What
Makes for Good
Worship?
.
Why focusing on
worship may not be the most
direct route to improving it
by Mark Kinzer
The worship was excellent!"
I have sometimes heard that comment after a
church service or prayer meeting and wondered to
myself, "What did he actually mean by that
statement?” Was the person referring to the
eloquence of the sermon, the performance of the
choir, the selection of hymns? Or was he
speaking of how inspired he was by the service
as a whole?
What do we mean by "worship," and how do we
think its "excellence" can be judged?
Such questions do not represent nit-picking
conceptual analysis. If I as a pastoral leader
want to see my congregation or community growing
and deepening in worship, I must know what
worship is and how to assess our progress in it.
GREEK ORIGINS
There are two Greek words in the New Testament
that are often translated "worship." One of the
words,
latreuo, means literally "to
serve” (Acts 24:14; Phil. 3:3; Rev. 7:15). The
other,
proskuneo, means "to bow in
respect or submission” (Matt. 2:11; 4:9-10; John
4:20-24; Rev. 7:11). Both words are drawn from
the ceremonial of royal courts, where they are
used to describe the proper expressions of honor
and respect shown to a human king.
This way of speaking is rooted in Old Testament
usage. The priests and levites are the special
attendants and ministers of the Lord, the king
of glory (1 Chron. 23:2-22; Psalm 134:1), and
they serve in his "temple," a word which in
other contexts is translated "palace." They
serve and honor the Lord by presenting him with
gifts (sacrifices), proclaiming his praise, and
doing his work. They respect and submit to the
Lord by bowing, kneeling, and other such
postures; by confessing sin and asking
forgiveness; and by laying before him their
various needs and requests.
As already indicated, neither of these words for
worship was exclusively religious in ordinary
use. For us, such terms as "worship," "minister
to," and "kneel before" are only part of our
religious vocabulary. But this was not so in
biblical times. People knew what it meant to
wait on someone in authority and to honor and
fear him (1 Chron. 29:20). Our lack of
familiarity in this regard makes it difficult
for us to grasp fully the meaning of these
biblical terms for worship.
ASPECTS OF WORSHIP
From this biblical background we can see two
important features of worship that are often not
fully appreciated: worship is both
relational
and
expressive.
As a servant attends to his king, as a son
honors his father, so we worship our king, who
is the king of kings, our Father, from whom
every family in heaven and on earth is named.
Worship is directed toward Someone. We worship
God because of who he is and what he has done
for us. We worship him because of the
relationship we now have with him in Christ. He
loves us, saves us, forgives us, provides for
us; we owe him our full loyalty and obedience,
we owe him our very lives. In our worship we
express the fact that we belong to him fully,
that we offer our lives to him without
reservation (Rom. 12:1).
This means that our worship is not primarily
directed to meeting our needs, producing
spiritual feelings, or conveying a particular
experience. The right worship of God will affect
us deeply, but this is neither its goal nor its
orientation. In worship we focus on
God
rather than on ourselves.
The relational nature of worship has another
implication: right worship is founded upon a
right relationship with God. This sounds rather
elementary. But I have often seen this truth
ignored, at considerable loss.
I once visited a Christian institution run by
men who genuinely sought to live a dedicated
Christian life and who also sought to help
others live such a life. In one corner of their
building I found a little book shop. On the
racks were some good Christian books. However,
side by side with these books I noticed many
volumes of dubious value-a mixture of Eastern
religions, transcendental meditation, and
self-help psychology. As I talked with the man
who was minding the shop, it became clear to me
that these Christian men thought that the key to
helping others grow spiritually was instruction
in proper spiritual techniques. The techniques
they taught focused especially on producing a
certain type of experience, a certain "state of
consciousness." Thus, by disregarding the
central issue of relationship to God, these men
were in the regrettable position of marketing
spiritual techniques for prayer that could lead
people away from loyalty to Christ.
Of course, there is much to learn about
Christian worship. There are many helpful
practical tools and methods, and, as already
mentioned, one of the fruits of their practice
should be a heightened awareness of the presence
of God. However, the first and most fundamental
fact about Christian worship is that it is
Christian - it is founded on a relationship with
God available to us through our union with
Christ in the Holy Spirit, a relationship
possible only because of Christ's incarnate
life, atoning death, and victorious
resurrection.
