This passed week Brad (our pastor) and I were talking about our desire to see every Sunday be a Super Bowl Sunday. By that I mean that every Sunday is our very best. It's about bringing your "A" game to the celebration that we call worship.
As I was pondering this thought today, I was reminded of how many times I had heard the preachers of my past chide the congregations for being less than enthusiastic during worship. They would always draw the comparison of how folks could hoop and holler and scream till their voices were gone at a football game, but then come to church and hardly make a sound during worship. Every time I heard a preacher use this analogy I just wanted to say " Well DUH!" what do you expect.
You're suppose to hoop and holler and scream to the top of your lungs at football games, that's what you go there for. You pay good money to be at a place where other like-minded folks gather to corporately cheer for a group of people that inspire them. To watch a team of professionals bring there very best to the field on Sunday and leave it all there. We admire the dedication, the raw determination and the commitment that our gridiron heroes bring to field and Yea, we make tons of noise during the game, because it OK to do that. As a matter of fact, you're expected to do that. Nobody's going to judge you for shouting at a football game. No one's going to be inspecting and critiquing your shout to determine if it was genuine or not, or question whether or not it was done in the right spirit or with enough conviction.
It's OK to shout at football games, everybody does it.
Traditionally, Church isn't that kind of atmosphere. We come into a worship service and we're not comfortable because the atmosphere isn't designed for true worship and celebration. People will worship and fully express there hearts to God in wonderful open ways if they feel comfortable, if they feel safe, if they aren't concerned about whether or not the person next to them is observing there expressions of worship and trying to discern whether or not their expressions are genuine, or if they are qualified to be making such public expressions of worship towards God.
You can't expect people to express the same kind of exuberance in church that they show at a football game unless the atmospheres are the same and most of the time they aren't.
In the midst of all this musing, I asked myself "In a hundred years what will it matter who won the Super Bowl in 2008". It was a great game and I loved seeing Eli win his first Super Bowl, but it's just a game. A great game, but still just a game. But what we do on Sundays is eternal and constant. Worship has been going on since the beginning of creation and it never stops. All of creation worships God continually, we just join in from time to time.
If worship is eternal, If we were especially designed for the purpose of reflecting God's glory and worshiping Him, then shouldn't we strive to make the atmosphere we worship in one that feels that way, open and safe? A place of connection.
There we go! That's the word I was looking for. Connection!!
That's what makes football so great. It's the connection that you feel with total strangers joined together in a stadium under the banner of there favorite team and no matter their background, there social standing, political leanings or theological beliefs; at this place on this day they are one voice, The 12th man. They may not be on the field but they are in the game none the less and the connection that is felt, the common joy that is share when the team is successful or the disappointment that is felt when they fail is equally shared among them all, because there is connection.
Connection is what we were made for. We are designed, by God for connection to God and while we may not understand that or even have the desire to be connected with God, we will seek to be connected in some way to others.
Worship is the Ultimate connection; to God AND to each other. When we worship we are responding to God and he in turn responds to us. We don't need to have a lot of deep understanding of who He is or a deep theological sense of why we worship, we just need to connect. If we can connect the understanding will come.
The old Jewish scholars believed that when the Jews gathered together in the tabernacle to worship, that the lines between heaven and earth blurred. That the realms of heaven and earth intertwined. If you have ever been in a truly powerful worship service you may have experience that very feeling. It's hard to explain, that feeling of heaven and earth merging together, but it beats the heck out of the football experience.
My deepest desire for Liberty Outreach is that we work and strive each week together as a group of worshippers to create an atmosphere where heaven and earth collide. A place where anyone could walk off the street and feel connected and regardless of their position spiritually they could still sense the merging of heaven and earth and the powerful presence of God Almighty.
So much for my musings today. I hope to connect with you Sunday.
Blessings
Joe
Thursday, February 21, 2008
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1 comment:
Thought I'd stop by and say hey. Good job today, and I'll talk to you in a few days.
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