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Corporate worship is a crucial defining activity for the Body of Christ. God's people come together to join their hearts and voices in praise to God for His greatness and in thanks for His goodness. Many Christian activities can be done alone or in small groups; but corporate worship is by its very nature something that involves the local church gathered. Worship is a response to God for who He is and for what He has done for us in Jesus Christ. The focus of Christian worship should not be on what we get (good feelings, peace, fellowship - though these may be perfectly legitimate by-products), but rather on what we give. We are called to adore and pay homage to God Almighty, and are privileged to be invited to do so: worship is thus an end in itself - indeed, the highest of all ends.
Five foundational principles under-gird our practice of corporate worship
Theocentric Worship
Reverent Worship
Blended Worship
Thematic Worship
Participatory Worship
Corporate worship is an end in itself: God seeks, and delights in, the praises of His people.
Worship also serves to reorient us (after the relentless onslaught of the world and its perspective) to the center of our existence and His will for our lives.
In addition, worship is uniquely appropriate to prepare people's hearts to hear and receive the preaching of the Word of God: having been filled with the wonder of God through the rehearsal of familiar truth, the believer is ready to be challenged to ascend to new levels of understanding and commitment.
"Come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the Lord our Maker." (Psalm 95:6)
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Experiencing Worship, The Study