by Tom Goodman
We tend to separate worship from daily life. In the thinking
of many, on Sunday mornings we leave home and go to worship.
But in the Christmas story, after the shepherds found Christ
they returned home to worship.
That’s what Luke wrote: “The shepherds returned home,
glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen” (2:20). Did you catch it? Yes, they knelt before the
Christ child in the manger, but then worship continued as they returned back to
daily life.
In light of this little verse, maybe some of our Christmas
carols need updating:
O leave, all ye faithful!
Joyful and triumphant!
O leave ye, O leave ye from
Bethlehem.
O leave, let us adore him
O leave, let us adore him
O leave, let us adore him
Christ the Lord!
There’s a serious point here. While you should come to worship you should leave worshipping, too.
This is hard, I know.
In a worship service we sing all these glorious statements about
God’s power and care. But then maybe we leave the service and return home to
not-so-glorious living. It’s not easy to return home worshipping when your marriage
is strained, or your kids disappoint you, or there’s tension in your workplace,
or you’re fighting cancer, or there’s financial anxiety.
But what you experience from worship music and from Bible
study should re-arrange your priorities, attitudes, and choices in daily life. Declaring gospel truth in a worship service
is scrimmage; living out the implications
of gospel truth throughout the week is where the real game is won.
This Thursday at 6:00 p.m., we’ll hold our annual Christmas
Eve worship service. We’ll sing carols, observe the Lord’s Supper, look into
the Word, and close with “Silent Night” by candlelight. Come, let us adore him.
But follow the example of the shepherds. At the end of our service, leave
adoring him, too.
Merry Christmas!
Holiday Schedule: The
Christmas Eve service is a 45-minute family-friendly service that begins at
6:00 p.m. Then on Sunday, December 27, we will gather for worship at 10 a.m.
There will be no meeting for Common Ground or Sunday School that day.
No comments:
Post a Comment