Heavenly Worship, 8889127120
Heavenly Worship, 8889127120
Heavenly Worship, 8889127120
Heavenly
e
Worship
n
Releasing Your Spirit to Faith,
Hope and Destiny
Peter Todd
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 2
All rights reserved. This book is protected under the copyright laws. This book may
not be copied or reprinted for commercial gain or profit. The use of short quotations or
occasional page copying for personal or group study is permitted and encouraged.
Permission will be granted upon request. Unless otherwise identified, Scripture
quotations are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION®
NIV®. © Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by
permission of Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved. Scriptures marked
NKJ are taken from the New King James Version of the Bible. Copyright © 1982 by
Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Scriptures marked NAS are
taken from the the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE, Copyright 1960, 1962,
1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used
by permission. Please note that Destiny Image Europe’s publishing style capitalizes
certain pronouns in Scripture that refer to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and may
differ from some Bible publishers’ styles.
Take note that the name satan and related names are not capitalized. We choose not to
acknowledge him, even to the point of violating grammatical rules.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8/10 09 08 07 06 05
This book and all other Destiny Image Europe books are available at Christian
bookstores and distributors worldwide.
www.eurodestinyimage.com
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 3
Dedication
n
Acknowledgements
n
Along with Barney Coombs, he has done more than anyone to help
me sharpen and hone my God-given gifts. I am very grateful to the
Lord for bringing both these fine men of God into my life. I am also
very grateful to Fiona Peters, who did an excellent job of reviewing
and editing the manuscript. Without her thorough and professional
help, I would not have been able to complete this book.
I was brought up with a rich heritage in music and worship. My
parents and grandparents are all worshipers, and I owe them a huge
debt of gratitude for the inheritance that they have given me. In
turn, the Lord has given four precious girls to Julia and I. They have
brought tremendous joy and happiness into my life. In different
ways, God has used each one of them to teach me about Himself.
Whenever I think of them, I am moved by how richly God has
blessed me.
Above all others in this world, I am deeply grateful to my wife,
Julia. She has loved, supported, and encouraged me through good
times and bad. She challenges me and provokes me into greater joy
and fruitfulness. She has believed in what God has given me when
I have been unable to believe myself. She has given of herself, many
times sacrificially, to see me flourish in becoming all that God has
made me to be. Her selfless love and servant heart have been a con-
stant inspiration to me. Without her, this book would not have
been written. I am deeply grateful to God for giving me such a
wonderful wife.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 7
Contents
n
Chapter 1
The Fuel of Heavenly Worship....................................................1
Chapter 2
The Place of Heavenly Worship ................................................11
Chapter 3
The Journey of Heavenly Worship ............................................23
Chapter 4
The Center of Heavenly Worship ............................................43
Chapter 5
The Liturgy of Heavenly Worship ............................................53
Chapter 6
The Pinnacle of Heavenly Worship ..........................................75
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 8
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 9
Foreword
n
In 1992, Peter sensed a strong leading from God to leave his home-
land and go to Winnipeg, Canada. He gave up a successful teaching
position and volunteered in our Christian school for two years. His
teaching expertise, musical skill, and shepherd’s heart were of incred-
ible value. During these years, Peter reconnected with his long-time
friend Julia Elderton, who at that time was living and working in
China. Julia also made the journey to Canada, and they were married
on Christmas Day 1994. Since then, they have been blessed with four
beautiful daughters.
Ron MacLean
Pastor, Gateway Christian Community
Winnipeg, Canada
January 2005
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:26 Pagina 13
Introduction
n
The verse that jumped out at me the most was Luke 1:64, which
says of Zechariah that “immediately his mouth was opened and his
tongue was loosed.” As I looked at the other God-encounters in these
two chapters, I noticed the same occurrence in each case. God
supernaturally revealed Himself and something of His purpose,
and the result was the loosening of tongues in worship and witness.
Luke highlights four responses to these revelations: Zechariah’s,
the shepherds’, Simeon’s, and Anna’s.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 14
whole area became alive with gossip about the good news. Luke
records a similar outbreak of God-awareness that took place 33 years
later when the Holy Spirit loosed tongues of those in the upper
room so they could preach the gospel (see Acts 2).
CHAPTER 1
e
a little key at the end of Revelation 3, which can help unlock the
door into treasures of the next two chapters. That key has to do
with our eyes. If our eyes are open, then we will be able to see into
Heaven itself. But, are our eyes open? Maybe our eyes are like those
of the Laodicean church.
As Eugene Peterson points out in his book, Reversed Thunder:
The Revelation of St. John and the Praying Imagination, the Church sits
in between the two great revelations of Christ in the Book of
Revelation, chapters 1 and 4. What exists here are reviews of the
seven churches. (The Holy Spirit has preserved Paul’s letters to
these seven churches, and they may contain a message for the uni-
versal Church, as there is in his epistles.) The seven reviews are
remarkable for their brevity, but apparently that is all that needs to
be said to each congregation.
In order to go from the glory of the first vision of Christ to the
greater glory of Revelation 4, you have to go through the Church;
and it’s not a church in all its splendor but one of ordinariness, with
a seemingly equal number of triumphs and troubles. “It is not possi-
ble to have Christ apart from the church” (Reversed Thunder, Chapter
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 2
2 Heavenly Worship
Thankfully, the Lord of our Church is not finished with the weak-
est, most lukewarm member of His Body. Jesus gives them guidance
on to how to move forward. He counsels them to “buy…gold refined in
the fire…white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and
salve to put on your eyes, so you can see” (Rev. 3:18). Suddenly, within six
verses, we are nearer to God than we have ever been before.
4 Heavenly Worship
6 Heavenly Worship
moment in time, but once our eyes are opened to a revelation from
God, the truth seen will always be with us. As my friend Barney
Coombs is fond of saying, “Once you have seen it, you will never
forget it.”
8 Heavenly Worship
reason for our hope: “…anyone who comes to Him must believe that He
exists and that He rewards those who earnestly seek Him” (Heb. 11:6). If
we want to see more of God, we need to have faith enough to look
for Him!
As a personal testimony, when I ask for more eye salve, I find that
I am crying soon afterwards. In the natural realm, tears are wind-
shield washer fluid for our eyes, and they take away accumulated dust
and irritations. For myself, I believe that tears are often a sign of my
heart being cleansed. Pain, heaviness, and disappointments can easi-
ly accumulate in day-to-day life. If left unwashed, these begin to
harden into sin in our hearts. Discouragement, unbelief, bitterness,
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 9
and joylessness begin to turn what was light into darkness. Then, the
eyes are no longer good!
But the love of God can come and begin to soften our hearts. It’s
sometimes evident in the flow of real tears that, suddenly, we begin
to see clearer again. Jesus said, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God” (Matt. 5:8). In each of these examples, the key to greater spir-
itual sight must be the work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of God
leads us into all truth and He reveals God to us.
Paul connects the Spirit with eye salve in his prayer for the
Ephesians, part of which I have already quoted. “I keep asking that
the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the
Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know Him better. I pray
also that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may
know…” (Eph. 1:17-18).
