[I am re-posting this article from last year. I believe it is as TIMELY for today as it was then. Read it and see!]
You are to bring there your burnt offerings and sacrifices,
your tenths and personal contributions, your vow offerings, and your freewill
offerings, and the firstborn of your herds and flocks. You will eat there in the presence of the
LORD your God and rejoice with your household in everything you do, because the
LORD your God has blessed you. (Deuteronomy
12:6-7 )
The
psalmist said, "I rejoiced with
those who said to me, 'Let us go to the house of the LORD.’” But, he never had to face a "time-change
Sunday"! While it is a wonderful
thing on the first night of Daylight Savings Time to gain that extra hour of
daylight, it is tough to lose the hour of sleep the night before.
Will you
be on time? Will you turn in early, so
you show up gladly rather than grouchy? It is important.
The
commands given to Israel
underscore this. At the center of their
camp was the tabernacle. Wherever they traveled in their pilgrimage, they
pitched their tents around the house of God. As Moses instructed them in anticipation of
entering the Promised Land, where a temple would be built, he reminded them
that worship would still be at the core of their experience. They were being readied to cross into Canaan , and that demanded they be ready for worship. Will we be ready for worship?
There are
several requirements if we are to be ready. We must go to the place of worship. We must know the pattern of worship. We must show the preparation for worship. We must bestow the provision through worship.
WE MUST
GO TO THE PLACE OF WORSHIP (Deuteronomy
12:1-14 ). You can worship God anywhere. You should. But, most
often you won't. I hear that excuse sometimes for why people don't attend
worship. They say, "When I'm in nature, I feel so much closer to
God." Really? How much time do you spend focusing on the Father while
fishing? How much singing to the Lord do you do while splashing in the lake?
While you are hunting is heaven on your mind? The creation ought to inspire us
with awe and is meant to direct us to the Creator. Our problem is that our
minds, darkened by sin, begin to worship the creation itself (see Romans 1:18-25 ). This is why
Moses forbids the Jews from going out to the hills, and under the stars, then constructing
their own altars. If we spend time with the saints at the house of God engaged
in corporate worship, it affords the needful corrective to our wandering hearts
which tend to devise a god of our own imagination instead of the God of
revelation. Father God may give way to Mother Nature, if we aren't cautious.
The first commandment tells us to have no other God.
WE MUST
KNOW THE PATTERN OF WORSHIP (Deuteronomy
12:15-13:18 ). You can't
worship God anyway you want. The second
commandment prohibits images in worship—not just the correct Person to worship,
but the correct pattern is important. Particularly
note 12:30, "Do not inquire about
their gods, asking, 'How did these nations worship their gods? I'll do the
same.'" God said, "You must
not do the same to the LORD your God..." (v.31). Jesus taught us that the only acceptable
worship is in spirit and truth (see John 4:23-24 ). Let
us bring that kind of worship to God—nothing superficial, no sham—not ritual,
but reality. The congregation has the responsibility
to safeguard that only the truth of God is proclaimed. In Israel , false prophets were dealt
with severely (13:1-5). It isn't a
matter of one man's opinion—one can be mistaken or just have an ax to grind—but
a body of believers led of the Spirit can insure truth is spoken in worship.
WE MUST
SHOW THE PREPARATION FOR WORSHIP (Deuteronomy
14:1-21 ). The dietary
restrictions on the Jews doubtless had health reasons, but those were secondary
to the main purpose—to remind them that they were to be different from the
pagans. They belonged to the Lord—and that
extended to every dimension of life—from outward expression (v.1-2) to inward
digestion! They were not to be governed
by their passions but God's precepts.
To eat to live is one thing, to live to
eat another. Only a people whose hands
were clean could lift them to God in praise. Only those whose lips were pure could open
them in prayer. One must not come to a
holy God in worship carelessly, casually—but reverently. It is when we are spiritually prepared for
worship that we encounter God in powerful ways. You cannot ignore Him all week, doing as you
desire, and then flip a switch and expect something transformative on Sunday. Are you ready for worship? By all means adjust your clock, but also
adjust your soul—orient it to God in submission.
WE MUST
BESTOW THE PROVISION THROUGH WORSHIP (Deuteronomy 14:22-15:23 ). Have you ever heard someone say, "I
didn't get anything out of worship today." But a better perspective would be, "What
can I give today?" I have found
that the best way to receive a blessing is to be one.
This has
to do with liberty (15:1-3; 12-18). God
wants to set the captives free. He might
well use you to proclaim that liberty.
This has
to do with generosity (14:22-29; 15:4-11). Whether providing for those in ministry or for
those in poverty—a liberal hand is an indicator of a loving heart.
This has
to do with priority (15:19-23). God
demanded the first and the finest. Worship
that is content to give God the leftovers of our time, treasure and talent is a
pious fraud.
So, are
you ready for worship? The clock is
ticking. Don't keep God waiting!
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