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IN HIS LIKENESS SERIES


Book Price R 99.00

Introduction
Worship is the single most important thing a Christian can
learn to do.
A.W. Tozer once wrote, "Why did Christ come? Why was He
conceived? Why was He born? Why was He crucified? Why did He
rise again? Why is He now at the right hand of the Father?"
The answer to all of these questions, Tozer says, is: "...in
order that He might make worshipers out of rebels."
Worship is what distinguishes the Church from the world.
When we worship, God's presence ceases to be something we
only talk about and, instead, becomes a personal experience
out of which we build an intimate relationship. In other
words, worship is an experience by which we touch the
unseen. It's a divine encounter that not only brings Him
glory, but also unveils His Word a little more clearly to
us. Worship not only opens the doorway to God's Love, but
also to His revelation and joy.
When do we Worship? How do we Worship?
When God put it on my heart to write a book about worship, I
questioned my friends, my family and others how and when
they worshiped. "Do you worship the Lord on a daily basis,
or just on Sundays?" The answers I received were surprising:
One friend said, "Oh, I worship the Lord all the time!"
Another commented, "I worship when I'm cleaning the house."
Another actually replied, "I worship the Lord when I'm with
the children." A gentleman responded, "I worship the Lord
when I'm driving in the car." Another commented, "I worship
Him when I'm at the office"; etc. In other words, the
general response I received was "I worship the Lord all day
long, no matter what I'm doing."
Now, I understand what these believers are saying-they have
an attitude of worshiping the Lord all day long. And that's
fine and that's good, but is that really what God means when
He says in John 4:23-24, "The hour cometh, and now is, when
the true worshipers shall worship the Father in spirit and
in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship Him. God is
a Spirit: and they that worship Him must worship Him in
spirit and in truth."
In other words, can we really "worship the Lord" while
cleaning the house, while being with the children, while
driving our cars or being at the office? Is this really what
God desires? This is what we want to explore in this little
book.
What is worship? How important is it? Do we worship the Lord
only on Sundays in church or are we to worship Him privately
at home every day? If the latter, how do we do it? And, most
importantly, how does God want us to worship Him?
What is worship? How important is it? Do we worship the Lord
only on Sundays in church or are we to worship Him privately
at home every day? If the latter, how do we do it? And, most
importantly, how does God want us to worship Him?
My Story
Let me start at the beginning:
A few months ago, I was experiencing so many disappointments
in my life (those "little foxes" that Song of Songs 2:15
talks about) that I just shut down emotionally. I simply
disengaged. It was as if the life in me just drained out. I
think our physical body instinctively knows how to defend
itself from more emotional attacks, and it does so by simply
shutting down and closing off. And that's exactly what
happened to me.
Maybe some of you can relate.
The problem is that when we shut down like this, we also
quench God's Life (in our hearts) as well. I felt as if His
Life in me wasn't just quenched or blocked, it was gone
completely. The joy of my salvation had completely
evaporated. I continued going about my daily business- Bible
studies, prayer, fellowship-but it was almost by rote,
mechanical at best.
The scary part to me was that I was daily making all the
right "faith" choices: I was confessing my sin and self,
repenting of those things, giving myself totally over to the
Lord and choosing to walk by faith. (I've been teaching
these principles and doing them personally for over twenty
years.) But this time, something was really very wrong
because my feelings were not aligning with my faith choices
(as they always have in the past), and the really
frightening part was that the joy of my salvation wasn't
returning!
No matter how much I prayed, confessed, repented and gave
things to God, I remained shut down, with absolutely no joy.
I so identified with Proverbs 17:22 which says, "...a broken
spirit drieth the bones." In the Living Translation the
words are, a crushed spirit saps our strength. It's so true:
when we are really spiritually depressed, everything in our
life is affected. It's almost as if our blood supply is
dried up. It frightened me because: how can I teach these
cleansing and renewing principles to others if they're not
working in my own life?
Those who know me well saw right through my forced outward
smile and were very concerned. Others saw my grin and were
oblivious to my hidden struggle.
But I knew something was terribly wrong. Either God
wasn't who He said He was, and walking by faith doesn't
really work (which I knew in my heart wasn't true), or, He
was again "cornering me" to teach me something new. (All of
my previous books have come about through personal
experiences that the Lord has allowed in my life to teach me
His ways. My books are simply a chronology of my walk with
Him over the last 25 years.) So I began praying that this
might be the case here also.
It was interesting because the very week that all of this
was going on, two different people-unexpectedly and out of
the blue-prayed that God would give me "new revelation" for
the next book that God would call me to write. That became
my prayer also.
There's that Word, "Worship"
During the second week that I was in this horrible state of
mind, I picked up an article that actually was intended for
Chuck but had mistakenly come across my desk. I casually
began reading it over when one word in the first paragraph
absolutely leaped out at me: worship!
The article, entitled Tired of a Tired Pastor, by Francis
Frangipane. This is what I read:
"In the early 1970s, during the beginning of my ministry,
the Lord called me to consecrate to Him the time from dawn
until noon. I spent these hours in prayer, worship and the
study of His Word. I would often worship God for hours,
writing songs of Him that came from this wonderful sanctuary
of love. The presence of the Lord was my delight, and I know
my time with Him was not only well-spent, but well-pleasing
to us both.
"However, as my life began to bear the fruit of Christ's
influence, the Holy Spirit would bring people to me for
ministry. In time, as more people would come, I found myself
cutting off forty-five minutes from the end of my devotional
time. On occasion, ministry to people would extend into the
night, and I stopped rising as early as I had.
