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Alan Smith, Approaching Mount Zion - Page 1 of 7
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Approaching Mount Zion
Topic: #6 of 522 for Sermons on Worship: Purpose
Scripture:
Hebrews 12:18-12:24
Denomination: Christian/Church of Christ
Date Added: February 1999
Audience: General Young Adults (19 - 30)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Introduction:
In a scene out of the book Tom Sawyer, Tom had gone to Sunday school and church at the demand of Aunt Polly. After Sunday school, Tom and his brother Sid went to the auditorium to sit under the watchful eye of Aunt Polly. Next we read Tom’s description of public worship. He says that announcements are made from a "list that would stretch to the crack of doom". The prayer is, to use his words, "generous in its details". Furthermore, Tom is so familiar with the prayer that he knows it by heart, and so he recognizes and resents any new additions to it. The preacher’s sermon "drones on monotonously through an argument that is so prosy that many a head begin to nod". Basically, the worship service bores Tom.
It may be that Tom’s descriptions remind us of similar experiences in our own lives, especially during childhood. We have all experienced public worship when it was less than invigorating. Unfortunately, there are many people who have come to expect worship to be dull, trivial, and boring. The time in worship is used to think about what’s for lunch or an upcoming ball game. People joke about the mental gymnastics they have to go through to survive a Sunday morning service. Some count bricks on a wall; others time how long they can hold their breath, or find the longest song in the songbook. Rather than a positive experience, the worship service becomes a ritual to endure.
And it’s true that, as a performance, worship hardly ranks up there with what we watch on television or at the movies. I mean, how can I begin to compete with Tom Cruise or Sean Connery? For excitement, our worship service doesn’t even begin to come close to a good football game.
So why go to church? And I mean by that phrase, Why go to worship services? It’s a question that probably wasn’t asked in many communities 30 years ago because it was commonly assumed that church attendance was important. But, in our day and time, a lot of people ask that question: Why go to church?
Some people go because they’ve always attended church out of habit. Others attend because it’s expected within their community or social circle. Some people have never been a part of church life and so they question the value of church attendance. Sunday morning is simply a time to recuperate from Saturday night or a time to get some work done around the house. I think it’s safe to say that for most people, attendance at worship has very little relationship to God’s demands for the Christian life. You hear a lot of people say, "I have a strong faith in God, but I just don’t think it’s all that important to go to church." So, "going to church" seems to be a custom of people who insist on maintaining an old tradition.
But I would suggest to you this morning that we need our times of worship together. I understand that worship can take place away from our regular meeting place. But we need special times for worship.
If we don’t have those special times for worship, we tend to lose our perspective on life and our sense of values. We begin to think that the only things that are real in life are the things that we can see and touch. It’s hard to live as a Christian in a society which doesn’t think much about God or know anything beyond this material existence.
Tagore, a great Indian mystic, once wrote a poem comparing our lives to
In a scene out of the book Tom Sawyer, Tom had gone to Sunday school and church at the demand of Aunt Polly. After Sunday school, Tom and his brother Sid went to the auditorium to sit under the watchful eye of Aunt Polly. Next we read Tom’s description of public worship. He says that announcements are made from a "list that would stretch to the crack of doom". The prayer is, to use his words, "generous in its details". Furthermore, Tom is so familiar with the prayer that he knows it by heart, and so he recognizes and resents any new additions to it. The preacher’s sermon "drones on monotonously through an argument that is so prosy that many a head begin to nod". Basically, the worship service bores Tom.
It may be that Tom’s descriptions remind us of similar experiences in our own lives, especially during childhood. We have all experienced public worship when it was less than invigorating. Unfortunately, there are many people who have come to expect worship to be dull, trivial, and boring. The time in worship is used to think about what’s for lunch or an upcoming ball game. People joke about the mental gymnastics they have to go through to survive a Sunday morning service. Some count bricks on a wall; others time how long they can hold their breath, or find the longest song in the songbook. Rather than a positive experience, the worship service becomes a ritual to endure.
And it’s true that, as a performance, worship hardly ranks up there with what we watch on television or at the movies. I mean, how can I begin to compete with Tom Cruise or Sean Connery? For excitement, our worship service doesn’t even begin to come close to a good football game.
So why go to church? And I mean by that phrase, Why go to worship services? It’s a question that probably wasn’t asked in many communities 30 years ago because it was commonly assumed that church attendance was important. But, in our day and time, a lot of people ask that question: Why go to church?
Some people go because they’ve always attended church out of habit. Others attend because it’s expected within their community or social circle. Some people have never been a part of church life and so they question the value of church attendance. Sunday morning is simply a time to recuperate from Saturday night or a time to get some work done around the house. I think it’s safe to say that for most people, attendance at worship has very little relationship to God’s demands for the Christian life. You hear a lot of people say, "I have a strong faith in God, but I just don’t think it’s all that important to go to church." So, "going to church" seems to be a custom of people who insist on maintaining an old tradition.
But I would suggest to you this morning that we need our times of worship together. I understand that worship can take place away from our regular meeting place. But we need special times for worship.
If we don’t have those special times for worship, we tend to lose our perspective on life and our sense of values. We begin to think that the only things that are real in life are the things that we can see and touch. It’s hard to live as a Christian in a society which doesn’t think much about God or know anything beyond this material existence.
Tagore, a great Indian mystic, once wrote a poem comparing our lives to
Comments
September 24, 2006
1. Judith Hand says...
I found this topic fresh and needed in today's environment of "casual" church worship atttitudes and the sermon well-written.
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