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Probe Ministries
The World in Our Worship
Rick Wade
Choices in Worship
Church historian Bruce Shelley reports on a speaking engagement he
had with a group of senior adults about recent changes in
evangelical churches. When he mentioned drums in worship, he said,
"even the breath-taking surroundings [of the Colorado Rockies]
couldn't suppress the sanctified outrage" he heard. "Like a match
dropped on a haystack," he said, "the room erupted first in a
corporate groan, followed by an outburst of laughter."{1} Clearly
such changes don't sit well with many Christians. Those who
appreciate a more traditional approach to worship are concerned
that the contemporary style of worship risks diluting the message
of the church by modeling itself on the secular entertainment
industry in its style, and thus risks the accommodation of the
message to the ways of the world.
On the other hand, those who believe the traditional approach has
become outdated are accepting contemporary worship widely. For
some, the change is simply a matter of taste: they like
contemporary music and a relaxed atmosphere. For others,
contemporary worship seems like a better approach to reach today's
generations. In his book, The Second Coming of the Church,
George Barna makes this startling statement: "After nearly two
decades of studying Christian churches in America, I'm convinced
that the typical church as we know it today has a rapidly expiring
shelf life."{2} The church is not effectively
speaking to its surrounding culture, he says, and is becoming
largely irrelevant. Adapting worship services is one part of
addressing this problem.
Still a third worship option for evangelicals who are tired of
traditional worship but think the contemporary style is inadequate
as well, is that of liturgical worship. Through the ceremony and
ritual of liturgical services conducted in settings with objects
rich with symbolism, some Christians look for a special encounter
with God. The October 6, 1997 issue of Christianity Today
had on its cover a picture of a woman with a glazed look in her
eyes. Above her head was the question: "Missing God at church?"{3}
A student interviewed in the cover article said this about her
church background: "There was no imagination, no mystery, no
beauty. It was all preaching and books and application." Another
student spoke of the loss of the sense of the divine in worship
today. "Gymnasiums and impermanent buildings" have replaced "the
splendor and holiness of cathedrals," she said. "Plastic cups and
folding chairs aren't enough," she continued. "There has to be an
environment that communicates God's holiness to my senses and to my
spirit."
A fourth option for worship is one championed by Robert Webber:
that of blended worship. This is especially appealing to young
people. It reflects, to a degree, postmodern thinking. We are no
longer restricted to choosing one style over another. Now that the
rigid demands of modernism have broken down, people feel free to
choose facets of different styles to form something new.
Some might think that differences between worship services are
really merely stylistic. Each person has his or her preferences
regarding worship, right? Some prefer one style, some another. But
are the differences only stylistic? Is it true that worship style
is basically a matter of individual preference? Are there any
objective criteria for corporate worship? If there are, then we can
look for the necessary elements as we consider a certain style of
worship.{4} On the other hand, we can also look for things to avoid
in worship, things that would hinder true worship. Are influences
from secular culture coming into the church and adversely affecting
our worship?
Let's consider first some goals of corporate worship. Following
that, we'll consider three cultural forces that serve to undermine
proper worship.
Three Goals of Worship
In her book, Reaching Out Without Dumbing Down,{5}
Marva Dawn says there are three goals of worship: praising God,
building up the community, and nurturing the believer.
Praising God
The obvious answer to the question "Why do we worship?" is, "To
give praise and glory to God." Said the Levites, "Arise, bless the
Lord your God forever and ever! O may Your glorious name be blessed
and exalted above all blessing and praise!" (Neh. 9:5). In praise
we have our focus on God and not ourselves. At least we think we
do.
However, too often our thoughts about God center around what He has
done for us, for me. Consider, for example, the songs
many of us sing in church. So many of them have I as the
real subject. God is praised for what He means to me.
Is it wrong to praise and thank God for what He has done for me?