Our worship of God expresses our relationship
with him. In order to know how to worship him,
we need to understand our relationship with him.
We must understand who he is-his holiness, his
greatness, his glory, his steadfast love and
compassion. We must understand how he has
redeemed us in Christ, how he now lives in us
corporately and individually through the Holy
Spirit, making us a new temple for his praise.
We need to understand the honor and love that
are due to him as our God and savior, the
reverence and humility with which we must
approach him. Our worship of God flows from
these realities.
Therefore the key to better worship in a
congregation is not necessarily more teaching on
worship but clearer proclamation of who God is
and what he has done for us in Christ, and
teaching about our response-conversion,
repentance, faith, and a deepening of Christian
commitment.
EXPRESSIONS
Many Christians think of worship as primarily a
subjective experience, the goal of worship being
to cultivate a certain spiritual or emotional
state, to work up feelings of love, gratitude,
and awe toward God. A time of worship is
evaluated according to whether it succeeds in
producing such a condition.
This is not the biblical view of worship. In
scripture worship is something expressed, given,
shown. Worship displays honor and devotion,
respect and submission. The worship of God by
his people expresses in words and actions the
relationship they have with their king.
The scripture presents a wide range of
expressions of worship. Sacrifices were offered,
as a kind of material gift to God (Psalm 96:8).
Prayer and praise were offered, as a kind of
verbal gift to God (Psalm 141:2). There was
vocal and instrumental music (Psalms 149, 150).
There was shouting the acclamation (Psalm
47:1,5), a custom also found in the courts of
Eastern kings.
We see various postures in worship: prostration
(Neh. 8:6), kneeling (2 Chron. 6:13), lifting up
hands (Psalm 134:2; 2 Chron. 6:12-13), clapping
(Psalm 47:1), dancing (2 Sam. 6:14-16; Psalm
149:3). The most common posture was standing
(Psalm 134:1), as a servant stood before his
king.
The Bible takes pains to emphasize that worship
must proceed from a heart that is humble and
submitted to God. Mere external actions mean
nothing if the underlying attitude and overall
way of life are not right (Psalm 51:6-17; Isa.
58:1-12). The heart, however, does not refer to
the seat of the emotions but to the basic
decision making faculty, what we would call the
mind or the will (Heb. 4:12). Worship is meant
to express a mind and will that is yielded to
God, seeking to serve, honor, and obey him.
Worship does involve a direct encounter with God
that is to be experienced (2 Chron. 7:1-3; Acts
4:31; Heb. 6:4-5). Our awareness of God's
presence and our attentiveness and
responsiveness to his word should increase as
our worship deepens. However, this does not mean
that in order to worship God we must be
experiencing him strongly at the time; not does
it mean that worship consists essentially of
such an experience. Worship is something we
express to God, and though it must come from a
rightly disposed heart, it need not always
produce or be accompanied by a powerful
experience.
CULTURAL BLOCKS
Because worship is by nature expressive, right
worship requires appropriate, concrete human
expressions. Unfortunately, modern Western
societies, especially American society, suffer
from an impoverishment in the dimensions of
human relationships where building blocks for
worship are normally found. We are poor in
expressing love and honor, fear and respect,
rejoicing and mourning.
When we have guests at our homes we lack a
strong cultural instinct for honoring them with
personal service in a way that would be second
nature in a more traditional culture. Those
present in a courtroom still rise at the
entrance of a judge, but children and adults
rarely rise when their parents, grandparents, or
pastors enter the room.
Even when our intentions are good, we may find
ourselves uncomfortable-or even inept. A friend
of mine once told me how his coworkers honored
him at his retirement party. Many of those
present amused their hearers with narratives of
incidents in which my friend had handled himself
in a foolish or unconventional manner. To laugh
at him was the only way they knew to express
their affection and esteem for him.
