HOLD YOUR APPLAUSE:
Sound theology
is sometimes as simple as good manners.
When I first met her she was a spirited feisty young teenager. I supposed
she was born that way. When she was eight years old, her family attended
a conference where her father was one of the speakers. One evening there
was a musical program during which the enthusiastic leader encouraged,
"Let's give God a hand." At that she got up and began to walk toward the
exit. Her surprised father reached her before she fulfilled her intention.
"What are you doing?" he inquired.
"I'm leaving," she firmly replied.
"But," he reasoned, "wouldn't that be rude?"
"Well," she clenched her argument, "they're being rude to God!"
The family followed her out.
As a college student today she knows it gets a lot worse. People aren't
just flippantly "giving God a hand." In many services they routinely give
each other a hand, especially in response to musical offerings.
Ministers will note that the practice has not caught on as a response
to sermons. Perhaps we will have to install applause signs in our sanctuaries
(or "worship centers" as they're now called) before people will get the
idea. Then we'll have to learn to pause until the clapping subsides.
In this context, it's a pleasant surprise to hear a word of sanity from
the secular priestess of manners, Judith Martin. In Miss Manners
Rescues Civilization, she answers a question about applause in
church with, "Having forgotten church manners, people are substituting
those that would be proper for a performance...Hard as it may be to imagine,
musicians in church are supposed to play or sing for the glory of God,
not the pleasure of the congregation (which people interestingly slip and
call 'the audience'). That is why there should be no applause in church.
Not even for small children, who particularly need to have the purpose
of the performance explained to them."
In response to the protest that the Bible authorizes clapping (as is
Psalm 47:1), Miss Manners proves herself a better theologian than many
evangelical worship leaders. "Where," she asks, "is the Biblical reference
by which God commands applause to honor musicians...?"
Miss Manners hopes she is not pressing too fine a point when she distinguishes
between the clapping of hands as an "expression of religious awe or joy
and the clapping of hands to denote approval and appreciation for the achievements
of our fellow mortals."
The specific problem Miss Manners addresses is the tip of the iceberg
of worship malpractice. Too many evangelical worshipers are like the man
shopping for his wife's Christmas present and choosing something which
pleases himself. So we go to church expecting to be soothed, entertained
and sent home feeling good.
It hardly occurs to us to ask, "What will please God?" The subjects,
not the Object of worship, are the focus. The result is that we no longer
know how to conduct ourselves in God's house. We lack worship manners or
even the sense that we need them.
If you invite me to your home, I'll come with my manners, which are
both attitude (I respect you) and actions (I'll conform to
the expectation of your household).
What attitudes should you bring to worship? God wants exuberant joy
(Psalm 100:1-2) and reverent awe (Hebrews 12:28-29).
What actions does He approve in worship? Singing, praying, reading and
preaching His Word, testifying to and confessing our faith, giving offerings,
celebrating sacraments and making holy vows.
If you think worship manners are no big deal, you might check out the
story of two Old Testament fellows who forgot their manners and lost their
lives because, "Among those who approach me, I will show myself holy; in
the sight of all the people I will be honored" (Leviticus 10:1-7).
By William
Smith. Reprinted with permission from World magazine, August
31, 1996