Not at all! Of course, we should do this. The problem is this: we
come to worship God in His fullness, but we end up praising
Him for what we've experienced. The being and work of God is
reduced to the limits of our own experience! But we're dealing with
the transcendent One here! The One who spoke the stars into
existence, who cares for all others in His family the same as He
cares for me, and all at the same time! God's project is bigger
than I am. God's being is bigger than what I have personally
experienced. In addition to praising God for what He has done for
us individually, we should be worshiping God for the things He does
that have nothing to do with us in particular. By worshiping Him in
His fullness we open ourselves up for riches we didn't expect and
maybe never even imagined.
Building Up the Body
In worship we also build up the community of faith. We are part of
something much bigger than our own church or denomination; we are
part of something which began two millennia ago and which will
continue to grow until the Lord returns.
What does this have to do with worship? First, when we come
together for worship we are a worshiping community, not just
a bunch of individuals gathered in the same room. When we are
together we can turn from our occupation with ourselves and focus
on the development of God's people as a body. We are not to mirror
our narcissistic and individualistic society, but rather to turn
outward to the community. Says Dawn, "Worship that draws all its
participants into a common understanding of God will develop
vibrant communities--and then the communities in turn will also
deepen the character growth of their members."{6}
Second, in worship we can also hear from members of the church from
generations past through their writings and art. In turn, we
nurture and protect that which we have inherited so we can pass it
on intact to succeeding generations. Worship aids significantly in
this project. Says Dawn, "Worship forms us; all the elements of the
service develop the character of believer in us. And worship forms
the community if it unites us in common beliefs, traditions,
renewal, and goals. Worship schools us in the language of faith as
we listen and sing and participate in its rites." She continues:
"We can only pass on the faith if it has nurtured our character to
be its carriers and if we are part of a community, the Church, that
has carried the faith down through the ages."{7}
So, when we sing, for example, do we draw into ourselves and enjoy
our own private worship? Or are we purposefully singing with
other believers, lifting up one sound of praise to God? Do we come
to church with our focus on what we hope to get out of the
service? Or are we thinking about how we are going to lift others
before the Lord? Are we listening to Christians from ages past who
have dealt with some of the same ideas and issues we struggle with?
And are we thinking about those who will come after us, about the
legacy we will leave behind?
The individualism of our age fights us here. It sets us up to be a
lot of little Christian islands in a sanctuary or auditorium. We
are not many individuals who just happen to have a religious bond.
What we are really is a body made up of many members. Worship that
recognizes God as the subject will be worship that builds up His
body.
Nurturing Character
Another goal of worship is the nurturing of our character. Worship
should transform us as a result of being brought into the presence
of the living God. It was entering the sanctuary of God that gave
Asaph a right understanding of God and His ways with men, which
took away Asaph's bitterness (Ps. 73). Think of Isaiah, who was
made whole and prepared to serve after beholding the glory of God
and his own sinfulness (Is. 6). This isn't just a matter of growing
in faith and going deeper in our prayer life. It's also a matter of
becoming good people, people whose character is like that of
Jesus!
Too often, however, our idea of being transformed is leaving
church feeling good! We want to feel better about ourselves, to be
lifted up! Yet, we all know in the normal course of life that
building up often means tearing down first. This is especially the
case when we think about being conformed to the image of Christ. In
fact, Marva Dawn says that worship ought to kill us. What
does she mean by this? She says:
"In a society doing all it can to make people cozy, somehow we must
convey the truth that God's Word, rightly read and heard, will
shake us up. It will kill us, for God cannot bear our sin and wants
to put to death our self-centeredness . . . . Once worship kills
us, we are born anew to worship God rightly."{8}
Worship, then, serves to praise God, build up the community, and
nurture our character.
Subjectivism: Worship Beginning With Me Rather Than With God
Let's begin looking at three forces, which work to undermine proper
worship: subjectivism, self-focused individualism, and dumbing down
the message. Our critique will not be focused on any particular
worship style. Indeed, these problems can be found across the
spectrum.
