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Posts Tagged ‘true worship’

The greatest acts of worship in the Bible were not accompanied with music.

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by Art Katz

There is no deception more profound than that for which Charismatics and Pentecostals are most subject. We think, albeit unconsciously, that the euphoric thing we enjoy by our music and choruses is really the statement of our faith. We may enjoy it, and we hope that God is being blessed also, but we need to be ruthlessly honest and gird ourselves with truth; and we need first of all to be truthful about our own condition. The true statement of our faith and the condition of our lives are what we experience in fear or apprehension about death, and about insecurity, when we stand in a tremulous place where an authority is confronting us that expresses the rule of the principalities and powers. The issue is not whether our worship pleases us or facilitates the service, but whether it is in fact worship. True worship is the statement and expression of the redemptive work of God that has been experienced in our lives authentically and corporately.

Loudness is power, and it is manipulative when the sound amplifiers are turned up. It is predicated on the notion that the powers of the air will be defeated through militant or revved up Worship.’ The moment we begin to employ worship for purposes other than worship, then it no longer is worship. God knows when there is a worship that has no strings attached. True worship is simply the adoration and devotion that God deserves because He is God. But when we make of it a manipulation and a tool toward an end, even a religiously desired end, then it is no longer worship. We are on the enemy’s ground, and employing an expediency to obtain an end, and still calling it worship, and we are just as much deceived to think that a vigorous, banner-waving worship defeats the powers!

“Jesus we know and Paul we know, but who are you?” may well be asked of us. “Yes, we hear your praise, and we hear your choruses, but there is something about them that is hollow. It is merely singing, and it is not, therefore, something that we are required as the rulers of darkness to acknowledge!” This is what the forces of darkness utter when they encounter a church operating in less than the fullness of its inheritance in Christ. There is a praise and worship that is mere singing, but there is also a praise that wells up to Heaven, which is more than the product of charismatic manipulation. It is a praise that is a spontaneous breaking forth of a celebration of the God who has saved us, not only out of fear, insecurity and anxiety, but who has brought us to a transcendent place of apostolic faith. That kind of praise devastates the powers of darkness.

Our call as the church to resist the Devil is not dependent upon what we do, but what we are. It is something in the character of the church. Our victory will be related to the quality and continuous character of the fellowship itself. So long as there is any surrender or condescension to the wisdom of those powers, for example, fear, intimidation, threat, concern for one’s life and security, then the powers have a place of penetration. When they see a people who are resolute in their faith, and know that their security does not come from the world, or from their employer, or from the State, but from God, then the powers are without any weapon. There is nothing that can be attacked.

Paul and Silas’ imprisonment in Acts 16 is a wonderful demonstration of the wisdom of God. At midnight they were praying and singing praises unto God. They believed that their suffering was the very consequence of their obedience, and that even though only one woman was affected by their ministry, they were in the place of obedience to the heavenly vision. It did not matter whether they would lose their lives or not, because that was not the issue. They had such a deep faith in the sovereignty of God, and the privilege of sharing in His sufferings, that they rejoiced, and it was expressed in praise.

When you can praise God in the midst of adversity and suffering, you have the most powerful release from the powers of darkness. They cannot stand it, or bear to hear it, and they flee, because it is the overwhelming evidence of the reality of the invisible God. It contradicts their wisdom which says that when you are suffering, you are to be mourning, pouting, feeling sorry for yourself, blaming God, and accusing this man or that. But when you can praise God in the midst of your sufferings, you have ruined them. You have taken their last weapon, and they have nothing they can use anymore to threaten or to intimidate. You have broken through onto a heavenly ground. They are absolutely helpless to adversely affect you, and so they are required to flee.

The one thing that the powers of darkness are required to acknowledge is authenticity—the thing that is real. I am an enemy, therefore, to what seems to be real in worship and praise that puts such emphasis on musical ability, on instruments, on loudspeakers, on electronic technology, on song and on worship leaders. One of my greatest battles as a prophetic person is with worship leaders. Oftentimes, it happens that I have a speaking engagement, and by the time the worship is over, I am completely depleted and drained. I get up and it is a pathetic beep next to what I knew the Lord was wanting. The worship, so-called, that should have enhanced the word, actually robbed and blunted it. There is so much emphasis on worship that almost makes the success of the church depend upon it. “Did you enjoy the worship?”— instead of it being the spontaneous expression of the redemptive work of God in the life of the believers, personally and corporately.

Jesus endured all of His suffering for the joy that was set before Him, in the anticipation of what would be the consequence of His suffering for eternity. This is the wisdom of God, because rejoicing in suffering is a contradiction. It is contrary to reason and everything we think natural to man. What is natural to man is survival, “Take care of number one.” But the wisdom that can rejoice in suffering is another wisdom, and it is that wisdom which defeats the powers. It is the greater wisdom, but it is not enough just to speak it. It has got to be made manifest, to be demonstrated, by a church whose inner life is itself her proclamation of God’s manifold wisdom. Whether she speaks it or not, the very inner life itself is that thing. It becomes that through trial, through testing, through the Lord allowing oppression, heaviness of spirit—all of the kinds of things against which we have to struggle and work out in our relationships. It is becoming one as He is one, in all of the differences, all of the personalities, all of the things that come up that take the guts-out of you, where you want to run and find the first Charismatic and Evangelical fellowship you can, just to be relieved from the tension of all of these demands. It is in those tensions, however, that God forms His character.

by Art Katz

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Have you seen the latest? A.I. programs can now write Christian worship songs!

