Isaiah
29:13–14 (NKJV)
13
Therefore the Lord said: “Inasmuch as these people draw near with their mouths
And honor Me with their lips, But have removed their hearts far from Me, And
their fear toward Me is taught by the commandment of men, 14 Therefore, behold,
I will again do a marvelous work Among this people, A marvelous work and a
wonder; For the wisdom of their wise men shall perish, And the understanding of
their prudent men shall be hidden.”
Every church is liturgical,
has a liturgy that directs them in their public worship week by week. Liturgies
are inescapable. For what is a liturgy? Webster defines a liturgy as “a series
of … procedures prescribed for public worship in the Christian church.” It is
simply the order in which the activities of public worship are arranged.
Sometimes these liturgies are simple and straightforward; other times they are
intricate and complicated. everyone has a liturgy.
The question that must be
asked, therefore, is not whether we should have a liturgy at all – that much is
inescapable – but whether the liturgy we have reflects the principles given to
us in the Word of God. And one of the first principles given us in worship is
that it must come from the heart. As human beings we are always in danger of
replacing genuine, heartfelt worship with hypocrisy – speaking “holy” words,
doing “holy” actions, thinking “holy” thoughts all the while our hearts are far
away from God.
Because this is a human
problem that comes from the human heart and not an external problem, hypocrisy
infects all types of worship. Whether it’s a low church Pentecostal service
with its planned spontaneity or a high church Anglican service in which every
word is scripted. Both are prone to hypocrisy because sinners plan them both. And
it is this sin of hypocrisy into which Israel had fallen in Isaiah’s day:
Therefore the Lord said: “… these people draw near
with their mouths And honor Me with their lips, But have removed their hearts
far from Me, And their fear toward Me is taught by the commandment of men,…”
So what of you? Have you
become distant from God, begun attending the divine service out of mere habit,
giving no attention to the words spoken, putting no heart into the service?
Have you become a mere spectator thinking that worship is some sort of
entertainment for your personal pleasure? Have you become dull of hearing? Or
are you actively engaged? Learning your role in the service? Singing your part?
Contributing your voice? Joining the one leading in prayer? Listening
attentively?
Brothers and sisters, beware hypocrisy,
beware mere externalism, beware drawing near to God with your lips when your
hearts are far from him. God takes such hypocrisy seriously and threatens his
people with his fatherly correction if we fall into such sin. So reminded that
when we come to worship, we are to come with our hearts engaged, loving and
cherishing the Lord and His law, let us confess that we often draw near with
our lips while our hearts are far from him. Let us kneel as we confess
together.
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