"Me" As Subject
Let's begin with subjectivism. This is a common attitude today. I
find what is true and good within myself. My personal experience is
what counts.{9} Therefore, I am the judge of what is worthwhile in
my worship. I expect the sermon to be on my level (none of that
heavy theology stuff), the music to suit the tastes I've already
developed, and the service time to not be too long. And the service
is evaluated by how I feel when it's over. What matters is
my spiritual experience now.
Seeing God As Subject As Well As Object
The problem here is that the center of worship is I, not
God. Although I might be directing my thoughts toward God, I am
patterning my worship so as to satisfy myself. The effect is
that my understanding of God is restricted to what He has done in
my life; my view of God is thus limited by my experience. When
my experience of God sets the limits, I'll have a shrunken
view of God.
The key to getting God fully into the picture is to see Him as the
subject of worship, and not just the object. What do
I mean by this? Says theologian Marva Dawn, "The gifts of worship
flow from God the subject and return to God as the object of our
reverence."{10} The content of our worship comes from Him;
He is the source. He gives us Himself, tells us His
characteristics, and informs us of His plans. Having received this
we turn back to God and make Him the object of our worship,
giving it all back to Him in praise. As one writer puts it,
"Worship . . . is an encounter in which God's glory, Word, and
grace are unveiled, and we respond, in songs and prayers of
celebration." In our worship, we "recognize a Lord whose majesty
evokes strong praise, petition, and transformation."{11} When we
worship, we are reflecting God back to God. In filling our vision
with God, we are met by Him. If we engineer our worship to meet
our needs as we see them, on the other hand, we risk missing
out on being touched by God in unexpected but vital ways.
I'd like to make one other point. With God as subject or source of
worship, grace once again becomes central, for grace is the theme
of His works on our behalf. When we are the subjects,
however, our actions are the focus making law
central. This leads to an emphasis on what we must do,
rather than what God has done.{12}
On Worship Killing Us
With God as the subject of worship, it then becomes a vehicle of
transformation in His hands. As I noted earlier, worship ought to
kill us. It ought to make us see the great distance between
God and ourselves. Once in God's presence our sinful nature is put
to death. Then we are ready to be infused with His life.{13}
Worship is a subversive act, Dawn insists. We don't come before God
to get His stamp of approval on our interests and agendas. God
intends to turn us upside down. As Dawn says, "If the Church's
worship is faithful, it will eventually be subversive of the
culture surrounding it, for God's truth transforms the lives of
those nurtured by it. Worship will turn our values, habits, and
ideas upside-down as it forms our character; only then will we be
genuinely right-side up eternally."{14}
When we have the attitude that the worship service is provided
primarily to fix our individual problems, we get the cart before
the horse. We aren't interested in being brought low before God.
But it is only in being brought low that we can be lifted up,
because it is only then that we both see our real need and
surrender ourselves to God to do with as He pleases, not as
we please.
We thus recognize God as both subject and object of worship, as the
One who fills us with Himself, and as the One upon whom we shift
our focus for our time of corporate worship.
Self-Focused Individualism: Worship Focused on Me Rather Than on
the Body
One of the weaknesses of the church in modern times has been the
failure to give due recognition to the fact that we are part of a
community of faith. Ours is a narcissistic age; we've been taught
to be self-absorbed in our "I did it my way" culture. Marva Dawn
notes that in her observation of the church today Christians
"rarely . . . think in terms of 'we' instead of 'I'."{15}
The Body Present, Past and Future
We aren't just a bunch of individuals thrown together in some loose
confederation. We are a body that extends geographically
around the world at the present, and which extends back in time
2000 years and forward until the Lord returns.
