Jesus made the sick well, restored wholeness to
lepers and brought them back into society, gave hearing to the deaf, sight to
the blind, speech to the dumb, provided food for the hungry, and brought dead
people back from the grave to their broken-hearted loved ones. All of this was amazing, wonderful and
good. Who could deny God was at work in
amazing ways? Who could possibly resent
all of this supernatural kindness, these powerful good deeds? Who could possibly feel anything but pleasure
at the blessing on so many who had suffered so long and so terribly until Jesus
lifted them up?
This Sunday’s text from John 11 gives
us the ugly answer to these questions.
The Jewish religious teachers and leaders, the very ones responsible for
shepherding the people, the very ones who should have recognized Jesus as the
Messiah, resented Jesus and were determined to be rid of him. John shows us not only their resolve the kill
Jesus, but also the reason for their plot.
Those reasons are completely self-centered. Their prominent position, their political
power, their determination to maintain the status quo, all these were
threatened by Christ. Their love for
these things – their love for themselves – is greater than their love for
God.
These self-serving religious leaders would have fit in
well in our self-promoting culture. Earlier
this week Pastor Jason posted a blog by Stephen Miller entitled Worship
in a Selfie World.
It is an excellent consideration for each of us as we prepare to gather
for worship this Sunday.
Wow. God really met with us in worship tonight. The room was
just so full of his presence. One of the most intense times of worship I have
ever experienced.
This caption came across my Instagram notifications a few weeks
back.
I was curious to see the photo this student had taken to
commemorate his experience. I never
would have expected a picture of a young man standing in front of a mirror in
his bathroom with a bewildered smirk on his face.
Yet there he was, a duck-faced teenager staring at his bathroom
mirror, smart phone in hand. What this had to do with how much he loved
worshiping Jesus was a mystery to me.
This Is Our World
This is the world in which we live, the world of the selfie. The
world where people take something that is not about them and make it about them
through the lens of their camera.
Grown men pose with their best “Blue Steel” smolder while the
tip of Paris’s breath-taking Eiffel Tower protrudes from the side of their
heads like a tiny, awkwardly placed steel horn.
Teenage girls attempt their cutest look while a singular stone
column of Rome’s ancient, awe-inspiring Colosseum is barely visible in the
background.
We are not seeing the world through their eyes so much as seeing
their eyes blocking the world.
Maybe I am alone here, but I would much rather see a picture of
Niagara Falls than a face obstructing my view of it. Niagara Falls is not about
us. It is majestic. It demands the full frame for viewers to feel even just a
little taste of the awe of something grander than themselves.
Selfie-Type Worship
This is exactly what we are doing when we attempt to make
corporate worship about us. Our sinful hearts want to fill up the frame of
God’s glory with our faces. Our flesh wants to distract us from the infinite
worth of a holy God who has invited us into his presence to behold him and be
made like him.
This selfie type of worship constantly tries to infiltrate our
churches, causing us to value sentiment over substance, emotional hype over
emotional health, or musical preference over meaningful proclamation.
When the content of our songs and prayers are saturated with
me-centered themes and thoughts, we are buying into the lie that worship is
about us. To be sure, our faces are in the frame, but they are a speck of sand
on the beach of a vast ocean of beauty and holiness. To focus on the speck
would be silly, if not outright madness.
God-Focused Worship
When we gather for corporate worship, we are ascribing worth to
the only worthy one, and lifting him to the place where he alone belongs, on
the throne of our hearts.
As we do this, he is with us in a very real way. This is not a
hypothetical situation — God is with us. There is no greater privilege on earth
for the redeemed and adopted family of God than getting to stand in the
presence of God and worship him in Spirit and truth through his Son.
In doing so, we are building up and encouraging one another,
reminding our own hearts of who God is and what he has done, and proclaiming it
to a world that desperately needs to see him for who he is.
This is neither done by singing about ourselves, nor obsessing
over our preferential feelings.
He Must Increase
If we are going to learn to worship in a selfie world, we must
continually look beyond our musical preferences, sentimental nostalgia, and
contextual idealism, in order to gaze with wonder and awe at the character and
acts of our mighty King and Savior.
We must saturate our services and songs with his word and wonder
at his wisdom, will, wealth, works, and ways. He is the God who created planets
and stars, and he holds them all in his hands. He made electrons and protons,
atoms and elements, gravity and inertia. Everything that has been made was made
by him and through him, and before any of its foundation was laid, he chose to
redeem and adopt us in Christ. This is too massive to be minimized with
me-centeredness.
May we all resist the temptation to fill the frame with our
face, but rather fill our minds with his eternal glory, and never stop
repeating the refrain of John
3:30:
“He must increase. I must decrease.”
“He must increase. I must decrease.”
“He must increase. I must decrease.”
(http://www.desiringgod.org/blog/posts/worship-in-a-selfie-world)
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