A prayer for more eye salve is also a request for more of the Holy
Spirit; and that is one request that the Father loves to grant. “If you
then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how
much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those that ask
Him” (Luke 11:13). The Spirit of God opens our eyes to see and under-
stand more of God’s Word. Therefore, it opens our hearts to receive
more of God’s glory. Implied in that statement is the absolute neces-
sity for Christians to be reading Scripture with enabling and counsel
from the Holy Spirit, and, therefore, to grow in revelation of the
God being worshiped.
10 Heavenly Worship
n
Weak is the effort of my heart,
And cold my warmest thought,
But when I see Thee as Thou art
I’ll praise Thee as I ought.
n
When our eyes are opened, we see what hasn’t been seen before.
In Revelation 4, what is seen right away is an open door to Heaven.
This is a remarkable change in landscape from the bleakness of the
Laodicean church, but perhaps it is only one dose of eye salve away!
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 11
CHAPTER 2
e
fresh set of goals do have their place, but this church needed to be
transported out of its situation to spend some time viewing God’s
majesty and wonder. A change of landscape was necessary, and it
had to be to a scene that would re-ignite a fire that was burning
dangerously low.
“After this,” said John, “I saw…” (Rev. 4:1). Eye salve will open your
eyes. What John saw was designed specifically to fan the flame of
the early Church’s flickering lights. The reading of this prophecy
would have stirred many to press on past obstacles of discourage-
ment and persecution: “…and there before me was a door standing open
in heaven” (Rev. 4:1).
Looking back again at Jesus’ last review (in Rev. 3:20), He had
said to the Church: “Here I am!” Just after His telling them that, they
are close to being cast away from Him (see Rev. 3:16). In three sim-
ple but wonderful words, He explains that He hasn’t left yet. He is
still within reach—only their eyes have to be open to see Him!
He then continued: “I stand at the door and knock” (Rev. 3:20). Jesus
was outside and wanted to be in, and He wanted to fellowship with
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 12
12 Heavenly Worship
His people. If any one person in that congregation was willing to open
the door, Jesus would eagerly accept the invitation: “If anyone hears My
voice and opens the door, I will come in…” (Rev. 3:20). He would “eat with
him” personally, regardless of where the rest of the Church was. Here
is a wonderful promise: Even in the most lukewarm of congregations,
it is still possible for an individual to invite Jesus to come and meet
with him or her, and He will come.
However, for the time being, the door to the Laodicean church
was shut. In contrast, a few verses later, we see a door standing open.
The point is this: The door to the congregation may be closed to
Jesus, but the door into Heaven is open for us! It doesn’t need to be
knocked on or pushed against. You don’t need a certain amount of
money or the correct password to get in. It is standing open! The lit-
eral translation is: “…having been opened.” In other words, it was
closed, but Christ’s work on the Cross opened the door, and it has not
been shut since. The veil has been torn in two, and whatever kept us
out of God’s manifest presence has been done away with.
It must be emphasized a door is standing open, not a window.
We are not invited to sneak a look from a distance; we are invited
to come right into the throne room of God Almighty and to make
our home here in His presence! Jesus is saying, “I’ve opened My
home to you. Will you open your home to Me?”
14 Heavenly Worship
trumpet blast from the mountain drew people towards God’s pres-
ence. The trumpet sound got louder and louder as they got closer,
until the voice called Moses to come up and meet with Him (see
Exod. 19:16-20). There, on the mountain, God explained His plans
to His servant, so that Moses, in turn, could tell God’s people. The
trumpet voice in Revelation calls John up through the door for the
same purpose: “Come up here and I will show you what must take place
after this” (Rev. 4:1).
The week before I was to speak on this passage, I had read the
story of Jacob’s ladder to my one-and-a-half-year-old daughter.
The next morning, I had come downstairs to do my devotions and
Jessica came down with me. As I was getting ready to pray, I could
hear her saying, “Up, Daddy! Up!” again and again. Finally, I
looked over at her, and she was looking at the picture of Jacob in
our picture Bible. She was pointing to the ladder and saying, “Up,
Daddy! Up!”
“dead” in our transgressions and sins (see Eph. 2:1). What hope is
there for ascendancy if we are dead?
But, in Christ, the dead are raised, and it’s not just at the final
trumpet on the last day. In Christ, we are not merely resurrected
from the dead, as wonderful and exciting as that is. The resurrec-
tion was not the end of Jesus’ journey, and it is not the end of the
journey for us. Christ ascended to the highest place in Heaven and
earth (see Phil. 2:12), seated at the right hand of the Father in the
heavenly realms (see Eph. 1:3). In Him, we also ascend to where He
is seated in the highest place. If we are in Christ, this is not a future
hope for when Jesus comes again; this has already been done and it
is a present reality. Here is how Paul explains the journey that we
have already taken:
But because of His great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made
us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it
is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us up with Christ
and seated us with Him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in
order that in the coming ages He might show the incomparable rich-
es of His grace, expressed in His kindness to us in Christ Jesus
(Ephesians 2:4-7).
If our ascendancy is in Christ and happens to us at the moment
of our conversion, how is it that John has to be invited back up?
Surely, in Christ, he is already there. From a positional standpoint,
we are in Christ—seated with Him in heavenly realms—but the
fullness of that reality will not come to us until Jesus returns. Then,
we will see Him “face-to-face” (see 1 Cor. 13:12). However, what hap-
pens here to John is that he is suddenly, albeit temporarily, ushered
into the fullness of what God has in store for all of us.
One could argue that this was a special, unique experience for
a special and unique person, and that we should not expect it to
happen to us before we are taken to be with God. However, it is
difficult to get away from the context of John’s journey into
Heaven. Jesus has just encouraged members of the Laodicean
church to buy eye salve so that they could see. Why did they need
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 16
16 Heavenly Worship
the eye salve? Obviously, they needed it to see clearly and come
into reality about their own spiritual state. But, more important-
ly, they needed eye salve to give them a fresh vision of the God
whom they professed to worship.
The truth is that we may not all get “caught up into the third
heaven” in the way that John did. Paul seemed to indicate that such
an experience was unusual for Christians (see 2 Cor. 12:1-6).
However, we can ask for eye salve to see more; we can ask for
greater revelation to know Him better. The God who encourages us
to ask, obviously wants to answer our prayers. So, when we ask, we
should do so in faith and trust that God will not disappoint but will
bless us by giving sweet, precious glimpses of the reality awaiting us
in Heaven. Although, from a positional standpoint, John is already
ascended in Christ and seated with Him in the heavenly realms,
“the beloved” is still earthbound physically. Yet, here, he finds him-
self in the reality of all that he longs for.
the latter three verses refer to being in “the Spirit,” which is the
third person of the Trinity. By contrast, the phrase in Revelation
4:2 and John 4:24 seems not to refer to the Holy Spirit’s person, so
much as a conscious state of mind and being: “in spirit.” It is not
an easy concept to understand or explain and may be best under-
stood in the sense of “not being in the flesh.” Somehow, we need to
put aside the fleshly patterns of our natural minds and tune into
the airwaves of Heaven.
