St John the Beloved

Organic Worship


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What does your baseball cap have to do with theology? More than you might think. In this illuminating exploration of 1 Corinthians 11:2-16, we discover how this seemingly perplexing passage about head coverings reveals three profound truths about authentic Christian worship.

The sermon begins with a fascinating look at Japanese aesthetics, where principles like suggestion, irregularity, simplicity, and perishability shape everything from literature to fashion. This cultural example brilliantly illustrates how our worldview expresses itself through seemingly mundane choices like clothing and presentation. Similarly, the way the Corinthians approached worship—specifically how they presented themselves—revealed deeper truths about what they believed.

Moving beyond surface-level dress codes, we discover that true Christian worship must be reverent, organic, and confident. Worship demands reverence because it's a cosmic event where heaven and earth intersect, attended even by angels who "long to look into these things." Yet this reverence doesn't mean stiffness or formality—it means approaching worship with appropriate preparation and expectation, knowing God will do amazing things when His people gather.

Worship must also be organic, functioning as one body under Christ rather than as competing individuals. Using the Trinity as our model, we see that headship isn't about superiority but ordered unity. Like traditional Japanese carpentry that creates earthquake-resistant structures through painstaking craftsmanship, building church ministries organically takes longer but produces something far more enduring. "If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together."

Perhaps most powerfully, Christian worship must be confident. Unlike pagan worshippers who veiled themselves for protection from capricious gods, Christians approach God with unveiled faces, knowing Christ has torn the temple curtain. The analogy of an IRS audit brilliantly illustrates this difference—while pagans feared divine scrutiny they could never survive, Christians know Jesus has already been "audited" in our place, paying every debt and opening the way for us to approach God boldly as beloved children.

This message transforms our understanding of worship from mere ritual or performance into a profound encounter with the living God who invites us to draw near with reverence, unity, and confidence—not because of who we are, but because of what Christ has done.

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St John the BelovedBy St John the Beloved