David Mathis ( is executive editor for and pastor at Cities Church. When it’s all about You, it’s all about You, Jesus.ĭesiring God partnered with Shane & Shane’s The Worship Initiative to write short meditations for more than one hundred popular worship songs and hymns. I’m sorry, Lord, for the thing I’ve made it Jesus is greatly honored when we bring ourselves, with the Holy Spirit’s help, back to the heart of worship again and again.Īnd it’s all about You, it’s all about You, Jesus. Hear these words in a spirit of worship and with a heart of repentance for how prone we are to wander and how often this has been not just Matt Redman’s story, but our own. We’re so easily distracted from the main things - especially from the main person, Jesus. “Let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall” (1 Corinthians 10:12). It is also a song of repentance and re-consecration, not just in worship, but all of life. Redman’s song is about refocusing, and re-centering, and reminding ourselves why we worship - and who we worship. It’s his commands we consider first, not our preferences. It involves us, but we’re at the periphery. The heart of worship is our heart, delighting in Jesus and expressing praise to him for the true things the Scriptures teach us about who he is and what he has accomplished for us. “What’s essential for worship today is not music and microphone, but the truth about Jesus and the help of his Spirit.” Our spirit, stirred by the Holy Spirit, in worship over true things about God, his Son, and his gospel. Jesus said to the Samaritan woman in John 4:24, “God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” The essence of worship is not the many good externals, but heart and head. And yet when we focus on them, rather than Jesus, we are losing the heart in our worship. You’re looking into my heart.” Good music, catchy beats, talented musicians, even the friends and loved ones with whom we worship - these are all good things, and wonderful in the context of corporate worship. Imagine that experience as you sing, “When the music fades, all is stripped away, and I simply come. ‘The Heart of Worship’ simply describes what occurred.” All About Jesus “Before long,” says Redman, “we reintroduced the musicians and sound system, as we’d gained a new perspective that worship is all about Jesus, and he commands a response in the depths of our souls no matter what the circumstance and setting. With the band and sound system gone, it made for an unforgettable time in the life of the church as they sang a cappella only - and for an unforgettable lesson about worship. He wanted them to come as worshipers, not as concert-goers. To come ready to engage with God for themselves, from the heart, not just watch with their eyes. His point was that we’d lost our way in worship, and the way to get back to the heart would be to strip everything away.” More Than a Songĭuring this season, the pastor challenged the congregation to be participants in worship, not consumers. He decided to get rid of the sound system and band for a season, and we gathered together with just our voices. “There was a dynamic missing,” says Redman, “so the pastor did a pretty brave thing. “The heart of worship is not music and song, but heads and hearts in joyful awe of the real Jesus.” In the late 1990s, the preaching pastor at Redman’s church in Watford, England sensed that their worship gatherings were going flat spiritually, that the congregation was going through the motions, and worship wasn’t flowing from the heart like true Christian worship must. Which can be especially dangerous in worship.įor songwriter and worship-leader Matt Redman, this lesson came in a remarkable experience that was both personal and corporate. If we don’t find ways to remind ourselves why we do what we do, we’re prone to just go through the motions, if not adopt some new underlying motivation altogether.
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