It seems odd to me that an A.I. program can write emotional worship songs and do so without having any emotions of its own. How is that even possible? It is possible because it can mimic a song previously written by a person that actually has emotions. So while many songs that are written by people can express the cry of that person’s soul, AI can only mimic that, it has no soul. I suppose there are people who would argue that.

Where would we be without the Book of Psalms? Where the heart’s cry of King David is expressed in so many beautiful ways. It is through pain and suffering that many of the beautiful Psalms are expressed. A.I. will never experience those pains and suffering. A.I. will never experience what we as humans face in our lifetimes, disappointments, betrayals, hunger, pain, love, friendship, etc.

There will be many in the music industry, both Christian and secular, who will laud the technology of A.I. in their songwriting. That makes sense if they are looking for successful songs that will hit the charts. After all, the industry works that way right now. Songwriters already do what A.I will do. They mimic successful songs in their writing. The goal for them is to write a song that they can make money on. A.I. will speed up the process and the songwriters will claim it as their own.

It will be interesting to see how this all unfolds.

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Matt Redman’s Heart of Worship song really hits the nail on the head. Worship is so much more than just a song or music.

“When the music fades,all is stripped away, and I simply come

Longing just to bring something that’s of worth, that will bless Your heart

I’ll bring You more than a song, for a song in itself, is not what You have required

You search much deeper within, through the way things appear, You’re looking into my heart

I’m coming back to the heart of worship, and it’s all about You, it’s all about You Jesus

I’m sorry, Lord, for the thing I’ve made it, when it’s all about You, it’s all about You Jesus” by Matt Redman

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We are in an age where the Biblical meaning of worship is fading quickly. It is being replaced by something that is less reverent, and more pleasing to our souls. It is less serious and will result in us losing the real meaning. I have put two verses from the Old Testament and two verses from the New Testament below, they will give us insight into the things we may have forgotten.  

Ex 34:8 And Moses made haste to bow low toward the earth and worship.

2 Chron 20:18 And Jehoshaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground, and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell down before the LORD, worshiping the LORD.

Matt 4:8-9 Again, the devil took Him to a very high mountain, and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world, and their glory; and he said to Him, “All these things will I give You, if You fall down and worship me.”

Revelation 19:10 And I fell at his feet to worship him. And he said to me, “Do not do that; I am a fellow servant of yours and your brethren who hold the testimony of Jesus; worship God.

Biblical worship is bowing in reverence. There are many places in the Bible where these types of verses appear. Those verses support each other and give us a clear understanding of what worship is. Worshiping God has to do with bowing in honor to Him, and in many cases, it meant bowing down, or falling down before Him. It is the realization of the greatness of God, and the littleness of man.

Most of the cases of worship in the Bible really have no music or musicians during those acts of worship. Yet our modern culture has made the music the main element of our worship. That makes it enjoyable for us, yet in Biblical worship there is an element of fear and reverence in many cases.

It is important that we distinguish between praise and worship. As a worship leader I recognize that what I do is lead people in praise to the Lord. While there can be times of “bowing in reverence” during a service, it is mostly praise. Praise in the congregation is a very important aspect, and leading people in praise is of great importance. We are commanded throughout the Bible to do so. We are commanded to praise Him and we are commanded to worship Him, let us not lose the distinction between those two great words.

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What a wonderful verse in Psalm 5 verse 7. “But as for me, by Your abundant graciousness I will enter Your house, at Your holy temple I will bow in reverence for You”. What a clear picture of true worship, “bowing in reverence for You”. We hear very little about reverence for the Lord these days. These are the days of His grace. Since Jesus came and made the way for sinners, God’s grace has been extended to all who will repent and come to him. Because of His abundant graciousness, we are able to come before Him and obtain mercy. His mercy allows us entrance into His holy temple, where out of thankful hearts, we are able to bow in reverence for Him.

Not so for the unbeliever. When the age of grace ends, and Jesus returns to judge the earth, those who did not turn to Him during this age of grace, will be forced to honor Him. And out of fear and terror, “every knee will bow, and every tongue confess, that Jesus Christ is Lord”. Phil 2:11 The terror will overtake unsaved people when they realize they were wrong about life, about Jesus and about how they chose to live their lives. When He returns, they will draw back and fall to the ground in fear, as we saw in John 18:4-6 “Jesus therefore, knowing all the things that were coming upon Him, came out into the open and said to them, “Whom are you seeking?” They answered Him, “Jesus the Nazarene.” He said to them, “I am He.” And Judas also, who was betraying Him, was standing with them. Now then, when He said to them, “I am He,” they drew back and fell to the ground”. Even when Peter, James and John were on the mount of transfiguration, when they heard God’s voice, “they fell face down to the ground and were terrified” Matt 17:6. This will happen in the end to unbelievers, probably believers too.

The unsaved will be forced to worship God, forced to bow! In terror will they bow. To bow is to worship. And when they look upon Him, they will utter praises from their mouths. As in 1 Kings 18:38, when “the fire of the LORD fell and consumed the burnt offering and the wood, and the stones and the dust; and it licked up the water that was in the trench. When all the people saw this, they fell on their faces; and they said, “The LORD, He is God; the LORD, He is God!”. This praise, this proclamation, will be on the lips of all creation. We who have already received His grace, proclaim it now, “The Lord He is God, the Lord he is God”!!! By His abundant graciousness, we will enter His house, at His holy temple, we will bow in reverence for Him.

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