Psalm 95:6–7 (NKJV)
6 Oh come, let us worship and bow
down; Let us kneel before the LORD our Maker. 7 For He is our God, And we are
the people of His pasture, And the sheep of His hand.
One of the most frequent questions visitors have about
our service of worship, one of the questions that you may also have, is this:
What’s with all the different postures? We sit, we stand, we kneel, we bow
heads, we lift hands – why all the variety?
The answer to these questions is threefold: first, God
did not create us as mere spirits but as creatures with body and soul. As those
who have bodies, God expects us to use them for His honor. Paul writes, “…you were bought at a price; therefore,
glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” Our bodies belong
to God and so what we do with them is important. Our actions should should
reflect our reverence for Him and our knowledge that one day Christ will return
in glory and raise these very bodies
from the grave. Our bodies matter.
So this leads us to the second answer to our question:
why all the variety? The answer is that in worship there are a variety of
things we do. We praise and thank the Lord; we confess our sins; we hear the
assurance of forgiveness; we listen to the reading of God’s Word; we confess the
creeds; we present our tithes and offerings; we pray; we learn from the
Scriptures; we feast with God at His Table. This wonderful variety demands a
variety of responses – both verbally and bodily. There is no “one size fits
all” bodily posture.
And this is why, third, the Scriptures invite us to
worship God with a variety of postures – standing, kneeling, sitting, lifting
hands, etc. So notice our text today from Psalm 95 - Oh come, let us worship and bow down; Let us kneel before the LORD our
Maker. This is but one example of the types of bodily invitations given in
the context of worship.
But let us beware that we not merely go through the
motions. For the ultimate reason that our posture changes is that we worship in
God’s very presence. He is here with us and we dare not treat Him lightly. He
calls us to worship; we respond by standing to praise Him. He thunders at our
sin; we respond by kneeling to confess it. He assures us of pardon; we stand to
listen and enter boldly into His presence through the blood of Christ. He
instructs us from His Word; we stand to give our attention to its reading. This
is the drama of the Divine Service – but it’s a drama that is meaningful only
when accompanied by hearts that love and cherish Him.
So what of you? Why do you stand? Why do you kneel? Why
do you sit? Do you do it just because that’s what you’re being told to do? Do
you kneel so you won’t appear out of place? Do you sit so you can take a nap?
Or do you do all these things because you recognize with awe and wonder that
the God we worship this Day has invited you into His very presence to worship?
So today as we have entered into God’s presence He has
thundered at our sin – let us confess that we have often just gone through the
motions of worship; and let us kneel as we confess together.
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