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Xenos Adult Education




















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Servanthood
1
Understanding
Ministry
Mission and Function of the Church
Worship in the New Testament
Teaching Goals
To explain how worship
in the New Testament is different from worship in the Old Testament.
To motivate people
toward a lifestyle characterized by New Testament worship.
Introduction
It is common for churches to say that their first priority
is the worship of God. This usually means that the corporate worship
service on Sunday morning is the most important activity in which the
church engages. Often, that worship service is liturgical--characterized
by a set order of ritual, song, prayer, etc.
Is this what the
New Testament teaches about worship?
A closer examination
of the relevant biblical material affirms that worship is indeed the first
priority of the church, but the New Testament defines worship in a very
different way.
A Change in Sacrifices
Read 1 Peter 2:5. This verse (along
with vs. 9) teaches that all Christians are priests. Whereas in the Old
Testament, only select Levites had this privilege, every Christian now
has this privilege.
What do priests
do?
In the Old Testament period, their main function was to carry out
the worship of God through the offering of sacrifices. There were essentially
two different kinds of sacrifices: sin offerings, which were offered for
moral offenses, and thank offerings, which were offered to express gratitude
for God's goodness and blessing.
The New Testament
tells us that Jesus fulfilled the Old Testament sin offerings through
his death (Hebrews 9:11-14; 10:1-14); therefore, we need never make such
sacrifices to God again. But as Christians who have benefited from his
sacrifice, we have the privilege to express our gratitude to God for Christ's
work in many ways. Peter refers to this in 1 Peter 2:5 when he says that
we "offer up spiritual sacrifices to God." Peter does not specify
here what these sacrifices are, except that they are spiritual, not physical.
By studying other
passages in the New Testament, however, we discover several different
"sacrifices" by which the Christian may worship God. It is important
to note that no one way is viewed as more spiritual than the others; all
are important if we want to have full-orbed spiritual lives.
Ask the Group
Do you think we can go so far as to say that churches who practice
a liturgy are wrong on that point?
Different Ways to Worship
Offer God Your Whole Self:
"I urge you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present
your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, well-pleasing to God, which is
your spiritual service of worship." (Romans 12:1)
When an Israelite
had received a blessing from God, he could have a priest offer up an animal
as a "whole burnt offering" to show God his gratitude. God was
pleased by this costly sacrifice, and expressed this by calling it a "soothing
aroma." (see Leviticus 3:5,16)
Paul says that as
Christians, we have received the mercies of God through Christ's work
- a gift so fantastic that he spent the previous eleven chapters of this
letter describing it. How can we say "Thank you!" to God for
such a fantastic gift? Not by offering an animal, but by presenting to
God something much more precious--our very selves. We can "sign over
the title deed" of our lives and say "God, I want the rest of
my life and every part of my being to be one long expression of my gratitude
for the gift that you have given me."
We may think that
this sacrifice is not very great because we have so many problems and
faults, but God says that it is "holy" and "well-pleasing"
to him! Notice that according to Paul, this sacrifice is our "spiritual
service of worship."
The Greek word for
"service of worship" is the word from which we get the term
liturgy. Paul is saying that the elaborate worship service enacted by
the Old Testament priests no longer has a place in Christian worship;
it is now replaced by this very personal sacrifice.
Ask the Group
What are some lines of thinking which oppose a person's movement toward
offering his or her whole self to God?
- Offer God Your
Praise:
"Through Christ then, let us continually offer up a sacrifice
of praise to God, that is, the fruit of the lips that give thanks to
his name." (Hebrews 13:15)
-
- Here is another
spiritual sacrifice which pleases God--praising him and thanking him
for all that he is and all that he does for us. The practice of thankfulness
to God is stressed over and over again in the New Testament (see 1 Thessalonians
5:16-18; Colossians 3:15-17). Why is this? Does God need our gratitude
so that he can feel good about himself?
-
- Such a view obviously
does not befit the God of the Bible--he is the only being in the universe
who is completely self-existent and therefore needs nothing. We add
nothing to God by praising and thanking him. God is indeed pleased by
our gratitude, but the ones who benefit from this practice are us!
-
- As we choose (often
against our present feelings and circumstances) to recall God's blessings
and then to thank him for these, we are keeping ourselves properly aligned
with reality. Rather than buying into the lie that we are mistreated
and unfortunate, we are by faith asserting the truth--that we are fantastically
blessed beyond anything that we could ever deserve! In spite of our
rebellion against God which deserves his wrath, he has forgiven us,
adopted us into his family, guaranteed us eternal life, given us a significant
role in his purpose, indwelt us with his Spirit, provided us with Christian
friends-- and the list goes on and on.
-
- The author's emphasis
here is that we should worship God in this way "continually."
