“Mine eyes shall be open, and mine ears
attent unto the prayer that is made in this place. For now have I chosen and
sanctified this house, that my name may be there for ever: and mine eyes and
mine heart shall be there perpetually.” (II Chronicles 7:15-16)
Reverence, according to Webster, is a
“Profound respect mingled with fear and affection, as for a holy being or
place, or an exalted thing.” This is in general line with the meaning of the
various Hebrew and Greek words used in the Bible to describe the proper
attitude of Christians toward God.
True reverence for God is inspired by a
sense of His infinite greatness and an awareness of His presence. Reverence is
manifested in attitude and demeanor. The time and place of worship are sacred
because God is there. There has been a great change, not for the better, but
for the worse, in the habits and customs of the church in reference to worship.
The sacred things which connect us with God, are fast losing their hold on the
church, and are being brought down to the level of common things. Our present
habits and customs, dishonor God, and bring the sacred down to the level of
the common.
Today there is very little reverence or respect for the house of
God. If we were invited to a state dinner at the White House, we
would naturally wear our best clothes to the President's house. Why
is it then that we casually wear whatever makes us "feel
comfortable" when we go to the house of God? Why is it that Christians
show disrespect for God’s house by wearing casual clothes, and
make no proper physical or spiritual preparation?
Many Christians today don’t feel like
dressing with respect to worship in the house of God. Nevertheless,
appropriateness or suitability in clothes has always been the keynote to what
to wear for the occasion or activity.
Unquestionably, sportswear, or
play clothes, are not appropriate for church just as they are not appropriate
for a funeral, wedding, or another special occasion. Only immature or indifferent
or ignorant people do not care about appropriate dress for church. Today people
express their casual attitude toward God and Christianity in their dress and
behavior in church. Their dress and their behavior express a spirit
of casualness and convenience.
Today there is very little reverence or
respect for the house of God. But this was not always so. . ." The
congregation who build a church, build it and continue to regard it as the
house of God. It is, then, a place where the greatest deference,
respect, and reverence are due." (American Etiquette and Rules of
Politeness, 1882)
"Do nothing that might appear
irreverent in a place of worship. Whispering, giggling and
scribbling notes during the service suggest a coarse-grained
nature. The church represents the ideas and beliefs that men through
the ages have held sacred. Respect this association by subduing, if
necessary, the tone of your conduct when you enter a church." (This
Way, Please: A Book of Manners. Eleanor Boykin, 1940)
The keynote of good manners in the church
is reverence and respect. Loud talking or laughing, waving to people, or playing with or using your cell phone is out of keeping with the dignity of the
house of God.
Women should dress properly. Conspicuous
make-up and short and tight clothing are out of place in a church. The same
applies to men they should take care in what they wear and maintain the utmost
dignity in church.
We go to church to worship God, to
offer thanks for our blessings, and to ask for help in knowing and doing the
things that are right. The church is God’s house, so it’s natural to
approach it in a spirit of reverence and a worshipful mood. Although clothing
restrictions for churches have been greatly relaxed in recent years, the correct
dress is still conservative.
Reverence is the quality that should
guide one’s behavior in the house of God, and while it is expressed in various
ways, in most churches, attentiveness, and dignity are very essential. Church
etiquette required proper dress and proper behavior.
It appears that today anything goes.
Churches often advertise: “Come as you are.” In other words, dress
how you want: shorts, flip-flops, ragged jeans, and so forth. It’s
a very self-serving ploy to get people to their church by
catering to people's self-centered feelings. If we don’t feel
like dressing appropriately for church, we don’t have to. We don’t have to
respect God’s house. We don’t have to reverence God’s house. We
don’t have to maintain dignity.
The Church used to uphold high principles, but it has rapidly declined. The Church has gone from Christ-centered to
man-centered. In the early days, we did not applaud after someone
sang a solo in the church service. Then after some churches began to substitute
entertainment in place of holy worship, applause became a standard response to
any performance in church. In other words, the church was no longer a
sacred place of worship, but a place of pleasurable entertainment. Clearly, the
house of God is no longer a house of prayer; it is a house of
entertainment: "Christian" rock music with strobe lights,
dramas, dance, and other recreation for good times.
When churches renamed the sanctuary an
“auditorium,” it excluded all sense of sacredness or holiness. This hastened
the secularization of the church and the decline of Christian culture. A
church sanctuary is no longer a place of prayer and holy worship. The
church sanctuary is an auditorium for the false worship of unholy, carnal
reveling. Instead of the Church transforming the world, the world has
transformed the Church.
Today the indifferent and rebellious
Christians are not going to be told what to wear to church. They are
self-willed. They are defiant. If the pastor wants them to come to
church, they must be allowed to dress comfortably even if it is inappropriate. They
must be allowed to show irreverence and disrespect in dress and
decorum. And, unfortunately, churches have condescended to this
common and vulgar willful stubbornness in order to gain more income.
We must not make light of the sanctity
of God’s house by showing disrespect in behavior or dress. It is an
insult to God. Self-willed behavior and inappropriate dress show
contempt for God and His house. We must reverence God's house. Jesus taught
that the temple must be a house of prayer.
Christians should be angry because the
house of God is being profaned. On the contrary, they are complacent and
tolerant of the shameful desecration of the house of God. We should honor the
house of God by appropriate dress and appropriate
behavior: reverence, respect, and dignity.
Many Christians are being driven out of
the house of God because church culture has been lowered to appeal to carnal
tastes in a foolish man-made effort to trick sinners into coming to church. In
order to increase attendance and increase tithes and offerings, false preachers
and false teachers argue that we should throw out reverence and respect to make
sinners feel comfortable coming to church. We should not make sinners feel
uncomfortable by asking them to show reverence in God’s house. Thus Christians
do not have to show reverence in God’s house.
God commands us not to profane His
house. God must be reverenced. And those who reverence God must
reverence His house. Jesus made it perfectly clear by His words and
actions that the temple must be a house of prayer.
So, what would Jesus see and hear if He
went into our churches and looked around? Would He see and hear
carnal reveling, dramas and other entertainment, sports, and other
profanation? Or would He see and hear praying, Bible reading, sacred
songs, pure gospel preaching, and reverent worship?
Would Jesus angrily rebuke us and throw
out the loud bands, strobe lights, and other entertainment that desecrates the
holiness of the church into a casual and irreverent auditorium? Would Jesus
angrily rebuke us: “My house shall be called the house of prayer, but you have
made it a den of entertainment”? There must be a cleansing of the house of God
and a revival of reverence.
If we neglect this teaching for just
one generation, it will be lost. It cost the Lord something to grant us access
to His sanctuary. One of the beauties of Calvary was that He opened up this
privilege to us. The house of God is sanctified, just as the Old Testament Holy
of Holies was sanctified. Blood was offered there; Christ’s Blood has been
offered for our sanctuary. We must never take that for granted. We are the ones
who benefit when we honor His house. When we offer God reverence, we are
blessed.
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