LaMar Boschman's article brings us back to the basics of our purpose as worship leaders. Check it out ...
Worship That Makes Your Socks Go Up and Down
By Worship Leader | Categories: Current Issue, Featured,
Magazine
1-wonder
By LaMar Boschman
I remember when I first started to teach about worship and
worship leading in the 70’s. It was a new concept and met with some resistance
but then suddenly gained momentum and acceptance. I have seen worship go from
song leading to worship leading from piano and organ to worship team. In the
last forty years there have been many changes in worship across all
denominational and cultural lines. I am thankful to the Lord for all of it.
However we must remind ourselves in the age of the new and the cool, that there
are elements of worship that are non-negotiable and fundamental no matter what
the musical style or liturgy we enjoy.
Today we think success in worship is guaranteed when we
follow certain steps. So we put together a song list like they told us at the
latest worship conference. Meticulously rehearse the songs and on the time
appointed to worship we play down the list prompting the congregation with
cues, that sound more like a drill sergeant than a shepherd, and we think we
have worshiped but probably only sang karaoke. The latest technique and
technology, mechanics and music can assist worship but are not, of themselves,
worship.
Worship happens in the realm of the heart and the spiritual.
It must have elements of the mystery and wonder of the Only Holy. Have we
become victims of definitions, analyses, categories, methods and procedures?
The church used to live on the dangerous edge of the miraculous, but now we
live in the safe fences of our explanations, definitions and produced worship
services and we hesitate to venture out to where the bushes are burning and men
lay prostrate before the transcendent glory of God.
The word wonder is associated with amazement and surprise.
When was the last time you had surprise in your church service? What about
astonishment, bewilderment, awe and fascination? Wonder is not a casual emotion
or shallow excitement. It has substance and takes your breath away. It
overwhelms you with a mixture of gratitude and love, adoration and reverence.
It might interrupt our plans we had. Tears may flow. Are you open for the
spontaneous or a detour when His presence comes?
When we get off the road of the explained and the contained,
and get lost in the forest of His greatness, then transcendent worship can
begin. Wonder makes you look up and at times overwhelm you. Yet wonder is born
in knowledge – knowledge of God. If we want to achieve wondrous worship, we
must exhort, teach and lead worship at a higher level. But when we lift up
Jesus, the Father or the Holy Spirit and preach the attributes of the nature of
God, a worship experience takes place that transcends the average and mundane.
Some may even lift their faces and hands to heaven others may bow their heads
in holy silence dropping tears on their Bibles.
How do we bring wonder into our worship?
1. Wonder comes when we preach and sing more of Him, His
attributes, His character, His nature, His greatness and grandeur, His mystery
and majesty. Then worshipers will be caught up in the wonder of His holiness.
For worship is more than singing a song list, or performing what we practiced.
Worship is spiritual, mysterious and “out of this world.”
Once your congregation has tapped into the wonder of God,
you can’t keep them back. They may sing outside of the arrangement and sing
lyrics not on the screen. When the prayer ends, they may not because that is
what worshippers do who have seen the Lord high and lifted up.
2. Choose songs that help worshipers to see the invisible,
to know the unknowable, to comprehend the incomprehensible, and experience the
eternal. Moses saw the glory and power of God on Sinai. Ezekiel saw the glory
of the Lord standing upright. Isaiah heard the singing seraphs before the
throne. Daniel saw the courts of heaven and the great ancient of days seated as
Judge. The disciples heard a sound from heaven and saw flames of fire on top of
heads of the intercessors gathered in prayer. John saw the throne and angels,
elders and aliens, all singing in worship. Our worship may be excellent and
musically engaging, but is it potently spiritual and full of mystery?
3. Remember with respect the Christ event! Jesus is the lamb
slain, who died and was buried, who rose again and sits at the right hand of
His Majesty on high. He is the center of heaven’s worship and so should be the
center of yours. Sing those songs, pray those prayers, and preach those
messages on the street and in the sanctuary. Worship will occur, and heaven and
earth will kiss in that place. It will bring invite His power and presence. And
worship as usual – form without force and liturgy without life—will give way to
the joy and excitement of the Wondrous. What do you think about the role of
wonder in worship?
LaMar Boschman, Author, adjunct teacher Theology of
Music/Worship at King’s University at Gateway, Equip teacher at Gateway Church
(Southlake, TX), a pioneer of contemporary worship. LaMarBoschman.com