What Is Worship Really?
Have you ever heard—or perhaps even said—something like this: “I enjoyed the worship today, but the sermon was boring!” Or maybe, “I missed worship because I was late to church.” Sometimes we even comment, “The worship team in that church is really good.”
These statements reveal something
important. Too often, we reduce worship to a segment of the Sunday
service—usually the music before the sermon. At best, we think of it as
scripture readings and times of praise. At worst, we treat it as nothing more
than a set of songs to get through before the “main event.”
But biblically, worship is far
greater than that. It is not merely about the songs we sing or the mood we
feel. It is about who God is and how we respond to Him.
William Temple, Archbishop of
Canterbury, expressed this truth beautifully:
Worship is the submission of
all of our nature to God.
It is the quickening of conscience by His holiness,
the nourishment of mind by His truth,
the purifying of imagination by His beauty,
the opening of the heart to His love,
and the surrender of will to His purpose.
All this gathered up in adoration is the greatest expression of which we are
capable.
In other words, worship is the
response of all that we are to all of who God is. That is why Scripture
commands us to love and worship the Lord with all our heart, all our soul, all
our strength, and all our mind.
True worship is always centred on
God, never on ourselves. It may be expressed physically—through singing,
kneeling, or raising hands—but it is never meant to appeal to shallow emotions.
It must be grounded in the Word of God so that both our spirit and our mind are
engaged. And because worship is an offering of the people of God, the songs we
sing should be chosen in such a way that the whole congregation can join in,
not merely listen to a performance.
If worship is truly the giving of
all that I am to God, then I must ask myself: Do I only worship when the music
starts, or does my daily life—my work, my studies, my choices, and even my
conversations—become an offering to Him? The real question is never “Did I
enjoy it?” but “Was God glorified?”
May we grow into worshippers who
live every moment for His glory.
___________
Adapted from Dr. Chacko Jacobs,
BSC Class Notes (2024).
brief and to the point
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