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Soli Deo Gloria
The concept of what worship is and isn’t
has become a battleground of high stakes and many casualties
within the church today. While theological battles still rage
among the leaders of the church the crux of debate in many
churches has fallen squarely on the shoulders of the attending
church members and the issue of worship.
There are many things that are thought of
worship and what it should and shouldn’t be. To many people,
worship is simply the songs that are sung during a church
service. To others, it is narrowed even further to include only
a particular genre of music most commonly known as “praise and
worship” music.
There are arguments whether new
“contemporary” songs should be used so that new and younger
church members will be able to relate to the music being played
in the church. The other side of the argument is that this new
music is strange to older members who have sung the same songs
for sixty years. Church leadership does not wish to isolate or
offend older members by “phasing out” their older brand of
worship. Finances even rear their ugly head in the debate as it
is the older members who are most often the biggest financial
supporters of the church. Some have even threatened to withdraw
financial support from a church unless they get the kind of
worship that they desire to see within their church.
Indeed, while such debates have some merit,
I wish to say that I believe that on the whole, this debate is
worthless and the point is moot. The prophet Micah will support
my statement.
The debate over worship is not over the
forms of worship, as it often appears to be, but rather over who
or what is worshipped. The answer should be obvious that we
worship God but the Lord is so often lost in this debate.
Immediately when we start arguing over old hymns or new
choruses, we’ve taken the focus off of God and on to the method
of worship.
Advocates of each side will state that the
form of worship is important but they lack scriptural support.
The Bible is silent on how the church today is to worship.
There were strict guidelines given for tabernacle and temple
worship but we worship in neither one today, nor do we have
Levites who would be able to perform the necessary duties within
our churches.
In truth, the Bible is silent even on the
day that we worship. The Israelites worshipped on the seventh
day of the week. The early church was still very much Jewish
and began their worship in the same manner as the Israelites but
at some point began meeting on Sundays. No biblical command was
ever given to change the day of worship, or to keep it the same.
The day of worship is just one of many
things that the Bible is silent on concerning how we are to
worship God. I believe that this is because God in His infinite
wisdom knew that different cultures would worship differently.
A white church is most likely going to worship differently than
an African-American church and an African-American church is
most likely going to worship differently than an African church.
So what is it that truly matters to the
Lord? The great composer Johann Sebastian Bach signed each one
of his masterpieces soli deo gloria. This means “to God
alone the glory.” This is what our worship should be and where
our emphasis both should and MUST lie.
The people of Micah’s day had much the same
problem that we see in our churches today. The people of
Micah’s day were caught up in the form of worship and ignoring
who they were actually worshipping. To the Israelites credit,
they were at least given a form worship of sacrifices and feasts
that they were to follow. Today’s church has no mandate from
God that states hymns are the only acceptable worship or that
the Lord only wants to hear modern songs. The Israelites got
lost in the form of their worship, today we have gotten lost in
the form and then we argue over how it is supposed to be done.
In Micah 6:6-8,
the prophet asks a question and then answers it himself.
“With what shall I come before the Lord and bow myself before
the exalted God? Shall I come before Him with burnt offerings,
with calves a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands
of rams, with ten thousand rivers of oil? Shall I offer my
firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin
of my soul? He has shown you, O man, what is good. And what
does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God.”
Israel had been given a form of worship
that they were to follow. They had sacrifices and feasts they
were supposed to do and attend throughout the year. Still Micah
asks the question of with what he should come before the Lord.
The response he gets isn’t one that says, “I already told you
all the things you should bring to each sacrifice.” Instead the
response he gets has nothing to do with form at all.
In the church today, almost all
denominations and churches hold some things in common. There
are songs that are sung, an offering is taken. Scripture is
read, either as part of the service or as part of a sermon.
Some sort of biblical truth is communicated to the people
whether in the form of a 40 minute sermon or a ten minute
speech. These are the equivalent to Micah’s sacrifices. The
New Testament makes reference to these as parts of early church
services. Micah’s sacrifices have specific instructions on how
each one is to be done but the New Testament service has no such
specifics. This is inconsequential however.
In Micah’s response to his own questions,
he says that the form of worship does not matter. All of the
sacrifices that were being done didn’t matter. Today, all of
the songs that are being sung don’t matter. What matters is
Micah’s response to his own question.
We have already been shown what is good and
right. We are to act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with
God. These are open ended commandments. The Israelites could
attend their required sacrifices and return home and live their
lives as normal. We may go to our worship services, sing our
songs, listen to our sermon, and return home and live life as
normal. What Micah hands down to the people is far more
difficult to do.
There can be no “act justly” service. We
cannot gather together once a week and “act justly” and say that
we’ve fulfilled the requirement. It isn’t even enough to act
justly most of the time. I know that I act justly at least 8
hours a day; when I’m asleep! This isn’t enough to fulfill what
has been asked.
