Our worship
Our worship
Worship is a special time. In God's house, God's people step away from the distractions and difficulties of daily life and gather as a spiritual family in the promised presence of God himself. Why do we come? What is the primary focus of our worship? On what we do? Or on what God does for us?
Certainly there are things that we do in our worship. We join with brothers and sisters in the faith and call upon God to be with us. We humbly and sincerely admit how far we have fallen and how miserably we have failed our God. There, in worship, we join our voices in hymns of prayer, praise, and proclamation. Every week we express what we believe in creeds that have been spoken by Christians for centuries. There, we pray.
But if we think of worship as primarily something we do, we are missing the most important part of our worship. Worship is about what God does for us.
Lutheran worship—biblical worship—is above all God speaking to us in his Word. It is God proclaiming through human messengers the crushing blows of his law. In worship, God lovingly speaks to sin-burdened sinners the sweet good news of sins forgiven and death defeated. In readings and sermons, God instructs, strengthens, equips, and motivates his people for lives of Christian service. Worship is where God comes to us in his sacraments, adopting sinners into his family through Holy Baptism and strengthening the faith of his people by giving them his true body and blood in the Lord's Supper. In worship, with every syllable of his Word that is proclaimed and spoken, God assures us of what he has done for us; in turn, he also reminds us of the mission that he has now entrusted to us.
One activity far exceeds all others in involving people directly with the life and work of a congregation. That activity is worship. Public worship is so central to our church experience that we couldn't possibly conceive of the church without it.
Designed to complement the 1993 hymnal, Christian Worship, the Christian Worship: Supplement was introduced in July 2008. With more than 200-pages the supplement includes 86 new hymns, two liturgies, 24 psalm settings, seven devotions, an expanded lectionary, to help congregations enrich their worship.
Want to prepare yourself for this week's worship service? Review the Bible readings ahead of time with weekly study guides, available on WELS' Evangelism site, What About Jesus.
