Monday, November 13, 2006

emotions?

In my last post I risked sounding like I may have thought the inner-man was pure intellect and that emotion has no part of us. Not true. Our emotions are powerful and they also need to be reckoned with. Here's a good post by Adrian Warnock on the impact of preaching on our emotion and another about the importance of emotion itself. The key here, as with our intellect, is that we need to avoid falling victim to Satan's lies. We need to become a Spirit controlled being and continue to renew ourselves in the truth of God's Word - and this is independent of how many parts you might believe man is made of.

John Piper's philosophy of worship does a nice job of concisely articulating how our worship involves the whole of the inner-man.

  1. God-centeredness: A high priority of the vertical focus of our Sunday morning service. The ultimate aim is to so experience God that he is glorified in our affections.
  2. Expecting the powerful presence of God: We do not just direct ourselves toward him. We earnestly seek his drawing near according to the promise of James 4:8. We believe that in worship God draws near to us in power, and makes himself known and felt for our good and for the salvation of unbelievers in the midst.
  3. Bible based and Bible saturated: The content of our singing and praying and welcoming and preaching and poetry will always conform to the truth of Scripture. The content of God's Word will be woven through all we do in worship and will be the ground of all our appeal to authority.
  4. Head and heart: Worship that aims at kindling and carrying deep, strong, real emotions toward God, but does not manipulate people's emotions by failing to appeal to clear thinking about spiritual things based on shareable evidences outside ourselves.
  5. Earnestness and intensity: Avoiding a trite, flippant, superficial, frivolous atmosphere, but instead setting an example of reverence and passion and wonder.
  6. Authentic communication: The utter renunciation of all sham and deceit and hypocrisy and pretense and affectation and posturing. Not the atmosphere of artistic or oratorical performance but the atmosphere of a radically personal encounter with God truth..
  7. The manifestation of God and the common good: We expect and hope and pray (according to 1 Cor. 12:7) that our focus on the manifesting of God is good for people and that therefore a spirit of love for each other is not incompatible with, but necessary to authentic worship.
  8. Undistracting excellence: We will try to sing and play and pray and preach in such a way that people's attention will not be diverted from the substance by shoddy ministry nor by excessive finesse, elegance or refinement. Natural, undistracting excellence will let the truth and beauty of God shine through.
  9. The mingling of historic and contemporary music: And he said to them, "Therefore every scribe who has been trained for the kingdom of heaven is like a householder who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old" (Matt. 13:52)
Let's enter into worship with our whole being (physical too) and not leave out any aspect of who we are. In true worship, we will be transformed.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

No comments:

reftagger