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Why We Need A Worship Life-Style

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Why We Need A Worship Life-Style

Posted on Thu, Aug 11, 2011

 by Tom Inglis 

If I asked you to identify the heartbeat of the church, how would you respond?

Evangelism? Surely, that is a critical element, signified by Jesus' command to "go and make disciples of all nations," (Matthew 28:19).

Healing is important. So is deliverance. Warfare and effectual prayer are likewise fundamental.

But all of these are tributaries, flowing from the river of worship. Yes, worship. It is probably the most misunderstood and ineffectively practiced element specified in Scripture. When the church finds this pearl of great price, all heaven will be released on the earth.

Worship is the test of the believer's authenticity.

God has not called us to be an army of workers who worship Him, but an army of worshippers who work for Him.

If all we can show the world is how hard we work for God, they will be little impressed. If we can show them how much we love Him, they will run to Him. Christians are the recipients of God's love to the world according to John 3:16. Our minimum response to this love should be worship so that the world will find Him irresistible also. Worship is simply our response to His love.

Without worship, Christianity is invalid. It's invalid because the distinguishing reality of Christianity is intimacy of relationship. If worship is not deeply personal, passionately intimate, and obsessively continuous then it is not true worship but only a phony substitute that will only superficially effect our churches.

It's Not To Show Our Love
 

Why has God called us to worship? You might think it is to express our love for God. That's not it; He already knows how much we love Him. God has commanded us to worship Him so He can change us...change us one little bit at a time, as specified in II Corinthians 3:17-18: "Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit."

 

This is where we will find liberty as the Holy Spirit changes us from one degree of glory to another at the rate of change we as individuals are ready to receive. One of the greatest needs in the Body of Christ today is for all of us to allow God to transform us at His pace – and not at our own. This is true freedom, but it is costly. It requires personal prayer, worship, and study of God's Word.

The need worldwide revival is not due to a lack of Christians, but a shortage of Christ-likeness. When the church begins to become Christ-like, the world will be quickly swept by the presence and power of God – that's evangelism.

Worship is the place of God's presence (Psalm 22:3), and also the place of revival. This revival takes place at either an individual basis or at the corporate level. Why then don't most churches experience revival when they spend so much time in what they think is worship? Perhaps it is because we have equated music with worship, or because revival comes at too high a price.

More Than Just Music
 

Worship has little to do with the way we sing, dance, or play musical instruments. It is not merely a 20-minute warm-up, tilling the soil of our hearts for the planting of the seed by the preacher. What then constitutes worship? Is it the same as praise, making the two synonymous for each other?

Praise is a separate topic. It is based on our knowledge of God. We won't elaborate on praise here, except to differentiate it from worship.

Worship is our response to God, meaning our obedience. We don't worship Him by what we sing, but rather by how we live – our lifestyle. Worship is what results from the continual process of change, growing more and more like Jesus as we spend time in God's Word, pray, and fellowship with our lord. Worship is always the result of personal activity or contact with God. It doesn't happen automatically because we call ourselves "Christian." It comes through being Christ-minded and Christ-lifestyle oriented.

Challenging and Disputed
 

If worship were something we do only on Sundays, Christianity would be easy. But because worship is our response to personal and intimate contact with God, it is one of the most challenging and disputed subjects in the end-time church. Upheavals in the spirit realm grow in intensity and frequency. The devil works frantically to douse worship and draw worshippers away from God.

As the time of the Lord draws near, congregations that seek true intimacy with God will experience great manifestations of His holy presence and power. The outbreak of revival will result in the addition of multiplied thousands to local churches. An inseparable bond will form between worship and evangelism. The growth will be explosive!

Sadly, spiritual hunger and thirst will plague churches that fail to worship God in spirit and in truth, and therefore haven't prioritised the salvation of souls. These churches will empty overnight.

A forerunner to this end-time revival will be a massive outpouring of repentance. God must deal with the church before He deals with the world. This will cause Christians to reach out to one another as never before.

The secret of the church's public ministry to the world is private devotion to God. The strength of any local church is the worship lifestyle of its members. The act of worship certainly draws God into our presence, but only a well-developed lifestyle of worship keeps Him there.

Like Trained Athlete

What would it be like if you played basketball, soccer, or some other physically demanding sport one day a week – and did nothing the rest of the week to practice or stay in shape for that sport? How well would you play on game day? That is what happens when we try to worship God on Sunday without developing a worship lifestyle Monday through Saturday.

Church is wonderful, but the rubber meets the road spiritually in our homes. Everything starts from a one-on-one encounter with God, where we as individuals bring His holy presence through prayer, study of God's Word, and obedience. This is a lifestyle of worship. If Christianity doesn't work in the home, it won't work in the church. It must start in the home, proceed to the local church, and then spread throughout the world.

Here lies the greatest challenge facing church leadership in the end times. God has confidence in the shepherds of this generation to inspire legitimate lifestyles of worship. May we all grow more like Jesus day by day. ♦

 

 

Tom was born in Scotland and moved to South Africa as a 14 year-old boy with his parents. He and his wife Barbara were saved in December 1976 shortly before he graduated from university with a master’s degree in Science in 1977. He had his own business as a chemical consultant until joining ministry full time in 1982 as music director with Rhema ministries in Johannesburg. In 1984 Tom had an unusual encounter with the Lord in his study for about forty minutes where the vision of Psalmody International was birthed.

He continued fulfilling various duties at the Rhema church until 1987 when he felt it necessary to leave full time church ministry and focus on the ministry of Psalmody International. He and his family continued as members of the church for the next seven years until they immigrated to San Diego, California in 1994.

Tom ministered across the United States and internationally for four years, teaching mostly on worship lifestyle. He then took an appointment in 1998 as worship leader and assistant pastor at New Covenant Fellowship in Temecula, California. During the next few years the church prospered and God birthed a vision in Tom to pioneer a church in Sydney, Australia. The family arrived in Sydney on April 1st, 2002 and started Sydney Life Church in the northern Sydney suburb of Mosman on August 4th that same year.

Tom has travelled into many nations teaching the message of Psalmody International and is considered by many as a pioneer in this area of worship ministry.

Tom’s wife, Barbara assists Tom pastor the church along with his children Kirsty, David, Andrew and Jessica Joy. The church is flourishing and along with his son David he has a strong team to support him with Psalmody International.

Qualifications

Diploma Biblical studies (South Africa)
M.Sc (Instrumental Chemical Analysis) RAU University
M.S.A.Chem. Inst
National Diploma (Chemistry)

Ordination

Rhema Ministries – South Africa
Victory Life International - Australia  

 

 

 

 

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