Readings for today: Revelation 1-5
Why do Christians sing? I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve been asked that question over the years. Why is singing such a significant part of Christian worship? Why do Christians from every tribe and nation and people group spend so much time and energy creating new songs? Adding new styles and rhythms to the great hymnal of the saints? Why are Christians so passionate about music? To the point where they even get into fights over it! ;-) After all, especially in the West, we are not a “singing” culture. We don’t get together to sing anywhere else in our society. At best we sing in the shower or in the car as we drive to work. We might sing at concerts but that’s about it. We don’t read music anymore. We don’t join choirs anymore. Sure, we enjoy music but as a spectator not a participant. So why then does the church still gather to sing?
In the Book of Revelation, it seems clear that heaven is full of singing. The angels sing. The seven spirits of God sing. The elders sing. All the saints who have gone before us - myriads of myriads and thousands of thousands - join their voices together to give praise to God. They even write new music! Music that captures the heart of the gospel. “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation, and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on earth.” (Rev. 5:9) There’s just something about music that moves the heart. Far more than words. Far more than sermons. Far more than even personal testimonies. Music taps something deep inside us. When we sing together, we literally become part of something bigger than ourselves. A sense of community develops. We experience the power of the many becoming one.
There’s nothing quite like it…at least on earth. But heaven is a place where all the barriers that divide us are torn down. All that separates us is replaced by an intimacy and a unity so deep and so profound that perhaps the only way to appropriately express ourselves will be to sing. Sing the songs of Zion. Sing the songs of Emmanuel. Sing the songs of the gospel. The church is called to “rehearse” this reality. Week after week. Month after month. Year after year. The church is where we learn to sing so we can be ready to join the heavenly choir when our time comes. The church is where we get a foretaste of the reality to come and it’s why we spend so much of our time singing. It doesn’t matter whether we can hold a tune. It doesn’t matter whether we can carry a note. It doesn’t matter whether we have rhythm or not. All that matters is that we sing from the heart. All that matters is that we give praise to Jesus.
Readings for tomorrow: Revelation 6-10