“Zombies.” Can you believe it? I’m starting another
sermon with that word. I did so not long ago and actually never thought I would
do it again but zombies, O and Michael Jackson, have been bouncing around
in my head. You see a couple of weeks ago I went with my family to watch the
world-wide Thriller dance on the lawn of the court house. It was amazing.
Hundreds of people, dressed like zombies, who at the appointed hour began to
dance to Michael Jackson’s song Thriller
around the world. This has been happening since 2005 and has set numerous world
records. The purpose, according to its creators is to create “a global
community project that is inspiring others to break down barriers, connect with
people of all religions, race, political and economic persuasions, contribute
to helping humanity, encourage environmental stewardship and encourage people
to step up as leaders, visionaries, and creators.” Now, that’s a tall order for
such a song and dance – even one by Michael Jackson and while I don’t wish to critique
or disparage the event. I had a great time. It reminded me that such a global,
public, transforming vision is what we are to be about every day as Christians
– a global phenomenon, meant to inspire, to transform, to break down barriers,
and change the world. Today, I would like to offer Scripture’s own Thriller
Dance and the way it challenges us about where worship should happen, what
worship should be, and who it is we worship.
Psalm 100 begins, 1Make a joyful noise to the Lord, all the earth!
The Psalmist
begins our Thriller dance with a challenge, an invitation: who is
invited to this praise of the living God? Where is the space for our worship?
“All the earth,” we are told. That means . . .
1.
First
of all the challenge is that the church is not enough.
Friends, Psalm 100 should remind us that the church is
too small for God. Sunday worship is good and wonderful but it’s not
extravagant enough, not large enough, not all encompassing enough. It’s a
summons for the whole earth.
The earth is simply short-hand for all of created
existence – it means the one world that God has made. That the planet earth is
the very theater of God where we worship. And it should be of no surprise to us
that I once again wish to challenge us by the very way that we speak. Don’t
worship at church! We don’t do that because the church was never meant to be a
place but a people – a people throughout every nation, language and walk of
life . The next time someone ask you where you worship say, “Planet earth!”
But make no mistake – “all the earth” isn’t simply meant
to broaden your horizons. Psalm 100 isn’t trying to be some NASA rocket which
aims to give you a far-away vantage point for seeing the entire world. “All the
earth,” in other words, may be smaller than you think. It means that you are to
worship and shout for joy where you live, where you work, when you play. It
means that worship is meant for your neighborhood, your local park, your home,
and even your office. It’s an invitation and orientation to see every place as
“holy ground.”
In the documentary film Godspeed, an American living in St. Andrews, Scotland, arrives at
his new job as a Parish Assistant and asks his boss (the priest), “Where is my
office?” The priest responds, “Your office?” And the new assistant says,
“Right, sorry, I mean your office.” And the priest asks, “My office?” And then
with a flicker of recognition takes him to the sign of the church which has his
home telephone number on it and says, “That’s my office.” The now puzzled
American asks, “Where do I work?” and the priest points down the street and
says, “The parish. Start walking.” And he begins to move down the street,
knocking on doors, visiting with people, getting to know “all the earth” one
door and one cup of tea at a time.
As I watched the film, I began to realize that the
challenge of making a joyful noise throughout all the earth is not about too
much space or an overwhelming amount of real estate. It’s actually a problem of
time. We move too fast to see all that we need to see in the earth that we
actually live. We are too quick and touristy to see and give thanks for all
that exists around us. So the invitation this morning is to invite you to a 3
mile an hour worship where you live. Why 3 miles an hour? Well, because that’s
the average walking speed of a person. We will never be able to summon “all the
earth” to worship unless we can slow down to catch up with the God who is
everywhere in it. So where is your parish? Start walking.
3 Know
that the Lord, he is God!
It is he who made us, and we are his;[a]
we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.
It is he who made us, and we are his;[a]
we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.
2.
The
second way that Psalm 100 challenges and invites us is to the reality that for worship
singing is not good enough.
BUT singing is good. It gets us going in the right
direction. It helps us connect to what it means to be human, it opens our
hearts as well as our heads. There’s a
reason that we are commanded to sing so often in the scriptures. I once asked
my daughter Emma why she thought that Christians were so often admonished to
sing. She said, “singing is the most joyful full-bodied response we can give to
a God we cannot hug.” I think she’s right.
