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When I was about five years old a missionary told me that when I got to Heaven I would be a spirit without a body and resembling the air and clouds. Everyone would be like this, and all we would do is worship the Lord every moment. I knew he was wrong then, and I still believe so.

Worship is a whole spirit, soul, and body experience. Therefore, I know we will have bodies in Heaven. Peter, James, and John all recognized Moses and Elijah who showed up in bodies to talk with Jesus long after they were dead (see Matthew 17:1-10). I’m sure Moses and Elijah used their new bodies to worship when they stood on Heaven’s soil as well.

And that whole thing of sitting on clouds and playing harps that some folks think represents heavenly worship is all wrong too. Worship comprises everything we do all day long with our thoughts, intentions, and actions. Washing dishes can be a worship experience if I am scrubbing with a right heart attitude and doing so as “unto the Lord.” 

Why would Heaven be any different? You can sit on a cloud and play a harp if you so choose, but I intend to hang out with Jesus, explore my new location, and in every second I will be worshipping him with my whole heart. And yes, I will also participate in the group worship sessions because from the descriptions I read of them in the book of Revelation, they are off the charts!

Worship isn’t reserved for someday in Heaven. God is more than awesome right here on earth. Jeremy Sizemore, our pastor who facilitates worship at Father’s House, says that our corporate worship is practice for Heaven. I agree. Even though washing dishes can also be practice for worship in Heaven, finding daily time to give my whole spirit, soul, and body to God in worship—my undivided focus—is something I need to practice more. “Worship the Lord with your full focus at least once a day. He deserves it”—so says #6 on my New Year’s resolution list for 2011.

Will you feel comfortable with worship in Heaven—like it is something you have been preparing for your whole life? How do you give your full focus to God in worship on a daily basis?

(By the way, I capitalize Heaven because it is a specific name of a specific location. If this troubles you, I’ll add you to my list of favorite grammar critics.)

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

Prayer, fasting, giving and meditating in the Scriptures are all spiritual disciplines. So is worship. I don’t usually put worship on my list of spiritual disciplines. A spiritual practice for sure, but I haven’t listed it as a discipline–at least not in my mind.

I’ve been reading over the Psalms and noticing how often that book puts us in the place of ministering before the Lord with praise and thanksgiving. The New Testament goes beyond mere ministers and calls us priests. Priests minister before and to the Lord.

Worship is the main ministry we do for the Lord even if all we are is a “gatekeeper in the house of our God.” Pretty big assignment if you ask me. Worship is work. It is what we will be doing for the rest of eternity future. It is something we are to learn to do well and practice even now, and it doesn’t always come easy. That’s why I think it is a spiritual discipline.

However, something I’ve noticed in my circle of Charismatic relationships is that worship isn’t always regarded as our spiritual work. It’s been hijacked into being one of our unalienable rights to a good spiritual experience.

Some seem to think that church is not really church unless we have a moving encounter with God during worship. If our emotions aren’t involved then worship doesn’t cut it. If one is not emotionally stirred then the service isn’t spiritual enough. Some people even change churches because their expectation of good worship isn’t being met at their current place “of worship.”

I wonder how many worship teams believe that their job description is to provide a time for people to experience God or that they are to set an atmosphere where people can encounter Him. I hope they understand that their job is to minister before the Lord and to do so in front of all of us in the congregation so that as a community of worshippers we can follow their lead in worshipping the Lord of Heaven and Earth.

I’m not against having good feelings or an awesome experience when I worship. I especially appreciate it when I encounter God during worship. But a gatekeeper, or a worshipper, doesn’t always encounter the Lord of the Manor. Gatekeepers, or servants, are known for how unnoticeable they are. They blend into the background and not the forefront. Good feelings, awesome experiences, and encountering the Living God are not the purpose of worship. These are byproducts. Good byproducts, but byproducts none the less.

It was King David who said that he would not offer to God that which had cost him nothing. One reason the Scriptures call us to give ourselves as a living sacrifice and to offer the sacrifice of praise is because sacrifices can only be given when we have to forfeit something. A sacrifice will cost you. Bottom line–we are not on the receiving end when we worship. We are on the giving end.

When we gather together as the church, we assemble to minister to the Lord. Our job description, every one of us, is to bless Him and minister to Him. Not the other way around. Sounds like work to me!

So the work of worship deserves more study, practicing, perfecting, and performing. I’ll let you know how my musings on this spiritual discipline go.

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

This post is a reprint of my May 7, 2009 post from my Sabbath and Sabbatical blog.

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