Worship Joyfully.

If you had your life to do over, what would you do differently? Maybe you’d climb Mt. Kilimanjaro; or you’d hike the Appalachian Trail; or maybe you’d save more money. I don’t know what your item would be but most of us would do something different with at least one thing.

A survey was taken of folks across America who were in their 90s and asked the same question. Far and away, the top three answers were reflect more, risk more, and do things that outlive me more.

For those of us that love God and his son Jesus, most of us would respond to God more appropriately with our life. The writer of Psalms 100 gives us four ways we could be different in how we respond to God.

Verses 1-2 remind us to make a joyful noise and come before him with singing. With singing…but so many of us have excuses of why we can’t sing. I’ve heard some say, “I can’t carry a tune in a bucket.” But respectfully, I’d say, “Get over it.” Jesus calls us in Mark 12:30-31 to worship God with everything we have, bad vocals and all. I’m always amazed that some believe enthusiasm for the most worthy thing in the universe must be carefully contained. We are called to sing for all that God has done for us…give him praise and adoration for his mercy and grace.

Verse 2 reminds me to serve God gladly. We should respond to God with emotion but also with motion. Our very lives should reflect a servant heart for God and others as we strive to imitate Jesus in our life. Paul tells us in 2 Corinthians 9 that God loves a cheerful giver. That word “cheerful” can be translated “hilarious”! That is how I want the world to think of me. I serve in ways that the world thinks is crazy…hilarious by their standards. I should serve God because of the life he’s given me.

Verse 3 reminds me to love God intelligently. The first word of the verse is “know” or “acknowledge”. Paul tells us in Romans 12 to be transformed by the renewing of your mind. And we are to know a couple of things about God. First, we should know his Lordship. Basically, He is God and you are not. You are his craftsmanship. You are a divine incident. Secondly, we should know his ownership. We are his people. And if you are a baptized believer, He paid for you with Jesus’ blood. Know who God is in your life.

Verses 4-5 tell me to thank God consistently. We come together on Sundays to worship, love, serve, and thank a wonderful Heavenly Father. But it doesn’t end on Sunday…it’s an every day affair. The Psalmist gives us three reasons why we should thank him: He’s a good, good Father, He’s merciful and He’s faithful to all his promises.

What if we decided to live every day in a worshipful posture to an almighty God? What if every day we worked at our job, loved on our spouse and kids, were good neighbors all as ways we worshiped our Heavenly Father? We are called as believers to worship him daily, serve him faithfully, love him completely, and thank him for everything He’s done for us. Blessings on the journey.

Worship is Everywhere.

Most of us are good at something. But to get there, it didn’t happen overnight. We typically have spent hours, days and weeks perfecting that thing we love in our life.

Following Jesus is no different. This year, if you want a deeper, more rooted walk with the Savior, you’ll have to invest in ways to grow those roots, changing old habits for new ones and revising your day to day walk.

A great place to start is recognizing that worship is a lifestyle (Romans 12:1-2). Traditionally, we are taught we worship on Sunday. While that is absolutely true, it happens on the other six days of the week as well. So to better define what worship is, we’ll need to tease out three ideas that we all possess.

First, we all have 168 hours in a week. In that time we sleep, eat, play, work, and pick up the laundry. But how much of that time do you spend towards God. A great place to start is giving God 1-3 hours every Sunday to come together with a body of believers to publicly praise the Name of Jesus. We also need a time in our daily routine to pray to our Heavenly Father and read God’s Word to discover what guidance and direction he can give us for our lives.

Second, we need to use our God-given giftedness or talent for the glory of the Kingdom. Any time you use your talent for God, it gives attention to God and you shine for him. The Apostle Peter writes in 1 Peter 4:10-11, that we each have been given gifts by the Spirit and he admonishes us to use those gifts for God’s glory.

Some of us love hospitality. Being a welcoming person at your congregation, holding doors, making the coffee or putting out the donuts are great ways to be hospitable. Some of us love to sing. Being a part of the praise team or band is a wonderful way to give God glory. Some of you love tech so working with the computers or the lighting in the AV booth is a nice way to use your giftedness.