As the band U2 was starting out many years ago, Bono,
himself a Christian, wrote the following letter to his father:
“[God] gives us our strength and a joy that does not
depend on drink or drugs. This strength will, I believe, be the quality that
will take us to the top of the music business. I hope our lives will be a
testament to the people who will follow us, and to the music business where
never before have so many lost and sorrowful people gathered in one place
pretending they’re having a good time. It is our ambition to make more than
good music.”
Bono’s words echo the Psalmists. God, too, wants more
than good music. For full, joyful worship to take place he also wants our service
– “to serve the Lord with gladness,” is our worship! So once again we are
challenged to enlarge our vision of what worship is. How often have we been
lead to believe that it’s like this? (Individuals with arms raised high in
nature)
Have you ever thought what it means to “serve the Lord”?
How do you serve the First Cause of all creation? The mighty One who holds all
things together? The creator of all that is. This God isn’t one like the Greek
gods who have human appetites and run amuck like teenagers with superhuman
powers. This God needs nothing – has everything – and he isn’t lonely or needy
or grumpy – but makes us a people to worship and serve him – which means “all of
creation,” all that is “His.”
And yet one of the common complaints that God will make
against Israel is that there worship focuses on the wrong things – like our
passage from Amos – festivals, assemblies, burnt offerings, noisy songs, nice
melodies, while neglecting mercy and justice for the poor and the outcast.
Friends, God wants full human flourishing on the earth
and worshipping Him was meant to secure that. A worshipping community of the
One True God is out joyfully singing in the streets and working for the peace
of God. So true worship of God, the psalmist declares is not simply about a proper
place but it’s also a project of service. Worship, in other words, is what
should get you dirty.
Worship is about God creating a community - a community
of service centered on God to bless “all the earth.” There’s an interesting
tension about all that is God’s – all that is “his” in our text. On the one
hand, there is a notion that it is God who made everyone – “we are his.” On the
other hand, there is a notion that there are some who recognize him more fully,
who are “his people, and the sheep of his pasture.” – what’s the point of that? There is an irony
here. Many people imagine that that they are God’s sheep which means somehow
that He cares less for others. But if we are worshippers of this God – we are
called to a life of joyful service to others because of God’s love of all creation.
We are to be servant sheep!
At this point, I shared
a story that I had heard that very morning about one of my parishioners who “served
others.” To hear the story go to MCC’s website and listen to the sermon.
4 Enter
his gates with thanksgiving,
and his courts with praise!
Give thanks to him; bless his name!
and his courts with praise!
Give thanks to him; bless his name!
5 For the Lord is
good;
his steadfast love endures forever,
and his faithfulness to all generations.
his steadfast love endures forever,
and his faithfulness to all generations.
3.
Thankfully,
God is enough!
The heart of worship is not first and foremost a question
about us - of space (where we worship?) or community (whom do we serve?) but focuses on the God who is
actively at work redeeming all of creation. Ignatius Loyola spoke about the
task of worship as marinating in the “God who is always greater” and that means
greater than our songs, our creeds, our sermons, our buildings, our politics,
our failures, even our hopes for the future!
The secret of the ministry of Jesus was that God was at
the center of it. Jesus chose to marinate in the God who is always greater than
our tiny image, the God who loves without measure and without regret, whose
love endures forever.
How do we unlock a Biblical perspective of worship orientated to global change and service? How do we not become overwhelmed? What’s the password to a realistic but inspiring vision in a world that feels so dark at times?
Eugene Peterson’s translation of vs. 4 is helpful and
will open us to a hope necessary for the church to continue worshipping God
around the world. He translates vs. 4. “Enter with the
password: ‘Thank you!’ Make yourselves at home, talking
praise. Thank him. Worship him.”
The password is “thank you” because when
we practice our “thank yous” to God we are placing ourselves in the proper
place. We are reminding ourselves that this whole project rest upon him. We say
“thank you” because God is the only one powerful enough to ultimately reach all
the earth and bring it justice. We say “thank you” because worship is God’s
project and not our own. We say “thank you” to remind us that we are joining
with God rather than doing something for God.
Pay attention – the church is not
enough. Be watchful of the God who is active in all the earth.
Be joyful and not afraid – singing is not good
enough. God desires our worship to transform the communities where we live. He
wants our worship to get us dirty.
Be thankful – God – well, God is good
and steadfast and forever. Marinate in the God who is simply enough.
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