Of course, what happened to John was involuntary; God did it
to him. Rather than John reaching out to God, he received from
God a gift of grace. In Luke 1, we already saw that God can super-
naturally gift us with such an experience any time He chooses to—
whether we are seeking Him in the right way or not (see this book’s
Introduction). The question then becomes, “Do we have any con-
trol of whether we are ‘in the spirit’ or not?” This is quite a huge
question. If we have no control in this area, then we can only hope
and pray for ascendancy in God, rather than be able to move
towards it at any time.
Surely, being “in the spirit” begins with the indwelling of the
Holy Spirit that makes us spiritually alive. Without this transfor-
mation, we cannot worship. This is perhaps why Jesus’ discourse
with Nicodemus about being born “of the Spirit” (see John 3)
comes before His talk about true worship with the Samaritan
woman (see John 4). Not only do we need the Holy Spirit to begin
truly worshiping, but we need to “be filled with the Holy Spirit”
(see Eph. 5:18) in order to continue worshiping. Notice that “be
filled with the Holy Spirit” precedes “sing and make music in your
hearts to the Lord” (Eph. 5:19). The Holy Spirit always moves us
towards worship.
18 Heavenly Worship
Being “in the spirit” then is a skill that can be learned, and it’s
not just an experience you have to wait for. If we want to be “in the
spirit,” then we simply need to partner with the Holy Spirit in
moving us away from being “in the flesh.” If this is true, Heaven is
a lot more accessible and true worship much more probable.
Where Do We Worship?
The need to “go up” was crucial for the early Church to under-
stand. The whole discourse between Jesus and the woman at the well
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 20
20 Heavenly Worship
CHAPTER 3
e
The door is open, so we ascend “in the spirit” at the invitation of
the Word of God and suddenly we are in Heaven. With John, we are
invited on a journey to the center of heavenly worship. What first
confronts John is a person, the likes of whom he has never met before.
Even seeing Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration would not have
prepared him for what he is seeing now. John recognizes that he does-
n’t have the vocabulary to begin to describe the One who is before
him, so he confines his description to a simple comparison: “The One
who sat there had the appearance of jasper and carnelian” (Rev. 4:3).
24 Heavenly Worship
26 Heavenly Worship
28 Heavenly Worship
realize that this bowing is not the end of heavenly worship, but just
the beginning. We “come up” to bow down!
30 Heavenly Worship
meaning that they held for her. If a special friend gave an item to
her, then it became precious—even if it was a scrap of paper with
some illegible scribbles on it. Another “precious thing” (as we came
to call them) was a small, transparent bouncy-ball with a dolphin in
the middle. This was precious because it was the first item Lucy
ever bought with her own money.
After giving her a small amount of money to spend while on holi-
day, we took her to a shop where she could spend it. Having shown her
everything she could buy, Lucy wanted the ball and wouldn’t be per-
suaded otherwise; a year later, she still carried the ball in her purse.
Lucy would take great care of these items and could always tell you
where they were, even if she hadn’t played with them for a while.
If one such item was lost or broken, her distress would amount
to a period of grieving. Dismissing such tears as over-dramatic (as
I’m sure sometimes they were) would be easy. However, it was
impossible to deny how deeply attached Lucy was to her “precious
things.” The items in themselves didn’t hold that much importance,
but what they represented is what so affected her.
Thinking back on those times when her little heart would break,
I can see something of how God has made us. Our heart is like a
treasure box. We store up (for good or evil) what we choose to cher-
ish. However, the heart is not made to be a strong safe; what it car-
ries can be easily stolen, and we can be easily hurt. I worried that if
Lucy consistently lost treasures, then she would harden her heart to
protect herself from further pain. Suddenly, she might start to pre-
tend, and then believe, that precious things don’t matter so much
any more. If Lucy started to devalue the gifts, then she would also
begin to devalue the giver.
The fact is that precious things do matter. If we harden our
heart to the need to value and cherish precious things, then we
begin to lose some of our ability to cherish the God who gave us
“every good and perfect gift” (James 1:17). Within each human is a cry
for something of real beauty and ultimate value that the heart can
be set upon without fear of disappointment. God has given us
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 31
many gifts to enjoy and treasure, but ultimate value and worth is to
be found in the Father who gave them to us.
All night long on my bed I looked for the one my heart loves; I looked
for him but did not find him. I will get up now and go about the city,
through its streets and squares; I will search for the one my heart
loves. So I looked for him but did not find him. The watchmen found
me as they made their rounds in the city. “Have you seen the one my
heart loves?” Scarcely had I passed them when I found the one my
heart loves. I held him and would not let him go… (Song of
Solomon 3:1-4a).
This could have been Mary Magdalene’s song during the night of
the Cross and the morning of the resurrection. Her treasure was
missing, and she was distraught. Then she found Him, or, rather, He
found her, and she would not let Him go (see John 20:10-17).
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 32
32 Heavenly Worship
God Sparkles
In his book Reversed Thunder: The Revelation of St. John and the
Praying Imagination, author Eugene Peterson points out that,
“Precious stones are precious because they collect and intensify light.”
The One who sits upon the throne, however, is not collecting light
from outside of Himself; that light is coming from within Him. In
fact, He is the source of all light! “God is light,” says “the beloved” in his
first letter (see 1 John 1:5), “in Him is no darkness at all.” John knew what
he was talking about. He had been with Jesus on the Mount of
Transfiguration when Jesus was revealed for who He really was and
“His clothes became as bright as a flash of lightning” (Luke 9:29).
This eternal and internal light makes God sparkle like jasper and
carnelian in every part of who He is and in everything He does. His
justice sparkles—it is so clean, pure, true, and so free of any hypocrisy
or selfishness. His creativity sparkles, with such an incredible imagi-
nation—it’s enough beauty and diversity to fill a universe with unend-
ing wonders and mysteries. Some of these we will never find out about
before Jesus returns; they are there simply because God enjoys the
process of creating. All His glories make Him sparkle in various
unique ways. Amazingly, part of the purpose of having this treasure in
our hearts is so that we can sparkle for His glory.
2. THE EMERALD
A rainbow, resembling an emerald, encircled the throne (Revelation
4:3b).
The first two precious stones mentioned here—jasper and car-
nelian—encourage us to cherish and be awed by the beauty of Him
who sits upon the throne. The next precious stone—the emerald—
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 33
tells us what to cherish above all about this God we worship. Around
all the attributes of God’s character sits a rainbow that is “resembling
an emerald.” But something else glitters and sparkles around the
throne that encompasses and defines it.
Ezekiel describes the same sight as follows: “Like the appearance
of a rainbow in the cloud on a rainy day, so was the radiance around Him”
(Ezek. 1:28). There is some debate about whether this means a lit-
eral rainbow, or a halo of light shaped like a rainbow. The fact that
the word “rainbow” is used to describe the same sight—both in
Revelation and Ezekiel—seems to point towards it at least having
the appearance of a literal rainbow.
