Friday, March 6, 2015

Worship One, Two, Three





Several weeks ago the worship team invested the weekend digging deeply into God’s word. Seeking the heart of God for our church and driving down into authentic relationships with one another led us to some great discussions. One of the key struggles we dealt with had to do with who the audience of our worship is.  I was challenged thinking about the two contexts of worship and how they practically impact our lives.  We found this simple phrase that Mike Cosper uses in his book, Rhythms of Grace, helpful as we worked through this:  Worship One, Two, Three.

Worship has One object and Author:  God.  The Triune God is at the center of all Christian worship.  God declared His centrality to worship in the 10 commandments (Ex. 20:1-5).  He explicitly states in other places that He will not share His glory with another (Isaiah 42:8, 48:11). As creation progressed, the Father lifted up Jesus as the central figure of worship (Philippians 2:1-11). God is not only the supreme object of our worship; He’s also the author.  He alone gives us life, breath, vision, redemption, eyes to see, ears to hear and mouths to declare His goodness and glory. Worship is all about God.

Worship occurs in two contexts: gathered & scattered. Gathered worship occurs when the church meets to remember the story of God’s faithfulness, encouraging one another and blessing one another.  The gathering of the church is one key way to hold fast to God under the pressures of a broken world and the temptations to sin (Hebrews 10:24-25). Scattered worship is the Spirit filled life of the Christian in the world. Jesus effectively deconstructed worship from time and place in John 4:21-24.  This means that when we leave the gathered worship service, our scattered service of worship begins!  The apostle Paul says that our entire lives, even the messy parts, are transformed in Christ and offered to God the Father as a beautiful sacrifice of praise (Romans 12:1).

Worship has three audiences:  God, the church, and the world. God is both the object of and the witness to our worship.  The church both participates in and witnesses the gathering of its people.  The world is watching from the darkness.  Having God in our audience means there is One who accepts us as we are and deems our imperfect worship as made perfect in Jesus.  Worship offered humbly in Jesus’ name is always received with joy by the Father (Hebrews 10:12-14). When you enter the gathered worship of the church, don’t fear acceptance or lack thereof.  Trust in Jesus. Your fellow worshipers, the church, also act as an audience to your worship, “ The gathering of the church is … an encounter with God intensified among the people of God, filled with the Spirit of God, spurring one another along in the mission of God.  Gathered worship is a communal experience, not an individualistic one. Christ in me meets Christ in you.”  (Mike Cosper, Rhythms of Grace)

 The world also watches as we worship.  When we gather, it’s the clarity of the gospel message that allows the Holy Spirit to transform the heart of an unbeliever.  As we testify to the power of God in our lives, God allows the world to hear us worshiping Him (and in fact commands us to worship in front of the nations). Who knows but that someone might give glory to God and say, “surely God is in this place!” (1 Corinthians 14:24-25)

Worship: One Object and Author.  Two Contexts.  Three Audiences.

As you put the gospel on display for the glory of God, the edification of the church, and as a testimony to the unbeliever this coming week, know that worship team is cheering for you, praying for you, and worshiping with you. 
-- Pastor Nate (for the musicians that lead our church in musical worship)

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