"And David danced before the Lord with all his
might; and David was girded with a linen ephod. So David and all the house of
Israel brought up the ark of the Lord with shouting, and with the sound of the
trumpet. And David said unto Michal, It was before the Lord, which chose
me before thy father, and before all his house, to appoint me ruler over the
people of the Lord, over Israel: therefore will I play before the Lord."
II Samuel 6:14-15, 2
The story of King David dancing before the Lord with
all his might is probably one of the most popular stories to connect dance to
the Bible. It is also one of the most misused and misunderstood passages as
well.
Many churches today are introducing new ways and
teachings on worship. It includes liturgical dancing, expressive dancing, and
flag-waving during worship time. Is this scriptural? Is this a form of new-age
creeping into the church? As a pop-culture phenomenon, liturgical
and expressive dancing seem entrenched in many of our churches today.
Hundreds of liturgical and expressive dance groups have flourished in the last
ten years.
Over the years I have seen brethren dancing in the
churches under the power of the Holy Spirit and I myself have danced on
occasions under the power of the Spirit. One thing for sure is that the
choreographed (arranged and practiced) dancing in churches today is a far cry
from what was experienced and what took place in response to the moving of
God's spirit throughout the history of the church. One of the problems with
liturgical and expressive dancing in churches today is that they have
confused dancing as an individual's expression of worship to God with dancing
that was a part of Israel's national folk culture.
Under the guise of spiritual worship, Jewish
cultural folk dances are being brought into the church and called worship. They
are not. They are just Jewish folk dances (or an attempt to recreate them). The
same goes for other choreographed dances, Jewish or not. Some seem to think
that just because it is Jewish, it is spiritual. Certainly, that is not true.
Now David's dancing is another matter. The whole incident is permeated with
worship. What made it different? Let's look at II Samuel 6:14-5, 21 and its
context.
It Was Spontaneous, Not Planned
The very spontaneity showed that it was an
expression of the heart. Sure we practice songs, etc. But dancing is a
dangerous thing involving the body as extensively as it does. It must be
sanctified by the spontaneity of the heart.
It Was Responsive, Not Catalytic
David was responding to the presence of God. He was
responding to the spiritual emotion of the moment. The precedent of people
slain in the Spirit in the Bible is an example of people's reactionary response
to the felt presence of God. The same is true with this dancing. David was responding
to the presence of God at the moment. It was appropriate. Today, dancing is
used in churches to attempt to move people to emotion, ostensibly, to worship.
It is a catalyst. The cart is before the horse.
It Was For The Audience Of The Lord, Not People
Certainly, people saw David dance on that day. His
wife Micah saw it and mocked it. But the point is, that David wasn't doing it
for the people. He was doing it "before the Lord." As far as David
was concerned, the Lord was the only audience. It is dangerous to judge
people's motives, certainly; but the very nature and performance of dancing in
the church today dictate that it is largely done for the audience of people.
David's dance was not for human spectators. Choreography is a dance of
presentation for people.
It Was Irregular, Not Choreographed
David wasn't attempting to follow some orderly steps
of a choreographed dance. His dancing, although not unseeming or out of
control, was an erratic, involved expression. It was probably rapid, and
fierce. It was with "all his might." Have you ever heard of a
clapping quartet where the song is carried by each clapping a part? David's
dance was as different from choreographed dances as that kind of clapping is
from the excited clapping of applause. David's dancing was a clapping of
applause to the greatness and mercies of God. David's dance probably didn't follow
any set pattern of recognized dances of his day. It may have, but it wasn't
planned in advance that day. Even if it was a recognized pattern of dance, it
was certainly to the music of the spirit and not the music of the ear.
It Was Humble, Not Man-Exalting
What angered David's mocking wife Michal, was that
David took off his kingly garment and assumed the role of a servant in his
dancing. It was servants and slaves that danced for the higher classes like
kings. Yet, David, the king danced as a servant. He was assuming a humbling
role. It wasn't something that would bring him the praise of being a good
dancer.
It Was Spirit, Not Body-Centric
It is hard to say that today's church dances do not
call attention to the form and grace and artistry of the human body. True
worshipful worship solicits observation of "that person was really lost in
worship" or "that person was really rejoicing in God," or
"that person really felt the Spirit," not "that was a great
dance," and "those were great dancers." Any dancing in worship
that accentuates the body, that is done in lewd, sensual movements, etc., is
certainly not Spirit-inspired or acceptable.
It Was Characterized By Noticeable Fervency, Not
Noticeable Form
Scripture does not say that David danced gracefully,
artistically, etc., but "with all his might." What was noticeable
about David's dance was its fervency, not its form. The church today has become
too concerned with the aesthetics of its worship instead of the genuine and
spirituality of its worship. There are a few practiced participators and many
deceived spectators. True spontaneity and heart-feeling in worship have been
replaced with not only choreographed dancing but from choreographed use of the
gifts to a whole choreographed service.
David was a true worshipper in spirit and in truth.
He didn't need a dance instructor to dance. He forgot the crowd, and,
responding to the spiritual emotion of the moment, he began to express the
tremendous spiritual fervency he felt in a humble, God-honoring dance with all
his might unto the Lord. That was the kind of dance that was both Holy Spirit
inspired and Holy Spirit anointed.
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