Healing through Worship
by
Robert Colman
Pastor Robert Colman is the worship
director at Blackburn Baptist Church, Melbourne.
Other Worship Resources
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our primary task in
life
is to worship God
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Several decades ago, A. W. Tozer said,
"Worship is the missing jewel in the Christian Church'. In some ways
things have changed since Tozer wrote those words. Over the past 25 years
the Holy Spirit has been renewing his church in a remarkable way and
bringing Christians everywhere a new understanding of the meaning and
importance of worship. We have a way to go though, if we are to follow the
words of Jesus to 'worship the Father in spirit and in truth'.
Our primary task in life is to worship God. Deep within everyone there
is an urge to worship. It was placed there by God. If we do not worship
the Most High God, then we will worship ourselves, or an extension of
ourselves, for we MUST worship.
Our greatest challenge is that we intellectualize God. We allow him
access to the mind, but steadfastly resist any approach by God to our
emotions or our bodies. Why do we find it difficult to express ourselves
with our emotions and bodies in worship? When sin came into the world
through Adam and Eve, so did embarrassment, self-consciousness, wrong
kinds of self-awareness, lust, and so on. When Jesus died on the cross, he
died for the shame which put us in bondage to self-consciousness. Only
through him can we experience total freedom in our emotions and bodies.
William Temple, the great Anglican theologian, said, 'Worship is the
submission of all our nature to God. It is the quickening of conscience by
his holiness; the nourishment of mind with his truth; the purifying of
imagination by his beauty; the opening of the heart to his love; the
surrender of will to his purpose', and I would add 'and the
surrender of our bodies to his total freedom'.
We are the ones who prevent God working in his wholeness in us. True
worship can only take place when we agree to God sitting not only on his
throne in the centre of the universe but on the throne that stands in the
centre of our heart.
The work of Christ in redemption has one great end - it is to save
humanity and restore us to the joy of knowing true worship. Adam and Eve
enjoyed that when they walked with God in the cool of the Garden before
the Fall. Our major problem when it comes to worship is our sinful
self-centeredness. Sin consists in maintaining self in the centre of our
lives, the place that God actually reserves for himself. When God no
longer occupies the centre of our being, then we become the centre - we
become god! And that other god is called 'I'.
Invaded by God
Unless the central core of our being is invaded by God and maintained
by him, then there can be no proper object on which to focus our worship.
Many of us are caught up in an inner fight with ourselves because we never
understood that to become the person God wants us to be, we must stop
fighting ourselves, and surrender to God. Then he can come in, take up his
rightful place in the centre of our lives, and rule and reign as Lord.
Unless we surrender totally to God then the inevitable result will be
inner conflict and disharmony. Our human ego functions best when it
functions in harmony with God, for, left to itself it becomes a dangerous
and damaging force.
What does God require? The answer is quite simple, and yet so deeply
profound - self-surrender. This is the joyful exchange of an
egocentric, sinful self for a God-centered self made whole. It is in fact
a swap -our life for his and his life for us.
Romans 12:1 says, 'Therefore, I urge you ... in view of God's mercy,
to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God - this
is your spiritual act of worship.
We need to exercise our will in deciding to accept the freedom Jesus
offers. He never makes us feel silly or proud. Satan's insidious voice
speaks to our fallen nature, the part that feels silly and proud. We need
to resist him and claim our victory in Christ.
Then, when we learn to express ourselves to God, with body, emotions,
mind, will and spirit, we will enjoy a continuing, freeing experience. We
don't stifle our emotions; then they don't get bottled up inside. And we
begin to gain more confidence. Our self-image benefits and we become more
aware of others. Jesus takes us out of our self-awareness, and we reach
out to others, to communicate with them and be more sensitive to them.
Remember that our healing starts with our personal time with the Lord.
It's there that we can be free with God alone and after spending time
alone with him, we can become more free with our brothers and sisters in
Christ. Both are essential to know complete healing. Worship then becomes
our whole life, involving all our being.
Paul summarizes this well in 1 Thessalonians 5:23, 'May God himself,
the God of peace, sanctify you through and through. May your whole spirit,
soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Other Worship
Resources >.>
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(c) Healing in the Now, edited by John Blacker (1995),
Australian Renewal Ministries, 1 Maxwell Court, Blackburn South,
Victoria3130. Used with permission.
Renewal Journal #6 (1995:2), Brisbane, Australia, pp. 24-25.
http://www.pastornet.net.au/renewal/
Reproduction is allowed as long as the copyright remains intact with
the text.
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