Showing posts with label Acts 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Acts 2. Show all posts

Sunday, September 7, 2008

W



Series: Wiii Church
September 7, 2008

1 Corinthians 12:27 tells us, “Now you are the body of Christ, and each one of you is a part of it.” That’s what we’re talking about the next four weeks.

When I was in the 9th grade a friend was going on a summer vacation for a week, and I talked him into letting me borrow his NES. For a week of my summer I did nothing but play SMB, determined that I was going to complete the games. The whole concept was revolutionary. That week I accomplished my goal and finished the game. My friend returned. I gave him back his game system, and I told him, “I just wasted an entire week of my summer. I will never play video games again.” Since that time, I have never owned a video game system. I have become woefully out of touch with the world. I ride a horse and buggy, I think little people live inside my TV, I afraid of electricity and don’t understand these “micro-waves.”

Ok, I’m not that bad. But still, I have never been interested in video games… until the Wii. I was volunteering at the Northwest London Resource Centre after school program, and they were having a game day. They had set up a game cube, guitar hero, and a Wii. A kid asked me to play Wii with him. I told him he’d have to teach me, which he thought was pretty cool. He said let’s box. He handed me the numb chucks. It was awesome. Oh, it felt so good to just kick the virtual snot out of this little punk. Then I went on to kick the snot out of another kid. I was on a roll. I was having a blast. Then this little twerp, I mean, he must have weighted 98 pounds fully clothed, with his backpack, soaking wet, holding a 45-pound plate, took the controllers. I’m telling you, I was flailing around all over the place, and this kid barely moved a muscle, largely because he didn’t have any muscle to move, and he totally cleaned my clock.

Hey, all kidding aside, the Wii system is a fascinating development in technology. It was developed under the code name “Revolution,” but they soon decided that this did not really convey what they were trying to do with the Wii. You see the Wii wasn’t so much about a wireless controller, that technology was already commonplace. What was revolutionary about the Wii was how it was going to bring people together. Obviously the Wii is spelled with two lowercase I’s, side by side, representing people standing together, and simple put, the name, “Wii” sounds like “we.” Two or more people, connecting together, sharing in the game, sharing the experience.

They changed the name from revolution to Wii, but Wii has still revolutionized the way gaming is done and will be done. And likewise, this September, we want to revolutionize the way you think about church, the way you understand church, the way you do church, the way we exist as a church, the way the world thinks about us as a church. Today, and all this month, it’s about “Wii Church.” It’s about me, and you, and all of us together, in community, in connection, doing life together.

Even the title of this series emerged in a group a few weeks back as a few of us were talking about this coming fall. But the thinking behind it started in me long ago, and really started to come into focus when I decided to go with the name “Connections.” I knew it sounded like a Christian dating service, or an internet provider, but still, it was a way for me to capture what I hoped and dreamed and believed a local church could be.

Like our mission states, we believe in a church that can become a gathering of people who are radically connected with God, with people, and with the world. And all I mean by “radical” is its root meaning, which is, “root.” To be rooted, connected in a way the grounds, that nourishes, that gives life- to God, to people and to the world. We believe that our connection with God is the most vital, most essential, most important thing we can do in this world and with our lives. And we believe that our God, unlike any religion can ever offer, invited us to enter into a relationship. We believe that God the Father loves us and sent his son Jesus to us. We believe that Jesus lives in a direct connection and relationship with each and every one of his believers by sending us the Holy Spirit. And that each believer, filled with the Holy Spirit, is connected to one another, in a way that is both contemporary and concrete (here and now) and is metaphysical and eternal.

And it is through this connection with God that we become connected with one another, and when we are connected to one another, we become what the bible calls the church. And thus the church is “me,” but it is so much more than just me, it is “we.”

We are Canadians and Americans, and Camericans like my family!
We are young and old,
men and women,
rich and poor,
Red and yellow, black and white, and some even have the orange tan thing.
We are educated and uneducated,
left brained and right brained and no brained,
capable and handicapped.
We are Liberals and Conservatives.
We are athletes and book worms.
Leafs fans and Senators fans, and maybe even some of us who care way more about football.
We are the mature in faith, and new in faith,
traditional and contemporary,
Orthodox and Catholic,
Reformed and Wesleyan,
Baptist and Anabaptist.
We have been monks, and social activists.
We have conscientiously served, and we have conscientiously objected
We have built a city on a hill, and we have entered into the city to heal
We have sinned greatly, and have been greatly forgiven
We have been given much, and we have much still to give
We have loved much, and have many more to love!

