The Object of Worship
Ken Stoltzfus
Every human worships.
Man was created with a need to
worship someone (or something) beyond and greater than himself
Worship carries with it the
expectation of reward,
the sense of
connecting with someone (or something) that will make one whole.
In worship, man offers up his heart,
his life, allegiance, and affections,
to God or to a god.
Man’s highest calling, and his
highest privilege,
is to commune with God in worship.
No other part of creation can
commune with God.
A human is fully human only when he
worships God.
God would say “When you worship Me,
the life that is in Me flows to you.”
Without that life, man is
incomplete.
God seeks those who worship Him in
Spirit and in truth, that is;
in humility and sincerity, without
reservation or pretense; in all of life, whether a “worship service” or a surrendered heart in work, play or family
settings
He seeks those who will lay down
their lives and yield their spirits up,
to receive LIFE through His life - -
rather than through their own life
By exalting Him as their Source, and giving Him
that place in their life, they worship Him;
because whatever becomes man’s
source, becomes his object of worship
But man has always had a problem
with other gods,
those who promise life without
death.
“Life to it’s fullest” they shout,
“Through self-rule,
self-satisfaction, self-assertion and self-fulfillment.”
“Get power, security, prestige,
houses, money, fame and more, by developing your human resources and potentials.”
They continue, “Find fulfillment by experiencing your senses and desires
to the fullest.”
In that, they confess the object of
their worship.
Man was created to have dominion
over the earth, and to worship God.
In refusing to worship God, and to
recognize Him as the source of life;
And in looking within himself and to
the world around him to find life,
man lowers himself by worshipping that which he was created to have
dominion over.
Born in 1940, Ken
Stoltzfus has worked as a pilot, ordained Christian minister, businessman,
missionary to Africa and writer. This is #4 in the section, "Poetry and
Piety", at www.flyinghigher.net,
and is one of many short writings that can be found there.
© 2003, Ken Stoltzfus, flyinghigher.net, P.O. Box 548, Apple
Creek, OH 44606 USA. May be printed for personal use and may be reproduced for
non-commercial purposes without further permission if proper acknowledgment is
given and a copy is sent to the author.