Worship Expectations
(Week of 4/28/24)
What was the most unexpected thing that ever happened in a worship service you were part of?
While I was still attending my home church in San Angelo, a soprano from the choir came to the pulpit to sing a special music as she often did. She had an amazing voice, and always did a wonderful job setting the tone for the message. On this Sunday, just as she began singing, a small bird came out of the balcony at the back and started flying around in the sanctuary over everyone’s heads. No one was quite sure how that bird got in, but it was what I would call an “unexpected” occurrence. The bird kept circling and never landed during the special music. The amazing thing was the lady never missed a note. Her song was beautiful, just like always. I don’t’ remember what she sang, but looking back now, I wish it had been, “His Eye is on the Sparrow.” That would make a much better story, but I digress. We all attempted to remain stoic and composed. The song ended, the bird found its perch in the balcony, and the lady found her perch in the choir loft. That’s when our pastor couldn’t take it anymore and said, “We welcome ALL our guests today to Harris Avenue Baptist Church!” Everyone lost it, including the lady who had just sung the special music.
I’m chuckling even as I write this, so let me quickly get to the point of this Meadow Minute by asking my opening question in a little different way. What do you expect from a worship service when you have made the effort to get up, and get dressed on your day off? Maybe you’ve already fought with the kids getting them ready. Maybe you’ve already broken a nail, and you’re out of hairspray, and there wasn’t enough time for breakfast because the power went off during the night. What are you expecting at church?
Do you come to church each week expectantly or out of habit? Are you expecting to hear from God while in worship, or do you leave thinking, “well, that sermon was a swing and a miss!” Do you bring your cares and struggles to Him expecting His comfort and intervention, or are you here because your mom or someone else made you show up? Is there praise and thankfulness on your lips in expectation of involving yourself in the song service, or do you leave asking, “why don’t they ever sing my kind of music?” I suppose the question could be asked like this: Why do you come to church? Now we’re getting to it, aren’t we? “What’s the point? Right? Nothing is going to happen there anyway…”
We have all found ourselves at church with less than a holy, righteous, godly, grateful, spirit-filled, expectant attitude. If you say that has never described you, I’ll see you at the altar this Sunday during the invitation hymn. Obviously, your pastor was impacted more by an interruption from an animal in church many years ago than how I worshipped the One who counts me worth much more than many sparrows. Yet even if we come with impure motives, God wants us in His house. He longs for us to worship Him. And He wants our worship to be meaningful and life changing at church, in the car, alone at night, wherever we find ourselves approaching His awesome glory. And, yes, unusual, unplanned things do happen in worship. But may God keep us from ever losing our wonder, our expectation in coming before Him. May we approach the Lord believing that He can and will do a work in our life and in the life of those around us every time we expectantly draw near to Him. Come to His house anticipating His Spirit to move among us that one or more than one might come in repentance and faith to salvation in Jesus. Come anticipating His Spirit leading an individual or a family to join our church in finding a place to serve Him. Come anticipating that you yourself will not leave unchanged from the way you arrived. Come expectantly.
Jesus said in John 4, “An hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and truth; for such people the Father seeks to be His worshippers.”
Grace,
Tom