How does this relate to worship? There are
many ways this passage can be applied. The easiest is that
worship is not a one hour a week experience and must instead be
lived throughout the week. Returning to J.S. Bach however,
worship is to bring glory to God alone. These actions brought
glory to God. Acting justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly
before the Lord brought glory to God. It was not the forms that
brought glory to God.
The offerings in and of themselves mean
nothing to God, he has no need of rams and bulls because he
created them. In Psalm 50:8-10 the Lord says, “I do not rebuke
you for your sacrifices or your burnt offerings, which are ever
before me. I have no need of a bull from your stall or of goats
from your pens, for every animal of the forest is mine, and the
cattle on a thousand hills.”
None of this is to say that the forms of
worship are useless. Even when God criticizes the Israelites
worship as meaningless, he does not order them to stop. He
calls their sacrifices detestable and orders them to stop bring
him blemished bulls and rams but he does not do away with the
entire system. The system itself was not broke. God had
created it and it was perfect.
The sacrificial system of the Old Testament
was very detailed and even in very fine details, they pointed to
a coming redeemer who would be the ultimate sacrifice. The
forms were perfect in the way that they had been set up. It was
the heart of the people who mindlessly went about the rituals
who ruined the system. A sacrificial system meant to point to a
coming redeemer meant nothing if the people did not take time to
think about it. Likewise, Old Testament worship was abhorred by
God when the people did not present what they were asked or did
not present their best.
This has a direct correlation to today
because we are making many of the same mistakes as the
Israelites. The form that we have is not broken. I do not
advocate throwing out singing altogether and spend our time of
worship loving mercy and acting justly.
However, our worship is meant to point us
to God. Just as the Old Testament system pointed to Jesus, our
worship should point to him both for what he has accomplished
and as a king that we wait to return. Middle Age cathedrals
were specifically built to draw the eye upward in the hope that
it would cause the viewer to focus on God.
This is what today’s worship should be all
about. It does not matter if we worship in a cathedral or a
shopping mall, but the goal is the same. A worship service is
to glorify God and focus on Him. When we gather together in the
Lord’s name, we are there to bring glory to Him and Him alone.
We often hold traditions above the worship
of God. We sing the songs that we sing because we have sung
them for years. If anyone actually evaluates them however, some
songs have very little to do with God or use language that
people no longer understand. I love the history and everything
that Martin Luther’s “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” stands for,
but honestly, I doubt I could find a dozen people in my church
that know what a “bulwark” is. I would not say that we should
get rid of the song but I do suggest that people cannot worship
God by using words of which they do not know the meaning.
On the other hand, “praise and worship”
songs are often anything but praise and worship. The name
separates them from other songs by making it sound like other
songs are not worshipful. In fact, many praise and worship
songs focus more on the singer and their emotions than they do
on God.
Soloists, praise bands, and dramatists are
all very useful resources in the church today. A drama can
provide a visual representation of an idea that a sermon or a
song simply cannot. Soloists can be both pleasing to listen to
and allow a congregation to focus on the words of a song more
than they can while singing. However, the line should not be
crossed where the church elevates the people who do such
things.
People with gifts that are used in the
church may be recognized as being gifted. However, the praise
should go to God who made them that way. Likewise, the medium
that the message is given through should not be overemphasized.
While a drama or a song may be considered entertaining, this
should not be the driving purpose behind having such things.
The goal of having performers within the
church returns to bring glory to God and to God alone. Some
churches can have performers in it and they can be wonderful in
facilitating worship of God. Other churches quickly lose the
focus of why the performers are there. They begin talking about
how good the band is or how talented the dramatists are. When
this is done without giving God the glory for the gifts, the
purpose is lost.
It is my belief that our form of worship
does not matter as long as our goal is to glorify God. The
argument is often used that the end justifies the means in order
to justify sinful actions that have a good outcome. In this
case however, I believe that the axiom applies. I can think of
no sinful action that brings directly brings about the glory of
God. (There are sinful actions that indirectly bring about the
glory of God. For example, terrorist attacks against the US
brought people to focus on God and cry out to Him. However,
this was a secondary effect and obviously not the intended
purpose of the attacks.)
As in the prophet Micah’s day, the form of
our worship does not matter as much as our focus. Our
sacrifices and offerings mean nothing if they are directed to
wrong the thing. Micah calls us to walk humbly before God. It
is our walk and our worship that needs to be examined, not the
form of our sacrifices.
In conclusion, there is a simple litmus
test that we may apply to our worship. It may eliminate many
struggles and arguments if we remember it. I call it the rule
of soli deo gloria. We simply need to ask ourselves if
our worship bring glory to God and Him alone. If our worship
does not, we need to make changes. If it does, there is no need
for debate because we are already doing what is asked of us. |