That possibility opens a number of wonderful doors for inter-
pretation. A rainbow in the Bible has great significance—it is a
sign to us of God’s covenant mercy. In the natural, a rainbow
occurs at the meeting place between rain and sunshine. For
Noah and his family, the rainbow came at the meeting place
between God’s judgment (the rain) and His mercy (the warm
and drying sunshine). The sign of God’s covenant mercy towards
Noah was not just a rainbow, but a rainbow “set…in the clouds”
(Gen. 9:13). In other words, it was mercy set in the backdrop of
judgment.
This awesome and fearful throne in Heaven is intimidating and
appears like a full-blown storm (see Rev. 4:5). However, in this place
we only see lightning and hear thunder after we have seen the rain-
bow. God’s perfect storm is wrapped around by the overriding glory
of His covenant mercy. The rainbow of His mercy is the gold band
into which is set the diamond of every other part of His character.
When God showed His glory to Moses, He said: “The Lord, the Lord
God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering and abounding in goodness and
truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and
sin…” (Exod. 34:6-7 NKJ).
In all probability, the rainbow in Heaven existed before God
revealed one to Noah. Does that take the meaning of Noah’s sign
to a different level for us? Could it mean that God’s own glory has
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 34
34 Heavenly Worship
3. THE CRYSTAL
Also before the throne there was what looked like a sea of glass, clear
as crystal (Revelation 4:6).
36 Heavenly Worship
Lord is pure, enduring forever” (Ps. 19:9). This is not the negative,
destructive, and crippling fear that the devil seeks to sow into our
lives. The fear of the Lord is healthy and life-giving. By embracing
it, rather than running away, a quality of worship comes out of us
that could not be experienced otherwise.
38 Heavenly Worship
n
The glorious throne asks: WILL YOU BOW TO HIM?
The precious stones ask: WILL YOU CHERISH HIM?
The perfect storm asks: WILL YOU FEAR HIM?
n
There is, however, one more question we are asked in our jour-
ney to the center of heavenly worship. This question may prove to
be the most costly of all for us to respond to.
40 Heavenly Worship
n
Together these heavenly elements give God a people of
submission, softness, integrity, and power!
n
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 43
CHAPTER 4
e
himself part of a glorious worship service. It begins with the four
living creatures and moves through a wonderful progression to its
climax at the end of Revelation 5. We will look more closely at that
progression—and the creatures and people involved in it—in this
book’s last chapter. In the meantime, we set the scene by examining
some of the landscape painted for us.
The Book of Revelation, chapter 4, has focused our attention
on “Him who sits upon the throne.” We have been invited to bow, to
cherish, to be open and honest, and to burn. Only two objects of
worship exist in Heaven: The first is “Him who sits upon the
throne,” and now Revelation 5 gloriously and dramatically unveils
the second. However, we are not immediately introduced to Him.
The journey to the center of worship must first take us past one
more element.
The Scroll
Peering through the intense brightness that emanates from the
throne, John begins to see an object through the glaring light. Held
firmly in God’s hand is a scroll, which was a normal part of Hebrew
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 44
44 Heavenly Worship
the early Church, the scroll represents information that would give
them hope and encouragement to press on. Inside the scroll are all
God’s promises for their future.
The Executor
“Then one of the elders said to me, ‘Do not weep!’” (Rev. 5:5a). I need to
hear this elder’s voice so often! This is the voice of joyful hope at
the point where I want to just break down, when I cannot see what
I want to see and I cannot know what I want to know, when I have
no answers for the questions of hurting people around me, and
when darkness seems to be gaining the upper hand. “Do not weep!
See, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has triumphed! He is
able to open the scroll and its seven seals” (Rev. 5:5).
46 Heavenly Worship
“God Himself will provide the lamb” (Gen. 22:8) and so He did! A
Hebrew sinner could bring a young, spotless lamb to the altar as a
sacrifice for sins. This cannot have been a pleasant experience.
Some of us find it difficult enough to consider an animal being
killed for food, let alone slaughtering one as punishment for our
own sin. Perhaps it would quietly go to the place of sacrifice, or
maybe it would struggle and bleat as you carried it in your arms.
Then, by placing your hands on the animal, the sins of humanity
would be ceremonially transferred onto it before its killing. Sin is
ugly and messy!
48 Heavenly Worship
“He came and took the scroll out of the right hand of Him who sat on the
throne” (Rev. 5:7). What boldness! If you didn’t understand, you would
call it arrogance! But, the Lamb can take from the right hand of
God—whereas the arrogant and proud cannot—because He is
clothed in the Lamb’s wool of humility. The Lamb takes the will of
God into His own hand! He didn’t have to be asked or cajoled! Not
long after God’s will has taken Him to the Cross, He’s back again! He
doesn’t just “take” the will of God—more accurately He “lays hold”
of it (lambano in the Greek). Why could He do this? Psalm 40:7 gives
the answer: “Here I am, I have come—it is written about Me in the scroll.
I desire to do Your will, O My God, Your law is within My heart.” He could
do it because the will of God is, primarily, His to do.
Isaiah 53:10 says, “…and the will of the Lord will prosper in His
hand.” The will of God is prospering in the hands of the Lamb!
This was true for the early Christian Church, and it was just
what they needed to know amidst all their troubles and persecu-
tions. Two thousand years later, this still remains true! God’s
will is prospering in the hands of Jesus Christ. So what is the
Church’s response?
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 50
50 Heavenly Worship
The Harp
The Lamb has the scroll in His hand; He has laid hold of it. The
24 elders also have their hands full. In one hand, they have a harp
(see Rev. 5:8). In Revelation 15:2, we discover that God gave harps
to “those who had been victorious….”
My wife Julia and I once watched a moving documentary film
based on the true story of a woman who adopted a severely mentally
handicapped boy. This film—The Woman Who Willed a Miracle—is a
powerful illustration of what is happening in Revelation 5. The boy
was so handicapped that he could not stand up or move by himself,
and he could not communicate or show any form of emotion. The
mother, a devout woman, prayed for him and tried to encourage him
to respond to her; one way she did so was by getting her husband to
carry the boy to their fence so he could try to hold himself up and, in
time, even move. Over a period of years, the boy made some slow
progress, but he still did not communicate in any way.
The parents loved to listen to music on TV, and, one day, the moth-
er noticed that the boy was moving his fingers to the music. So, she
asked her husband to get him a piano. The mother tried to get him to
sit at the piano and put his fingers on the keys, but again nothing
seemed to register with the boy. But one night, while the woman lay
in bed with her husband, she heard beautiful piano music playing.
Thinking that the TV had been left on, she went downstairs to turn
it off, only to discover that it wasn’t the TV at all! The boy was sitting
at the piano, perfectly playing melodies he had heard on the televi-
sion. He was later confirmed to be an idiot savant, which means that
even though he could not function in most capacities, he was abnor-
mally gifted in one area.
Playing the piano soon opened up his abilities to communicate in
other ways. A while later, the boy was playing and singing for a group
of neighborhood children, when, suddenly, he began to cry. This was
the first time he had ever cried! The mother asked him what he was
feeling. All he could say was “love.” When she asked him to explain
further, he began to play a famous old hymn:
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 51
n
“Amazing grace, how sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost but now I’m found,
Was blind but now I see.”