Third, we view our resources as a tool to further the Kingdom story. And it can be scary to release your money or resources back to God when you are not in the habit of doing so. But we grow our faith by trusting God to take care of us when we put him first in our resource category.

In Malachi 3:10, God is speaking to his people and reminding them, you cannot out give God. You make a decision to put God first with your resources and he will bless you in return. Now, we don’t give in order to get but when we trust God, he will take care of us.

Worship is a lifestyle. Worship happens when we work, drive, love our family, or are dining out. It will always cost you something. So whether you are giving God your time during the week or making sure your are using your giftedness for the Kingdom’s benefit or trusting God with your resources, following Jesus will cost you something. Disciples of Jesus are not consumers but givers. This year, may you determine to become a giver and allow God to bless you because of it. Blessings on the journey.

What is Worship?

Most people believe worship is that special hour on a Sunday morning when Christians gather to sing, pray and dig into the Word of God. While that is so very true, that hour is only 1/24 of 1/7 of our worship. Some of us believe we have this metaphorical click board and in order to worship, we are checking things off as “done”. I showed up on Sunday morning: check. I sang some songs: check. I put money in the plate: check. I’ve “worshipped” today.

But Jesus says if you are just checking boxes and your heart is not in the right place, your worship doesn’t even get to God (Matthew 15:1-9). See, true worship is a beautiful reflection of your heart toward God. So, with my heart in the right place, how do we express our worship to an incredible, amazing, awesome God?

Sometimes, we bow in reverence. There are times when I’m overwhelmed with what God has done for me and it puts me on my knees. Psalms 95:6, “Come, let us worship and bow down. Let us kneel before the Lord our maker.”

Sometimes we life our hands in adoration. In our culture, lifted hands can mean surrender or victory. When we say “yes” to Jesus, our surrender to him means we have the victory. See Psalms 63:4

Sometimes we offer a sacrifice of praise. “Let us offer through Jesus a continual sacrifice of praise to God, proclaiming our allegiance to his name” Hebrews 13:15. Even when I don’t see him or feel him, I worship him because my worship is based on my circumstances. It’s based on his character.

My favorite reminder of what worship is and when I should worship is found in Romans 12:1 where Paul says, “I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all he has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice—the kind he will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship him.” Worship is an every day event, not just on Sunday mornings.

When I am doing my chores, I am worshipping. When I’m loving my spouse or raising my kids, I’m worshipping. When I’m helping my neighbor, I am worshiping. Worship is not confined to Sunday AM service but it’s every single day of my life.

We live a worshipful life every day of the week because of what Jesus Christ has done for us. We serve an awesome God. He deserves our very lives on Sunday, on Tuesday night, on Saturday morning. So, live each day in a worshipful posture to an almighty God. Blessings on the journey.

God is Here and Powerful.

Our current situation seems chaotic. A massive hurricane hitting the Gulf coast this week; Delta variant overwhelming hospitals again; Evacuations in Afghanistan; Christians being hunted down and killed around the world; Racial tension still evident; State and Federal government strong-arming one another; Rising flood waters in Tennessee killing innocent people. We look around and wonder where is God?

While we as believers know God has not left us, our human side wonders, “Is He in control?” “Does He even care about my situation, my anxiety, my story?” These past several months have revealed we are more fragile and vulnerable than we care to admit.

Job is a story about a man who worshiped the Living God. His story is found in the Old Testament. He’s living the American dream one day and the next, he’s lost everything: his business, his livestock, his children, his health. However, he never loses his faith but he does have some questions for God.

Job begins to ask God about his current state, wondering where God is in his story. By chapter 38, God has had enough and answers Job’s questions, not with answers but with more questions. God asks beginning in Job 38, ““Who is this that questions my wisdom with such ignorant words? Brace yourself like a man, because I have some questions for you, and you must answer them. Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?Tell me, if you know so much.

Who determined its dimensions and stretched out the surveying line? What supports its foundations, and who laid its cornerstone as the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy? Who kept the sea inside its boundaries as it burst from the womb, and as I clothed it with clouds and wrapped it in thick darkness?

