Psalm 100
The worship of God is every believer's highest pleasure
and responsibility. The components of worship, however, are easily and often
misplaced. It is a mistake to think that true worship rests upon the style of music,
lighting, drama, or the use of hymns or choruses. The chief instrument in the
worship of God is the human voice.
There is a great misunderstanding in many churches as to the
purpose of music in worship. Some churches advertise that their “life-changing”
or “dynamic” worship will “enable you to enter the presence of God and change
your life.”
The problem with this kind of advertisement is that these
kinds of promises reveal a significant theological error. Music is viewed as a
means to facilitate an encounter with God; it will move us closer to God. In
this schema, music becomes a means of mediation between God and man. But this
idea is closer to ecstatic pagan practices than to Christian worship.
Today there is a popular but mistaken notion that music
and the worship experience are means by which we enter the presence of God and
receive his saving benefits. There is simply no evidence whatsoever in
Scripture that music mediates direct encounters or experiences with God. This
is a common pagan notion and far from biblical truth. There are consequences to
viewing music as an encounter with God. Every Christian, pastor, and worship
leader should be aware of this and take great care when it comes to worship.
Worship and music are as essential to each other as
worship and preaching. It seems there is always tension between time dedicated
to music and time dedicated to preaching. In our world today preaching is being
marginalized, shoved into a
smaller and smaller time constraint while it seems the services are filled with
what amounts to little more than an emotional rock concert. The truth is, that preaching
and Christ-honoring music are not adversaries. Music and preaching should complement each other.
Our assurance is threatened if we associate God’s presence with a particular
experience or emotion, what happens when we no longer feel it? We search for
churches whose praise team, band, or music produce in us the feelings we are
chasing. But the reality of God in our lives depends on the mediation of Christ,
not on subjective experiences.
When music is seen as a means to encounter God, worship
leaders and musicians are vested with a priestly role. They become the ones who
bring us into the presence of God rather than Jesus Christ. Understandably,
when a worship leader or band doesn’t help me experience God they have failed
and must be replaced. On the other hand, when we believe that they have
successfully moved us into God’s presence they will attain in our minds a
status that is far too high for their own good.
If we identify a feeling as an encounter with God, and
only a particular kind of music produces that feeling, then we will insist that
this same music be played regularly in our church service. As long as everyone
else shares our taste then there is no problem. But if others depend upon a
different kind of music to produce the feeling that is important to them then
division is cultivated. And because we routinely classify particular feelings
as encounters with God our demands for what produces those feelings become very
rigid. This is why some churches succumb to offering multiple styles of worship
services. By doing so, they unwittingly sanction division and self-centeredness
among the people of God.
Scripture is full of exhortations to God’s people to sing
and make music to the Lord. God has been gracious to give us this means to
worship Him. But it is important to understand that music in our worship is for
two specific purposes: to honor God and to edify our fellow believers.
Unfortunately, many Christians tend to grant music a sacramental power that Scripture
never bestows upon it.
How wonderful it is when music in our services is not
done as a performance to highlight the talent of the musician but as a message
about the glory of our God. We need to be so careful that music, the lyrics,
and the musician have as their goal to praise God. In so doing, those who hear
the music are made ready to receive the Word that will be preached. Music and
preaching are not in competition in worship; they are complementary to each
other and allow for Christ-honoring worship.
“Praise ye the Lord. Praise God in his sanctuary: praise him in the
firmament of his power… Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord. Praise ye the Lord.” (Psalms 150:1, 6)
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