52 Heavenly Worship
The Bowl
If the first item in the elders’ hands is an instrument of worship,
then the second is the golden bowl of prayer. “Each one had a harp and
they were holding golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the
saints” (Rev. 5:8). This is a strange principle. The scroll is in the hands
of the Lamb, and God’s purposes will flourish in His hand. However,
the Church has responsibility to pray that will into being. The Lamb
has taught us what to pray: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name,
Your kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” (Matt. 6:9-
10). So, we are charged to pray that the scroll’s contents will be
worked out in reality on the earth and in our lives.
The revelation of the Lamb makes priests out of the 24 elders (see
Rev. 5:10). The scroll is in the hands of the Lamb; while worship and
prayer are in the Church’s hands. As the Lamb laid hold of the scroll,
we also need to be purposeful in laying hold of tools God has placed
into our hands. As we partner with Him in prayer and praise Him in
song, we discover our crucial role in all that God is doing not just on
the earth, but also in Heaven itself.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 53
CHAPTER 5
e
and to take in sights that add fuel to our worship. We have had our
eyes opened to the awesome throne where God sparkles and the
Spirit blazes. We have been led on a journey to the center of heaven-
ly worship where we find the all-conquering Lamb.
Now, we need to look at the songs ignited by this fuel. Five of
them occur in Revelation 4 and 5, and they take us on their own
journey. I am suggesting that these songs represent the progression
of worship in Heaven from the first days of creation until the end
of this present age, which culminates in the fulfillment of all God’s
purposes. This is not the only way to look at these Scriptures, but
in working our way through these verses, I hope this approach will
give a deeper understanding of heavenly worship’s true nature.
My text for this chapter is based on a sermon that I wrote for
a Sunday morning meeting, in which we went through Revelation
4 and 5. After reading the relevant passages for each song, we
worshiped together and sang songs that carried the same heart as
those within Revelation 4 and 5. This proved to be a powerful
way of experiencing, to some small measure, what we see hap-
pening in Heaven.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 54
54 Heavenly Worship
So, let’s look at each of these five songs, and see how they map out
God’s purposes through the ages—from creation to re-creation—
and revolve around the Lamb’s appearance in all His crucified and
risen glory. Noticing who sings what songs and what the particular
focus and themes are is of vital significance.
as the chariot of God. Psalm 18:10 tells us that God “mounted the
cherubim and flew; He soared on the wings of the wind.” Ezekiel sees
them carrying the very throne of God (see Ezek. 1:25-26). These
creatures—each with six wings and a multitude of eyes—are in
constant adoration: “Day and night they never stop saying…” (Rev.
4:8b). This chorus has been repeated over and over, since the
beginning of creation, and echoes alongside the never-ending song
that God put into creation itself.
The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of
His hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night
they display knowledge. There is no speech or language where their
voice is not heard. Their voice goes out into all the earth, their words
to the ends of the earth (Psalm 19:1-4a).
God has created a universe that sings. The mighty mountains sing
of splendor and majesty; the oceans and storms testify to power way
beyond anything we can produce and it’s totally outside of our control;
while the sparrow sings worship to a God who shows intricate care and
tenderness, even to those who are not so lovely. Jesus said that if we
wouldn’t worship, then “the stones will cry out” (Luke 19:40).
We are not the first worshipers in creation, but if we listen to
what creation is saying, then we may join in its song! If we had eyes
to see—as the four living creatures do—then we would constantly
be in awe. Then, mankind would be without any excuse, because
creation declares in booming tones of the glory of the One True
God. Indeed, we are without excuse, because we all have eyes and
senses. However, we humans would need to be covered with eyes—
just as some of the angelic beings are—to even begin to take in all
that He is.
These creatures are covered in eyes made to eternally gaze into the
glories of God. Even with all those eyes, they will never become tired
or bored; each glance will reveal some new wonder, even after an
eternity of gazing. So, like creation from the beginning of time, the
four living creatures never stop saying, “Holy! Holy! Holy!” That is a
declaration of the transcendence of God. However glorious and
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 56
56 Heavenly Worship
wonderful they are, and however awesome creation is, God far, far, far
exceeds them all.
When NASA’s interstellar Hubble Telescope first sent back pic-
tures of uncharted space, humanity was amazed at the universe’s
beauty and majesty. The vastness of planets, stars, and galaxies left
mankind stunned, while the splendor of colors and shapes never
before seen took their breath away. Yet, however huge and glorious
the universe may be, it is still small in splendor when compared with
the One who created it all. The heavenly creatures name Him: “The
Lord God Almighty.” He is the ruler over all creation, the one being
from whom all others emanate, and is supreme in all power and
authority. They say, “He was.” Creation insists that there is a
Creator—a Someone before the world came into being, who is the
author of everything that exists.
The heavenly creatures say that, “He is.” Creation also insists that
there is a sustaining power, as well as a creative power. It is not as if
God created everything, gave His creation a set of rules and laws on
how to operate, and then sat back and watched. Of course, rules and
laws govern the operation of our universe, but laws do not sustain it.
Only God, who still spins stars in His hands and feeds sparrows, is the
One who sustains. He lives, and, in so doing, He continues to be the
life source of every living thing. He is provider, healer, protector, and
savior. Nothing can exist without Him. The only reason that we
breathe is because He gives us breath.
Finally, “He is to come.” Creation lives in hope, despite its abuse
suffered at the hands of men. Crocuses still come up out of recently
frozen ground, and butterflies still blossom out of cocoons. New life
continues to spring up and, as it does so, sings of a time when the
Lord God Almighty will return and restore life in all its fullness to His
creation. So, the living creatures declare in perpetual chorus: “Holy,
Holy, Holy, is the Lord God Almighty who was and is and is to come.”
Israel added to the 12 apostles of the Lamb). But how they are
described is interesting. In Revelation 3, Jesus—the Head of the
Church—confronts the Laodicean church as being “wretched, piti-
ful, poor, blind, and naked.” In fact, unlike all the other churches
He addresses, Jesus can find nothing positive to say about them.
Yet, to this sorry group of people He offers riches, white robes,
and eye salve. His words are recorded as thus: “I counsel you to buy
from Me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes
to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your
eyes so that you can see” (Rev. 3:18). Even more incredibly, He gives an
incredible promise to this most lukewarm church: “To him who over-
comes, I will give the right to sit with Me on My throne, just as I overcame
and sat down with My Father on His throne” (Rev. 3:21).
In the very next scene of John’s heavenly vision, 24 elders are
“dressed in white” with “crowns of gold on their heads,” and, obvi-
ously, are face-to-face with the living God and seated on thrones
surrounding The Throne. Here is an immediate, powerful image of
the truth of God’s promises. It’s a wonderful picture of God’s grace
and mercy, and His amazing ability to take poor, wretched human-
ity and lift them up to become enthroned with Him in the highest
place of the universe.
