Praise the
Lord!
Praise God in his sanctuary;
praise him in his mighty firmament![a]
2 Praise him for his mighty deeds;
praise him according to his surpassing greatness!
Praise God in his sanctuary;
praise him in his mighty firmament![a]
2 Praise him for his mighty deeds;
praise him according to his surpassing greatness!
3 Praise him
with trumpet sound;
praise him with lute and harp!
4 Praise him with tambourine and dance;
praise him with strings and pipe!
5 Praise him with clanging cymbals;
praise him with loud clashing cymbals!
6 Let everything that breathes praise the Lord!
Praise the Lord!
praise him with lute and harp!
4 Praise him with tambourine and dance;
praise him with strings and pipe!
5 Praise him with clanging cymbals;
praise him with loud clashing cymbals!
6 Let everything that breathes praise the Lord!
Praise the Lord!
Ashley and I included a
stop at the Grand Canyon on our fall vacation last year. Neither one of us had been before. We drove into the park through the east gate
and stopped at the first observation point.
We parked the car, hurriedly walked down the path without stopping at
the bathroom first – that tells you how eager my wife was to see the canyon –
and crowded into a spot at the overlook with a few hundred of our closest
friends, and we said the same first words of everyone who views the canyon for
the first time: “Wow.”
We lingered for awhile,
drove to the next overlook, parked, walked up to the edge, and said,
“Wow.” We repeated that pattern for the
next two hours as we made our way toward the hub of the park and our
hotel. That evening, we ran through the
village to crowd onto the last bus that would take us to points further west
where we could catch the sunset over the canyon, and can you guess what we and
hundreds of other folks said as the sun set and painted a continually-changing
beautiful picture in front of us? “Wow.”
The next morning, we were
up early to watch the sunrise – just like watching the sunset, but from the
other direction and in reverse order, right?
I’ve seen the sunrise in beautiful places before, I had an idea what to
expect, shouldn’t have been too surprised by what we saw, but do you know what
I said as the sun rose that morning?
“Wow.”
There were also people
there who seemed less-than-impressed.
People who walked up to the edge, snapped a few pictures, and hopped
back in the car to drive to Las Vegas or Phoenix or Albuquerque or wherever
they were headed next. Families who
complained about how expensive everything was, children who weren’t sure what
their parents were so excited about, saying, “What’s the big deal? It’s just a big hole-in-the-ground?”
Beauty is in the eye of
the beholder. But for those with eyes to
see, it will make you keep saying, “Wow.”
And I don’t know about you, but when I see something beautiful, something
that takes my breath away, something that makes me say, “Wow,” I just don’t
want to take my eyes off of it. We spent
about 24 hours at the Grand Canyon, not a ton of time, but every moment, would
you like to guess which way my head was pointed and what had my attention? I was looking at that big hole in the ground,
that thing that kept making me say, “Wow.”
What if God held our
attention in the same way? What if,
every available moment, our senses were drinking in the love and grace and
holiness and majesty of God? What if, we
couldn’t take our eyes off of God, couldn’t even if we wanted to, what if God
was constantly revealing some new facet of God’s self to us that we were
constantly saying, “Wow?”
In today’s Scripture
reading, the Psalmist says, “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.” Does everyone here have breath? I hope so!
You may want to check the person next to you – everyone here still
breathing? Let everything that has
breath praise the Lord. If you’ve got
breath, praise the Lord!
That word, “let,” is a
funny little word. Sometimes we use it
like we’re giving permission for something, or allowing something. “I’m gonna let you go swimming” or “I’m gonna
let you go to your friends’ house.”
But there’s another we use
that word, “let,” not so much giving permission, but giving a command. At my house, that sounds like Ashley telling
me, “I’m gonna let you clean up the kitchen,” or “I’m gonna let you take out
the trash.” In reality, is she saying,
“I allow you to do this,” or is she really saying, “I’m telling you to do
this”?
In the same way, when the
Psalmist says, “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord,” it’s not that
we are being given permission to
praise God, but being told, commanded, expected
to praise God! Do you have breath? Yes, I do!
Good! Then, as a person of faith,
use that breath to praise God.
The problem is that many
times we use our breath to do things other than praising God. Ever used your breath to say things that were
quite the opposite of glorifying God?
Ever found your breath filled with gossip rather than worship, or with
giving grief to others rather than giving glory to God?
Today, the Scripture
reminds us to use our breath, which is itself a gift from God, to glorify the
God who gave us breath in the first place.
But, how should we praise God? The
Psalm says to praise God with all the instruments available at our disposal –
with the blast of the ram’s horn – maybe that’s a trumpet. Praise God with the lute and lyre – a guitar
and a harp, perhaps? Praise God with
drum and dance – just don’t tell our Baptist friends that we’re dancing, I
suppose! Praise God with strings and
pipe – sounds like an orchestra and an organ.
Praise God with loud clashing cymbals – in other words, expect worship
to be loud! Use every instrument at your
disposal to glorify God.
Too often, however, we approach
worship with our personal tastes, preferences, and sensibilities higher on the
list than glorifying God. We pick the
instrument on that list that matches our own preference, and we begin to praise
it rather than seeing all of it as an appropriate vehicle to praise God. Too often, we use our breath to praise the
organ or praise the guitar. Praise the
choir, or praise the band. Praise the
early service, praise the late service.
Praise what I like, praise what suits me best, praise what I most
prefer. It’s too easy to fall into
praising those things, instead of recognizing that we praise God through those things.
