A few months ago, I nearly posted a blog entitled, “Worship
and Amusement Parks.” You can probably guess the contents. The essence of the
blog pertained to church worship, which ought to be aimed at affirming God as
God; that same worship, however, frequently devolves into entertainment for the
congregation and follows the capricious tastes of that particular church’s
target audience. I never posted the blog, and in fact I forgot that I wrote it
until recently.
Last week in a Reformed Worship class our professor said, “When
the congregation becomes an audience, the worship has become idolatrous.” His
accusation was twofold. First, such worship is idolatrous because the worship
is aimed at entertaining the congregation instead of being aimed at affirming
God as God. Second, such worship is idolatrous because the congregation ceases
to participate in affirming God as
God. His simple statement shakes the very foundations of many American churches’ worship, though like most earthquakes in California it shall go largely unnoticed.
Entertainment is a common flavor in American “Christian”
worship, and it is poisonous.
References to “high places” are not uncommon in the Old
Testament; they were places of worship. Some folks today may suppose that these high
places were places of idolatry. Perhaps, in many cases they were, and it is
likely that many high places were used for worship of local deities. It was
also not uncommon, however, for worshippers of the Lord to worship the Lord
at “high places.” In either case, high places were places for worship. In some
instances, the Israelites were instructed to destroy the high places because
they were being used to worship local deities instead of the Most High God.
In America, we too have built many “high places.” Perhaps
similar to the high places in the ancient world, our high places are indeed places
used to worship local deities instead of the Most High God.
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