For I locked it behind barred gates, limiting its shores. I said, ‘This far and no farther will you come. Here your proud waves must stop!’ Have you ever commanded the morning to appear and caused the dawn to rise in the east? Have you made daylight spread to the ends of the earth, to bring an end to the night’s wickedness?

As the light approaches, the earth takes shape like clay pressed beneath a seal; it is robed in brilliant colors. The light disturbs the wicked and stops the arm that is raised in violence. Have you explored the springs from which the seas come? Have you explored their depths?

Do you know where the gates of death are located? Have you seen the gates of utter gloom? Do you realize the extent of the earth? Tell me about it if you know!”

King David also knew that just be looking around us in nature and the cosmos, God’s presence is revealed. David says in Psalms 19:1-4 that if you and I would just slow down, go outside and look up, we’d see that God is with us. Nature itself screams the glory and presence of God.

As Christ-followers, we worship a God who is so much bigger than we are! He knows and sees what we do not. There’s something comforting about worshipping a God that big.

My prayer is we’d realize we are not in control but He is. At the end of Job’s story in Job 42:5, Job says, “I had only heard about you before, but now I have seen you with my own eyes.” Job went from hearing about God to seeing God; from knowing about God to knowing God. May you truly know God is with you during these difficult times. May you feel the peace in your life that only He can provide. Blessings on the journey.

Wait for it.

I can only imagine you had the same difficulties I had growing up. I’m not talking about outdoor plumbing or limited meals or walking to school in the snow up hill both ways…I’m talking about waiting on Christmas morning for your parents to get up! I’d come down early in the morning and look at all the presents. Then, I’d have to sit and wait until my parents got up in order to play with the toys that Santa brought. Waiting is difficult.

I don’t know your current story but my guess is you are having to wait on something and maybe you’ve been waiting for weeks or months or years. Maybe you’ve been waiting on the new career to begin. Or waiting on that promotion that is long overdue. Or waiting on you to be financially right side up again.

Maybe you’ve been waiting on your marriage to be great again. Maybe you’re waiting on Mr. or Mrs. Right to appear. Maybe you’re waiting on your grown children to have a relationship with you again.

It could be you’re waiting on the cancer to go away or the chronic illness to subside or your child to be healthy and happy again. Maybe you’re simply waiting on children to be born.

I don’t know your story, but I bet you’re waiting on something. And some are waiting to hear God speak into their story. You wait and pray and talk to God but there seems no direction from him, no calming presence, no subtle hint that change is coming for the better.

When we read Habakkuk 2 in the Old Testament, we gather a sense of what the prophet did while he was waiting on God. Verse 1 reminds us that he listened to God. Some people can’t stand waiting to hear from God and walk away after the first little bit. But be patient. We must position ourselves in such a way to hear God’s voice speak into our story. So, every day, carve out time to be in his Word and pray. Let his words wash over you and reassure you He is present and has not forgotten you.

Surround yourself with like-minded people. People who will support you and stand with you as you wait. Positive people who will hold your hand during the chaos. God can also use your circumstance to bolster you and create a deeper faith. Equally, you can hear his voice as you sing praises to him or listen to a message from his word. There are so many ways we can truly hear the voice of God in our lives.

Like Habakkuk, we can also write for God. In verse 2, Habakkuk is called to write down what God says. We too can write and journal our experience. Why? Because Satan wants to kill, steal, and destroy everything that God is doing for you. He wants us to forget all the good that God continues to do in our life.

As a child, I was told not to write in my Bible. However today, all the white margins are filled with my notes. As I read, God places things on my heart which I write down. I also use a journal every day to write discoveries in my study time, prayers, and thoughts about my relationship with God.

Lastly and probably the most difficult, I wait on God. Some of you have been waiting on your spouse to come home, your marriage to be strong again, your finances to pan out, your adult children to have a relationship with Jesus, the promotion to come at work, racism to die, the cancer to be gone and the list continues to grow. Waiting is difficult.