These 24 elders represent “overcomers” who simply persevered
by faith and kept going. Here sit mighty men of God like Moses and
Elijah. But here, too, sits the harlot Rahab and the adulterer and
murderer David. Here sit great-grandparents, grandparents, moth-
ers, fathers, and children taken from the earth before they had a
chance to grow; all are now gloriously clothed, with rewards of suf-
ferings on their heads, and are seated in the royal estate, while gaz-
ing into unending beauties of their God.
Again, we must not miss the obvious observation: The living crea-
tures appear as a mixture of the heavenly and the earthly, and move
easily between the two realms. But redeemed humanity is also in
Heaven. We are heavenly creatures too! “He has also set eternity in the
hearts of men…” (Eccles. 3:11). We were made for more than what this
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 58
58 Heavenly Worship
physical realm has to offer us. Redeemed man sits, sees, hears, and
worships in Heaven. We will never be at home anywhere else.
So, here sits the universal Church in its regal attire. But, despite its
privileged position, when the song of the four living creatures is
heard, the people fall off their thrones. They aren’t pushed, cajoled, or
ordered—there simply is no other response to give. However, they do
not fall away in fear and intimidation; they fall before the throne in
awe and wonder, and then they “worship.” What the living creatures
are doing is not described here as worship (although it is in Rev. 7:11),
but what comes from the hearts of the saints is!
They lay their crowns down before Him—even though the crowns
represent God’s reward to them for faithful perseverance through
hardship, suffering, and persecution. Even that reward isn’t worth
keeping when presented with the overwhelming joy and satisfaction
found in His presence. Then they worship. Notice that they don’t
speak before they are correctly postured. The knees are bowed and
the crowns are removed before any sound comes from their lips.
Heavenly worship has to do with knees and heads, before it has to do
with tongues. They willingly lay aside even God-given privileges and
get as low as they can before Him. This is not shallow or presumptu-
ous worship; these are lives laid down in adoration—not just for this
life—but for all eternity.
What these saints say appears to be a response to what is heard
coming from the living creatures. In the natural realm, the eagles
soar and the lions roar, and then mankind observes in wonder.
Then, if he has eye salve, he looks beyond the natural to the source
of all that exists—and then worships.
n
“O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder
Consider all the works Thy hand hath made.
I see the stars; I hear the rolling thunder;
Thy power throughout the universe displayed.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 59
n
Creation—as seen through the right eyes—provokes worship.
So “whenever” the creatures speak, the elders say, from the posture of great-
est humility: “You are worthy, our Lord and God…” (Rev. 4:11).
Unlike the living creatures, the elders claim a personal intimacy
with Him who sits upon the throne—it’s not “The Lord God
Almighty” but “Our Lord and God.” Also, notice that it’s not per-
sonal intimacy (“my Lord and God”), but corporate intimacy (“our
Lord and God”). Christianity is not an individualistic belief (“it’s
just about Jesus and me”); rather, it finds fullest expression, partic-
ularly in worship, through a corporate body of people.
Here, as in all the songs of Heaven recorded in this Revelation,
there is no mention of “me” or “mine.” Any remnant of self has been
lost in the glory and majesty set before them. More than that, they
sing one song, not lots of different styles of songs blended together.
They sing as one man—worshiping together as the Body of Christ.
We do need to develop our own life of personal worship with God,
but that can never be an adequate alternative to worshiping togeth-
er. This truth—as we will see when we come to the song of the
Lamb—applies as much to individual churches as it does to individ-
ual saints. We cannot have the worship of Heaven if we will not
worship together.
The elders go on to say: “You are worthy, our Lord and God, to
receive all honor and glory and power, for You created all things…” (Rev.
4:11); and, therefore, everything belongs to Him. Nowadays, there is
much discussion about land claims and rights, and God Himself has
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 60
60 Heavenly Worship
62 Heavenly Worship
n
“Crown Him the Lord of love! Behold His hands and side,
Rich wounds, yet visible above, in beauty glorified.
No angel in the sky can fully bear that sight,
But downward bends his wond’ring eyes
At mysteries so bright.”
—Matthew Bridges (1854)
n
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 63
64 Heavenly Worship
n
“Ransomed, healed, restored, forgiven,
Who, like thee, His praise should sing?”
—Henry F. Lyte (1834)
n
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 65
So, the Lord puts a harp into our hands (see Rev. 15:2), and tells us
to fill Heaven and earth with our music. He wants all of Heaven,
earth, and creation to hear the glory of His Christ. We need to sing to
Him in Heaven and sing of Him to the earth. Such singing cannot be
coerced, conducted, or orchestrated. Our fourth child, Elizabeth,
sometimes sits behind me when we are driving and spontaneously
sings; she does so simply because she is so content and happy at hav-
ing us all in the car together going somewhere. When we are content
and happy, we don’t have to be told to sing, hum, or whistle—it just
flows out of us naturally. Such is the motivation for these elders.
Content and gloriously happy at the revelation of the Lamb, the
music just flows out of them naturally.
66 Heavenly Worship
The elders sing a new song never before heard in all of creation or
Heaven. Of the three times that this word for “sing” is mentioned in
Revelation, it twice refers to a “new song” (Rev. 5:9 and 14:3), and once
to an old one (the song of Moses recorded in Rev. 15:3). Heavenly wor-
ship includes both the old and the new. This new song sets all of
Heaven singing, and it comes from the Church. This is the Song of the
Lamb: “You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals because You were
slain…” (Rev. 5:9). What a stunning statement!
The elders and the living creatures worship Him who sits on the
throne because He is the source of all life. Now, they are singing to
the Lamb because He gave up His life for us all. The Father lives
and gives life. The Son dies and gives life! But—because He was
willing to die in order to please His Father—He is worthy to han-
dle the will of God. The Father knows that He can trust Jesus with
everything: “…and with Your blood, You purchased men for God…” (Rev.
4:9). The Lamb is worthy because He has bought a very precious
gift to present to His Father. He paid for it in a currency that is
priceless: His own blood. He did it for the joy that was set before
Him (see Heb. 12:2).
I am sure that the Lamb gets great joy from seeing people saved,
healed, and set free, but that is not His greatest joy. The foremost
joy set before Jesus when facing the Cross was to see the pleased
smile on His Father’s face when presenting Him with the fruit of
His sufferings. He did it for His Father first, not for me, or even
the millions of people He has saved over the centuries. To please
His Father, Jesus brought Him the one gift that would give His
Father the greatest pleasure. The elders themselves represent that
gift, and all of us bought with the blood of Jesus are also part of
that gift; we have all been purchased by a Son who wants to see His
Father both glorified and satisfied.
Seemingly, the elders are satisfied simply to be the gift. They could
have sung, “For You were slain and with Your blood You purified us,
You provided for us, You made a way into Heaven for us….” But while
watching this wonderful exchange between Father and Son, they are
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 67
not thinking about what they are receiving from this. Reveling in the
relationship before them, they are content with the role as a love
offering from one to the other. Our greatest pleasure in Heaven, I
believe, will be to see the Father’s love for His Son, and the love that
Jesus has for His Father, and to know that we contributed to that
love’s fulfillment.