We are the church and we are every person, in every corner of the world, who has died, who lives, who are yet to be born, who are IN JESUS CHRIST. That’s it, that’s the primary definition of the church- We are the gathering of everyone who has lived or now lives in Jesus Christ- every person who puts their life in Jesus.

And when we are the church, we will experience life the way it was meant to be lived. We will find community, hope, healing and wholeness. We will find life in Jesus, and we will find life in each other. We will be encouraged, and challenged. We will have our lives saved, and we will have our lives ruined- that is, we will have our old, boring, dead-end dreams of fame, wealth and worldly success ruined by a vision to live in a better way. We will discover that place where we are loved, where we have purpose, where we belong. And in the church, in this connection, we will tap into a power unlike anything else we have ever experienced.

You see, I believe that behind what much of our culture calls psychological disorder (not everything mind you), but much of what we think of as disorder, is actually so prevalent, that it is in fact the normal order of things in a fallen world. Angst, anguish, anger, confusion, depression, fear, guilt, loneliness… since everyone experiences these things to some degree, they are a part of our common soul cry for God.

I believe that because a disconnected soul lies at the heart of most of our personal and cultural struggles, the solution (again, not always, but more often that not) is not therapy, not to further isolate ourselves from others, going behind closed doors to vent on a expert at reflective listening, but church. The solution is believing in Jesus, repentance, turning our life over to God, connecting with Him, then connecting with others in him.

I believe that the greatest need then in someone’s life after they connect with God, is to connect with other people. Communities of people pouring their heart, their love, their lives into others; as we have others pouring their heart, their love, their lives into ours.

And therefore, (and this is what’s going to ruffle the feathers of hard-core church types) these communities are not primarily about correcting wrong behaviors, or providing accountability, or having mentors who are like spiritual giants standing over us- these communities are about connection. Simply connecting with each other, as the children of God, the body of Christ.

Is there a place for correcting wrong behaviors? Sure there is. If your life is wrapped up in self destructive and other-destructive behaviors, then God can help, and the church can help, and God will help and the church will help. But the church is not primarily about entering into a behavior modification program of rules and regulations; it’s about a living relationship with God.

Is there a place for accountability? Sure, when we come to a place where we desire a standard of life higher than we can ever achieve on our own, when we have that kind of intimacy with a few others. But again, the church is not primarily about holding a standard over your head so you feel constantly guilty about where you are. The church is about receiving forgiveness in Jesus, and together leaning on the standard of Jesus to raise us from death to life, from this world to the next, and living in grateful response to the grace and love he’s lavished on us.

Is there a place for being mentored and mentoring others? Of course there is. But these relationships are so intimate, so personal, so wonderful when they happen and come into place, that we can’t force them. But we can plan for them. Because the only way we are ever going to find them, the only way we can ever get to place to say to some one, follow me, or, I want to follow you, is if we are already connected, already in community, already living as the church.

This is about “we” being the church. I want to do this because I believe, like others before me, that the church is the hope of the world. I believe that the church is the one enduring and eternal institution of this world. I believe it is way more than an institution, it is an organism. I believe that the church is the organic, dynamic, predestined hope for the world. I believe that church is the living, breathing, growing body of Jesus Christ. I believe that the church is made manifest in the people of God here on earth, and will be made glorified in eternity. I believe the church is the best thing that I, or anyone else, can be a part of on this side of heaven, because the church is going to be the bride of Jesus in heaven. I believe that church, more than anything else in the world, is the method and the means to change the world.

We are the Ecclesia. That’s the Greek word that we translate church. It means a gathering or an assembly. It also has the connotation of being called out. So we, the ecclesia, are people who are called out from the world, who gather together in Jesus. Then Jesus sends us back out into the world to gather more!

