Have
you ever had your boss ask you to do something that seemed unreasonable? Well, as I have read the Bible, I have come
across some of those moments? The first one was when God told Noah to build an
ark. Consider for a moment, scripture suggests
that there was no rain before the flood.
The first rainbow occurred after the flood. There was a sun since creation. If there were rain and sun, there should have
been a rainbow unless God changed the behavior of light at the time of the
flood. Now, God could have done
that. I don’t know. Nevertheless, God told Noah to build the ark
and put in all the animals. First of
all, how did Noah know what an ark was. Then,
from the time God told him to build it until the time Noah entered the ark, was
at least 100 years. Do you think he
might have had a few doubts along the way?
A few skeptical neighbors? How
about a skeptical wife?
Last
summer, Linda and I roughed in a 1000 square foot addition and 2 ½ stall garage
onto our son’s house as an “in-law” suite for ourselves. Apart from hiring out the concrete, we, me
and her, did all of it with about 10 hours of help from our sons. I mean nailing, screwing, roofing, siding,
hanging garage door, just the two of us.
Linda was on the roof nailing shingles with an air nailer. We had doubters. Jared, our youngest said, “Dad, do you think
you might be a little old for this?” It
took us 3 months. This summer we plan on
finishing the inside. Now God did not
tell me to do this, and there were times Linda was more than a little skeptical;
but I’ll bet nothing like Noah’s wife.
What
about when God told Abraham that he was going to have a son. This was sometime
before Abraham was 86 years old because Ishmael was born when Abraham was 86,
and Ishmael was Sarah and Abraham's way of trying to help God. At 99, still no child. Then God tells Abraham to circumcise every male
among his household. Now that would have
caused me many questions, like “what is circumcision?” “Will you repeat that again, I think I
misheard you”. Now I have heard of guys
getting drunk and doing crazy stuff; but, never anything like this. Can you imagine the looks on his servant's faces when Abraham told them. First of “how”,
then “why”. Who went first? Who volunteered to be the first? Can you imagine the pain and blood. No anesthetic. No scalpels. Now you know why Abraham is
listed as a hero of faith! If I was
Abraham I would have said, for over ten years we have been waiting for a son
and now you want me to do what?
Then
when Isaac was a young man God told Abraham to sacrifice him. Think for a moment, how many of these “You
want me to do what?” moments Abraham had.
There was the first asking him to pick up everything and move, not even
knowing where. The destruction of Sodom
and Gomorrah had to be another.
Look
at the heroes of faith in Hebrews. They
all had “You want me to do what?”
moments.
Moses? Gideon? Isaac? Jacob? Joseph? Joshua? Samson? Elijah? Elisha?
Why
do I bring this up? Two fold. One, just to prove how prideful and stupid we
are when we refuse to do simple stuff that God tells us to do in His Word, like:
anointing the sick with oil, laying hands on the sick, taking authority over
Satan, just to name a few. We come up
with all kinds of excuses and reasons why we don’t, can’t, shouldn’t, don’t
need to, or just plain refuse. Second,
in regards to worship. We just called a
new “worship pastor” in our Ft Myers church and I am excited about it. Not that there was anything wrong before, but
I like his ideas on worship. He’s not
here yet but he has a blog that explains his theology of worship. On his blog there are many videos and one is
entitled “Worship that pleases God”. In
it he and another worship pastor discuss the concept or theology of worship.
I
want to discuss worship and since I did not read every part of his blog, I don’t
want you to get the idea that everything I say represents his theology. It may or may not. Some I know does but what I discuss here was
born out of or stimulated in response to his blog combined with my thoughts
over the years regarding worship. “Singing”
does not equal “worship”. Singing may be
part of worship; but, worship is more than singing. Not all singing in church is worship. Not everyone singing in church is of necessity
worshiping. Worship is more that
singing. I can worship without
singing. Nevertheless, God has given us
instructions on worship and His response to “God driven” worship.
I
was raised in a very conservative local church and as a child, we sang Psalms
and hymns. Psalms were Psalms set to
music. All 150 of them. Many Psalms had more than one song. They were not of necessity verbatim, but
parts were. All were paraphrase’s of
Psalms. Thus all were scriptural! Does that mean that all were song in a spirit
or attitude of worship. For some
individuals I am sure they were; but, worship is an attitude toward God, a
response to God. We never sang with enthusiasm,
at least I never did and it never appeared to me that anyone was; but, I am
sure some were. The enthusiasm was not
what I saw at football or basketball games.
People got excited at basketball and football games. They clapped, they raised their hands. They pumped their fists in the air. They were excited.
Even
today, the same is true in most churches.
People know how to worship at a sporting event, at least they are doing
it. Maybe they don’t know they are; but,
they are. On Sunday, they just sit there on their hands.
The
psalmist says in Psalm 28:
Hear the voice of my
supplications, when I cry unto thee, when I lift up my hands toward thy holy oracle.
Prayer
is worship. Praise to God is part of
prayer. Praise is worship.