Fourth, it gives the Father a kingdom (see Rev. 4:10). The prob-
lem with Israel’s pestering Samuel for a king was not so much that
it was wrong to have a king; the real issue was that they already had
one! When Samuel went to the Lord, His response was, “it is not you
they have rejected, but they have rejected Me as their King” (1 Sam. 8:7).
However, God did not stop being a King just because His people
rejected Him. In the very next generation, He began to take back
the Kingdom for Himself. David’s throne was His throne and
David’s worship leaders knew it! “How awesome is the Lord most high,
the great King over all the earth” (Ps. 47:2). Now, after the Cross and
resurrection, the Kingdom is restored to its rightful King. The
people—as represented by the elders—rejoice in that restoration.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 68
68 Heavenly Worship
Finally, the gift that Jesus gives to His Father brings perfect and
complete restoration to God’s original plan for creation. This gift
will perfectly fulfill the requirements of God’s original blessing to
Adam and Eve of having dominion over all that He has made; “they
will reign on the earth.” In Revelation, we see all of God’s plans,
covenants, and promises made since before the first day of cre-
ation become completely fulfilled. All of this is done through a
meek, lowly Lamb and a Cross of wood. That such a seemingly
complex problem could have a simple solution is truly incredible.
That one act—and the life and grace that flowed from it—bought
for the Father in Heaven all that His heart desired. We are now
that gift. Standing today, while washed in the blood of the Lamb,
we bring Him immense pleasure.
So the 24 elders sing a new song, and it is only one song! They
are from “every tribe and language and people and nation” (Rev. 5:9),
but they sing one song! This is true heavenly worship. It comes
from hearts reconciled by the blood of the Lamb and reconciled
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 69
70 Heavenly Worship
So the angels join in the song of the Lamb, expand on the theme
of the saints, and underscore His new place of glory in Heaven. He
who once was “made a little lower than the angels” (Heb. 2:7) is now
high above them, and they are thrilled at His exaltation! “Worthy is
the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and
strength and honor and glory and praise” (Rev. 5:12). There is no
“because” since no reason is necessary; the Lamb’s worthiness is
ultimately explained by the scars that He bears, the millions of
saved sinners that bow before Him, and the incredible pleasure
that He has brought to His Father.
So, through the ages, the worship has grown and grown. It starts
with declarations of the living creatures and the elders’ response to
the creatures’ message, and then rises to new heights as the cruci-
fied Lamb takes His place before the throne as both worship
leader and object of worship. Now, a new melody takes over. The
Song of the Lamb is added to the worship of “Him who sits upon
the throne,” and Heaven explodes into majestic music as thou-
sands upon thousands of angels join the chorus of the saints.
However, more is yet to come.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 72
72 Heavenly Worship
The Song of the Lamb is so compelling in its theme, that it’s like
a Pied Piper gathering thousands and thousands of devoted follow-
ers in its wake. The worship of the Church gloriously affects and
changes the worship of Heaven. However, our worship is not for
Heaven alone. Written in the scroll is the Father’s expressed will
that all ends of the earth shall hear this song because He desires
knowledge of His glory to cover the earth just as waters cover the
sea (see Hab. 2:14).
True heavenly worship cannot be fully developed within the
four walls of our churches alone, and in no way can it be divorced
from evangelism. The Song of the Lamb is to be sung to the ends
of the earth before the end will come. It could be “sung” with
instruments or a melody or, more often, by the simple sharing of a
testimony or a loaf of bread, or through a life that radiates Jesus’
love, or by the preaching of the gospel.
The whole earth needs to hear of Christ’s glory, and the good
news of salvation that can be found in Him alone. The end result
will be utterly beyond anything to be grasped by the human imag-
ination—even in our wildest dreams. John records it this way:
“Then I heard every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth
and on the sea and all that is in them singing” (Rev. 5:13).
Is this real, or is it prophetic hyperbole? To those who wanted
to stop His followers from praising Him, Jesus said, “I tell you…if
they keep quiet, the stones will cry out” (Luke 19:40). Was He stretch-
ing the truth to make a point, or does creation have such a pent-
up passion for worship that it will explode into highest praise if
given the right catalyst? The Psalmists seemed to believe so! The
writer of Psalm 148 obviously had enough eye salve to perceive
what John was seeing in Revelation 5.
Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord from the heavens, praise Him in the
heights above. Praise Him, all His angels, praise Him, all His heav-
enly hosts. Praise Him, sun and moon, praise Him, all you shining
stars. Praise Him, you highest heavens and you waters above the
skies. Let them praise the name of the Lord, for He commanded and
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 73
they were created. He set them in place for ever and ever; He gave a
decree that will never pass away. Praise the Lord from the earth, you
great sea creatures and all ocean depths, lightning and hail, snow and
clouds, stormy winds that do His bidding, you mountains and all
hills, fruit trees and all cedars, wild animals and all cattle, small
creatures and flying birds…Let them praise the name of the Lord, for
His name alone is exalted; His splendor is above the earth and the
heavens (Psalm 148:1-10,13).
The climax of the Book of Psalms is the climax of all God’s purpos-
es: “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord” (Ps. 150:6). As creation
joins the symphony, total harmony occurs between Heaven and earth.
They combine the focuses of the first four songs into one song; we
have had two songs “to Him who sits upon the throne” in Revelation
4, as followed by two songs “to the lamb” in Revelation 5. Now, every
creature in Heaven and earth, and under the earth, joins in singing to
them both: “To Him who sits upon the throne and to the Lamb be praise and
honor and glory and power, for ever and ever” (Rev. 5:13). In essence, they
cry out: “Let there be eternal honor, everlasting glory, and never-end-
ing power to Him who sits upon the throne and to the Lamb. And let
the praise never end; let worship go on forever and ever!”
74 Heavenly Worship
the way it should be!” The Church—having heard what has hap-
pened as a result of its worship both in Heaven and upon the
earth—falls down for the third time and worships in awesome
wonder, love, and praise! It will surely happen! It has been in the
heart of God since before the ages of the earth. What an incredi-
ble hope! After all, what greater purpose can there be than to wor-
ship and witness here on earth that we have the joy of seeing many
others in a joyful chorus, all because of our testimony!
The amazing fact is that we can hasten the day! The more we wor-
ship and witness here on earth, the sooner we will all join in worship
with angels, archangels, and all of creation. There is no greater reason
to live! Heavenly worship is the God-ordained destiny of all His
saints, but we don’t have to wait for death before participating. The
door is open now, and the invitation is there for us all to “come up.”
Once there, we don’t have to initiate our own worship experience but
can simply flow with what is already happening. As we join in
Heaven’s worship, we will become more passionate about hastening
its inevitable and glorious climax: the eternal, thunderous, cosmic
worship of our Father in Heaven and His glorious Son.
“Lord Jesus, we come to You and ask for eye salve, so that we
may see what is to come, and that, in seeing, we may find fresh
vision and passion to pursue the glory of God in every nation and
through all of creation. Come, Lord Jesus. We long for the day!”
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 75
CHAPTER 6
e
who sits upon the throne and to the Lamb.” The praise will go on
forever and will never end. Surely, nothing more needs to be said.