Jesus said, whenever 2 or more people get together in my name, I am there. Whenever one person calls on the name of Jesus, they are saved. They become a Christian. They enter into a relationship with God the Father through believing in Jesus Christ the Son and they are filled with the Holy Spirit. They are a Christian. And that person, whether they like it or not, whether they want it or not, are immediately and eternally a part of the church. When that Christian gets together with just one other Christian- bang! The church is made visible. That’s the way it is, because we are the church. It’s not a building, and we do violence to the real nature of the church when we think of it not analogous to a building, but as a building, we change it from something living, to something dead. It’s not just a meeting on Sunday mornings. And we diminish church, we lessen it’s greatness when we think if is simply as one hour Sunday morning, no matter how important or awesome that worship experience is.

Some people don’t get this because Jesus didn’t talk about it much. Jesus didn’t rail on and on about the church. He spent his ministry talking about the Kingdom of Heaven, or the Kingdom of God. He preached, more than anything else, repent, for the kingdom is near! Jesus spent his life calling people into a relationship with him, calling people to follow him, healing the sick, giving sight to the blind, feeding the hungry, casting out demons, even raising the dead. He taught people about the love of God and how to love their neighbors. He welcomed little children into his arms. He mingled with the haves and have not’s. He associated with the right people, and the wrong crowd. He comforted the afflicted, and he afflicted the comfortable. He gave people without hope a reason to live. He gave people without purpose a direction in life. He forgave sinners and set them free. Jesus is without a doubt the most compelling figure in all of history. He has changed the world. His legacy lives on and grows larger every day.

Jesus is easy to love. He really is. And there really are few people in the history of the world who have studied the life of Jesus and have not come to believe in him as the Lord and savior of the world, even fewer won’t at least fall in love with him as the most exceptional human who ever lived. It really is hard not to love him.

So Jesus, on the last night of his life on earth, before his death, resurrection and ascension, said to his disciples a new command I give to you: love one another, as I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples. (John 13:34-35) Can you believe that- he set us up. He came to us, he lived with us, he taught us, healed us, saved us. He became our savior and our Lord, and that was great. Then he had to go and mess the whole thing up by telling us that we had to love each other, and that this is how the world will know him. He set us up!

He set us up because you people really make it hard to love you. I know, I’m your pastor. I mean, you have issues, you have baggage, you have real problems. You come from broken families, and the sins of your parents have haunted you for a lifetime. You have addictions and attitudes problems. You have parents who are sick and dying and need cared for. You have kids who have rebelled and break your heart. You have trouble finding a relationship, and finding someone to marry. Then when you find someone you have trouble in your marriage. You have debt and messed up finances. You have trouble at school and at work. Have you seen you people? Have you looked in the mirror? You really make it really hard to love you.

But God did love you. He loved you so much he has saved you and called you his very own. He loved you and trusted you so much he entrusted to you the very desire of his heart, the very center of his mission- to be the church. To be his body, the body of Christ. And as the church he send us into the world. So we’d be his feet going to everyone on earth. And we’d become his voice and we’d share the best news the world has ever heard, the greatest story ever told. And we’d be his ears, listening to the voices crying out in the darkness. And we’d his hands, going to everyone and lifting them out of the graves of this world. And so now we are left having to love other people the way Jesus loved all people because the Holy Spirit lives in us, and connects each of us, and changes my life from just being about me, to being all about we.

Our story doesn’t end with Jesus. It really just begins. Jesus appeared to his disciples for 40 days after his resurrection, then he ascended into heaven, promising to send to us the Holy Spirit. And when the Spirit would come, the church would be born. And the Spirit did come, and the church was born, and on the they very day the church was born A man named preached the story of Jesus, and 3000 people believed, repented, and were baptized.

Immediately Acts tells us what marked the life of the church…
Acts 2:42They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. 43Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles. 44All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. 46Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.


What are the marks of the church? To summarize, they were devoted to God, they were devoted to one another, and they were devoted to others. And this is what we have devoted ourselves to. Take away one of those pillars- devotion to God, to people, to the world, and the church isn’t the church anymore. Take away one, and like a three-legged stool, the whole thing falls over.

This is what the church did, and what our church does. To gathering in worship in celebration of God, to study God’s word, to pray. That’s what these celebrations are all about. It didn’t end there, that was just the beginning, They gathered in homes to fellowship with one another and share in life together. That’s what we’re talking bout next week. Their life together was marked by their baptism in the Lord Jesus. SO that’s what we’re doing September 21. Their life together was sustained in sharing Communion, or the Lord’s Supper, or the breaking of Bread, or the Eucharist (it sure has a lot of names), but whatever your favorite title, we’re sharing in that meal on September 28.

