bonded to created worth. We risk this paradox: while the Creator calls for worship, the worshipper would rush to worship even if the Creator did not call.
I cannot find a way to say these things right. I wish there were a word in English which would at once mean both living and worshipping in an indivisible union, because that's what God originally intended. This was how Jesus lived--thirty three years as a living sacrifice--no moment spent not worshipping. It is His life that showed us what all the Law and Prophets were trying to say to us, namely that we were created continuously to adore. We were created as naturally to do this as to breath in and out, to honor, to submit, to depend on, to fellowship, with our Maker. Thus, it is quite easy to see how Adam and Eve were continually at worship in whatever they did--not once in seven days--but continuously: moment by moment, action by action, breath after breath; in speechless quiet, in ecstasy, in words, in deed, in supplication, in praise, in laughter, at rest, asleep, in sexual intimacy, in the simple things and the imponderable things, at table, and in thanksgiving. It is in this primordial and complete sense that worship was simple, normal, and lively. And as we shall see in a few minutes, it can still be that way.
However, just as the original creation is all about worship, so is the Fall. There is such a thing as evil genius and Satan used every bit of it to accomplish his purpose. This genius lay in turning Adam and Eve from the complete Truth to the complete Lie while leaving the desire to serve and to worship completely undisturbed. Adam and Eve were so completely turned upside down by their decision to disobey that, while being kept alive as worshippers they exchanged gods from Creator to creature. Having done this, they had no choice but to fall under the dominion of creature and handiwork--the only things left--for worship and serve they must. Consequently, falling under the dominion of that over which they were initially given dominion spells the fundamental difference between idolatry in all of its epiphanies and the worship of God in all of its diversity.
There is, in fact, a double evil in all of this. On the one hand, we have become enslaved to our own lordship; we enthrone and worship ourselves, but at the same time, we are both enslaved to ourselves and to the creation around us. Thus our self-worship and the lordship of the created order end up in a hellish and chaotic death dance. We end up neither servants nor masters, but confused and blinded slave-gods. This is the ultimate schizophrenia of fallenness. And horror upon horror, instead of leading only to degeneration and depravity, this schizophrenia has generated a world full of religions and blinded religiosity. With the true God absent, but with worship continuing, and with humankind enslaved to its own lordship, a near orgasm of false worship, self-made religion, manufactured righteousness, and self-justification has rushed into the vacuum. These characteristics and behaviors mark all worship but Christian worship, and it is only God who can take this chaotic mess, this maze of contradictions, lies, and confusion, sort them out, and, through the blood of Christ, bring back the worship of the one true God.
This is why the title of this message had to be answered in the way it was. All of life for all of humankind comprises some kind of worship, therefore worship is always worship. It's only the gods that change. All liturgy is liturgy, whether Christian or pagan, only the content and intent change. All actions are acts of worship, whether we are under the spell and dominion of Wall Street, scholarship, the arts, a snake in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea, an evil spirit in the tenements of Hong Kong, a rock pile in Zimbabwe, a frog in the rain forests of South America, or a guru in Waco, Texas.
So we need another title, transformed by one adjective:
When is Worship Christian Worship?
This one word spells the difference between true worship and false worship, best summarized in Romans 12:1 ("Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God - this is your spiritual act of worship") and Romans 12:2 ("Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is - his good, pleasing and perfect will"). In these verses, two diametrically opposed systems are spoken of, namely worship as worship (Romans 12:2) and worship as Christian worship (12:1). We must remember that being conformed to this world, as mentioned in 12:2, is more than what we generally think of as worldliness, that is, the adulteration of a basically Christian walk with activities that are perceived to be less Christian and more worldly--as circular as that sounds. Worldliness in the biblical sense is as far reaching as the Fall is. It is a complete way of life, a complete world view, integrating itself with itself so completely that, compared to the whole truth of God, it is a complete falsehood, the inversion of Truth.
cont`d..
I realize that Robert Webber likes to say that worship is a verb. This is a very important concept, for sure. Worship is action, but before we get to the action part, the verb part, we have to re-discover what's in the noun that drives the verb. There is an old adage that we use without realizing how fundamentally flawed it is: so-and-so is as so-and-so does, or more to the subject: worship is as worship does. This is the verb driving the noun, doing leading to being: the root of legalism, pure, simple, in all of its fallen nakedness. If we are sworn to the principle of justification by faith, we must correct this adage and say that so-and-so does as so-and-so is. Therefore worship does as worship is. This is-ness, this spiritual Bernoulli's law, is so easily overlooked, especially in our buzzing, driven, and pragmatic churches, chock full of achievers and doers. We must discover how easy it is to fall backwards into this trap of legalism, doing the deeds of worship in order to worship.
So this question: When is worship worship?
Strangely enough, it can only be answered in a circular way: There is no worship of any kind, anywhere in this world, that is not worship. We can put this even more bluntly: There is no one in this world who is not, at this moment, at worship in one way or another, consciously or unconsciously, formally or informally, passively or passionately. There is a law of worship fully at work which cannot be understood without a double inquiry into how God originally created us and how the darksome mystery of the Fall cut into the beauty of His work.