Because worship is a human expression of our
relationship with God, our cultural poverty in
expressions of honor and respect restricts our
ability to worship. Even Christians who
appreciate the types of worship described in the
Psalms or in the book of Revelation tend to
treat those forms as special religious actions
and have lost the sense of how they express a
relationship. They may bow or kneel, but because
such postures no longer play any role in our
human relationships, they tend to think of them
as pious acts rather than as natural expressions
of relationship with God.
This leads to the conclusion that renewal of
corporate worship in the Western world waits on
a corresponding renewal of suitable cultural
forms of expressing honor, love, hospitality,
reverence, submission, rejoicing, and mourning
in ordinary life, outside the actual context of
worship. A recovery of the cultural language
through which we speak in word and act to one
another would enlarge our capacity to worship
God.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental issues in renewal of worship are
thus not directly matters of worship. They
concern spiritual renewal (proclamation,
repentance, conversion, faith, deepening
commitment) and an enrichment of our cultural
language. Yet these priorities often escape
those who are most concerned about worship. The
tendency is to focus on worship as an activity
in isolation from the participants individual
and corporate Christian life.
But it is crucial to see worship as part of the
bigger picture. Worship is only one part-albeit
a crucial part-of our relationship with God and
our life together as his people. No amount of
tinkering with the activity of worship can
substitute for renewal in these fundamental
spiritual and cultural dimensions.
DRAW FROM EXPERIENCE
Although we must attend to the broader concerns
of conversion, commitment, and cultural modes of
expressing honor, we do also have to deal
directly with worship itself. What approaches
are helpful?
My main recommendation is simply that we should
learn from Christian traditions of the past and
from various spiritual renewal movements of our
own day. Here are examples of the resources we
may find:
1. Jewish tradition.
The roots of Christian tradition extend back
into the Jewish way of life practiced by Jesus
and the apostles. The Jewish approach to worship
had a shaping impact on New Testament teaching
and church life.
One of the most prominent features of Jewish
worship is its integration into all aspects of
life. Sometimes in our concern for the renewal
of worship we focus exclusively on weekly church
services or prayer meetings. Though the solemn
gathering of believers has special importance,
our goal should be to build worship into every
part of our life, rather than leaving it as an
isolated religious act performed once a week.
For instance, many of the most important Jewish
customs of worship occur in the home. The
sabbath meal is an important spiritual event,
complete with ceremonies and prayers. The
Passover seder is one of the main worship events
of the year, yet it is conducted in the home
rather than in the synagogue. The grace after
meals and the lighting of the Chanukah candles
are other examples of special family worship
customs.
The Jewish approach to blessing (possibly
alluded to by the apostle Paul in Ephesians
5:20), which encourages giving thanks to God
throughout the day for his varied gifts, also
makes worship a daily rather than a weekly
affair. The ecumenical community to which I
belong, The Sword of the Spirit, has tried to
learn from these customs in order to promote a
common way of worship that is integrated into
the fabric of daily life.
2. Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox
tradition. The ancient traditions of the
Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches
have much to contribute to the worship of all
Christians. These traditions are especially rich
in helpful human expressions of worship in
solemn settings. A variety of postures are
used-kneeling, standing, bowing, prostration-and
a reverent bearing is maintained.
The Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox-and
Anglican/Episcopal and Lutheran-emphasis on the
centrality of the Lord's Supper in worship also
has great value for all Christians. This
emphasis aptly expresses the fact that all
Christian worship is founded on the redeeming
work of Jesus and his continuing intercession in
the heavenly sanctuary.
3. Protestant tradition. The evangelical
stress on the public reading of scripture,
preaching, and the singing of hymns is also
important and has been of great influence on all
Christians. Christian worship is a response to
what God has done for us and in us, and the
reading and proclamation of God's word presents
us with that which we need to respond to. The
Protestant introduction of hymn singing into the
Christian worship service has done much to
engage the entire congregation in the act of
worship. Many traditional evangelical hymns are
especially good models of expressing Christian
realities and truths in musical form-for
example, the great hymns of Charles Wesley. Like
the emphasis on the Lord's Supper in other
traditions, hymns and preaching serve to center
evangelical worship on the person and work of
Christ.
