Worship is very important to us. Our vision statement says so eloquently “As Jesus devoted disciples, We worship passionately.” This does not mean that we hold to a particular style of worship, but that we give ourselves completely to Christ during the weekly event. Do you recall how Jesus describes true worship? In response to the question about what is the most important thing he replied, “To love the Lord your God with all your heart, your soul, and you mind.” We seek to worship the Lord in that way. With all our heart. With all our soul. With all our mind.
That does not indicate any particular style of worship. Passionate whole hearted worship is enacted all over the world in many, many permutations. In Korea Presbyterians enthusiastically shout out their prayers. In Russia Christians stand for hours in silent meditation as the priests and choir chant and sing the liturgy. In Africa Presbyterians dance in worship. And in America Presbyterians… How do Presbyterians worship in the USA?
You may be surprised to know that there is no set answer. I’ve worshipped in probably near a hundred different Presbyterian churches. The majority have been similar to what we call our “traditional service”. But a large minority don’t fit that picture at all. We have churches that have liturgical dancers, puppeteers, jazz bands, rock bands, even a blues band! We have churches that worship in jeans and t-shirts, churches that worship with latte’s in hand, churches that worship with Pentecostal bands. We have a church in our Presbytery where the children monthly lead the adults in worship.
Worshipping Jesus is what we are called to do. Each of us has a preference for how we worship. One author divides our natural inclinations into 4 types. Worship through the intellect, through the emotions, through silence, and through action. It is helpful to assess a worship style through that sorting screen. Roughly put, the tradition of worship at our church has been predominantly on the intellect. That is not to say that our average service does not engage the heart, nor is it to say that we don’t move, nor to say that we don’t have silence. It just means that as a body we are most comfortable engaging God through our minds. Our worship reflects this preference.
Our vision statement also adds, “Filled with God’s Spirit, We invite all to experience God’s grace.” We recognize that there are many people who are most open to God not through the mind, but through the heart. It is for these that our Session is designing our second service. The upcoming “Celebration Service” will be a designed to engage through the heart. That does not mean that it will not be thoughtful – it will be – but that the format is intentionally designed to encourage people who prefer lots of emotional contemporary songs and prefer informality and spontaneity.
May 10 is the big launch day. Please come if this service sounds like you would be encouraged through it. Please pray for its success. Please tell others about it!
Sincerely, Pastor Charlie