For there is a Bernoulli's law of worship, a common ground law of worship, authored by the Creator Himself from the eternities. This law was then turned upside down and into a lie by the Satan, but thanks to the indomitable force of Truth and the finished work of Christ, this law can once again be turned right side up. This law can issue in two kinds of worship: that of death unto eternal death or life unto everlasting life. For the question is not, When do we worship, or with what degree of intensity do we worship? Instead, it is, Whom do we worship and with what condition of heart? The answer to this second question constitutes the difference, quite literally, between heaven and hell, for worship will be fulfilled in both places.
For, you see, the desire to worship was created in us, not as an add-on, but as an intrinsic part of our very nature. We were created to live worshipfully, to be in adoring submission--celebrating the One whom we cannot help but adore and being adored by the One to whom we cannot help but submit. This relationship, unique in all creation, is based on the utter mystery of being related to God by being created in His image. Hence, worship cannot be a one-sided, apples-oranges affair, the sovereign One getting, the submissive one giving. This relationship is really a continuous exchange of gifts, because both the Creator and the worshipper are givers. Worship is a marriage of willingness: the willingness of all-sufficiency bonded to the willingness of dependence; the willingness of sovereignty bonded to that of submission, prevenient love bonded to responding love, transcendental worthiness bonded to created worth. We risk this paradox: while the Creator calls for worship, the worshipper would rush to worship even if the Creator did not call.
I cannot find a way to say these things right. I wish there were a word in English which would at once mean both living and worshipping in an indivisible union, because that's what God originally intended. This was how Jesus lived--thirty three years as a living sacrifice--no moment spent not worshipping. It is His life that showed us what all the Law and Prophets were trying to say to us, namely that we were created continuously to adore. We were created as naturally to do this as to breath in and out, to honor, to submit, to depend on, to fellowship, with our Maker. Thus, it is quite easy to see how Adam and Eve were continually at worship in whatever they did--not once in seven days--but continuously: moment by moment, action by action, breath after breath; in speechless quiet, in ecstasy, in words, in deed, in supplication, in praise, in laughter, at rest, asleep, in sexual intimacy, in the simple things and the imponderable things, at table, and in thanksgiving. It is in this primordial and complete sense that worship was simple, normal, and lively. And as we shall see in a few minutes, it can still be that way.
However, just as the original creation is all about worship, so is the Fall. There is such a thing as evil genius and Satan used every bit of it to accomplish his purpose. This genius lay in turning Adam and Eve from the complete Truth to the complete Lie while leaving the desire to serve and to worship completely undisturbed. Adam and Eve were so completely turned upside down by their decision to disobey that, while being kept alive as worshippers they exchanged gods from Creator to creature. Having done this, they had no choice but to fall under the dominion of creature and handiwork--the only things left--for worship and serve they must. Consequently, falling under the dominion of that over which they were initially given dominion spells the fundamental difference between idolatry in all of its epiphanies and the worship of God in all of its diversity.
There is, in fact, a double evil in all of this. On the one hand, we have become enslaved to our own lordship; we enthrone and worship ourselves, but at the same time, we are both enslaved to ourselves and to the creation around us. Thus our self-worship and the lordship of the created order end up in a hellish and chaotic death dance. We end up neither servants nor masters, but confused and blinded slave-gods. This is the ultimate schizophrenia of fallenness. And horror upon horror, instead of leading only to degeneration and depravity, this schizophrenia has generated a world full of religions and blinded religiosity. With the true God absent, but with worship continuing, and with humankind enslaved to its own lordship, a near orgasm of false worship, self-made religion, manufactured righteousness, and self-justification has rushed into the vacuum. These characteristics and behaviors mark all worship but Christian worship, and it is only God who can take this chaotic mess, this maze of contradictions, lies, and confusion, sort them out, and, through the blood of Christ, bring back the worship of the one true God.
This is why the title of this message had to be answered in the way it was. All of life for all of humankind comprises some kind of worship, therefore worship is always worship. It's only the gods that change. All liturgy is liturgy, whether Christian or pagan, only the content and intent change. All actions are acts of worship, whether we are under the spell and dominion of Wall Street, scholarship, the arts, a snake in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea, an evil spirit in the tenements of Hong Kong, a rock pile in Zimbabwe, a frog in the rain forests of South America, or a guru in Waco, Texas.
So we need another title, transformed by one adjective:
When is Worship Christian Worship?
This one word spells the difference between true worship and false worship, best summarized in Romans 12:1 ("Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God - this is your spiritual act of worship") and Romans 12:2 ("Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is - his good, pleasing and perfect will"). In these verses, two diametrically opposed systems are spoken of, namely worship as worship (Romans 12:2) and worship as Christian worship (12:1). We must remember that being conformed to this world, as mentioned in 12:2, is more than what we generally think of as worldliness, that is, the adulteration of a basically Christian walk with activities that are perceived to be less Christian and more worldly--as circular as that sounds. Worldliness in the biblical sense is as far reaching as the Fall is. It is a complete way of life, a complete world view, integrating itself with itself so completely that, compared to the whole truth of God, it is a complete falsehood, the inversion of Truth.
cont`d..
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