We come to worship, a time
to focus solely on God, and our first words are about ourselves. I like, I
prefer, I want. Nothing wrong with
having or expressing a preference, but the word of caution is that we can
worship our personal preferences rather than worshiping God.
We sing "mi mi
mi" to warm up our voices, but too often "me me me" becomes the
theme in much of our worship. We come to worship as consumers, ready to absorb
and receive and evaluate based on our personal fickle preferences.
It's not that worship
shouldn't touch us or move us or speak to us in some way. Worship is very much
a conversation - we offer praise to God and God offers something of his love
and grace back to us. What God offers us may look a little different from week
to week - encouragement, inspiration, comfort, challenge, instruction. What God
says to us at any given time may well make us glad, or sad, or mad, but at the
end of the day, worship must be focused more on God than on ourselves. Worship is not about me, me, me. It’s about God, God, God! We are not the audience in worship. God is.
When we make worship
primarily about ourselves, in terms of style and taste and preference, we miss
both the opportunity to glorify God, and to hear God speaking to us in
unexpected ways and places. I’ve
participated in worship in various places in a variety of styles that run the
gamut, some of it very familiar, some of it brand new and strange. I’ve attended worship in languages I didn’t
understand, and worship conducted in English where I didn’t have a clue what
they were talking about. Some of it I
liked more than others, but in every instance, when I was able to discern that
a genuine offering of praise was being offered to God, well, then that was
worship. As long as God is at the
center, regardless of the style, regardless of whether or not I “like” it, I’m
pretty much good to go.
Those of us who lead in
worship - pastors and musicians and choirs and any one else who contributes and
leads in some way, we are not here to perform and entertain. My hope is that you walk away, not thinking
about what a good sermon or not-so-good sermon it was, or what a good preacher
or not-so-good preacher I am. My hope is
that you walk away having seen more of God than you have seen of me. Likewise, if the choir or our musician plays
a piece and you glory in how great they are rather than in how great God is,
then it may have been a wonderful performance, but as an act of worship, it has
failed.
I say that even with my
friends in the quartet sitting right here. They are talented. They are gifted.
They got up early this morning, drove up from Charlotte, are singing two
services today, and then driving back to Charlotte this afternoon. But, they didn't drive up here to perform for
us, they are offering their gifts to God as an act of worship. They aren't
performing for us, they are leading us in worship in their own unique God-given
way. If we walk away today praising them, while stopping short of praising the
God who gave them their gifts, then everything they've done today will have
been for nothing.
Whether you are up front
or sitting in the seats, don't come to worship for yourself. Come for God. Don't come to worship as a consumer. Don't
come as a spectator, don't come as a passive recipient, don't come with your
list of likes and dislikes and preferences.
We don't come to evaluate;
we come to participate. Say that with me. We don't come to evaluate; we come to
participate. Let everything that has breath praise the Lord. Come to use
whatever breath you've got to praise God. It doesn't matter whether you've got
a great big and flashy breath like some of the people in our choir, or a little
off-beat can't carry a tune in a bucket breath - whatever breath you've got,
use it to give glory and honor and praise to God.
The Westminster Catechism
says “the chief end of [human]kind is to glorify God and enjoy [God] forever.” When we give ourselves to the worship of God,
using all our life and breath in praising the one who gave us breath, we
fulfill the chief and most basic purpose with which we were made. Some have described the human heart as having
a God-shaped hole within it – when we worship as Psalm 150 invites us to do, we
fill the hole with God.
When Jesus was asked about
the Greatest Commandment, he summarized it as “loving God and loving our
neighbor.” Those two go together. They are inseparable. But how
he told us to love God is so important – he said to love the Lord our God with all our heart and all our soul and all our
mind. All our life, all our breath
– not part of our breath, not dividing our breath, giving glory with this
breath and grief with the next, dividing our breath between worship and gossip
– no, let everything that has breath use all of their breath to praise the
Lord.
We’re invited into a
lifestyle of constant worship, and if we’ve used all our breath to glorify God,
then there won’t be any left over for less-than-godly pursuits. If we love and glorify God with everything we
have, then that love spills over into everything else. When our faculties are dedicated solely to
God, they cannot be co-opted for anything less.
Praise the Lord!
If you come to worship as
a critic, you can always find something to criticize. If you come to worship as a consumer, you can
always find something that met your needs and something that didn’t. Worship can be very much like standing next
to the Grand Canyon. One person can be
standing there saying, “Wow,” and another person may be asking, “What’s the big
deal?” or “How much longer ‘til we’re outta here?” Beauty is very much in the eye of the
beholder, and what we put in will have a tremendous impact on what we get out.
So, don’t come to
complain; come to contribute! Don't come
to give grief; come to give glory! Don’t
come to gossip, come to worship! We don’t
come to evaluate. We come to
participate. Come to join your breath
with others in giving glory to God.
Friends, as we give glory
to God, God gives grace to us. And that
grace changes us. Makes us better
disciples. More like Jesus. More transformed into the image and likeness
of the God who first placed breath within us.
That’s enough to make each
one of us say, “Wow.” Wow, God. Wow, God, for who you are, and Wow, God, for
what you’re still doing in me. Wow.
Don't come to evaluate.
Come to participate. Come to give glory to God.
Let’s all resist the temptation to make worship about, “me, me, me,” and
let it be about “God, God, God.”
Let everything that has
breath praise the Lord. Praise the Lord!