Tag Archive - worship

Worship as Belief

It falls to me to pick the worship songs for our house church.

This, as you might guess is something of a liability for me, and perhaps my group. I comb through the song sheets, looking in vain for “Praised Be Thou, Inaugurator of Participationist Eschatology” and the like.

So instead, I have to go with what we have.

Image: Salvatore Vuono / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Today, as I thumbed through and picked out a few things, I did so with a little bit of an internal eye roll. I grabbed a song that I knew was little more than a compilation of scripture verses. I knew it was a theologically and pastorally apt conjunction of scripture and real life.

But it wasn’t me. I wasn’t feeling it. I felt like a bit of a hypocrite singing first person singular lyrics about myself that didn’t reflect my reality, how I actually have responded to life as late.

You get it? I didn’t want much to do with the song. But I picked it anyway, inasmuch as “The Galatian Praise Song” is something I try to save for Lent.

But then…

When it actually came time to sing the song, I found myself able to sing it, to believe it, to celebrate the reality of what I was singing.

How do you think about worship?

Usually, I think of it as an attempt at an authentic response to God, reflective of where I was when I came in.

And that’s an important piece of it.

But there’s something else going on in worship as well. Worship becomes a tutor to our hearts. We sing what is true, even when we don’t believe it, or didn’t a few seconds before, in order to enter into the belief that we lack.

Worship isn’t just about experience, it is also about ultimate reality. Or, perhaps better, is about creating an experience that expresses and embodies–and therefore summons us into–the reality into which God has called us in Christ.

When we gather as one and with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we participate in the fulfillment of God’s covenant promises. We speak truth again, we catch a glimpse of reality.

And we can believe.

Love and Faithfulness

Today I’m at the Fuller Faculty retreat. During our time of worship this morning, a couple of things grabbed me.

First, we sang “Crown Him with Many Crowns.” Well, we sang, “Crown him the Lord of love, behold his hands and side.” I never stop wondering how different Christianity would be if we could remember that this is love. The cross is love. The self-giving of Jesus, the son-giving of God.

If we loved the world like Jesus loved us, how would we be different? How would we be differently seen?

My second moment came while singing, “Great is thy faithfulness.”

While my mouth was singing the words, “Great is thy faithfulness, O God my Father,” my eyes were looking at this:

And my mind was thinking, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

Christianity lives in that dialectic. The faithful God is the God hidden in the cross. Great is thy faithfulness is the song we sing to the same God we confess as ours while we join our voices with Jesus’ Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani.

Prayers of Privilege

One of my pet-peeves is the sort of piety that strives to remove our worship of and prayers to God from our everyday life. The “prayer Olympics” that many practice sometimes makes it seem as though the greatest height to which we can attain is when we praise God “just for who you are,” “for who you are in yourself”–as though this is more lofty than praise and thanks for the manifestations of God’s presence here on earth or in our own lives.

It struck me recently that the very idea that such a prayer is the most pious of all is a theology of power and privilege.

It is Sadducee piety. The Sadducees were of the priestly families. Those families had gradually come to power, and under various Greek and Roman regimes had found themselves the indigenous leaders given charge (and the wealth that comes with it) under various “temple constitutions.”

Is it any wonder they didn’t believe in resurrection? Resurrection means vindicated the oppressed, rewarding the unpaid righteous. And it means repaying the powerful tyrants as well.

Those in power don’t want a piety that will turn the world on its head.

Similarly our theologically luxurious insistence that true worship, true prayer, has nothing to do with us. This is a mistake that can only be made by people who do not have eyes to see that for God to be “who God is” the world has to be changed. The redemption begun must be brought to completion. The righteous who cry must be answered.

And when God so acts, God must be praised.

If there is one thing that I hope we will learn more and more as we who are white, western, and thus worldly privileged listen to our African, Latino/a, and Asian neighbors it is that our culture of power has distorted our understanding of theological normalcy and theological virtue.

It is only people who know that the world suffers under the hand of the unrighteous who will know that God must make justice flow like a river and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream–if, in fact, God is to be God; if, in fact, God will be “who God is” and thus worthy of thanks and praise for it.