How can the church address this individualistic attitude? Dawn
believes "that worship which keeps God as subject is the most
important key, for God is the Creator of community and the
preserver of the Church. . . . [W]orship that draws all its
participants into a common understanding of God will develop
vibrant communities--and then the communities in turn will also
deepen the character growth of their members."{16} In our worship
we study Scripture together, we speak the words of the great creeds
to each other, we sing as one voice, we agree in prayer. Such
things foster in us a sense of oneness, of being part of a
unity.
As we are part of the community present in our own day, we are also
part of a community that began with the apostles and that will
continue until the Lord comes. In our worship services the past can
remain a part of the present through the inclusion of the wisdom of
our forefathers through their writings, prayers, and liturgies. As
I mentioned earlier, there is a new interest in liturgical worship
among young people. Ancient writings "are seen as providing needed
maturity as well as a connection to the faith of the church
historical."{17} Also, the awareness that we are leaving a legacy
for those who come after us provides an encouragement to transmit
and maintain a correct understanding of God in our worship. A
renewed understanding of the importance of the community of faith,
then, gives us a foundation upon which to stand, and makes us aware
of our responsibility to others.
Speaking to our Society
There is positive change in this regard in churches attuned to the
situation of the younger generations. One of the characteristics of
modernism was the psychological isolation it produced. We have been
thinking in terms of personal needs and choices rather than in
terms of obligations to the group. Against the existential idea
that my experience now is what makes me what I am,
leaving me essentially rootless and radically free, Christians find
their identity in the enormous body of believers made alive through
faith in Christ. Today, however, young people are crying out for
community, and churches are meeting this challenge through various
means. This is a key area where the church reveals its eternal
relevance to the human situation; to ignore it will impoverish the
church body, and will make Christianity seem truly irrelevant to
the younger generations.
Dumbing Down the Message
A third problem sometimes found in churches today is that of
"dumbing down" the message in an effort to make it understandable
to everyone equally, even to non-believers who may be visiting.
While we should welcome nonbelievers into our churches, we have to
ask whether keeping our worship on an elementary level is worth the
cost of holding believers at the level of nonbelievers or new
believers.
We need to remember first of all that the church is . . . well, the
church. It's the body of Christ made up of those who have
been taken hold of by the Savior. It isn't unbelievers.
Worship is the work of believers, and the worship service should be
geared toward them. It should not be governed by what the general
population finds acceptable. As Martin Marty has said, "To give the
whole store away to match what this year's market says the
unchurched want is to have the people who know least about the
faith determine most about its expression."{18}
Bringing People Up Rather than Dumbing the Message Down
Part of the mission of the church is bringing people into the
kingdom, and our worship services can be good places to do this.
But if in our worship we water down the message, we are robbing the
visitor of the full truth he or she needs to hear. If we don't give
visitors an idea of how big God is, in the long run we won't keep
them. Why should they stay if they get little more than they can
get outside the church? Church historian Martin Marty said
this:
This writer fears that we are on the verge of seeing happen what
happened in the 1950s to mainstream Protestant churches; they
retooled for people who were casually attracted and liked big
parking lots, spectacle, and low demands; and the people left as
easily as they came.{19}
One of the problems of the liberal church this century was that in
its effort to be timely and relevant it "plunged more deeply into
the needs and wishes of human beings--or a God sculpted more
closely to the image of man."{20} The attempt to keep God up-to-date
winds up allowing "the world to call the tune for God." It
ignores the complexity of God; it forgets "the tensions that must
exist between human's wishes and the Creator's intentions."{21}
We must relate the message in accessible ways, but we needn't
assume that people can't learn or aren't willing to be stretched.
The things of God, not the sensibilities of contemporary culture,
should be the measure of our worship.
On Christians Getting Their "Meat" Elsewhere
Some might say that Christians can get their real "meat" in Sunday
schools or in other separate study time. We forget that we learn
about God through all parts of worship, and not just from the
didactic teaching of a sermon or Sunday school class. To suggest
that Christians get the "meat" of the faith in Sunday school is to
reveal a modernistic bias in favor of head knowledge; i.e., the
idea that knowing is simply a matter of adding to our mental
database. Some might say that we are worshiping in Sunday school
when we are being taught facts and ideas. But this is only a part
of worship. Corporate worship is a special time for interaction
with and getting to know God on multiple levels.
