True worship hurts
Have we lost the concept of sacrifice in the context of worship? By Michael Shaw
I have recently started re-reading Leviticus. I have not read it for many years. You enter into a strange world, an alien culture of sacrifice.
It is hard, not just getting your head around the ritual, but also trying to understand how any of this could be relevant to anyone in our culture.
After spending a few days in chapters one to seven I turned to John Goldingay to understand what any of it actually means - and had a light bulb moment.
Goldingay talks about how the heart of this is thanksgiving and worship, and at the heart of their worship and thanksgiving is something alien to us – sacrifice.
The problem with so much of our worship is that most of it does not engage with sacrifice. When I see pictures of big worship “events”, worship leader at the heart, hands raised and lots of heart-felt singing, it often leaves me cold, because it comes without sacrifice, it is all too comfortable. It is all about us.
In Isaiah 58, the prophet talks about true and false worship. At the heart of false worship is that it is all about us, all about what God can do for us, a warm feeling of self-satisfaction.
By contrast true worship hurts, because true worship changes things, not just for us, but for others around us. True worship has an outcome that is good for all, the imprisoned and oppressed are set free, the hungry are fed and the needed are clothed. Most of our worship does not see any of this happen.
Worship is more than just singing songs, and many would agree with that, but what is it?
True worship is good news focused, but good news for who? Jesus uses Isaiah to highlight who in Luke 4: good news for the poor, the blind and the oppressed. But too often our worship is focused on how we are feeling, not how the poor, the blind and the oppressed are feeling: all too often they are placed at the back of our minds, if they were in our minds at all.
So what does true worship look like? Well, Paul helps us in Romans 12. He also talks about true worship being sacrificial, though this time we do not offer the bodies of animals but our own bodies. We offer ourselves as “living sacrifices”, and this, Paul says, is “truly the way to worship” (NLT).
Worship is more than just singing songs, and many would agree with that, but what is it? It is something that hurts us, it is something where we lose and the poorest, the least and the marginalised gain, it is something where God is honoured by seeing justice rolling like a river. It involves us giving our whole lives to God.
What do I mean by lives? Well it means how we live, where we live, where we serve, where we work, what job we do, what we spend our money on, whether we take a job despite the money or the prospects, where we send our kids to school, whether we are as concerned by catchment areas as our neighbours, whether we have a “dream house in a dream location”, who we live with, where we go on holiday.
1 Peter 2:12 says this: “Be careful to live properly among your unbelieving neighbours. Then even if they accuse you of doing wrong, they will see your honourable behaviour, and they will give honour to God when he judges the world” (NLT).
We will make mistakes, but if we live as the rest of society lives, then what difference will that make? If we start worshipping God in a way that truly hurts us, that is sacrificial, then we will start to impact the people around us, and they will “give honour“ (worship) to God.
But if we continue in “worshipping” God in the way we have, most people will stay unmoved, disinterested and detached from church.
The Revd Michael Shaw is minister of Devonport Community Baptist Church, Plymouth
Image: Elideth Ceniceros/CreationSwap
Baptist Times, 29/05/2015