John 13: 31-35
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.”
Prayer: Thank you, Lord, for the abundance of your gifts of love and music. May we hear your word speaking to us today. Amen.
Well friends… it should never go without saying that our hearts are filled with tremendous gratitude for all our musicians: all singers, all instrumentalists. All directors and leaders of our choirs and music groups. Our adults. Youth. Children. Our parents, too! Because your support and love, and bringing your children here are also to be commended.
There’s still more music to come, but let me just say, on behalf of all of us here and online, we love the music you’ve offered. We’ve enjoyed the harmonies, the blending of musical notes and sounds, the creative use of instruments like the bells, piano, organ, guitar, drums, ect.. to make those sounds. We’ve shared in the joy of the lyrics that you’ve sung and sometimes that we’ve sung with you. Because we’ve found deep meaning and inspiration in those lyrics, especially when they are combined with the instruments to make a pleasing sound. So thank you!
In a way, this is very humbling… because the old joke goes that good sermons are pretty much like good jokes—even the best ones are difficult to remember!
But NOT SO WITH THE MUSIC! I will be long gone, and what I’ve said here today or any day will not be remembered nearly as much as what you’ve sung and played. What music you’ve made. It’s incredible to me—you ask people what favorite sermon do you remember the most? Uhhh… CRICKETS! But you ask people what favorite church hymns do you remember? Ah! “Amazing Grace.” “How Great Thou Art”. “Joyful, Joyful We Adore You.” “The Old Rugged Cross.” “Jesus Loves Me, this I Know.” And the list goes on and on from there.
So, thank you musicians! From the bottom of my heart. From the bottoms of all our hearts!
However, in a much more profound sense, while we may appreciate and enjoy what you’ve offered in worship, our worship is not about us. Our worship is not primarily for our gratification. It’s not mostly for our enjoyment or our edification. It’s not for us to feel good about ourselves or our need for self-enrichment.
Our worship gratifies God. We offer our music for God’s enjoyment, first and foremost. God’s edification. To please God! Yes, we are gratified, we enjoy it some, but our music, with its sounds, its melodies and harmonies, its dissonances and joyful noises, its speed and volume, its lyrics through poetry and story—all of it blesses God. All of it glorifies God.
So we remember today that the heart of worship is never about what we get out of it for ourselves. It’s always about what we put into it for God. We come together as a community of faith to glorify God.
When Jesus lived on earth, he glorified God by showing us God. He revealed God’s love by teaching us that if you have God in your heart, you have love in your heart also. And to show God is in your heart is to love one another. So, as people of faith living in our community of faith, we follow Jesus’ commandment to love one another. In this way people all around us will know that we are Jesus’ disciples.
Now to bridge this all together, my mind went to a 1970 Mac Davis song—many of you will remember this song— “I Believe in Music.” I find the lyrics not only rich and meaningful but very apropos of today’s Music Celebration Sunday.
Mac Davis described the moment when this song started to be born in him. He was at a party in England at the home Maurice Gibbs of the famed Bee Gees. Mac said, “I went to the kitchen and fixed myself a drink at the party, and there were a bunch of [people saying they] were gonna have a séance. They asked me if I would like to join them. And I said, “No man, I don’t think so.” It wasn’t my thing. Then someone asked, “Don’t you believe in the occult?” I said, “No man, I believe in music.” And the second I said it, I just went … “I believe in music.” I looked around … it was like a God-shot. I saw one of Maurice Gibb’s guitars sitting on a stand, and I picked it up and started strumming it. I had the hook line before I left [the party …] (he sings) “I believe in music, I believe in love.”
That line is the chorus. Now all the verses are good, but the last verse speaks to us today. Listen to this:
“Music is the universal language and love is the key
To peace hope and understanding, and living in harmony
So take your brother [and sister] by the hand
and sing along with me
Lift your voices to the sky, God loves you when you sing. [Everybody sing]
I believe in music, I believe in love.
[sing it to me children]
I believe in music, oh-h-h I believe in love.
Mac Davis said he kept and framed the piece of paper from the hotel room that he went back to after the party where he completed the song. According to him, the line “Lift your voices to the sky, God loves you when you sing” was inspired by a piece of folk art he had seen that said, “God respects you when you work, but [God] loves you when you sing” (I Believe in Music (song) - Wikipedia, retrieved May 13, 2022).
Yes, indeed! God loves you when we sing. God loves it when we make music. God loves it when we love. All of it glorifies God. Because love and music glorify God together! Let us give God praise and thanksgiving in this moment of Quiet for these wonderful blessings. Amen.
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