Donna, in response to Philip Yancey’s article about worship being much more than just the music during a service, left the following comment to my post pointing to it:

In all the time I have spent in church, I have always associated ‘worship’ with music because that is the only context in which I heard the word mentioned. I remember when it hit me for the first time about a year ago that worship isn’t about the music. I was reading casually (not studying) in Genesis 22 where Abraham was taking Isaac to sacrifice him, and stopped when I read:

22:4 Then on the third day Abraham lifted his eyes and saw the place afar off. 5 And Abraham said to his young men, ‘Stay here with the donkey; the lad and I will go yonder and worship, and we will come back to you.’”

I couldn’t get past that passage. They went to worship? It sounds funny now, but I thought ‘It didn’t say anything about musicians going along on the trek’, and that is when I realized that there was something I had not been told in church about worship.”

I attend a Bible church and am your basic hands-in-my-pockets or clasped-behind-my-back kind of guy when it comes to singing during the service. Not everybody shares my superior view of this practice, however, and so I notice those individuals who raise their hands while singing. I have learned to let them be who they are and enter into the presence of God however they see fit (like they really needed my permission to begin with).

Being the way I am, I sometimes find myself wondering why no one raises their hands during the offering. I don’t mean during the song that’s played at that time, but as the plate goes by and they drop in their check. Is this any less an act of worship? Where’s the passion and sense of communion at this point in the service? (I must say that I am as emotionally and spiritually numb during the offering as I am during the singing, thus displaying my integrity.) Has worship suddenly stopped? I don’t think so, and yet it seems that the offering is often viewed as a necessary “commercial” that interrupts an otherwise good time.

If you were to ask a person who lived during biblical times what comes to mind when they think of the word “worship,” you might be surprised both by what they say and what they don’t say. What they likely would not say is singing or music; what they might say would be things like animals, sacrifice, smoke, and blood. During the times recorded in the Bible, worship was about death and loss and not about having a good time.

This is not to say that singing or music don’t have their place, for certainly they do. It is to say that we may have “neglected the weightier matters” of worship (apologies to Mt 23:23).

For my money, the foundational verse about worship is given to us by Paul in his treatise on the gospel, i.e., the Book of Romans:

Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.” – 12.1-2

Worship begins – and ends – with the sacrifice of our lives. It is not something that occupies us just on Sunday mornings, but throughout the week as well. It encompasses the totality of our being and affects everything that we do. It includes singing on Sunday morning, but also giving our money, listening to the sermon, working during the week, living with our families. It’s about how we drive, talk, treat strangers, vote, pray, study, think, blog, and anything else you can imagine.

If we really believe the Bible – that is, if we actually want to do the things we know – we will not relegate worship to an hour or so on a particular morning of the week. We will understand that every breath we take is preparation for worship.

We will live our lives in the sight of God, as Paul reminds us (2 Cor 2:17, 4:2, 7:12, etc.) and remember that there is no split between our “religious” and “secular” lives. We are whole individuals, not compartmentalized or fragmented. Our spiritual service of worship ought to reflect that.


2 Cor 1:13