But know if it’s not God’s time, you can’t force it. If it is God’s time, you can’t stop it! God has not forgotten you. He sees you, hears your cries, hears your prayers. He’ll never leave you. We, like Habakkuk, can say, “the Lord is in his holy temple. Let all the earth keep silent before him” (Habakkuk 2:20). We can worship God before we see him move in our life. We have faith in his goodness. We rejoice in his salvation. We celebrate that he truly is our Father. Blessings on the journey.

Looking Up

Have you have been in a situation where you needed help? Many times while playing high school football and after a huge tackle, team mates would see me on the ground, put their hand out and help me up. No doubt, you’ve had lots of moments like that when people helped you as you looked up to them.

In 2010, 33 Chilean miners were trapped in a collapsed mine. They were 2300 feet down and their only hope was far above them. Sure enough, 17 days later, one by one those who were on top pulled 33 miners to safety. Below, they had looked up for hope and help. Now, help came from above.

You know that’s where we were in our sin. We were hopeless. We needed help and our help, our salvation came from above. God Most High made a decision to leave the glory of heaven, put skin on and come to earth. The name God Most High reminds us of God’s greatness and majesty. He is the best, mightiest, most powerful, first and the last, all-knowing, and everlasting Savior.

Jesus left the rights and privileges he had in heaven for the silence of his arrival and humble living of earth. He was God Most High but was born into a peasant family, in a barn, and placed in a feeding trough. Jesus did that for you and for me.

Only 3 miles from where he was born in Bethlehem, was the palace of King Herod in Jerusalem. His palace set high on a hill. The palace itself sat on 45 acres and was 90 feet tall. The grounds surrounding the palace were 200 acres of gardens and swimming pools. If he had stood on his balcony that night, he could have looked to Bethlehem to see where the King of kings was born.

And because we see how humble Jesus was in his coming, we are reminded as his followers we too are called to live out that humble lifestyle. Paul reminds us of just how humble in Philippians 2:3-11. Paul says, “We MUST have the same attitude of Jesus.” It’s an imperative, not an option.

What a gift, the best gift we’ll ever get, in Jesus Christ. He is the Name above all names. He is God Most High. He is our Savior for the ages. As we realize what we have in Jesus, it reminds us of how we are called to live as we follow him. We look to him for our hope and our example.

Two challenges this holiday season (and beyond). Respond to God Most High every day with heart-felt worship. Jesus’ Name should be on our lips and tongue every day, giving him praise and thanks for his gift of love to us. And also, live out the Christmas story through humble service to others. Whether it’s your spouse, your kids, your co-workers, the folks you are standing in line with, your brothers and sisters at your local church…wherever you find yourself, treat others like Jesus has treated you. Blessings on your journey.

A Lifestyle of Worship

Worship has been around for ages. We all worship something. It may not be God but each of us have a god to which we give our time, talent and resources. But there is only one God that is truly worth all that we have to offer. He is the creator of the universe and the creator of you and me. He’s the one that gave up his Son in order to save us from ourselves.

For many of us, we grew up thinking that worship was a Sunday morning event. The “holy hour” on any given Sunday morning was the time we could truly worship the King of kings and Lord of lords. But we are reminded that is not the true.

Our call is to worship our God every day of our life. Paul says in Colossians 3, “Let the message of Christ…fill your lives…Whatever you do or say, do it as a representative of the Lord Jesus. “ Paul also reminds us in Romans 12 after going to great lengths to explain our lostness and what Jesus did to save us why we should live a life of gratefulness and worship toward him, “Offer yourselves to be a living and holy sacrifice…this is truly the way to worship him.”

Everything we do is worship to God. How we treat people; how we speak; how we live with our families; what our work ethic is like; how we glorify Jesus in the way we live among our co-workers and neighbors. We are called to Love God and love people (Mark 12:30-31). Worship is so much more than a Sunday morning. It’s an everyday event that reflects back how we are so grateful for what Jesus has done for us.

So, may your worship be more than one song on a Sunday morning. May it be every song, every day. Blessings on your journey.