4. Anabaptist tradition. Anabaptists
(perhaps an unfortunate title, but the most
easily recognizable one) stress the intimate
connection between worship and common life. The
Mennonites, the Hutterites, and similar
groupings, such as the Moravians, have always
had a strong emphasis on community and on the
imitation of Christ. Following Jesus'
instruction that one's gift should be left on
the altar if a relationship with a brother needs
to be made right (Matt. 5:23-24), Anabaptist
tradition views right relationships and the life
of discipleship as a precondition for corporate
worship, and in some ways as a type of worship
in itself (see also Ephesians 5:1-2). This is a
helpful corrective for many of our modern
churches which seek proper worship without a
common life and a common discipline.
5. The Pentecostal-charismatic movement.
This 20th-century movement has much to
contribute to the whole Christian church in the
area of worship. Rejoicing and celebration
characterizes much charismatic worship, and this
has been a neglected aspect of worship in other
traditions. In fact, expressiveness is one of
the most marked features of Pentecostal
piety-dancing, singing, jumping, clapping,
lifting of hands, kneeling.
Though worship in this movement does not center
on experience, it nonetheless presumes a living,
experiential relationship with God in which
worship is a crucial element. The
Pentecostal-charismatic movement has helped many
Christians appropriate in their experience what
they already believed in their theology. This
renewal of the experiential dimension of
Christian life can also contribute to the
renewal and strengthening of worship.
The charismatic renewal movement also stresses
the immediate presence and guidance of the Holy
Spirit in worship, and this can center worship
on our union with God through Christ in the Holy
Spirit-the basic reality that is the foundation
of all Christian prayer.
TEACH, MODEL, INSPIRE
As in most other areas of church life, effective
worship requires effective leadership. If we
have pastoral responsibility for a group of
Christians, then we also have responsibility for
their common worship.
If we are to lead people into proper worship,
then we must teach about worship. We must teach
about who God is and how we should relate to him
in worship-with honor and devotion, with
reverence and submission. We must explain and
demonstrate various worship postures,
illustrating them from scripture and making
clear their purposes.
One pastoral leader I know began leading his
family into deeper worship by teaching them from
the psalms. He especially focused on Psalm 95,
which speaks of God as creator, savior, and
shepherd and calls us to sing, make a joyful
noise, bow down, and kneel to God. My friend
demonstrated each of these expressions for his
children. His family worship times improved
dramatically as the members of the family
understood what God expected of them and why.
As always, we must teach by actions as well as
by word. We must
model what we teach.
Our brothers and sisters can learn how to
worship expressively and reverently, with a
focus on God himself rather than on themselves,
if our own prayers and demeanor reflect what we
are seeking to impart to them.
We can also lead people into worship by
exhortation and encouragement: we can
inspire
them to worship. Many of the psalms begin with a
fitting summons to worship, such as "O sing to
the Lord a new song" (Psalms 96:1; 98:1; 149:1)
or "Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good"
(Psalms 107:1; 118:1; 136:1). As leaders of
God's people we should call them to sing to God,
to give him thanks, to honor him in a right and
fitting manner.
Sometimes correction is also fitting, either
corporately or individually. Few pastors think
that correction for irreverent behavior is
either their responsibility or their right,
since worship is viewed as a personal and
subjective experience. However, once we
understand worship as relational and expressive,
a matter of proper honor and reverence, then
correction for poorly expressed worship (for
instance, hands in pockets, failure to sing,
looking around distractedly) seems more
evidently a matter of pastoral responsibility.
A prominent part of Christian leadership is to
draw out the gifts of others and to enable them
to use those gifts for the good of the whole
body. Therefore, another way to lead people in
worship is to
discern and foster spiritual
gifts.
In one weekly worship service in my own
community, we have time for members to lead out
in prayer and praise. Several months ago, those
of us leading this service noticed that this
participatory period of the service was not
going well. We decided to contact those brothers
and sisters in whom we discerned a special gift
of leading out in prayer and praise, to urge
them to take more initiative in using their
gifts to inspire and strengthen the whole
congregation. Over the following weeks these
brothers and sisters exercised their gifts more,
and the worship of the body was greatly
enriched.
