Worship: Participation – Cheap Praise and Lazy Worship

There is too much at stake in today’s service to be coy with our praise and selfish with our worship.

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What do we learn from worshipers in the Bible?

  • King David said, “I will not offer to God that which cost me nothing.” He was talking about buying a field for purposes of a sacrifice that had been offered to him as a gift.
  • Father Abraham said to his servants, “You wait here while we go yonder and worship.” He was talking about offering his only son to God as a sacrifice.
    We learn that while worship is joyful it is also a personal sacrifice; it costs us something.

How should this challenge worshipers today?

Let’s go forward in time to the next Lord’s Day Worship service. Having made it off the parking lot and found our way to the place we have chosen, we begin to observe those around us.

  • Too many of us want praise and worship to be easy, nestled well within the safe confines of our cultural comfort zones. It is as if we are saying, “I’m contemporary, don’t try to make me sing hymns.” or “I’m traditional, don’t try to make me sing these weird new songs.”
  • What we are really saying is, “I’m comfortable with what I already know and like. Don’t make me work.” Doesn’t that attitude constitute cheap praise and lazy worship?

Look at those people on the platform.
Their faces beam with the joy of praise. Their bodies move to the rhythms of worship. And here you are in the pew trying to get through another song service. What is the difference?

Those singers and players up on the platform have paid a price for their praise.

  • They have worked at their worship.
  • They got here an hour before you did to prepare their praise.
  • They gave a whole evening sometime during the last week to work on their worship skills.
  • Their extravagant praise and worship springs from a costly routine of rehearsal and prayer. It isn’t cheap and they aren’t lazy.
  • They have disciplined themselves in their schedules and denied themselves the freedom others enjoy to make the music of praise and worship.

Look at your worship leader.
For every song he asks you to sing, he has listened to five or more. Every song list he leads you through is really a sacrifice of praise, the product of seasons of prayer, and a lifestyle of worship study. He and his staff have worked many hours this week preparing the songs they ask you to sing. It is by no means cheap and they are by no means lazy.

Look at your pastor.
He/she is about to preach the Word.

  • All hell opposes him/her.
  • He/she needs warriors on the platform and in the pews who will chase devils with the power of their praise and the worthiness of their worship.
  • He/She doesn’t need fair-weather worshipers who give up when it costs too much or when the work is too hard.
  • He/She also is a person of worship. He/She has paid a price in the Secret Place for the Word he/she will deliver to you today.
  • The Pastor needs the pathway of your praise that takes us all through the Gates of Thanksgiving and Courts of Praise.

Today’s preacher needs the work of your worship to bring us into the Holy Place where the Prayer (Altar of Incense) and the Word of God (Table of Shewbread) pulse with power of the Holy Spirit (Golden Lampstand). Why? Because your pastor’s deepest desire is to go with you through the Torn Veil of Jesus Himself into the Holy of Holies where the fullness of God’s provision meets the desperation of human need. There is too much at stake in today’s service to be coy with our praise and selfish with our worship.

Look at your heart.
Is your heart fixed on Jesus?

  • Are you determined to praise Him and worship Him in spite of the music chosen rather than because of it?
  • Did you come to the service determined to present your personal sacrifice of praise to the Lord?
  • Is your highest goal to GIVE unto the Lord or to RECEIVE from him?

Because God is a faithful Father, He will always bless. But are we faithful children who will always pay the price to praise or do the work of worship?

Look at your Savior.
He gave His all and all He is looking for from us is True Worship.

  • Do we keep Him waiting for us to minister to Him while we argue our personal preferences?
  • Do we see Him weeping over the multitudes within striking distance of our sanctuary who are speeding into hell while we debate tempo and style?
  • Like He did the home of Simon the Pharisee, Jesus has come to our house. Are we washing His feet with our praise?
  • Are we giving Him the seat of honor with our worship? Or do we think that He has come to serve us, to answer our laundry list of requests?

Why be an average worshiper?
Cheap praise and lazy worship do little for Jesus. Let us all stretch beyond our comfort zones today.

  • Let us buy the whole field (contemporary, traditional) so that we can have the one great Pearl of Great Price (Jesus).
  • Let us pay the price of True Praise.
  • Let us do the work of True Worship.

When we do, His Kingdom will come and His Will will be done in this very room.

 

 

This is an updated edition of a post originally published on Steve Phifer

Featured Image by StockSnap from Pixabay

 

The views and opinions expressed by Kingdom Winds Collective Members, authors, and contributors are their own and do not represent the views of Kingdom Winds LLC.

About the Author

Full of passion for Jesus Christ, Stephen Phifer is a third-generation minister with more than three decades of experience as a pastoral artist, worship leader, and conductor.