Worship: A Foretaste of Heaven
By Kyle Pope
One of the greatest blessings and privileges which God has offered
to man in His scheme of redemption revealed in the gospel, is the opportunity
to worship Him. To imagine that the God of all creation allows such frail and
faltering creatures to come before His presence is a gift which we often fail
to appreciate.
The
Meaning of Worship
We can learn a great
deal about what “worship” is by considering the many references to worship
offered in the New Testament. It is not unusual in scripture to find a
worshipper described as falling on his face at the feet of the one being
worshipped (See Matthew 4:9; 28:9; Acts 10:25. 1 Corinthians 14:25; Revelation
3:9 & 11:16). Though we may not imagine worship as something requiring such
humiliation the word most often translated “worship” (proskuneo) was
used “To designate the custom of prostrating oneself before a person and
kissing his feet” (A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testamnet and other
Early Christian Literature, Bauer, Arndt & Gingrich 716). One scholar
adds that the implication is “To kiss, like a dog licking his master’s hand”
(Strong. no. 4352). Worship to God is something that demands recognition of the
Lord’s presence with a humble submission to His will.
While it is true that
Christians offer worship in every act of obedience (Romans 12:1), and God is
with them at all times (Matthew 28:20) the reality of God’s presence is somehow
much more apparent to us in acts of collective worship. The Bible tells us that
worship as it should be will cause the sinner after “falling down on his
face” at the uncovering of his heart’s secret sins to “worship God and
report that God is truly among you” (1 Corinthians 14:25 NKJV). Is the Lord’s
presence in the Christian assembly any greater than His presence in our private
lives? Or, is it simply more real to us when we come together and see Christ
living in others?
Spiritual
Worship
Worship must be a
spiritual exercise (John 4:24). A spiritual endeavor is not something purely
emotional nor purely intellectual. It is instead something that develops the
spiritual side of our nature. The Holy Spirit points out to us that, “The
spirit of a man will sustain him in sickness” (Proverbs 18:14). When we sow
to the spiritual side of our being we will not only develop that which can
sustain us through trial but lead us to eternal life (Galatians 6:8). We must
look to our times of worship as feasts upon spiritual sustenance. In the
assembly we are neither self-serving nor deprived but given the opportunity to
fill others as we ourselves are filled.
In the assembly we
can grow spiritually by witnessing other disciples imitating the Master. Though
we must never revere men as we revere God, we can often see God in the lives of
other Christians. As a people seeking conformity to Christ’s image, our goal
must be to, “walk just as He walked” (1 John 2:6). When our brethren
succeed to a degree in this goal, Scripture teaches us to follow such behavior
to the degree that it conforms to the Lord’s pattern. Paul taught, “Imitate
me, just as I also imitate Christ” (1 Corinthians 11:1).
A
Glimpse of the Other Side
David wrote, “Behold,
how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity!”
(Psalms 133:1). Not only does worship help us to see God in the lives of
brethren but it also gives us a taste of eternity. When brethren live in love
and peace as they should we can experience as in no other relationship (except
perhaps the family) a life free from competition, greed, malice, and
selfishness. In this world we find no times in which those united by a common
goal work for the good of all as can be seen in the peace and love demonstrated
in the Lord’s church. We must, therefore, work to make certain our communion
demonstrates this love lest we offer discouragement to each other.
I don’t know how many
times in worship assemblies the thought has passed through my mind that if I
could only be with brethren in worship constantly I could endure any trial or
temptation. While that is somewhat of an idealized aspiration, unrealistic in
this age, the hope is as it should be. One day that will be the condition of
the saved—throughout all eternity, united in fellowship with all others in
fellowship with God, in a place where, “There shall by no means enter it
anything that defiles, or causes an abomination or a lie but only those who are
written in the Lamb’s Book of Life” (Revelation 21:27). Let us all seek
that future home and strive to make our worship now, like the tabernacle of old
a, “Copy and shadow of the heavenly things” (Hebrews 8:5).