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Worship
By Jim Killebrew

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[February 01, 2024]  Churches across the land seem to have one thing in common: they are filled with people who sometimes become disgruntled about how Church is done. The trouble is, they spend too much time complaining about insignificant things that have nothing to do with worship or salvation.

Often people complain about the order of the worship service, the type of music being used, the length of the sermon, or who makes the announcements. Sometimes the complaint is about environmental surroundings of the worship place. For instance, the decision to use chairs instead of more expensive pews, the arrangement of a stained-glass window, a cross hanging out of its usual place is more often than not a topic of "concerned" conversation and perhaps even a "matter for prayer."

It may be that the real source of these complaints is not so much that God is not being honored as much as that a personal tradition is being trampled on (sending an individual into a tailspin). Some believe that traditional forms of worship are closer to the heart of God and must be incorporated into the congregational worship or otherwise God may be blasphemed. Hence, the apparent issue is that one’s earlier traditional worship experience has been disrupted, resulting in a person’s unhappiness.

However, the real issue is that worship should not be focused on or about the individual: worship is a response to the God of Creation and a deepening relationship with Him. We join with others of "like precious faith" to lift our hearts to the Eternal God to thank Him for His Grace and the work He has done on the cross relative to our personal salvation. The indwelling of His Holy Spirit allows us to submit our spirits to His and to continue to grow in the grace and the knowledge of His presence and work through our lives. Lifting our voices in prayer, joyful noises, supplication, thankfulness, obedience, and acknowledgement of His Strength is our response to His Grace. That response goes forth irrespective of the type of chair we sit in, the type of windows we gaze out of, the type of lighting in the room or who carries the communion cup and bread.

When we are distracted by insignificant, petty complaints regarding our worship service, we are in danger of replacing the acceptance of God’s Grace with dependence on following rules and regulations. When we hold fast to traditions of using hymnals instead of viewing a screen in front, insisting the preacher stand behind a pulpit instead of walking unrestrained on the stage, or having the choir wear velvet robes rather than street clothing, we exchange the Truth of God's unconditional love for the lie that our salvation depends on the way we worship and the power of the traditions we hold.

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Insisting on our personal traditions as the only proper way to worship God and then forcing others to adhere to our personal preferences actually replaces what Jesus did on the cross with the importance of our own actions. When that substitution occurs, it is the same as reverting to believing we are saved by works. That puts the individual in danger of driving away the power of the Holy Spirit since He only testifies to the works of Jesus, not to the strength of human traditions.

We must be careful in our assemblies of worship to avoid worshipping traditions. When that happens, it changes worship into works. When we begin to worship our own works, we experience the loss of the Spirit of worship, and the loss of power in our worship.

In the final analysis we need at least to consider that our current tradition is not necessarily something of longtime practice. It may simply be the newest thing we have morphed into only months ago. It may simply be a newer mode of worship, replacing older traditional modes of worship, in the pursuit of gaining the attention of outsiders because we want to look more like the culture most are comfortable to be part of. Arguing over what constitutes “traditional” versus “modern” modes of worship unfortunately turns our heads and hearts away from the worship of Christ and His Gospel in order to protect what we personally believe worship should be.

[By Jim Killebrew, Lincoln]

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