Come, let us sing to the Lord;
let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation!
Let us come into God’s presence with thanksgiving;
let us make a joyful noise to God with songs of praise!
Every line from the opening verses of Psalm 95 is a call to worship, and the very first word is Come! We hear and extend a joyful invitation to come together and make some noise, to sing and shout to God, and the very first word is Come.
And I hear it and I say it, but not with my whole heart. Come, I say, but not too close. Come, but stay at least 6 feet away. Come, or maybe better not. Perhaps it’s best if you and I stay at home for the next couple of weeks. Perhaps it’s best if you and I don’t come to God’s house for a while.
A friend and colleague asked me, What are your thoughts? after telling me that her community would still gather today but forego communion.
“I am very torn about the situation,” I told her, “that the most loving things to do right now are also the most distancing; that the most healing actions necessary now are also potentially the most fragmenting. I trust that we will be shown ways to remain connected in the Spirit when we choose not to gather in tangible, embodied community.”
Not gathering, I wrote her, is the most severe form of a Lenten fast. And like any fast, it is not a tragedy or an imposition, but a discipline, a chosen practice. We abstain from coming together, from sharing hugs and holding hands, not out of fear, but because that is what love demands in this moment.
And in faithfully and obediently responding to what love demands we are given the opportunity to find God in the longing for coming together in person, seeing each other face to face, standing together shoulder to shoulder, comforting and strengthening each other hand in hand, reminding each other in every touch that we are members in the body of Christ. In fasting from the tangible proclamation of our communion with God through Christ, we are given the opportunity to know in our bones God’s own longing for communion with us.
My sister lives in Italy with her family, and on Friday she sent me the headline of a local news outlet, announcing that musicians from all over the country would sing or play their instruments from open windows, all of them together at 6pm on Friday night. I loved that project! In my mind, I could hear the music rising from apartments in Milan, farm houses in Campania and Apulia, condos in Rome and villas in Tuscany—the songs, the melodies coming together in one great Italian corona symphony!
Come, let us sing to the Lord,
let us make a joyful noise to God with songs of praise!
The next morning she sent me a video somebody somewhere in Sicily had recorded from their balcony, overlooking an open court yard between multi-story apartment buildings, and there were neighbors everywhere in open windows and on balconies, playing accordion, banging drums and tambourines, and singing together. It was wonderful, beautiful, a hymn of joy in praise of life and community and neighborly creativity!
I don’t see how we cannot choose to abstain from coming together, from sharing hugs and holding hands, because that is what love demands in this moment. This fast, this Lenten discipline embraced in the Spirit of Christ, is both an expression of our love for our neighbors and an invitation to discover other ways to connect, stay in touch, sing and pray, even break bread together.
What if each of us sent a card to one of our homebound members?
What if we made plans to meet on Zoom for our book group or for Wednesday prayers or Sunday school?
What if we decided to do a community art project together – paintings, drawings, photographs, needle point – and create an online gallery?
What if we each drew a name from the hat each day and make just one phone call to check in and talk about something else than toilet paper or hand sanitizer for a change?
I had decided to keep my social media shut for Lent, but I broke my fast a few days ago in order to be with you when we aren’t together in person.
Let us come into God’s presence with thanksgiving, let us come into God’s presence with our joy and our sorrow, with our anxiety and frustration, with all that we carry in our hearts—let us come into God’s presence with praise, whether that is all of us together in one place or two or three of us gathered in his name on a conference call.
According to our psalm, the most basic reason for praising God is that God is “a great sovereign above all gods.” We don’t praise God because God needs to hear at least once a week, from as many people as possible, various renderings of “how great thou art.” We praise God because God is worthy of our praise for creating and sustaining the world. God in whose hands are the depths of the earth, the heights of the mountains, the sea and the dry land — this God is worthy of our worship, and other gods are not.
What other gods, you ask? Fear wants to be god, as if we needed a reminder. Suspicion wants to be god. Panic wants to be god. Greed wants to be god. Me, myself, and my needs want to be god. Lovelessness wants to be god. But the Lord has no rival.
The God who created heaven and earth, who made covenant with Abraham, who spoke to Moses and brought Israel out of slavery, who empowered the prophets, who sent Jesus and raised him from the dead — all for the sake of life in covenant communion — this God has no rival: neither fear nor panic, nor greed, nor loveless self-absorption, nor powers, nor principalities, nor anything else in all creation. The Lord is a great sovereign above all gods and wannabe godlets, and in coming together in worship and praise we remember.
Come, let us worship and bow down,
let us kneel before the Lord, our Maker!
For the Lord is our God,
and we are the people of God’s pasture,
and the sheep of God’s hand.
Bowing down before the Lord, our Maker, and kneeling before no other, we remember who and whose we are: God’s own people.
The community that created, prayed and kept the psalms and passed them down to us, generation to generation, experienced war, invasion, destruction, deportation, exile, and foreign occupation. Therefore the worship in which they call us to engage with them is not frivolous, shallow, or happy clappy. The praise in which they invite us to join them is grounded in God’s power to give life to the dead and call into existence the things that do not exist. It is grounded in God’s covenant promises and the faithfulness with which God clings to them and therefore to us.
We have entered a time of great uncertainty — socially, politically, economically. But the God we worship is a very present help in trouble. Remembering who and whose we are, we will be given all that is needed to love each other well.