What's Wrong with Praise and Worship?
I
like many of the praise and worship songs. I also like hymns. I like
some of the more classical pieces like Mozart and other formal works
like the John Rutter I sang in college choirs. Then again, that is
all beside the point.
With
all the talk about praise and worship songs as a style of music, then
as the centerpiece of what it means to gather as the church, that is
where I start to feel a rub. What is wrong with praise and worship?
It is not they style of music, not that it focuses on praise or
worship. It is that is so often deflects and distracts us from what
it means to be believers and followers of Christ Jesus.
There
is nothing wrong with raising your hand in the air as you sing along
with the band. There is nothing wrong with the theology presented in
many of the songs. It's actually more a question of what is not there
than what actually is.
More
than anything, it is a question of depth. It is a question of
breadth. It is a question of content and of purpose.
We
gravitate to praise and worship often as not because its focus is
self-centered. Sure, the songs talk about Jesus and how God is great
and worthy of our praise. We sing about how our lives are being
deposited before God. We sing about the wonders of the cross. We sing
about heaven by and by. We sing about heaven coming down and
experiencing God's presence. We just rarely if ever get around to
actually being the hands and feet of Jesus.
Well,
maybe we find encouragement to go on a mission trip to South America,
Asia, Africa, or the Caribbean. I have yet to find praise and worship
tackling the issues of justice, equality, racism, and the systemic
forces in or society that keep others from experiencing the gospel
call to bring the disenfranchised into our lives as friends and loved
ones.
On
the other hand, maybe there is something a little bit darker in our
understanding and application of praise and worship. The very use of
the phrase would limit the worship and praise of God to what happens
within the concert hall. It focuses on how we feel or are manipulated
to feel beneath the lights and our waving hands raised high.
We
engage our emotional selves, but we often miss the fact that
spirituality is not about emotional highs or how the songs make us
feel. Faith is much more about how we live than an experience we
might have in a concert hall.
Praise
and worship is not really about the music we sing. It is about the
song of our lives as we give substance to the teachings of Christ
Jesus. Real praise is in Jesus' words the feeding of those who cannot
work or otherwise sustain themselves. It is healing the sick and
providing recovery for whatever hinders them from becoming
contributing members of society. It is about caring for those cast in
debtor's prison with no chance of escape. It is about bringing
dignity back to those who cannot clothe themselves or regain standing
in society. It is about granting access to all those things that make
life and opportunity possible.
Jesus
told us pretty clearly that we are charged with loving one another to
the point that our enemies become our friends. Praise and worship
songs do not translate into that kind of radical faith. On the other
hand, it is that radical faith that embodies true praise and worship
of the Jesus we call Lord.
—©Copyright 2017, Christopher B. Harbin
http://www.sermonsearch.com/contributors/104427/
My latest books can be found here on amazon
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