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This sermon comes to us from Craig Simonian of Vineyard Christian Fellowhsip of Morris County, NJ. When I visited Central Asia in 1992, I visited a country where there was only 1 known believer. I met her during that trip... she had a real heart for the Lord though she was going thru a lot of persecution for her faith in Jesus.
In Psalm 95, David invites all of us to respond to God's invitation to worship.
READ PSALM 95:1-7b
From the earliest period of church history, Ps 95 has been used as a call and guide to worship.
But before we look more closely at this psalm, we should define what worship really is.
Our English word, worship, literally means "worth-ship".
As Americans, we live in a predominantly secular society, so we don't see people literally bowing down before idols.
I think this is what David is doing in Psalm 95... he is inviting to us to make God the object of our worship. I want to break the passage down into three sections: An Invitation to Celebration, Adoration, and Dedication.
I. Invitation to Celebration, v. 1-5
"Come, let us sing for joy to the LORD; let us shout aloud to the Rock of our salvation. Let us come before him with thanksgiving, and extol him with music and song. For the LORD is the great God, the great King above all gods. In his hand are the depths of the earth, and the mountain peaks belong to him. The sea is his, for he made it, and his hands formed the dry land."
David starts by encouraging God's people to sing, to shout, to extol the Lord with music.
But the singing isn't the only expression the service gives us to worship... from the praise, to the Word; coming up during ministry time to our tithes... it's all worship.
You don't have to read this passage too carefully to see that it is loaded with verbs...
In John 4:19-24, when Jesus met a woman at the well in Samaria, she looked at Him and said, "Sir, I can see that you are a prophet. Our fathers worshiped on this mountain, but you Jews claim the place where we must worship is in Jerusalem."
Now let me tell you that there are many times during worship when I've felt distracted or disconnected from Him. When the words are coming from your lungs to your throat through your mouth... but not from your heart?
But WHY? Why should we worship God? Why should we "come", "sing", "shout"?
Whereas verses 1-5 are an Invitation to Celebration, verses 6-7 are an Invitation to Adoration.
In Luke 7:36 we read of a woman, perhaps Mary Magdalene, entered the house of a Pharisee who had invited Jesus over for a meal.
Already, I am struck by several things.
Back to my main point... that this woman expressed more worship and adoration for Jesus than all the Pharisees and disciples in that room put together.
When Peter saw that it was Jesus who caused them to catch the multitude of fish in Luke 5:8, he fell at Jesus' knees and said, "Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!"
When John receives his vision of the angelic hosts worshipping Jesus, he falls to the floor in worship.
DAVID UNDERSTOOD that our knowing who God is, in relation to who we are, will cause us to worship and adore Him.
The last segment of Psalm 95 is an Invitation to Dedication, v 7c-11.
READ verses 7c-11. David is referring to a specific event in Exodus 17:1
- Then, in v 8, the Lord says to us, "Do not harden your hearts like at Meribah."
Rom 12:1-2 Offer your bodies as living sacrifices, surrendered to God... this is your spiritual act of worship. We surrender day after day to be worshippers.
Some of you are facing difficult times right now... with your job, finances, relationships, health, plain old tiredness...
In the very next Psalm, Psalm 96, David writes, "Sing to the Lord a new song..."
If something else or someone else has taken first place in your heart... then bring that to the Lord.
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Experiencing Worship, The Study