"Church growth problems began to eat at the quality of my
remaining time; ministerial expansion, training younger
ministries and more counseling crowded the already limited
time I had left. Of course, these changes did not happen
overnight, but the months and years of increasing success
were steadily eroding my devotional life. In time I found
myself in a growing ministry but with a shrinking anointing
to sustain it.
"One day an intercessor called who prayed regularly for me.
He told me that during the night the Lord had spoken to him
in a dream concerning me. I was eager to hear what the Lord
had revealed to my friend, thinking perhaps He was going to
increase our outreach or maybe supply some needed finances.
I asked him to tell me the dream.
"What the Lord said had nothing directly to do with the
projects and the priorities that were consuming my time. He
simply said, 'Tell Francis I miss him."'
The author went on to say that he had become so tired and so
dry from doing the Lord's work that he needed to get back to
reading the Word more, praying more and worshiping the Lord
more.
"Worshiping the Lord more"? I thought for a moment. Do I
really worship the Lord? I know I pray, I know I praise and
I know I read the Word, but do I really worship Him? My mind
continued to race, "How is worshiping God any different from
praising Him or from blessing Him? In fact, what does it
really mean to worship?
The rest of the evening, I continued this line of personal
questioning: Is worship something we do just in church on
Sundays, something we do all day long (at the office, in the
car, etc.), or are we to personally worship the Lord in some
special way daily at home? And, if that's the case, how
exactly do we do that? These questions plagued my mind all
night long. How would you answer these questions?
No Joy
The next day, I was in the office with the head of our
prayer ministry and, unexpectedly, she showed me a letter
from a woman who was concerned about her daughter losing
"the joy of her salvation." As I read the letter, the Lord
totally convicted me, because that letter perfectly
described my life at that moment!
Many things had happened in this young woman's life (just as
they had in mine) that had left her almost "shell-shocked."
The mother wrote that her daughter "is there in body only,
but with absolutely no emotions and no joy." And, of course,
that was exactly how I felt! She said it was tearing her
family up because none of them was able to minister to her.
Then she closed her letter by saying, "Please, can you help
us..."
I left the prayer office in total shock, because I knew
exactly what that young woman was experiencing. How, Lord, I
thought, does one restore his joy? (No matter how hard we
try, I know it's impossible to change our own feelings.
There's no way we can manufacture them, hype them up or
counterfeit them.) So, what is the answer, Lord? I walked
away from my friend's office feeling totally helpless and
even more confused than ever, with all these unanswered
questions racing in my mind.
That afternoon in my daily reading of the Word, I came to
Psalm 65:4, "What joy awaits us inside Your Holy Temple."
(New Living Translation) The word joy caught my attention
and I found it fascinating that it was somehow connected to
God's Holy Temple. Lord, I cried, what are You trying to
show me through all of this?
God's Voice
The event that finally put everything into perspective, and
sparked a whole new level in my spiritual walk, happened
later that night. After dinner, I sat down to finish my
Bible reading and I happened to be in Luke 4, which talks
about the three temptations of Christ. As you may recall,
Christ's rebuttal to Satan in the third temptation is that
we should worship and serve the Lord only: "Thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve."
Wow! There's that word worship again, I thought, which
automatically propelled the same line of questioning:
Lord, do I worship You? I know I praise You; I know I pray
to You; and, I know I read Your Word; but do I really
worship You?
God's answer to me was almost audible, "You don't even know
what worship means, and that's why you have no joy!"
My mind raced: What are You saying, Lord? Worship and joy
are linked? How?
God began to lovingly unfold His wisdom to me. He first
showed me that, yes, I had been praising Him; and, yes, I
had been confessing and repenting my sins; and, yes, I had
been reading His Word. But, after I did these things I would
get up and go about my business, without so much as a
thought about worshiping Him. Oh yes, every once in a while,
I would raise my hands in church or fall on my face to pray
for something specific or cry if I heard a moving tape, but
He showed me that I had never really entered into worshiping
Him and adoring Him on a daily or personal basis. The truth
was I didn't really know how!
As a result of all of this, I had lost the joy of my
salvation and my spiritual strength had evaporated.
Only "in Thy presence, is fulness of joy...", Psalm 16:11
tells us.
Course of Action
God has called me to be a teacher and I absolutely love the
"treasure hunts" that He puts me on. After the above
encounter with Him, I got out every book, every commentary,
every Bible translation, every Bible dictionary and every
concordance that I could find about worship and about joy.
The first night, I literally stayed up all night, lost in my
quest for understanding. I was determined to find out what
He meant when He says, "Worship Me." How are we supposed to
worship Him? And finally, how is joy tied to worship?
I was aware of the above Psalm 16:11, but I never realized
that worship is really the only "key" that opens the door to
His presence. In other words, being before Him in worship
leads to His presence and thus, to fulness of joy. I never
put these together. This realization also brings Nehemiah
8:10 into better perspective: "...the joy of the Lord is our
strength." What this means is: without worship ( without
being in His presence), we will have no joy; and without
joy, we will have no strength. Our life's blood will dry up,
and we'll wither and die spiritually.
This is so true. Look at the body of believers today. As a
whole, we are joyless, powerless and loveless. Why? Because
we are not worshipers! We don't worship the Father in spirit
and in truth. In reality, most of us worship other things
(other people, careers, sports, fame, wealth, etc.). We put
these things first in our lives, not the Lord. This is why
Tozer, in the quote on the first page, intimated that
learning to worship the Lord is the most important thing a
Christian can do. It's the key to His presence and thus, to
our happiness.
After my encounter with the Lord, I was hooked. I was
determined, at all costs, to find out what authentic worship
really is; how we are supposed to worship; and when are we
supposed to worship.
This little book will attempt to explore some of the
incredible things that the Lord is showing me and how they
are changing my life.
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