What is lost by not developing our understanding of God in the
context of worship? Worship takes us beyond mere head
knowledge; there is interaction between God and man and between
Christians. In Sunday school we listen; in worship we listen and
then talk back to God. It is like the difference between reading
about someone and talking with him or her.
The goal in all of this is to see God as fully as we can and be
touched by Him. We use words and images and whatever else we need
to lift us up to God, to let Him speak to us through whatever means
are available.
Conclusion
Although someone will be hard pressed to find in Scripture a clear
description of a proper worship style, we can find principles of
proper worship, which apply whether one uses electric guitars or
organs or no instruments at all. Furthermore, we can be careful to
weed out of our worship-–indeed, out of our thinking generally-–ideas
and attitudes that do not accord with what Scripture teaches.
Subjectivism, individualism, and the dumbing down of the Word of
God should not characterize our worship. It is hard to stand
against one's culture, especially since we're all influenced by it.
But we need to do it, for the health of the body and the
individual, and for the advancement of the kingdom of our Lord.
Notes
- Bruce L. Shelley, "Why Does Worship Keep Changing?" Christian Reader, December 1996. Downloaded from the Web at http://www.christianitytoday.com/cr/6r6/6r6049.html, Jan. 11, 2001. This article gives a brief overview of the changes in worship since the Puritans. See also Robert Webber, Ancient-Future Faith: Rethinking Evangelicalism for a Postmodern World (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999), pp. 97-101.
- George Barna, The Second Coming of the Church: A Blueprint for Survival (Nashville: Word Publishing, 1998), 1.
- Gary Burge, "Missing God at Church," Christianity Today, October 6, 1997, 20-27.
- See Jerry Solomon, "Worship," available on our web site at http://www.probe.org/docs/worship.html.
- Marva J. Dawn, Reaching Out Without Dumbing Down: A Theology of Worship for the Turn-of-the-Century Church (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995.)
- Dawn, 133.
- Dawn, 149.
- Dawn, 206.
- See Donald G. Bloesch, "Whatever Happened to God?" Christianity Today, Feb. 5, 2001, 54-55.
- Dawn, 80.
- Burge, 22.
- Dawn. 236.
- Dawn, 206.
- Dawn, 58.
- Dawn, 131.
- Dawn, 133.
- Daniel Harrell, "Post-Contemporary Worship," Leadership Journal, Spring 1999. Downloaded from the web at http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/912/912037.html on Jan. 11, 2001.
- Martin E. Marty, "Build a Parking Lot, and the People Will Come (and Go)," Context 25, no. 4 (15 Feb. 1993): 3-4. Quoted in Dawn, 258.
- Marty, "Build a Parking Lot," quoted in Dawn, 258.
- James Turner, Without God, Without Creed: The Origins of Unbelief in America (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985), p. 113. Quoted in Dawn, 299.
- Turner, quoted in Dawn, 300-301.
© 2001 Probe Ministries International
About the Author
Rick Wade graduated from Moody Bible Institute with a B.A.
in Communications (radio broadcasting) in 1986. He graduated
cum laude in 1990 from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School with
an M.A. in Christian Thought (theology/philosophy of religion) where
his studies culminated in a thesis on the apologetics of Carl
F. H. Henry. Rick and his family make their home in
Garland, Texas. He can be reached via e-mail at
rwade@probe.org.
What is Probe?
Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at Probe.org
Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by writing to:
Probe Ministries
2001 W. Plano Parkway, Suite 2000
Plano, TX 75075
(972) 941-4565
info@probe.org
www.probe.org
Copyright (C) 1996-2012 Probe Ministries
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Updated: 14 July 2002
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