Leviticus 10:1-3
"Now Nadab and Abihu , the sons of Aaron, took their respective firepans, and after putting fire in them, placed incense on it and offered strange fire before the LORD, which he had not commanded them. And fire came out from the presence of the LORD and consumed them, and they died before the LORD. Then Moses said to Aaron, "It is what the Lord spoke, saying, 'By those who come near Me I will be treated as holy, and before all the people I will be honored" So Aaron, therefore, kept silent.
In this passage we see two sons of Aaron being immolated for not obeying God’s instruction for offering incense. Verse one says they offered “strange fire before the Lord.” The fire that they offered was not permitted by God and it was offensive to God. It was offensive to Him because they did not regard Him as holy and obey His commands. In verse three God commands that He be regarded as holy and glorified before all people.
I believe that we can use this brief narrative as a reference to see how serious we should take worshiping God. Nadab and Abihu did not take it seriously enough and were punished severely for it. By definition, worship is an act of reverence. So when we worship God with music, we should do so with reverence. In order for our worship to be pleasing to God it must have the following three characteristics. It must be done orderly, specifically, and harmoniously. I will go deeper into each subject in following posts, but for now I would like to just do an introduction to the “orderly” aspect.
If we worship God using music and put relatively no effort into it, would it be pleasing to God? OF COURSE NOT! It would be like telling a king that you would make him a beautiful crown, and throw it together the night before and then hand him a paper hat! The king would be disgusted with it. That is similar to putting no effort into worship for God. God would be displeased with it.
Let’s go back to the king analogy for a minute. Now, if you promised the king a beautiful crown and put all your possible effort into it and then gave it to him. And he knew the amount of effort involved, and then he would be more pleased than with the paper hat. That is the same as if we put all of our effort into music for God.
When all three of the characteristics are present and we have put all of our effort into it. Then it would be pleasing to God. The music with no effort would be like the “strange fire” that Nadab and Abihu offered to God. So now I ask this. What kind of fire do you want to present before the Lord? A “strange fire” or a pleasing one?
3 comments:
Great job on the post!
In what ways do you think we could present pleasing worship before the Lord?
Keep up the good work! :-D
--Andybert
We can offer pleasing worship by having order, specificity, and harmony in our music.
I'll have more on this subject in following posts, but for now that's all I'll give you...:-p
>>Doug out<<
Really enjoyed this post Doug, and I'm looking forward to hearing more of your thoughts on music.
I like the new backgrounds/colors you gave your blog...looks great!
Have a good day!
Amanda :-)
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