In
Psalm 47, the Psalm says;
Clap your hands, all you nations;
shout to God with cries of joy. For the
LORD Most High is awesome, the great King over all the earth. He subdued
nations under us, peoples under our feet. He chose our inheritance for us, the pride of
Jacob, whom he loved. God has ascended amid shouts of joy, the LORD amid the
sounding of trumpets. Sing praises to God, sing praises; sing praises to our
King, sing praises. For God is the King
of all the earth; sing to him a psalm of praise. God reigns over the nations; God is seated on his holy throne. The
nobles of the nations assemble as the people of the God of Abraham, for the
kings of the earth belong to God; he is greatly exalted.
The Psalmist is not telling the
nations to clap their hands because the choir did a great job. He is telling the nations to clap because God
has done great things.
In Psalm 63, David in the desert
of Judah prays and worships God. He
wills himself to praise God. He lifts up
his hands as an act of his will.
You, God, are my God,
earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry
and parched land where there is no water. I have seen you in the sanctuary and
beheld your power and your glory. Because your love is better than life, my lips
will glorify you. I WILL praise you as long as I live, and in your name I WILL
lift up my hands. I WILL be fully
satisfied as with the richest of foods; with singing lips my mouth will praise
you. On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of the night.
Because you are my help, I sing in the shadow of your wings. I cling to you; your right hand upholds me. Those
who want to kill me will be destroyed; they will go down to the depths of the
earth. They will be given over to the
sword and become food for jackals. But
the king will rejoice in God; all who swear by God will glory in him, while the
mouths of liars will be silenced.
The Psalmist in Psalm 98 tells us
to
Make a joyful noise
unto the LORD,
all the earth:
make a loud noise
, and rejoice
and sing
praise. Sing
unto the LORD
with the harp;
with the harp,
and the voice
of a psalm.
With trumpets
and sound
of cornet
make a joyful noise
before
the LORD,
the King.
Let the sea roar
, and the fulness
thereof; the world,
and they that dwell
therein. Let the floods
clap
their hands:
let the hills
be joyful
together.
We are to make noise, rejoice and
sing. Next time you complain about the
music is church being too loud, remember Psalm 98. Even the creation worships God.
Psalm 134 commands us:
Behold, bless
ye the LORD,
all ye servants
of the LORD,
which by night
stand
in the house
of the LORD.
Lift up
your hands
in the sanctuary,
and bless
the LORD.
The LORD
that made heaven
and earth
bless
thee out of Zion.
We are commanded to raise our
hands in church. Can you imagine the
next time the National anthem is sung at a football game, and you refuse to
stand. Try that at the “Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier” and you WILL get publically reprimanded. I saw it happen. In the blog of our worship pastor there was a
video of a service at a church in Georgia.
The worship pastor asked the people to repeat some of these verses
from Psalms and raise their hands. About half of the people stubbornly did not
raise their hands. Talk about disrespect
for the Word!
David in Psalm 141 compares “lifting
up of my hands” to the “evening sacrifice”.
The writer of Hebrews tells us:
let us offer
the sacrifice
of praise
to God continually,
that is ,
the fruit
of our lips
giving thanks
to his name.
We
are to CONTINUALLY offer a “sacrifice of praise”. David tells us that God “inhabits
the praises of His people”. God lives
in, dwells in our praises.
Psalm 100 tells us:
Shout for joy to the LORD, all
the earth. Worship the LORD with
gladness; come before him with joyful songs. Know that the LORD is God. It is
he who made us, and we are his ; we are his people, the sheep of his pasture. Enter
his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give thanks to him and
praise his name. For the LORD is good and his love endures forever; his
faithfulness continues through all generations.
Does this sound like the worship
at your church? Sound like a football
game? We will spend hours talking about
our favorite team. How much time do we
spend speaking the praises of God?
The Pharisees told Jesus to rebuke
His disciples on Palm Sunday to keep quiet and stop praising Him. Jesus responded.
the whole crowd of disciples
began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen:
“Blessed is the king who comes in the
name of the Lord!” “Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!” Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to
Jesus, “Teacher, rebuke your disciples!” “I tell you,” he replied, “if they keep quiet, the stones will
cry out.”
The
next time you feel pretty good about yourself or your church, reflect, when did
you last “worship” God? David was a
murderer, adulterer, and thief; but God also said he was a man after His own
heart. David knew what it meant to
praise His God! He knew true worship. God dwelt in the praises of David. Are the rocks outside the church crying out
louder than the people inside the church?
God
tells us what He wants us to do. It’s
not so hard. It is a matter of
obedience, an act of the will. Look at
the heroes of faith. Check out what he
asked them to do. There is no pain, no blood for us. Jesus shed all the blood! Jesus endured all the pain! For us, it is a matter of submission, surrender. Our part is easy. Jesus did the hard part! He too had to obey the will of His Father. He had to submit to the Father!
“Without
faith it is impossible to please God.” Do you
please God? Do I please God? The next time you pray for the sick, does
your faith please God? The next time you
worship, does your worship please God?
Have you, are you obeying God in your worship? Is your worship an act of sacrifice or is it
an act of rebellion? Are you worshipping
“God’s way” or your way? Yes, God wants you and me to worship Him, in His manner.
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