And only they will know how to write the songs and pray the prayers that properly praise the God who, in the Gospel of the dead and risen Christ, has revealed God’s righteousness to the world.

Worship Old and New

This month’s Christianity Today has a couple of articles that probe the differences between contemporary praise songs and old hymnody. In general, I find that both sides of the “worship wars” tend to provide fancy rationales for justifying what we like better. But there is some important theology to grapple with as well.

John Koessler’s piece, “The Trajectory of Worship,” is self-conscious about both. Or, at least, he’d have us think so. On the self-consciousness part, he says, “I am reduced to that most primitive test of aesthetic values: ‘I may not know what art is, but I know what I like.’”

It seems we’re in for a confession that the reason he prefers old music is because he prefers old music. But then, it takes a turn: “Or, rather, ‘I may not know what worship is, but I know what it isn’t.’”

Ah… So the contemporary music you don’t like isn’t actually worship.

His problem, as he goes on to describe it, is that modern worship moves as though it’s from us to God, not a practice that originates in heaven and envelops the earthly worshiping community.

That’s fine theology, but is it really the case that old hymnody captures the “participating in angel choirs” note that modern worship misses? I think he was more on target in his self-evaluation when he was talking aesthetics.

Because anybody who wants to poo poo modern praise music is going to have to start with this: a vast majority of modern praise songs are singing of psalms or other bible passages. It’s going to be very difficult to sustain the argument that the theology of the songs themselves is wrong using the sorts of litmus tests Koessler sets out.

Here’s my take on contemporary music: if it’s a repetitive song, whose words are more or less from the Bible, and accompanied by guitar and drums we call it a praise chorus and deride it. If it’s a repetitive song, whose words are more or less from the Bible and accompanied by the piano or sung a capella, we call it Taize and celebrate it.

In the second article, an interview, T. David Gordon explains the widespread disdain for classical-music hymnody by the prevalence of pop music in our society. Based neither on theology or aesthetics, the change to contemporary music in church is due to a “media ecology”: a change in our environment that causes nothing but pop music to sound like music to our ears.

Gordon urges us to cultivate a new musical sensibility to help connect us with the great musical tradition of the church.

He says that not all hymns are good, and not all praise songs are bad. There are both in both. In the interview he then goes on to say that there are objective categories for evaluating music–and that hymns shouldn’t strive to the level of musical excellence that would make them unsingable for most of us.

In fact, says Gordon, “musicologists argue that hymnody is actually a subcategory of folk music… But folk music, by name, suggests music produced by the people. It’s the way people join their heritage, and it’s participatory in its very nature.”

Exactly.

So which is more “the people’s music”? The music that is currently being produced by people who are participating in the “the people’s culture” of pop music, or the music that reflects an earlier generation’s sensibilities?

Gordon argues that this isn’t about aesthetics, but I’d say it is: the “media ecology” he describes has developed a certain aesthetic in society–and it happens to be one that he doesn’t resonate with. If we have to “cultivate” a liking for the music he wants us to like, in what sense is it our own folk music any longer?

One other thing that struck me about the interview with Gordon is Anglo-centric his assessment of worship is. Perhaps Gordon celebrates the videos he sees of Africans in traditional garb singing 18th century English-penned hymns. They make me weep. Ok, that’s a bit strong: I’m glad that they sing our songs and participate with us in our worship. But it also strikes me as a failure of the gospel to take hold of the hearts, failure of western missionaries to give freedom to people in a new context to reexpress the praise of God in their own tongue, to have them sing our songs.

And with our own now being a more missionary situation, I wonder if promulgation of the old hymns isn’t as culturally inappropriate.

Look, I like hymns as much as anyone. I love that so many of them contain rich lyrics and rich theology.

But I also believe that when the Psalmist says he will “sing a new song,” he is not actually asking the people of God for the next 4- or 5,000 years to sing his new song–old song that it is to us.

In fact, I would argue that what we see in scripture is that new song is exactly what we should expect any time that God is at work in the world. Yes, Koessler is correct: worship begins with God. But the worship we sing is, as often as not, about how that God in heaven has intersected tangibly with the world down here. Worship is not about the God who remains afar off in the heavens, it’s about the God who has, or should have, acted here on earth for the good of God’s people and all humanity.

