Why do we keep singing together?<\/a><\/p>\n
Robert Webber states that “The first act of worship is to assemble the people. This is no mere human act lacking in theological<\/a> significance.\u00a0 Rather, it is an act of divine initiative through which God calls the people to gather and in which the worshiping community is actualized.”[ref]Robert E. Webber, Worship Old & New <\/em>(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), 153.[\/ref]<\/p>\n
It is important to understand that worship is not in itself assembling. The act of assembling does not mean that worship has or will take place. Nor is worship singing in itself. Many songs are sung that do not give worship to God. In his book Exploring the Worship Spectrum<\/em><\/a>, Basden argues that \u201cThere is no ideal definition of worship. No one has defined worship so completely as to plumb the depths of this divine-human encounter.\u201d[ref]Paul A Basden, Exploring the Worship Spectrum<\/em> (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2004), 13, Kindle Edition.[\/ref]<\/p>\n
[bctt tweet=”Worship is a gift God gives man to relate to Him. – Richard Palmer”]<\/p>\n
Our worship is a response to God\u2019s initiatives and redemptive<\/a> actions. Assembling for such a purpose is also a divine initiative. It was God who called His people together for worship. We see God miraculously rescuing His people from Egypt. He gave Moses the message to Pharaoh to let His people go so they could worship Him. Upon exiting Egypt, we see God gathering His people for worship at Mount Sinai. Webber argues that the act of God gathering His people is a consistent theme of worship. A call from God to worship is a pre-requisite of true worship.[ref]Robert E. Webber, Worship Old & New <\/em>(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), 21.[\/ref] Thus, God is the Great Assembler, the Gatherer.<\/p>\n
Gathering for worship is an obedient response<\/a> to God. As such, God has always provided a place for His people to gather for the purpose of worship: the foot of Mount Sinai, the Tabernacle, the Temple, the Synagogues, and now the church. It is well then that the book of Hebrews encourages us not to forsake the assembling of ourselves together (Hebrews 10:25).<\/p>\n
Interestingly, the Bible does not define what acts of worship should look and sound like when we gather. Worship, therefore, has evolved over the different historical time periods<\/a>. It also looks different from region to region and culture to culture. Though worship has changed throughout the ages two of the elements that have remained constant are: gathering together and the use of singing in worship. Our voice is the first and most basic musical instrument God has given us. We do not need any created instrument to make music for God.\u00a0 One person can make such a beautiful sound with their voice that it can reach past the ear of the hearer and touch the heart and the soul.<\/p>\n
It is commonly accepted that the Bible does not provide a concise definition of worship or a specific mode of worship. However, there is solid theological foundation to argue that there are some elements of worship that we can reasonably say are divinely ordained by God.<\/p>\n
We see in the Old Testament an example of how particular God was with His instructions to the Israelites on how to keep the Passover. In the New Testament the book of Hebrews tells us not to forsake gathering as a church. Throughout the New Testament, we see many examples of corporate worship from Jesus making it His habit to go into the synagogue on the Sabbath to Peter and John going to the temple to pray, to Paul and the Apostles doing the same.<\/p>\n
[bctt tweet=”Corporate worship is a spiritual exercise & a call to obedience. – Richard Palmer”]<\/p>\n
The assembly of God\u2019s people for the purpose of worship is timeless and never loses relevance. It is not a generational or cultural practice, it is a divinely inspired worship environment. God knows we can worship individually and privately, however, God built us to function best together. Corporate worship is a spiritual exercise and a call to obedience.<\/p>\n
[bctt tweet=”We sing together to celebrate the finished work of Christ on the cross. – Richard Palmer”]<\/p>\n
We don\u2019t come together to sing. We sing because we are together. And when we join together in praising God, singing allows our voices to join together in harmony. This is the worship we see in Heaven in the book of Revelation. One day we will join that worship scene. Therefore, we are participating in a worship here on earth that is a type of that which is to come. We keep singing together because we are celebrating the finished work of Christ on the cross. We do so from the depths of our being because it is a heavenly picture of what worship should be.<\/p>\n
Interested in exploring the art of worship? Stay tuned for the rest of our roundtable discussions<\/a> in the weeks to come. In the meantime here are some other resources you may enjoy:<\/em><\/p>\n