The worship of Almighty God is one
of the characteristic acts of humanity. The
brute looks up to heaven, but man alone looks up with
thought of God and to adore. “The entire
creation grew together to reflect and repeat the glory
of God, and yet the echo of God slumbered in the hollow
bowels of the dumb earth until there was one who could
wake up the shout by a living voice. Man is the
first among the creatures to deliver back from the
rolling world this conscious and delicious response,
the recognition of the Father who begat him.
He, and he alone, is nature’s priest, her spokesman,
her mediator.”
The idea of worship, in which the
crown and glory of manhood thus has expression, “includes
all those acts which make up the devotional duty of
the soul to Almighty God.” Our private
and family devotions are acts of worship. They
enter into its obligation, are comprehended by it,
but do not fill it out. They are not sufficient
alone. The due acknowledgment before others
of our belief in and reverence for God, the blessings
which attend only upon the use of united praise and
prayer and of Sacraments, the honor of God, the rendering
of “thanks for the great benefits that we have
received at His hands,” the setting forth of
“His most worthy praise,” all
demand the public act of worship.
The obligation and privilege of such
worship cannot be too greatly exalted. It is
not a matter of inclination merely; it is an imperative
duty, the discharge of which may not be regulated by
considerations of convenience, or indolence, or pleasure.
To neglect it, is to dishonor God, to withhold what
is His due. It is also to dishonor ourselves,
to violate our own noblest instincts. No other
act of which we as men are capable is so dignified
or so worthy of ourselves. Not to worship is
to debase ourselves.
This duty and privilege of worship
the church and the Prayer-Book help us to perform.
Just as other buildings about us homes,
stores, factories, schools, libraries stand
for and represent certain interests and departments
of our lives, so the church as a building makes its
claim and reminds us that there must also be room a
large place and sacred in our lives for
worship, and supplies the hallowed means and helpful
associations for its right discharge. And what
the church supplies the means of doing fittingly,
the Prayer-Book directs. It comes with the reminder
that while Sunday brings the great opportunity of
worship, the obligation is not a thing of one day only,
but of every day, and that our public worship should
be “daily,” if possible. It enables
every one who comes into the church to be a worshiper.
It gives to each one his part. It makes no distinctions.
High and low, rich and poor, have equal share in the
service. It teaches to worship reverently, and
in spirit and in truth. “Everything in
the Prayer-Book is solemn, humble, reverential, as
it respects man, and ennobling and glorifying as it
respects God.” And this is meet and right.
For, as has been truly said, “Worship is the
concentration and consecration of whatever is noble
in the world. It is the dedication to the Most
High of all that is best in what the eye can see, the
ear hear, the voice sing, the hand execute, and
the mind conceive. It is the sanctification
of color, sound, and skill, of intellect, imagination,
and emotion. It is devotion devotion
of what is excellent in man, devotion of what symbolizes
the loveliness of nature. Therefore it is that
worship calls for art; therefore, too, it is that
art so often finds its noblest use in worship.
Worship and art together take the beauty of the world
and offer it up as a tribute at the feet of God.”