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Went to a church like the one above. I never went back. It wasn't worship, it was a concert. With fog machines and lighting effects.
Just not my kind of worship. Different strokes for different folks.
God loves it when His people worship HIM with all they've got. The benefit is that His presence is in it. You don't know what you're missing.
Who says that someone isn't giving it their all without fog machines and light effects?
God inhabits His people's praises and there is nothing that says you need fog machines and light effects for Him to inhabit His people's praises.
Therefore, I am missing nothing. I don't need an entertainment style worship to worship God and praise Him. As I said, different strokes for different folks. There is no one way to worship God.
It has nothing to do with entertainment but all to do with giving over to the leading of the Holy Spirit and worshiping Him fully with all we have and with excellence.
We have a hymnbook, and in the various meetings any brother can give out whatever hymn or song the Holy Spirit suggests. The whole company sings the hymn or song together. I don't agree with choirs or musical instruments, because these things weren't at the beginning and the New Testament scriptures never sanction them. Introducing that sort of thing just gives oppurtunity for the feeding of the flesh and distracting the singers from the words they're singing. Juk, what you highlight is a very important consideration: is the whole thing focused on us and our tastes and likings, or is it for God? I know that God doesn't care for musical instruments or the quality of the singing, He takes into account what's flowing from the hearts of the worshippers. If adding something to the service of God adds nothing to what flows from the hearts of the saints, then it can't do any good, and has potential to do harm.How is the worship music in your church? Can you post some examples? Is it more upbeat and fast, or slow and solemn? Something that I found about the worship music in my church is that it focuses on the believer, not God. Guess you really can't call it worship music at that point.
I don't agree with choirs or musical instruments, because these things weren't at the beginning and the New Testament scriptures never sanction them.
Can you provide scripture where it says that God has "decisively" ended musical instruments?God has ended that decisively
The answer to that is really written across the New Testament, ingrained in the character of Christianity. One scripture which immediately springs to mind is John 4:23-24: "But the hour is coming and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth; for also the Father seeks such as his worshippers. God is a spirit; and they who worship him must worship him in spirit and truth." Here, the Lord is bringing out the essential contrast between the earthly system which was going to be set aside, and the heavenly system which He was bringing in. The new system wasn't going to one of worship "in this mountain, nor in Jerusalem" (John 4:21). Everything that was attached to the earthly system - the physical tabernacle, the instruments of the service, the altar, the sacrifices, the incense, the musical instruments - was to be set aside, because the things they represented in type were come to realisation in actuality at last.Can you provide scripture where it says that God has "decisively" ended musical instruments?
In Revelation 15:2, John says "They held harps given them by God". A harp is certainly an instrument. Ephesians 5:19 says to "Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord" (Note it doesn't ONLY say sing).
Anyway, please share where in the Bible God has decisively ended musical instruments?
I'm very much afraid we're all too inclined to let our own natural tastes dictate how we go on with the service of God, and that leads to division - when my tastes differ from yours, then we aren't going to get along together in fellowship. Paul was compelled to take up that state of things with the Corinthians: "I have given you milk to drink, not meat, for ye have not yet been able, nor indeed are ye yet able; for ye are yet carnal. For whereas there are among you emulation and strife, are ye not carnal, and walk according to man?" (1 Corinthians 3:3). The mind of the flesh was being made way for in Corinth, and the result was emulation and strife. This sort of thing can only do harm.Interesting thought but I'm of a different type of view point altogether. I think that unless the congregation is a well rehearsed group of singers. You either need a strong voice(s) or a musical instrument to hold things together. Personally, I feel the church organ can be excellent in fulfilling this role.
I may feel less sure about other instruments like guitars in a church service but I feel sure that if I had the opportunity to work my own folky style of guitar and mandolin into some church band doing other things, I'd take it.
On the larger picture I suppose my own view is that as long as we are doing our best for Him, God isn't going to mind how we go about things - and I don't suppose any of us truly know what His tastes in music are or what heavenly music really sounds like.
From my own personal position though, I am affected to some degree by my own largely more traditional service leanings and to a greater degree to my own musical tastes. I doubt some things (including a fair of "Christian music") are ever going to work for me.
I agree that there is a taste level when it comes to worship music, but truly, all worship music is loved by God, when it is given with the heart of worship. However, criticizing how people come together in worship is not the right thing to do. It has nothing to do with entertainment but all to do with giving over to the leading of the Holy Spirit and worshiping Him fully with all we have and with excellence.
That's pretty much a rave by the look of it...LOL.Went to a church like the one above. I never went back. It wasn't worship, it was a concert. With fog machines and lighting effects.
Just not my kind of worship. Different strokes for different folks.
I think i need to clarify my post some.
I have no issues with a worship band, and have been in a couple churches that sang contemporary Christian music which I listen to each day. When it crosses into entertainment for me is the use of fog machines and lighting effects.
Don't you think it's dangerous though, to mix in things that appeal to the flesh? It's apt to allow the same line of thought that caused the disciples to admire stones and buildings (Mark 13:1) and the Lord has to answer that: "Seest thou these great buildings? not a stone shall be left upon a stone, which shall not be thrown down." (Mark 13:2). The Temple is really a substantial figure of the old system, one of physical things, imposing things which appeal to the eye. Early believers worshipped in the Temple (see Acts 24:11 with reference to Paul), because God in His grace allowed the two things to go on together for a time, but there came a point when the Jewish system was utterly done with, "and immediately the doors [of the Temple] were shut." (Acts 21:30). You might say, that was the definitive rejection by the religious system of the day of the new heavenly order, and the point where the two were completely and finally separated. Believers didn't go up to the Temple to worship after that.I have nothing against any "special effect" especially when the one operating these things is spirit-filled and doing it unto the Lord...much the same way as the one who cleans the church toilets is also putting his hand to work for God with all His might.
Ecclesiastes 9:10a
Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might,
Don't you think it's dangerous though, to mix in things that appeal to the flesh? It's apt to allow the same line of thought that caused the disciples to admire stones and buildings (Mark 13:1) and the Lord has to answer that: "Seest thou these great buildings? not a stone shall be left upon a stone, which shall not be thrown down." (Mark 13:2). The Temple is really a substantial figure of the old system, one of physical things, imposing things which appeal to the eye. Early believers worshipped in the Temple (see Acts 24:11 with reference to Paul), because God in His grace allowed the two things to go on together for a time, but there came a point when the Jewish system was utterly done with, "and immediately the doors [of the Temple] were shut." (Acts 21:30). You might say, that was the definitive rejection by the religious system of the day of the new heavenly order, and the point where the two were completely and finally separated. Believers didn't go up to the Temple to worship after that.