Our active role of leadership in worship should
further corporate participation rather than
stifle it. Worship services are not
performances, pastors are not actors, music
groups and choirs are not concert performers,
and the worshiping body of Christ is not a band
of spectators. Our leadership should have as a
goal the calling forth of true and holy worship
from the people of God.
SCHOOL OF PRAYER
As we seek to renew and strengthen Christian
worship, we should not fail to utilize those
inspired words of praise, thanksgiving,
confession, and petition given to us in the book
of Psalms. The Psalter is a school of prayer. We
can learn how to relate to God in worship by
observing and imitating the ways that the
psalmists relate to God.
The Psalter is also the Christian prayer book.
It provides not only instruction in prayer but
also the very words of our prayer. If we want to
lead people into deeper worship, then we should
lead them to the book of Psalms, teach them its
ways, and sing and pray its prayers together.
Of course, we must also learn how to pray the
Psalms as they are fulfilled in the Messiah. We
are not pre-first-century Jews worshiping in the
Jerusalem temple, nor should we be 20th-century
antiquarians pretending in prayer to live in a
world of the past. We are instead those who have
been redeemed by Jesus, the Messiah who
fulfilled the law of Moses, the prophets, and
the psalms (Luke 24:44). We are praying in the
temple of the Messiah's earthly body, and our
worship ascends as a pleasing sacrifice in the
heavenly sanctuary.
REVERENCE AND AWE
As I stated at the beginning, the Hebrew and
Greek words for worship refer to expressions of
honor and reverence. New Testament faith
proclaims that God has sanctified us in Christ,
torn the veil preventing our entry into the Most
Holy Place, and brought us as priests and as
sons and daughters into his throne room. God is
not inaccessible to us; we can now enter his
presence with confidence (Heb. 10:19).
Nevertheless, the one we stand before is still
the creator of the universe, the Holy One of
Israel, the Lord of hosts, and we are still
exhorted to offer him "acceptable worship, with
reverence and awe" (Heb. 12:28).
Reverence does not come naturally to those who
have been born and raised in mid-20th-century
America. We are most comfortable in casual and
informal situations; if a relationship is
supposed to be intimate, then we assume it is
also relaxed and without rules of decorum. The
father-son relationship in biblical times was
intimate, but it was not lacking in reverence.
Our relationship with God is intimate, but
should we enter his throne room in our tattered
blue jeans, pull up a chair for ourselves, greet
him by his first name, and ask him how he's
doing? Of course, we can worship and pray while
we are doing anything; but we should not do just
anything while we are worshiping and praying.
We need to recover expressed reverence for God.
Such expressed reverence is at the very heart of
worship. May God be patient with us as we seek
to grow in offering him the worship that is
worthy of his great honor and glory.
This article,
copyright © 1987 by Mark Kinzer,
was first published in Pastoral Renewal,
October, 1987, Volume 12, Number 3, Ann
Arbor, Michigan, USA. Used
with permission.
Mark S.
Kinzer is a Messianic Jew, theologian, and
Rabbi of Congregation Zera Avraham in Ann
Arbor, Michigan, and President Emeritus of
Messianic Jewish Theological Institute. He has
been involved in ecumenical work since the
1970s. He had an active teaching and
leadership role for some 20 years with The
Word of God and the Servants
of the Word,
in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA and also with the
wider network of international communities,
called Sword
of the Spirit.
At its peak growth of 1400 people in the
1980s, The Word of God community comprised a
diverse membership of Christians from many
different traditions and denominations,
including Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox,
Pentecostals, and Messianic Jews.
Mark Kinzer has been a member of the Messianic
Jewish – Roman Catholic Dialogue Group since
its inception in 2000. He has written many
articles and books, including Living With a
Clear Conscience: A Christian Strategy for
Overcoming Guilt and Self-Condemnation (1982),
and Searching
Her Own Mystery: Nostra Aetate, the Jewish
People, and the Identity of the Church (2015),
with a forward by Christoph Cardinal
Schonborn.
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illustration, "Jacob's Dream" (c) by
Baruch Maayan