Worship.
How would you define it?
Hearing that word almost creates confusion.
It has become so many things. Songs, services, singing, and industry.
Records, sold-out shows, iTunes charts, and royalty checks.
Jobs, productions, and emotional feelings.
But what is it…really? More than anything, we need to get this right. Worship is foundation – it’s the rock that everything is built upon.
As leaders, we can never tire of hearing this. We can never graduate from the heart of worship. There are no bigger and better things.
Christ is all – His worth, magnified in our hearts and in the hearts of the people we lead. Seeing Him clearer, knowing Him deeper.
Let’s ask some pointed questions:
When was the last time you were really desperate for God? Where you felt like you really needed Him?
Do you remember a time when your desire to know Jesus was stronger than your desire for anything else?
Have you ever felt the fire that Paul felt?
“Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ” (Phil. 3:8).
Is Christ so valuable to you that everything else seems like rubbish?
The Dangers of Professionalism
I don’t have a problem with being a professional. Professionalism is a powerful standard to strive for.
But our hunger for Jesus shouldn’t be professional, tamed, civilized. It needs to run wild. It needs to burn. It needs to spread.
Oftentimes, the more professional we get, the less desperate we become. We start to adopt the world’s values and crave its attention. Rather than living our lives to magnify the greatness of Jesus, we subtly crave a slice of that pie.
Our hearts crave the glory that belongs to One name.
But here’s the goal: we want to be professional in our craft yet like a child in worship.
But a blog post like this can be mistaken for sensationalism. Or emotional rubbish.
The wild, abandoned, free worship I’m talking about isn’t just relegated to stages, songs, services, and church buildings. It’s a way of seeing the world – seeing your life through the lens of worship.
Defining Passionate Worship
This Scripture is one of the most powerful worship verses in the Bible and it’s not referring to music or passionate singing:
“Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervor, serving the Lord. Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer. Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality” (Romans 12:11).
Worship.
How would you define it?
According to this verse?
- Consistent zeal
- Spiritual fervor
- Joy
- Hope
- Patient in affliction
- Faithful in prayer
- Giving to the needy
- Being hospitable
By all means, light up your local church stage with your zeal, passion, and fire for God. But balance that passion with this: your private passion must back it up.
How you maintain zeal in a complacent society is a reflection of your worship.
Serving God is a reflection of your worship.
Giving is a reflection of your worship.
Being hospitable is a reflection of your worship.
How passionately you sing at a worship concert doesn’t mean much if you aren’t stoking the flames of worship on Monday morning.
Believe me, I’m all for passionate, loud singing at a concert. But let that passion find expression where you live every day.
Let’s labor for a more robust worship. Worship that spreads into every fiber of our being, every moment of our day, and every appointment on our calendar.
Question: What do you do to maintain your zeal as a worshiper? How do you keep your heart on fire? Are we missing the point with our passionate worship? You can leave a comment by clicking here.
[ois skin=”Beyond Sunday 2″]
Dave Lowry says
I define worship as “Aligning my plans and actions with God’s will.” This has gone through a few revisions, and I’m sure will go through more! It used to be “Aligning my whole purpose with the plans and character of God.”
I came to this definition from reflection on a personal worship statement I did with my team some time ago. This is what I came up with:
1) I will strive to live a fruitful life as a worshipper of God, a lover of Jesus, and an agent of the Holy Spirit.
2) I cannot lead people to where I haven’t been myself, so I will pray and study to be in God’s presence and know his will.
3) I will continually review who/what have I been worshipping so my focus isn’t hijacked by personal preference, comfort zone safety, or churchianity ritual.
4) If I look at the church and feel unsatisfied, revival starts with me, the example I set, and the relationships I invest in.
5) I acknowledge that I am a work in progress and God is shaping me.
One thing I’d say about “Giving is a reflection of your worship” — I read somewhere recently regarding that there was a subtle difference between giving and helping. Giving doesn’t always help, but helping is always giving something.
vicki says
Like the comments – thanks! Good article also!
David Santistevan says
Dave, this is so good. I love “If I look at the church and feel unsatisfied, revival starts with me, the example I set, and the relationships I invest in.” Great advice!
Ralph says
Hello David, Raised as a Catholic I always felt a yearning to experience communion with the divine. We were raised to the teaching “The Kingdom of Heaven is Within” and again to “Be Still and Know (realise?) God”.
I never realised what this meant until in my early twenties I attended a 10 day meditation Vipassana seminar taught in Igatpuri India by Mr SN Goenka. Having seen the efficacy of this non sectarian meditation technique – which the Americans have latched on to and re-christened as “Mindfulness Meditation” I can recommend this eastern wisdom to every Christian seeker.
Love your enemies. Do good to those who persecute you. This becomes so easy after the practise of Vipassana meditation which has 3 elements (1) Concentration by focus on the natural subtle inflow-outflow of breath (2) Realising for oneself, moment by moment, the truth of impermanence leading to (3) the realisation of of AGAPE-unbounded love for your fellow beings.
No rites, rituals, acceptance of any beliefs are involved. These elements are completely non-sectarian and can be practised by any one of any faith.
You do not need to spend 10 days of your life in a residential 10 day retreat which is now available around the world. There is no payment involved. If after attending aa 10 day course you feel you would like others to experience the same “peace that surpasseth all understanding” then you are welcome to make a contribution of any amount as you wish. “Paying it forward” has allowed the technqiue to spread wordwide over the last 40 odd years.
The global centres are listed at www-dot-dhamma-dot-org
For more you can also go to vri-dot-dhamma-dot-org
Walter says
Absolute Truth!