Is all worship equally precious to God?
That question
challenges me quite a lot. They stretch me. And I think I see a trap
in it.
It seems to me that
worship from a broken place might be more precious, as it costs us
more.
It’s pretty easy,
when God has just healed your daughter from cancer, to respond in
worship toward the God who just restored the love of your life to
you. In fact, sometimes it’s hard for believers to not
worship God in those circumstances.
And that worship is
precious to God.
But worship doesn’t
come as naturally, as easily, when you’ve missed your rent payment
again, when your family rejects you, when your favorite grandmother
just died. Scripture talks about “a sacrifice of praise” [Hebrews
13:15]. One reason that Job is among my heroes is because when he got
the news about the death of his children and the theft of his
fortune, “he fell to the ground in worship” [Job 1:20].
Worship in these
circumstances is more costly to us.
I find that worship
in those circumstances is more precious in me as well, from two
perspectives.
First, in times of
disappointment and failure, my soul is more vulnerable, more pliable,
more raw. When I come before God in worship in those times, I am more
effectively conformed to his image, and I receive more of his comfort
and provision (though I may not recognize that until later).
Second, when I
observe you worshipping
passionately in the midst of your trials,
that ignites something in me
in response. Sometimes it’s igniting worship in me, sometimes
gratitude or joy.
Watching
someone worshipping in the midst of blessing and gratitude is cool
too. But when you are worshipping God purposefully in those times,
your worship has a more powerful effect on me, and therefore is more
precious to me.
Is
it more precious to God? That’s
a tough one. Since Scripture doesn’t seem to answer that question,
I figure I maybe shouldn’t answer for him where he’s chosen not
to answer.
However,
a good number of people believe that yes, God does appreciate worship
more when it comes out of difficult trials.
Now
here’s where the trap comes.
If
I believe that my worship is more meaningful to God when it comes
from trials, then I might be tempted to go looking for trials in
order to “level up” the value of their worship before God. And
there are all kinds of problems with that.
○
I’ve known people who believed this, and tried to walk it out.
Their lives were messed up. They intentionally chose physically
demanding jobs, they wouldn’t let anyone help them so as to not
“lose their reward.” They had no joy, no friends, and no fruit in
their lives. These were miserable people.
○ In
some religious movements, this has been elevated to a virtue, an art
form. Self-flagellation –
whether literal or metaphorical – is always popular. And it’s the
metaphorical kind that’s the worst trouble. We all know people who
regularly say sad and evil things about themselves (“I deserve
this” for example). Many of them will defend these beliefs at some
level.
○
The worst of it may be the worship of Molech, which we see in the Old
Testament, and which continues even today. One of the more detestable
things that evil people in the Old Testament did was to sacrifice
their children [1Kings 3:27, Ezekiel 20:31].
I
was reflecting on this the other day: Why would these people kill
their kids? How could they be
so deceived as to think that this was a good thing?
I
could feel Father’s sadness as I brought the questions up. He
pointed out that these people are badly deceived: it’s not really
God that they’re worshipping, though they may or may not know it.
But they believe that in sacrificing that which is most precious to
them – bone of their bone – that they will be more pleasing to
God or gods, or that they will gain more power.
In
reality, those child sacrifices are acts of worship to demons,
inspired by demons, and used by demons to control the people. That’s
not all that hard to see from our viewpoint as twenty-first century
Christians. We can see it where they could not.
And
then it dawned on me: it is, all of it, in greater or lesser measure,
and whether we intend it to be or not, it is all worship at a false
altar. (I can’t bring myself to say, “It’s all worship of
demons, in one measure or another,” even though that’s what I
think I mean: that’s just too harsh.)
Let
me say it more delicately, and I’m going to cut to the chase, here:
any time we hold up our
sacrifice, our works, as making us more pleasing to God, we’ve
missed the heart of Jesus. In that moment that we believe (whether
with words or not) that “I deserve this,” or that “My sacrifice
will make me more pleasing to God,” we have taken our eyes off of
Jesus, and put them on a false god of one sort or another.
Summary:
Worshipping God in the midst of trials and loss is a beautiful thing.
It’s good for you, it inspires people around you, it draws you
closer to God and to his provision for you.
It
is possible, whether blatantly (as with Molech) or subtly (with our
attitudes) to carry that “beautiful thing” to a very ugly extreme
and to rob it of all its beauty.
At
the same time, it is also possible to be overly aware of
the dangers of the ugly extreme, and shy away from worshipping God in
difficulty or uncertainty, out of fear of making that mistake.
Reacting
out of fear is never a healthy thing, is it? And taking things to
extremes is so often such a mistake, isn’t it?
I’m
reminded again of the wisdom of “fixing our eyes on Jesus, the
pioneer and perfecter of faith.”
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