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bzirk -> RE: Is music derailing your worship of God? (7/13/2008 9:26:00 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: TMeeks Some have mentioned that there is a lot of room for many kinds of expession musically. And, that is true. However, the topic is WORSHIP. The Christian experience is very broad. There certainly is room to express between ourselves and others our appreciation for what God hs done for us. There is also room for exhortation and encouragement to others. But, these are different sides of the coin than the side of Christian experience devoted to worship. In the post, there was some recognition of the differences by the categories of different songs. We clled some hymns, others 'Gospel Songs' and a third group was called 'choruses'. Today, we seem inclined to lump songs together under the general title of 'Praise and Worship' without making clear distinctions between those directed to God and those directed to ourselves and others. And, it has, as the writer pointed out, also become common to sing songs that actually speak FOR God. The 'Gospel Songs' of the 'Old Sawdust Trail' that Billy Sunday made popular probably did this as much as any genre. Someone mentioned Revelation. And, from a pure WORSHIP point of view, there is no finer example in all of Scripture than that found in chapters 4 and 15. The issue in these chapters is that those who are praising and worshiping are right in front of Jesus Christ, the Lamb and the throne of the Father. I doubt that any of us have any idea of the totality of the magnitude of God and wht it will be like to be right in His presence in all of His Glory. And, that lets us lose sight of the real difference between praising him for who and what he is and praising him for what he has done for us. Imagine unexpectedly coming upon the Grand Canyon for the first time. Imagine the AWE you would feel at the enormity and grandeur of it all. Then realize that the Grand Canyon is nothing more than a tiny scratch on one of the tiniest bodies in a heaven fill with billions upon billions of massive stars... and, you are suddenly in the presence of the very one that created them all. In truth, THAT is your Jesus. Would we REALLY waste our voices to exhort others to look? Would we waste a single breath on thnking him for this or tht that he did in our lives? Or, would we be transfixed by WHO he is and WHAT He has done well beyond our personal being. So, certinly there is a place for songs of thanksgiving and even a place for songs that encourage and exhort others. But, surely these songs fall well short of the goal of truly WORSHIPPING in song. So, maybe we should or could look very carefully at how we organize our services and how we describe what we are doing so that we do not detract, in any way, having a highly focussed time of REAL praise and REAL worship while not abandoning the other forms of expression. TMeeks, Certainly, Revelation 4 and 15 are wonderful examples of worship, but effecting that stance in worship does not constitute the sum of 'REAL' worship. When we limit worship to a particular form (which is in fact not Biblical), we can easily begin to worship the form. Yet you know and I know that worship is a heart matter. As you said, it is not about the style of music. It's also not about the semantics of how someone expresses their heart's overflowing for the Lord. I take Romans 12:1,2 as my instruction for worship, and that can manifest in various ways including corporate worship that might include singing of the Lord's greatness but not necessarily addressing Him directly (or what the world defines as directly). Sometimes when people sing of the Lord's greatness in corporate worship, it is at the prompting of the Lord, and it's hard to think that responding to the Lord's prompting is less than real worship. quote:
Romans 12 1Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship. 2Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.
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