Worshipping myself?


I don’t know if it’s just me, but I wonder if some of the worship songs we sing are more about us than they are about God. So many of the songs I find myself singing in church end up saying more about what I am, what I am doing, or intend to do than about what God is, what he is doing etc. Most of them have lines like ‘I will worship with all of my heart…” “I will give you all my worship….” “I surrender all….” and so on. Now there’s nothing wrong with this – the Psalms do it quite a bit, but if that is all we sing, and if the subject of most sentences is ‘I’, then it ends up pointing more to me than to God. The song subtly becomes more about me than it does about God. Worshipping God is not a celebration of our intentions or desires, but is being enabled to gaze upon him and lose ourselves in that, or allowing him to gaze on us and sensing his searching eyes on us.

I’ve been listening out for worship songs that don’t have the words ‘I’, ‘me’ or ‘us’ in them. And I haven’t found many. Of course we want songs that include us. But maybe we don’t quite have the balance right here. When I end up singing about my desire to worship, there’s always a little voice in my head that asks ‘do you really want to worship with all of your heart, all of the time?’ Do you really surrender all? Not only in the moment of worship in church but in the rest of my life? To be honest I think I’d prefer to sing a bit more often about God & his love, grace, Son, Spirit, creation, and a little less about myself. I'd like to be able to forget about myself and whether or not I feel like worshipping, or whether 'my eyes have seen the King', adn just let the light fall on God so I can contemplate him rather than my own frail and faltering faith and desire.

I also think the focus on the self makes it harder for those who are a) new to Christian faith and are wondering whether they can really sing ‘I will offer up my life in spirit and truth’, and so on, or b) struggling with the faith, but hanging in there – people who can’t honestly sing how they are ‘desperate’ for God, but just want to be reminded of how much he still cares, creates and remains faithful.

So here’s a challenge for you worship song-writers – try to write a song without the words ‘I’, ‘me’, ‘we’ or ‘us’. The prize is an indulgence – the permission to eat a Mars Bar during Lent…..
Last week we sang 'I know that you love me.' I couldn't help but wonder how many of us there actually know that, 100% of the time or at least all at the same at church?

Surely we should focus on the Big Guy and what we do will follow, rather than focus on what we are doing (which Christians seem to spend an inordinate amount of time especially when trying to be holy) and hope that it somehow adds to the glory of God.
Xian wrote a bit about this last year. As you know, it is something that I have been thinking about since way back. Pete Ward covers this a bit in "Selling Worship". Maybe you could cover it on Godpod?

No Mars bars for Isaac Watts and John Newton then?!
Ah, but could it not be argued that their work (education and anti-slavery respectively) led them to pen such hymns focusing on insights into the nature of God rather than worship that focuses us on what we are doing or will do? Should our daily lives lead us to worship rather than our worship lead us to live?
I know exactly what you mean... one of the reasons I love the Chris Tomlin album Arriving is that most of the songs are real "praise God" songs, focussing on all that God has done rather than his/my/our response.
Kinda off topic, but I think andyp means that they won't get mars bars cos they're dead. But otherwise I agree with you Gaston :)
Graham, a typically thought-provoking post. The use in 'worship songs' (even if 'songs' isn't the always the right word) of the personal pronouns you mention may be as old as the earliest records of worshipping God in song itself. The first real worship song that we know of is The Song of Miriam in Exodus 15. The very first words are "I will sing to the Lord" and just a few lines later "the Lord is my strength and my song" and so on. Some scholars have argued recently that this song acted as a model for the organisation of formal singing in Jewish and Christian worship.

Perhaps even more important (at least in the Christian tradition) is the Magnificat. Perhaps no other song in the Bible is as personal as Mary's: "My soul doth magnify the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour".

Aspects of both of these models formed the basis for formal Christian singing ever since (at least in the art-music tradition). I'm sorry Graham, but I'm with Andy P here!
Contemporary worship songs seem to be on a spectrum between 'to' God and 'about' God. I think we often have to ask ourselves where we're at , as you challenge us to do - to see if we're singing too many shallow love ditties such that we're trivialising the experience of entering into the presence of a Holy God, or if we're spending so much time declaring truth about God that we can't relate the words to our experience - and then we correct back to some other point on the spectrum, almost like a pendulum.

I don't think there needs to be so clear a divide between the 'I' and the 'you' - why not both in the one song, if worship is a response? My all time favourite song (and by that I mean that one I have found the most connection with God over all of my life) is 'And Can it be' - this song is choc -a - bloc with dense theology about interests in blood, chains falling off, heavenly beings trying in vain to sound the depths of Love Divine - yet it is entirely in the first person.

I agree that "I’d prefer to sing a bit more often about God & his love, grace, Son, Spirit, creation, and a little less about myself" . . . but the Christian life is an experiential one, it's relational. I don't believe a lot of concepts about God, I have experienced glimpses of them in the incarnate form of Jesus. Can I sing about God's love without mentioning Jesus, and his saving grace for all, including me? Or fail to celebrate the fact that God has stepped into the world in human form to be experienced, so great is his love?

Just finally - as it is rude to write such massive comments on another's 'blog - I find it interesting what you say about "When I end up singing about my desire to worship, there’s always a little voice in my head that asks ‘do you really want to worship with all of your heart, all of the time?’" . I find that challenging voice completely vital in my walk with God. if I wasn't reminded of my failure to worship with all I am, I might miss the sheer depth of grace. When I lead the songs which talk about 'offering all my life', I usually lay out a challenge, to myself as well as the church family I am part of; what would life look like if this were true?


PS Come on the Rovers! (sorry, I live next to the Memorial Stadium)
Great comments everyone - I agree absolutely, Christian faith is a personal, experiential thing, where we want to sing about our love for God & our intention to worship him whatever - it's just that I'm not sure we have the balance right - there are a little too many of those kind of songs, and not enough of the other kind, that just focus exclusively on God & his goodness & grace. And also, sometimes I just want to get on and worship God rather than tell him that I'm about to.....