People come to a worship service on weekends for all kinds of reasons. Some come from habit or loyalty or guilt or gratitude. Some come to connect with other human beings. Some come because of the music or sermons. Some may even come to be entertained.
In the modern church's quest to "get people to church" the bigger question remains about ways to "get people to worship." Chances are we can get people to come to church for one reason or another. Yet if we seek to find ways to get people to worship, we cannot manufacture such an experience.
The tension between getting people to church and getting people to worship can lead to role reversals in the practice of worship where human beings somehow become the subject and God becomes the object of worship. And so people became shoppers for religious goods and services. People become the Ebert and Roepert of the theater of worship where sermons and prayers and songs are subject to thumbs up or thumbs down depending on the critics choice.
Which begs a question: For whom is worship? Who is worship for?
Soren Kierkegaard, the Danish philosopher, brought a healthy corrrective when he he wrote an essay that explained the difference between how many of us tend to worship and how we ought to worship God. Kierkegaard said that many people think of the congregation as the audience with the pastor, worship leaders, and choir as the performers.
However, from the Bible's point of view God is the audience in worship, and the people in the congregation are the performers--singing, praying, listening intently as the Word is read and proclaimed, and giving back to the Lord in offering and praise. The pastor, worship leaders, or musicians are merely prompters to the actors on stage, which is every one who shows up for a worship service! Worship is literally and liturgically "the work of the people."
Therefore, when we leave worship, we should not ask, "How good was the sermon?" or "How good was the music?" Rather, we should ask, "How good was I, Lord?"
Each of us plays to an audience of One in worship. The actions and words of worship provide the script for our various parts.
- In what ways do you relate to this way of seeing worship?
- Why do you come to worship?
- Why don't you come to worship?