Jesus taught that the first and greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind (Matthew 22:36-40).
Our readings today show us some of the ways in which we can do that.
In Revelation 4 we read that “whenever the living creatures give glory and honour and thanks to the one who is seated on the throne, who lives for ever and ever, the twenty-four elders fall before the one who is seated on the throne and worship the one who lives for ever and ever; they cast their crowns before the throne, singing,
‘You are worthy, our Lord and God,
to receive glory and honour and power,
for you created all things,
and by your will they existed and were created.’
This picture of worship in heaven shows us everything that exists kneeling before God. “The Hebrews regarded the knees as a symbol of strength, to bend the knee is, therefore, to bend our strength before the living God, an acknowledgment of the fact that all that we are we receive from Him. In important passages of the Old Testament, this gesture appears as an expression of worship.”
The word worship comes from an Old English word, worthship, and it literally means “to give something worth—to demonstratively attribute value, especially to a deity or god." (Zach Neese, How to Worship a King). Worship is putting the value you hold for something on display. Just like a groom saves up money to buy his future bride an engagement ring, worship says "you are worth this sacrifice." When we worship God, we demonstrate how important He is to us and bending our knees before the living God in acknowledgment that all that we are we receive from Him is one of the ways in which we can do so.
As believers, however, there are so many ways to worship God. We can worship God through song, as we see happening in Revelation 4 and as Psalm 150 encourages us to do. Psalm 150 ends by saying, “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord” and demonstrates that by encouraging us to use a great array of instruments – as many as we can – in worshipping him:
Praise him with the sounding of the trumpet,
praise him with the harp and lyre,
praise him with timbrel and dancing,
praise him with the strings and pipe,
praise him with the clash of cymbals,
praise him with resounding cymbals.
“But we can't stop there. Worship is much more than a song; it's a lifestyle. Giving our time is worship, whether it's serving in church or out in the community. Being generous with our finances is worship. Obeying the Holy Spirit’s prompting is worship. Choosing Jesus even when we don't feel like it is worship. It’s all worship.”
Our Gospel reading (Luke 19.11-27) encourages us to use our gifts and talents in God’s service as an act of worship. In the story of the Ten Pounds, what is criticised by Jesus is sitting on our gift and doing nothing with it. In the story the person who fails wraps the pound in a cloth and does nothing with it in order to give it back to the master safe and sound. Doing nothing with our gifts, even if our intent is that we don’t damage or harm our gifts is not good enough, is not worship. Instead, they are to be used, even if we make mistakes in doing so. In the story ten slaves are given ten pounds. Then, we hear what has been done with their gifts by three of the slaves. Two have made more money from their pound and one has kept theirs. What happened with the other seven? We don’t know. It may be that they lost money through their activity but at least they tried, unlike the slave who did nothing. The outcome of our activity is not as important as the attempt. In trying to make use of our gifts we are honouring the one who gives them to us, while by choosing not to use them, we are not.
St Paul wrote that we are to be “a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God” as that is our “true and proper worship” (Romans 12.1-3). We can do so as we sing, as we kneel, as we acknowledge God as the giver of all we have, and as we use the gifts he has given in his service. In these ways, we are loving the Lord our God with all our heart and with all our soul and with all our mind. May it be so for each one of us. Amen.
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Martin Smith - Joy (What The World Calls Foolish).
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