The idea that Christian worship takes place only (or especially) in
a corporate worship meeting is utterly foreign to this verse. Because
of Christ's payment for our sins, we have the privilege to draw near
to God and communicate to him in this way at any time: in the morning
when we wake up, on the way to work, during the busy day, when we are
together with other Christians, alone in our room, etc.
-
- It is wonderful
to praise God with other Christians in song (Ephesians 5:19), but this
should be only the "tip of the iceberg" of our thanks to God.
-
- Ask the Group
What do you think erodes thankfulness in Christians? What do you
think promotes thankfulness in Christians?
-
- Offer God Your
Material Resources:
"And let us not neglect doing good and sharing, for with such
sacrifices God is pleased." (Hebrews 13:16)
-
- The author touches
on two more ways in which we can worship God: doing good and sharing.
"Sharing" probably refers to the generous giving of our material
resources to God's people and God's work. This is explicitly identified
by Paul as a sacrifice which pleases God: "But I have received
(your money gift) in full, and have an abundance; I am amply supplied,
having received from Epaphroditus what you have sent, a fragrant aroma,
an acceptable sacrifice, well-pleasing to God." (Phillipians 4:18)
-
- Many Christians
regard giving financially to God in the same way that they pay their
taxes to the I.R.S. - they have to do it, and they look for ways to
give as little as possible. Paul's view is very different from this.
He says that giving is a privilege (2 Corinthians 8:4) and something
that we should do generously (2 Corinthians 9:6), as an expression of
our commitment to God (2 Corinthians 8:5).
-
- When we give our
money to God in this way by supporting our local church, other Christian
workers and ministries, and helping the needy, God regards this as an
expression of worship fully as spiritual as praising him. This is because
giving of our money represents a giving of ourselves, since money represents
the time and effort and creativity that we have invested in order to
gain it. Such giving is also an expression of our trust in God's faithfulness
to continue to meet our material needs--which Paul tells us God will
fully supply (Phillipians 4:19).
-
- Ask the Group
How can a Christian make the transition in his or her thinking from
the "I.R.S." outlook on giving to the "privilege"
outlook on giving?
- Offer God Your
Service to Others:
"And let us not neglect doing good and sharing, for with such
sacrifices God is pleased." (Hebrews 13:16)
-
- The other sacrifice
mentioned in this verse is "doing good." This phrase refers
to ministry--performing deeds of loving service to other people as representatives
of Christ. When we relate to the people God brings into our lives with
Christ-like, sacrificial love, God regards this as an expression of
our worship to him. " . . . walk in love, just as Christ loved
you, and gave himself up for us, an offering and a sacrifice as a fragrant
aroma."
-
- God is pleased
by this kind of life-style not only because he wants to love people
through us, but also because this demonstrates that we are living with
an attitude of trust in his love for us. We are motivated to love others
because we understand and believe in the love that God has for us (1
John 4:16-19).
-
- Every day, God
gives us dozens of creative opportunities to say "thank you!"
to him in this way-- serving our spouses, caring for our children, performing
deeds of service for those in need, showing and sharing the love of
Christ to our neighbors, those at work or school--the examples are endless.
-
- We also have the
special privilege of worshiping God through the exercise of our spiritual
gifts. Paul speaks of his own apostolic ministry in this way: "
. . . because of the grace that was given to me from God, to be a minister
of Christ Jesus to the Gentiles, ministering as a priest the gospel
of God, that my offering of the Gentiles might become acceptable, sanctified
by the Holy Spirit." (Romans 15:15,16)
-
- After urging us
to present our lives to God as an act of worship in Romans 12:1, Paul
goes on to urge us to express that worship through the use of our spiritual
gifts (vs. 6-8). As we discover our spiritual gifts and exercise them
regularly in the service of others, and give God praise for the fruit
of this ministry, we discover a form of worship that is uniquely satisfying!
-
- Ask the Group
What differences do you think it would make for you when facing
situations (mentioned in the previous sentence) that you consciously
thought about serving the Lord himself via serving this person?
-
- (Responses might
include: less fear, more boldness, more respect, more energy and resolve,
deeper care about what you're doing, etc.)
Discussion Questions
What if we emphasize one form of worship to the virtual exclusion
of another? Consider the different mixes of exclusions, the possible motives
behind each mix, and the possible outcomes of each.
Prior to this study,
which of these forms of worship did you understand the least and why?
Which do you think is your strongest/weakest? Why?
Conclusion
It should be clear from this study that worship in the New
Testament is a lifestyle made up of many kinds of activity, not
necessarily a corporate meeting.
Why is this so
important? When Christians view worship as the most important priority
(which is correct) but have a superficial view of what worship is, the
result is often a superficial and dichotomized Christian life. Such Christians
are faithfully committed to attending the Sunday worship service, but
because they view that as the essence of worship, fail to develop a lifestyle
of whole- hearted commitment to God, thankfulness, financial stewardship
and ministry. God is more pleased and we are more fulfilled when we develop
lifestyles characterized by the full-orbed worship described in the New
Testament.
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