WORSHIP-DEPTH
Worship
should lead to greater understanding of theological truth. If we contrast the
theological depth of the prose hymn in Colossians 1:15-20 with examples from
modern praise choruses, we can see more clearly how trivial and insubstantial
some of what we sing in our worship is.
The
foundation of worship in the heart is not emotional (“I feel full of
worship” or “The atmosphere is so worshipful”). Actually, it is theological. Worship is not something we “work up,” it
is something that “comes down” to us, from the character of God.
Sinclair Ferguson
A Heart for God, 1987, p. 110, by
permission Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA.
It is God who
gives us the spirit of worship (Psalm 133:3), and it is what we know of God that
produces this spirit of worship. We might say that worship is simply theology,
doctrine, what we think about God, going into top gear! Instead of merely
thinking about Him, we tell Him, in prayer and praise and song, how great and
glorious we believe Him to be!
Sinclair Ferguson
A Heart for God, 1987, p. 111, by
permission Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA.
I really
think that you are what you sing. Shallow theology will produce shallow music,
and shallow music will produce shallow theology. It's a cyclical thing. What we
are challenged to do in our day is to reinsert the theological element both
into our lives and into our music.
Daniel Block
The height of
devotion is reached when reverence and contemplation produce passionate
worship, which in turn breaks forth in thanksgiving and praise in word and
song.
R. Kent Hughes
Disciplines of a Godly Man, Crossway Books,
1991, p. 90.
Our devotion
must culminate in a conscious yielding of every part of our personality, every
ambition, every relationship, and every hope to Him. This done, we have reached
the apex of personal devotion. As Thomas a Kempis said, “As Thou wilt; what
Thou wilt; when Thou wilt.”
R. Kent Hughes
Disciplines of a Godly Man, Crossway Books,
1991, p. 93.
More
knowledge of God leads to a higher form of worship.
Author Unknown
Of all the
attributes of God, holiness is the one that most uniquely describes Him and in
reality is a summarization of all His other attributes. The word holiness
refers to His separateness, His otherness, the fact that He is unlike any other
being. It indicates His complete and infinite perfection. Holiness is the
attribute of God that binds all the others together. Properly understood, it
will revolutionize the quality of our worship.
John MacArthur
The Ultimate Priority, Moody Press 1983, p.
73
In the
process of striving to fulfill our needs and satisfy our desires, the church
has slipped into a philosophy of “Christian humanism” that is flawed with self-love,
self-esteem, self-fulfillment, and self-glory. There appears to be scant
concern about worshiping our glorious God on His terms. So-called worship seems
little more than some liturgy (high or low) equated with stained-glass windows,
organ music, or emotion-filled songs and prayers. If the bulletin didn’t say
“Worship Service,” maybe we wouldn’t know what we were supposed to be doing.
And that reflects the absence of a worshiping life- of which a Sunday service
is to be only a corporate overflow.
John MacArthur
The Ultimate Priority, Moody Press 1983, p.
viii
God is the
only being in all of existence who can be said to possess inherent glory. We
don’t give it to Him; it is His by virtue of who He is. If no one ever gave God any praise, He would
still be the glorious God that He is, because He was glorious before any beings
were created to worship Him… His glory is His being – simply the sum of what He
is, regardless of what we do or do not do in recognition of it.
John MacArthur
The Ultimate Priority, Moody Press 1983, p.
128
Our
songs are not the cause of our loss
of the sense of God’s greatness, though songs are surprisingly influential. No,
our songs reflect this loss. Singing God-centered hymns is desirable, but more
than that is needed. We sing what we feel, what we believe. When once we
rediscover the greatness of God, we will sing it. Our song will echo our
conviction.
Tom Wells
Christian: Take Heart! By Permission of the
Banner of Truth Trust, Carlisle, PA. 1987, p. 105.
The god-who-serves-ME
requires flattery, not worship.
Tom Wells
A Vision for Missions, Permission by The Banner of Truth Trust, Carlisle, PA. p.
29.
Worship
without wonder is lifeless and boring. Many have lost their sense of awe and
amazement when it comes to God. Having begun with the arrogant presumption of
knowing about God all that one can, they reduce Him to manageable terms and
confine Him to a tidy theological box, the dimensions of which conform to their
predilections of what a god ought to be and do.
Sam Storms
One Thing, Christian Focus, © Enjoying God Ministries, 2004, p.69-70. www.enjoyinggodministries.com.
Used by Permission.
We are now the
Temple of God! If the inanimate structure of the old covenant trembled and
shook at God’s presence, what is our response, we in whom this same glorious
and holy God now lives? How can there be the slightest indifference or coldness
or routine or mere ritual or mindless habit in our worship when this same God
lives and abides in us?
Sam Storms
Copied
from: Pleasures Evermore: The Life-Changing Power of Knowing God by Sam Storms,
© 2000, p. 140. Used by permission of NavPress – www.navpress.org. All rights
reserved.