Put differently, a church with no new songs to sing is a church where God is not at work.


    A culture that cannot express its encounter with God in its own idiom is a culture where the gospel has not taken root.

And, if we’re not careful, an insistence of the singing of only the old songs might become a convenient theological cover for the reality that our own lives need a fresh visitation, that our eyes need a new vision, of the Kingdom of God come near.

Incomplete Praise, Until…

In Revelation, numbers are important.

7 churches. 7 lamp stands. 7 spirits of God.

7s are important, but so are 3s. 3 angels with three final woes.

3 choruses of “Hallelujah” to offset three songs of woe for the fall of Babylon.

And so it is all the more remarkable that in ch. 4, when the One who Sits on the Throne is praised, there are not three songs. There are only two.

The praise of God is incomplete.

The scene continues, not with a third song of praise, but with the introduction of the Lion who is the Lamb who was slain. The lamb, too, receives his two songs of praise: You are worthy… for you were slaughtered! This followed by “Worthy is the Lamb, who was slaughtered.”

So what about the third?

It seems that the completion of the praise of God was waiting. It was waiting for the praise of the Lamb. They each receive their third song at the end of ch. 5–and they receive it together.

How is praise of God brought to completion? How is praise of the Lamb brought to completion? When they are drawn together in the praises of every creature under heaven:

    To the One seated on the throne and to the Lamb
    be blessing and honor and glory and might
    forever and ever!

And.

To the One on the throne and the Lamb.

Now has come the praise of our God in its fullness–when its adoration of the creating God is wrapped up, inseparably, with the praise of the redeeming Lamb.

O Worship the King

Did the first Christians worship Jesus? What would it mean to sing songs of praise to God that began wrapping Jesus into them? What would it mean to begin singing songs of praise to Jesus himself? How does this help us understand the development of the church’s early Christology?

Does it matter for this question that Israel sang songs of praise to her kings?

    My heart overflows with a goodly theme;
    I address my verses to the king;
    my tongue is like the pen of a ready scribe.
    You are the most handsome of men;
    grace is poured upon your lips;
    therefore God has blessed you forever.
    Gird your sword on your thigh, O mighty one, in your glory and majesty.
    (Psa 45:1-3 NRSV)

Somehow, the blessing of God upon the king is sufficient to merit a psalm of praise to the king himself. In the psalter.

But at least such psalms would clearly distinguish the persons of God the source of grace and the king the recipient.

Right?

    In your majesty ride on victoriously for the cause of truth
    and to defend the right;
    let your right hand teach you dread deeds.
    Your arrows are sharp in the heart of the king’s enemies;
    the peoples fall under you.
    Your throne, O God, endures forever and ever.
    Your royal scepter is a scepter of equity;
    you love righteousness and hate wickedness.
    Therefore God, your God, has anointed you
    with the oil of gladness beyond your companions;
    (Psa 45:4-7 NRSV)

The king rides out victoriously.

The king loves righteousness.

The king’s scepter is one of equity.

Whose throne is it that endures forever? Is the king numbered among the gods?

“Your throne… your scepter… you love… therefore God your God has anointed you.”

Make that,

“Your throne O God… your scepter… your love… therefore God your God has anointed you.”

Is being king of Israel sufficient to warrant participation in the praises of God’s people? Is being king of Israel sufficient to have ascribed to one an everlasting throne? Is being king of Israel sufficient, even, to be hailed as a god who sits enthroned–the son of God, the royal vicegerent, the image-bearer, the ruler of all creation?

Clawson on Mission & Worship

Ok, so maybe feeding hungry people doesn’t stir your soul. Might it be the worship God desires?

Julie Clawson has a fabulous, provocative, challenging–and short!–article on justice and worship over at The Next Wave.

Go check it out.

House Church, Take 2

I want to clear up a few things about my own participation in a house church.

First, I’m not doing it because I love that small group experience. Honestly, the “small group experience” has posed the greatest difficulty for me in this setting. I tend to prefer to sing songs with a hundred or two hundred people than with eight or ten. Unless you have a group of confident singers who know all the songs, the singing doesn’t have quite the same power to draw you inward and upward in a small group. We have had that kind of experience on several occasions, but it’s not the norm. I miss big group singing.