However, the last word on worship does not belong to creatures of
earth and sky, nor to the saints and angels, and not even to the
mighty cherubim. As in all things, the last word on heavenly wor-
ship belongs to the Lamb.
76 Heavenly Worship
was a wonderful worship song, and it’s the greatest one ever
written.
78 Heavenly Worship
support. But many of them would be the first to say that worship
is not only about music.
Revelation 5:6 is the last word on worship because it’s the last
word on every vital ingredient that makes up perfect worship—
even though it doesn’t include any singing. What are those ingre-
dients? If we can uncover what they are, then it will surely help us
to grow in our worship. Many ingredients are involved, but they
can be gathered together under two main headings. Jesus’ offering
is the last word on worship because it’s the last word on submission
and sacrifice. As we shall see, these are the two main ingredients of
heavenly worship.
trusted to do a good job, and the trained staff had done many success-
ful operations before. But those facts did nothing to quell my anxiety.
When the Father asked His Son to walk through the gates of
Heaven to come to earth, He put His Beloved’s life in our hands.
The Father knew that we couldn’t be trusted to look after Him
properly, and so did the Son. Jesus knew the pain and suffering that
awaited Him, but His Father wanted this act of worship, so Jesus
submitted Himself to His Father’s will.
Hundreds of years before, God had been just as prescriptive with
His people—the Israelites—about how He wanted them to worship
Him. God took His people out of Egypt into the wilderness with
Moses “so that they might worship Me” (Exod. 9:13). He brought them to
the mountain and gave them strict instructions as to how they should
worship Him. The instructions for worship, as given to Moses on
Mount Sinai, can be put into two categories: One had to do with the
tabernacle, the priestly functions, the sacrifices, and feasts; and the
other had to do with the way they should live, which included the Ten
Commandments and all its rules and regulations. The important
point here is that—as with Jesus—the worship was not self-initiated
or self-motivated. God did not tell them to write their own songs and
come up with their own forms of worship. He was very prescriptive
about what He wanted them to do.
Our desire to self-initiate is closely entangled with a warped, bro-
ken concept of self-worth. We can easily feel that we are only worth
what we have to offer. This can be true of us as Christians when we
come to worship. If we cannot think of what to say, pray, or do, or if
we feel that we have nothing to give, then we often struggle with feel-
ings of guilt, shame, and a sense that our worship is worthless. On the
contrary, when we feel that we have plenty to say, pray, do, or have
much to give, then our sense of guilt, shame, and worthlessness can be
lifted (although it is not fully removed). In that case, we feel justified
that our worship has some worth and merit.
Those views are seriously wrong, both theologically and doctri-
nally, and can leave people who genuinely want to worship God
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 80
80 Heavenly Worship
I enjoy writing worship songs, but after many years of trying, it’s
clear that I cannot come up with a great worship song by myself; it
has to come from inspiration, not just perspiration. That does not
mean that songwriting is not hard work, because it is. The inspira-
tion often begins with a single lyric or tune, and then must go
through a necessary “birthing” period where the song takes shape
through hours of wrestling, praying, and struggling; sometimes, it
even needs outside help from others to be fully brought to birth.
82 Heavenly Worship
Certain parts of the Body of Christ have an idea that you can
“miss” it in worship. This is a tremendous pressure to many wor-
ship leaders, and one often unfortunately propagated by the way
that Church leadership speaks about worship. The only way you
can “miss” in worship is to not offer it in faith in Christ’s perfect
act of worship, or, in other words, to offer self-motivated and self-
initiated worship.
84 Heavenly Worship
86 Heavenly Worship
88 Heavenly Worship
Then Christ would have had to suffer many times since the creation of
the world. But now He has appeared once for all at the end of the ages
to do away with sin by the sacrifice of Himself. Just as man is destined
to die once, and after that to face judgment, so Christ was sacrificed
once to take away the sins of many people (Hebrews 9:26-28).
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 89
You would have thought that the greatest act of worship must
take place in perfect surroundings, with everything in order and
just as it should be. The exact opposite is the case: The most per-
fect act of worship came out of the most carnal, unjust, and wan-
ton act of treacherous violence ever committed in all of God’s cre-
ation. Satan did the worst that he could do, and so did mankind.
Yet, God turned it all into the best worship ever heard in the
courts of Heaven. Such is God’s total, overwhelming, sovereign
power, and such is the unashamed joy and satisfaction that He
draws for Himself from the worst of situations.
If satan, who hates the worship of God more than anything else,
understood this principle—that God always turns the worst of the
devil’s devices into the most glorious worship—then he would have
stopped tempting and persecuting the saints long ago. He certainly
would never martyr anyone ever again. His vain attempts to reduce
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 90
90 Heavenly Worship
worship only increases it. Like pouring water on burning oil, he only
spreads glorious worship farther and higher.
Music and songs may be vehicles for the highest form of worship
in eternity, but only because there are no more opportunities to lay
down a life in adoration of the King. Of course, I am not saying that
eternal worship in Heaven is second-class. What I am saying is that
we don’t have to wait until Heaven before offering heavenly worship.
Nor do we have an excuse for living half-hearted lives while on earth,
in the belief that we can make up for our poverty of earthly worship
in eternity. By the time we get to Heaven, we may have already missed
some of our greatest opportunities to worship.
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 91
The Lamb’s scars will remain, but ours will be gone. In that
sense, His sacrificial worship is eternally seen. We, on the other
hand, have a window in this life to participate with Jesus in sacrifi-
cial worship. Then, that window will vanish into what will be, for
us, an eternity without scars.
The songwriter and psalmist Brian Doerksen writes, “Now is the
time to worship.” How right he is. Now is the time! Whatever we
offer, if it is done through faith in Jesus’ perfect worship, then it will
be received as perfect heavenly worship before Heaven’s throne. We
do not have to wait for a perfect heart, a perfect voice, or perfect
songs. We can offer perfect heavenly worship now because heaven-
ly worship is perfected on earth!
And so Jesus also suffered outside the city gate [in our sinful and
broken world] to make the people holy through His own blood. Let
us, then, go to Him outside the camp [while we are in our sinful
and broken world], bearing the disgrace He bore. For here we do
not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to
come [heaven is coming, but let’s not put heavenly worship on
hold till then…]. Through Jesus, therefore, let us continually offer
to God a sacrifice of praise [while we have the opportunity to do
it in our sinful and broken world—for it will not be a sacri-
fice of praise if it is does not include some measure of suffer-
ing]—the fruit of lips that confess His name (Hebrews 13:12-15).
n
TO HIM WHO SITS UPON THE THRONE AND TO THE LAMB
BE PRAISE AND HONOR AND GLORY AND POWER,
FOR EVER AND EVER!
(Revelation 5:13)
n
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 92
Heavenly Worship_070605_m 12-10-2005 9:27 Pagina 93
ISBN:88-89127-11-2
ISBN:88-89127-10-4
Via Maiella, 1
66020 S. Giovanni Teatino (Ch) - ITALY
Tel. +39 085 4716623 - Fax +39 085 4716622
********************
Are you an author?
CONTACT US
publisher@eurodestinyimage.com