That passage ended with what I think is just about the most awesome things ever- They enjoyed the favor of all people and the Lord added daily to their number those who were being saved. And so we pray daily to see people saved. This is what we mean by Wiii Church.

We are serious about Wiii Church. We are so serious about this, that we want to remove every obstacle form your path to connecting with God, and connecting with people, and connecting with the world. One of the things we’ve heard from some of our folks is that because we rush out of here after worship, a lot of folks don’t have time to connect with others. Sorry, it’s one of the limitations of the theatre and engaging our culture here. But today I want to remove your excuse for not connecting. We believe so deeply in WE, in relationships, that we are giving you a $5 gift card to Starbucks. Everyone who wants one will get one. IF we run out, I’ll run over to Starbucks and get more. They are worth $5, that’s enough for two people to each get a Grande, or Giganto, or whatever they call it, coffee. But that’s the catch. You have to share it. You have to grab a person, grab a card, and go, or set up a time to go. Or, if there’s someone you’ve been wanting to invite to Connections, or someone you just need to connect with, you can take a card, call that person, and go connect.

Are we trying to buy you off? Absolutely. You bet. We think you are worth $5. We think your relationship are worth $5. In fact, we think your life and your relationships are worth way more than $5. We think you are priceless, you are worth the life of Jesus Christ, and your relationships are about the best thing you can invest in in this world. And if $5 can help us communicate you’re worthy. If $5 can help grow relationships, well we think that the best investment we can make as a church.

And if $5 Starbucks cards gets people talking about the church that bribes people to come- well so what. In fact, if it gets them talking, if it gets them visiting us, great! But we aren’t giving out cards next week, so they all missed the boat!

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Signs of Belonging: Soaring in Worship

Series: Signs of Belonging
Sermon: Soaring in Worship
George J. Saylor
April 6, 2008

I want you to think about this question- have you found the place where you belong?
Have you found the place where you have the deep and abiding assurance that you belong?
The place where you are accepted for who you are, all your strengths, and all your shortcomings?
The place where you serve a vital role, and others serve you in vital ways?
The place where you are so woven into the very fabric of the place that perhaps it would be impossible to pull out with tearing the thing apart, the place where if someone else pulled themselves away, that it would tear you apart?
Have you found where you belong? Have you experienced the sense of belonging?

We probably don’t even realize our deep need to belong until we have our first experience of not belonging. They are traumatic experiences in our lives- the first time we get cut from a team. The moment we find out we weren’t invited to a friends party. The day we open the letter and find out we don’t get into the school of our choice. All of us, I suspect, have had the moment, or maybe we feel like we are continually living in that moment, of wondering, “Where to I fit in? Where do I belong?”

I am continually intrigued by this tension in my own life and in the lives of those around me. All of us seem to live in this push and pull of wanting to be ourselves and to be part of a group. We obsess about finding our voice, our individually, our own unique style and expression. We want to stand out from the crowd. Then something happens to us and we have that moment of realization that more than anything else we desire a sense of belonging to something bigger than just ourselves. We long to find our peeps, our posse, our purpose, our entourage.

We have to find our place of belonging. It’s as human as the need to eat and sleep and breathe. Here at Connections we have a couple of convictions about belonging:
We were created to belong to God. This is the ultimate connection we must make, the ultimate belonging that must happen in our lives.
We were created to belong as a group, what we would call being the church.
We were created to belong socially, in a smaller network of friends.
We were created to belong personally, invest with a few true friends.
And we were created to belong intimately. With a spouse, with family, maybe with one or two life long friends.
Belonging is not a simple thing, it’s not even as simple as yes or no. It’s multifaceted and works out on many levels in our lives.

For the next five weeks we are talking about the Signs of Belonging here at Connections Community Church. We want people to know that these are Signs that mark and identify this church. Today I want to you first understand why they are important.

First, I like signs. Signs are very helpful. Bill Engvall has made a career out of offering people signs. Signs serve several absolutely vital functions in our lives and in our world. Signs give us information. Signs tell me where the grocery store is. They tell me what movies are playing and at what time. Signs tell me what’s on sale. They tell me who’s appearing next weekend at the JLC.