Also, inasmuch as I do leading and/or teaching, I am much more comfortable teaching 18+ plus people in a less discussion-oriented manner. Even when doing small things like administering communion, I feel more myself in my teaching when I am leading more people.

It may sound ironic, but I think that both of these things are because I am an introvert. The large group setting disallows some of the intimate contact, and I find that ability to be more myself because enmeshed in a room with more people enhanced.

There is also a myth that house church is some sort of regression to the early church, a truer embodiment of the house-based communities that defined early Christianity. I don’t think that this is an accurate assessment of the early church. Or, perhaps it’s better to say, there were probably some communities that look something like a house church and probably some that looked like networks of house churches that came together for larger worship experiences, and some things that looked more like a larger group that would meet in some “third place” for worship.

The idea that house church (or any church) is repristinating the ancient model depends on the myth of “the” ancient model. I don’t buy it.

This series began as a response to John Armstrong’s thoughts about “the home church movement.” I want to pick up on a couple other positives that he mentions. These were some of the positive pulls toward a house church when we moved to San Francisco.

First was children. As Armstrong puts it, “Children are not a problem to be solved but welcomed little people.”

Photo Credit: www.thedesignblog.org

One thing that our church in Philly had done very well was integration of children as members of the worshiping community. They were welcome as part of the worship service, and participated in everything until the scripture reading and sermon. So they were there for all of the liturgical and memorized elements as well as a good bit of singing.

Outside the worship service, during the scripture and sermon, there was an excellent children’s program that was not babysitting but age-appropriate worship.

After the sermon, the children were brought back up to participate in the family meal (communion), again in a somewhat liturgical context where they would soon memorize all the responses. For the final song, there were often instruments up front for the kids to play while everyone sang before the final blessing.

That beautiful both/and of integrating children into the service and having space for them to be children and worship and learn accordingly was something we did not find in SF. The options were either a great children’s program at a place where children were  welcomed into the adult worship or children welcome to be part of adult worship or, alternatively, to go to babysitting. After having it all, we weren’t willing to go back.

The other major pull was the way in which house church is a more natural extension of our real life. One question we asked of the churches we visited was, “Could we bring a non-Christian coworker here? Why or why not?” Especially given the amount that we entertain, having a house church was a simple way to say, “Yes, we’d invite anyone here.” (Our church, “The Table”, has brunch every week, so the extension of our “real life” is quite natural.)

Finally, there is the blessing and curse of being in close community. Our group, almost two years old, has had its share of conflict. Some of it has been handled well, some of it badly. But even when I looked at everything and said, “We’re dealing with this terribly,” the next thought in my head was, “and that makes us healthier than 98% of the churches in the world, because we’re actually dealing with it.”

There is no running and hiding, no avoiding of people you don’t like in favor of those you do. There’s community for better or worse. And even when it’s going badly, that is good community. But more often, it goes well. This group has been our family, and we’ve been other people’s. We’ve kept kids while others have had emergency surgery, we have friends who help get ours to school when Fuller thinks I should be somewhere besides in my home office at 9:00 in the morning, we have older mentors to challenge and encourage us, we have younger friends to help draw toward maturity.

So, while not being totally within the assessment John gives of why people go to house churches, much of what he said there rings true to our own desires for family-based Christian community.

Tomorrow I’ll tackle some of his concerns.

Only Worship God! Or the King, or…

From James McGrath’s blog:

1 Chronicles 29:20 depicts the Israelites worshipping/prostrating themselves before Yahweh and the king. One verb, two objects. The king is said a few verses later to sit on Yahweh’s throne.

To claim that in Jewish literature no agent of God ever receives the same kind of worship that Jesus is depicted as being offered in the New Testament is to ignore fairly clear evidence from the Bible itself, never mind relevant extrabiblical evidence. Most scholarly studies recognize that this primary terminology of worship, which has as its root meaning prostration, is not consistently directed only to God Most High in Jewish literature.

McGrath is spot on. We take too little stock in how closely tied together are the identity of God and God’s representatives on earth in the Biblical narrative. God is so “other” in our thinking that we miss the ways the biblical narrative show that God is bound up with the persons of Adam, Israel, and the kings.