A few years ago I was in a worship service with a Tambourine
Lady. No one else in the service had brought a tambourine, much less decided to
play it during the singing. No one else had moved to an open space to find room
to sway and to jingle. Like the lone apple in a bowl of oranges, Tambourine
Lady took her place among us. I am thinking of her now.
I’m standing at the front of the room, just to the left of
the podium I will shortly stand behind to speak, and my body language is
completely wrong. It’s a fairly small room, so the fact that my hands are at my
sides is particularly evident, even though everyone else is on their feet as
well. From behind the keyboard you repeat your plea that we be free in our
worship, that we let go and throw our hands in the air, let go of worry about
what others might think. Come on, ladies,
let’s raise every hand in this place to the glory of the Lord. Be free.
The music swells, the singing grows louder. My arms stay
conspicuously at my sides.
It’s a beautiful song, a God-exalting, glory-laden chorus,
suitable for the throne room itself. I am deeply moved.
No one will judge you
here. Raise your hands to your Father! Every hand!
Oh, man. I try to focus my thoughts away from the
possibility that eyes are watching me through that sea of upraised arms,
wondering why their retreat speaker is so uptight. I half expect to glance up
and see my hands, like two traitors, mutinously occupying the space above my
head. But no, they seem to be still in their usual place. Think about the God
of the song. Think about the God of the song. Don’t worry about it - just
worship.
The chorus, one more time. Okay, sure, three more times. I
hear a faint jingling sound in the back of my consciousness.
Sweet, earnest worship leader, I hope I haven't let you down. Your job, like mine, is hard: we ask people to step outside what is comfortable. I gather that you may have recently flung off the
fetters of conservative worship, and that’s tremendous. I say that without
irony. But there's something I need you to understand.
Authentic worship means to me exactly what it means to you:
the freedom to worship as the Lord leads. I have traveled the length of the
denominational spectrum. I have been instructed to kneel, shout, laugh, fall
over, chant, throw my hands up, take off my shoes, sway with my neighbor, and dance like David
danced. It was a long trip through myriad worship styles, and participation was
not always optional. My hands are at my sides for the same reason yours are
thrown in the air: because I am free - free from the expectations of any of my
fellow worshippers, free to worship in whatever posture the Spirit leads. The truth is, I do occasionally raise my hands,
but never when told to by a worship leader or a lyric. Because of my history,
nothing could be more inauthentic, nothing less free.
So for me, and I suspect for a few others, authentic worship
looks a little different than it might for many – a little less demonstrative. Let’s
just say you’re never going to sustain a tambourine-related injury standing next to me.
It would grieve me to know that you felt dishonored by my failure to participate
in the manner you encouraged. But it
would grieve me more to know I had traded authentic worship for the comfort of
conformity.
Tambourine Lady understood that. And taught me that. I am her, in my own way.
Tambourine Lady understood that. And taught me that. I am her, in my own way.
You are dead right – we must be free in our worship. Sometimes
freedom raises its hands, and sometimes it sways and jingles. And sometimes freedom
stands quietly and trembles. Believe me, it is entirely possible to have your heart in your mouth and your hands at your sides. What you see is not fear or hardness. It is
worship unbound.
This is so beautiful and true and brilliantly expressed.
ReplyDeleteThank you, thank you, thank you. I so needed this. At the heart of this, for me anyway, is the dreadful fear of being judged and being misunderstood. May the Lord release me, and all others who are too uptight, to truly engage in worship as the Spirit leads and not as dictated by others' expectations. And, may I never be judgmental about the worship style of others.
ReplyDeleteI love this. Excellently put.
ReplyDeleteThis is me. I can 100% relate. I grew up in a Foursquare church where raising hands, dancing and being slain in the spirit where all around me. My father wanted me so badly to speak in toungesand the manner in which he showed his desire was very off-putting. Growing up, this affected how I worship. I am, however, becoming more comfortable and okay and therefore able to fully worship the Lord they way His spirit is leading me. Some times I think, "okay, I want to raise my hands", but don't. I want to raise my hand because I feel His spirit leading me, not so I can prove to myself that I can do it. I am comfortable with my hands down and almost feel it would be a distraction to me, to raise my hand. I can worship just the same with my hands down :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat, encouraging post. I have been reading (and loving) much of what you've written. I had a question about this one because I've struggled with the concept. I don't love it when worship leaders ask me to worship in specific ways because some expressions of worship honestly just distract me from actual worship. In fact, I do lift my hands in worship, but like you, not always at the urging of the worship leader. My question is, is that rebellious? My worship leader is a pastor at our church and part of me wonders if he instructs me to lift my hands in worship and I don't, am I not submitting to the instruction of my leaders? Maybe it's a silly question but I'd love to hear your thoughts.
ReplyDeleteJamie, that's a great question. I think it always comes back to motive: are you trying to defy your worship leader or worship The Lord according to your conscience? My guess is that your motive is the second. But if you're concerned about it, you could always talk to your worship leader about it. I think most would say they are not giving a command, but a suggestion?
DeleteGood call. Thanks for your response!
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