Not only do they give us information, they give us direction. You want to go to Toronto, follow the signs. Along the way they show us that we are going in the right direction, that we are going the right speed, that we are making progress. Signs keep us from getting lost, or, should we be lost, they help us get back on the right track. Signs get us to where we are going.

But even more, signs create order out of the chaos of our lives. Imagine if they took all the stop signs in London away. Signs show us the limits of safety, they warn us of danger, they keep us out of danger, they keep control and order of our lives where otherwise there would be chaos and anarchy. We need signs to navigate the world today.

In the same way we need signs to navigate our lives. We need signs to help walk the path of God, to help us arrive at the destination we were created for, if we should get lost they get us back on track, and they help keep us out of trouble and harms way.

What were we created for? Oh I’m so glad I asked that. We were created for Belonging. Like Bob Dillon sang so many years ago, you gotta serve somebody in this world. You belong to somebody or something. When you were born you belonged to your parents. Maybe now you belong to your spouse. Maybe your boss. Maybe your addiction- a bottle, a drug, adult websites. Maybe you belong the money you want to make, or the money you own. The fact of the matter is that we all belong to somebody or something.

The bible teaches about the belonging we were made for. The bible teaches us that we were created to belong to God. And this may be one of the most offensive truths of our faith in our culture. You are not your own, but are to belong to the one who made you. Ephesians 2:19 says
“You are a member of God’s family, and you belong in God’s household with every other Christian (LB).”
As we talked about before, the bible story paints a picture of perfect belonging at creation. Adam and Eve belonged to God, they belonged fully to one anther, they belonged in the Garden of Eden. We, humanity, messed up, and we’re still messed up. But we never lost the innate need to belong, the created norm of having that place and experience of belonging. So God came to buy us back through Jesus Christ.

The story is told of a boy who lived by a river and loved the water. Watching boats move up and down the river, he decided to make his own little toy boat. For days he carefully crafted the vessel, making sure everything was just perfect, just the way he wanted from stem to stern. When it was finished to his satisfaction he carefully carved his initials in the hull to mark it as his own. Then he took it out for it’s inaugural launch. He was so excited to set the ship free he pushed it out into the water where it quick caught he current and began moving downstream. Frantically the boy followed along shore as best he could, but he couldn’t keep up, and eventually lost sight of his boat. He went home with a broken heart. A week later as he was walking through town he happened by a unique toyshop, and to his amazement he saw his boat in the window. He knew in an instant it was his. He ran into the shop and told the owner that was his boat in the window. The shop owner was unmoved by the boys pleading and told him he bought the boat from a fisherman, and the boat was his. Seeing the situation clearly as he did, the boy did not hesitate. He ran home, took out all his savings, and spent it all to buy back his own boat. As he walked out he looked at his boat and smiled, saying, "Little boat, you are now twice mine- first I made, and now I have bought you."

God looks at us in much the same way- first he made us, then he bought us back through sending his own Son Jesus Christ. He made us, he knit us together in our mothers womb. Then we drifted downstream. But Jesus came to buy us back, to die on a cross to atone for our sin. And now Gods says to us, you are twice mine- twice you belong to me- I made, and I’ve bought you back. This is the message of Easter, and this is the belonging offered to us in Jesus Christ.

Just after Easter, we find that the church is born. It’s growth and development is outlined in the Book of Acts- the acts and actions of the new church being lead by the Holy Spirit. In the first chapter we find the last encounter with the risen and living Jesus before he ascends to heaven. In the second chapter the Holy Spirit comes on the followers of Jesus and their lives are transformed. They instantly go from this rag-tag bunch of turncoats, confused, afraid, disorganized, ready to run away, into this groups that boldly goes out and preaches the good news of life in Jesus. And more than that, they instantly find this community of belonging. At the end of that second chapter we read this:

2:42They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. 43Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles. 44All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need. 46Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

That is a picture of belonging, and that passage outlines everything we are going to talk about the next five weeks. What were the signs, the marks of this new community, this thing called the church, the body of Christ, the family of God? We see at least five things clearly outlined:
∑ Soaring in Worship- they gathered in the temple courts to worship, they praised God, they broke bread and prayed.
∑ Studying God’s Word- the devoted themselves to the apostles teaching.
∑ Stewarding God’s Gifts- the held everything in common as they gathered in each others homes.
∑ Serving God’s People- they gave to everyone who was in need.
∑ Sharing God’s Love- they enjoyed the favor of all the people, and the Lord added daily to their number those who were being saved.

I want to focus for the remainder of our time on that first sign- the sign of worship. And I want to propose to you that finding your place of belonging in this world begins with this thing called worship. What is worship- it’s most basic definition- ascribing worth to someone or something- to say you are worthy of my love, my affections, my admiration, my emulation, my everything.

When we begin to look to the scriptures we begin to see that worship is actually a very big thing. Is it about one hour Sunday morning? Absolutely. The followers of Jesus from day one gathered on the day of the resurrection. They read the scriptures, they prayed prayers, they sang songs, they took communion, they baptized new believers, they welcomed outsiders in to hear the good news. And then it ended and they went home and went on with their same-old lives.

Of course not- it was the springboard that propelled them into everything else, always asking the question- does this glorify God. What is outlined is that basically, all our lives are to be worship. Worship isn't everything, it's the ONLY THING!!

Colossians 3:17 tells us, whatever you do, in word or in deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.” And that’s really the gauge of worship. If we have confidence that what we are doing brings glory to God, if everything we do and say we can do and say in the name of Jesus, then it qualifies as worship. As the bible says we then worship God from waking to sleeping, in eating and drinking, at work and at play, in making love and raising kids. If you can do it to the glory of God, then it is worship, and it is what you were made for.

Nearly 400 years ago a bunch of reformers got together to write out a teaching tool to help people understand the Christian life. One of the things they wrote is called the Westminster Catechism and it begins with this question, which is absolutely brilliant, What is the chief purpose of humanity? That’s like the million dollar question. That’s what we are all ultimately asking- what the purpose of life, and in particular my life? 400 years before the purpose driven life folks we asking this question. 1600 years before that God gave the answer. Join us next week as we look at the answer.

No, I’ll spill the beans- to glorify God and enjoy him forever! That's what we as humans were made to do, or to put it another way, what makes us most human, is to bring God glory and enjoy him in the process, forever. That is what worship is all about. It’s about fulfilling your created purpose. And that simple, pithy, direct answer tells us three of the most important things we can ever learn about worship:
  • It’s about God’s Glory;
  • It’s about our pleasure;
  • It’s about eternity.

The first sign of true worship is that it’s about God’s glory. The bible is abundantly clear on this. When Moses went to pharaoh and demanded that he set the people of Israel free what was the reason- so that they could go and worship God. When God gave the first commandments to the people what was the first one, worship the Lord your God alone. Already he was revealing that we were created to worship and drawn to worship and that we must only worship God. Psalm 29:2 says, Ascribe to the LORD the glory due his name; worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness. And as we’ve already said, when the church was born it’s first sign was the sign of true worship. Bringing glory to God the Father through Jesus the Son in the power of the Holy Spirit.

Worship is to Glorify God and to enjoy God. It kills me that the world thinks worshipping God is boring. It’s like the greatest travesty the world has ever seen- that somehow we’ve made worshipping the living God lifeless and dull, that we’ve taken the greatest revelation ever given to us, the bible, and made it irrelevant. It’s supposed to be a delight, it’s supposed to be a joy, it’s supposed to be awesome. Psalm 100 tells us to worship God with thanks in our hearts, to worship God with joy! John Piper says that God is in fact most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him.

And lastly, we worship forever. Worship is the start because it’s to bring God glory, it’s be a joy to us, because it’s to go on forever. So we best not be wasting our time messing up worship and doing it in a way that neither God nor people enjoy, because we are gonna be doing it a long long time. The final image we have in the bible is the revelation of John, where he sees through this window into heaven and what he sees is that at Jesus’ return heaven and earth collide, and the worshippers of God from every tongue and tribe and nation gather around God and party! They celebrate, they praise, they worship!

And because we worship God forever, we start with the end in mind. The first sign of belonging in the household of God is to gather on the first day of the week for worship. It’s what the followers of Jesus do. It starts our week and sets the tone of the whole week to come. It has been characterized by singing, by praying, by reading and talking about God’s word, by taking Communion, or the Lord’s Supper, and by baptizing new believers. The bible commends the gathering of worship to all believers and urges us to continue this practice and invite other to join us.

Let's close this service, but continue our worship, now and forever. Amen.