
        by Steve Atkerson 
It is 
        common for people to refer to a church meeting as a “worship 
        service.”  Articles appear regularly in evangelical publications 
        explaining how to experience true worship in church.  Some regard 
        the Sunday morning worship hour with a fear and trembling similar to 
        that felt by Israel at Mount Sinai.  Others understand the worship 
        service to be a time of celebration, joy, and praise.  Which 
        approach is warranted by Scripture?  What should take place in a 
        church meeting?  Just what is a “worship service”? 
        
All the Hebrew and Greek words for “worship” 
        reflect one  of two basic ideas.  The concept of worship most 
        commonly held today is seen in the word proskuneo.  Pros 
        means “toward” and kuneo means “to kiss.”  According to the 
        lexicon of BAGD this word designated “the custom of prostrating oneself 
        before a person and kissing his feet, the hem of his garment, the 
        ground, etc.; the Persians did this in the presence of their deified 
        king, and the Greeks before a divinity.”  Thus the word means to 
        “(fall down and) worship, do obeisance to, prostrate oneself before, do 
        reverence to, welcome respectfully.”  As can be seen, 
        proskuneo is an attitude of humility, reverence, appreciation, 
        fear, adoring awe, and wonder.  The emphasis is on inner love and 
        devotion. 
        
 The second concept of “worship” is 
        reflected in the word latreia, which essentially means “service” 
        or “work.”  This word originally referred to the labor of slaves or 
        hired servants.  In contrast to proskuneo, latreia is an 
        action word. 
        
Thus, Biblically, to “worship” God is to “work” 
        for Him in an attitude of “adoring awe.”  Furthermore, Jesus told 
        the Samaritan woman that “a time is coming when you will worship 
        (proskuneo) the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem 
        . . . God is spirit, and His worshippers must worship in spirit and in 
        truth” (Jn 4:21-24).  Worship has nothing to do with any particular 
        location or time; it is to be done every place the believer happens to 
        find himself and at all times.  So why do we primarily associate 
        worship with church buildings at 11:00 on Sunday mornings? 
        
Surprisingly, the NT never refers to a church 
        meeting as a “worship service.”  Ro 12:1 does make mention of a 
        “service of worship” (NASB), but this refers to offering our bodies to 
        God as a living sacrifice; it has nothing to do with the church 
        meeting!  Certainly there is nothing wrong with worshipping God 
        during the church meeting (1 Co 14:22-25; Eph 5:19b; Col 3:16b), but is 
        this to be the primary objective of the meeting? 
        
Many Christians go to the OT to justify making worship the 
        chief reason for a church assembly.  Under the Mosaic Covenant 
        God’s people were required by divine law to make several annual 
        pilgrimages to the one and only temple site (the “house” of 
        Yahweh)  and there to present offerings and sacrifices.  Their 
        worship consisted of sabbaths, feast day rites, and performances done by 
        prescribed Levitical mediators; it was scheduled, localized and 
        ritualized.  By contrast, the New Covenant introduced a radically 
        different manner of worship.  The “new” way made the Mosaic 
        Covenant (and its worship) “old,” obsolete, and ready to disappear (Heb 
        8:13) 
        
1 Co 14:26 clearly states the prerequisite for 
        anything that goes on in a church meeting: “When you come together, 
        everyone has a hymn, or a word of instruction, a revelation, a tongue or 
        an interpretation.  All of these must be done for the strengthening 
        of the church.”  The word “strengthening” is from oikodome 
        and means “edifying, edification, building up.”  Certainly as we 
        worship God corporately we are indeed strengthened.  However, the 
        ultimate focus of the meeting is to strengthen the church.  It is 
        not the Lord who stands in need of strengthening, but the Lord’s 
        people.  In this sense, the weekly assembly is for the benefit of 
        the people present.  A church gathering is to be designed to edify 
        believers and to this end it is to be man-centered as well as 
        God-centered. 
        
Notice how this concept of strengthening is 
        supported by Heb 10:24-25: “Let us consider how we may spur one another 
        on toward love and good deeds.  Let us not give up meeting 
        together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one 
        another–and all the more as you see the day approaching.”  Once 
        again, the reason for “meeting together” is to “encourage” one 
        another.  We are to think of ways to “spur” one another on toward 
        love and good deeds.  In this sense the church meeting is to be 
        designed to equip the believer to go out and worship during the 
        week.  As Francis Scott Key wrote, “And since words can never 
        measure, let my life show forth thy praise.” 
  
        
The church meetings revealed in the NT were interactive, 
        informal and small.  Simplicity was the rule of the house-church 
        meetings.  Somewhere along the line (about the time of Roman 
        Emperor Constantine’s Edict of Milan) we moved out of homes and into 
        awe-inspiring, majestic “sanctuaries” (which formally belonged to pagan 
        religions).  We exchanged interaction and mutual encouragement for 
        monologue.  Intimacy was lost as the masses gathered in huge 
        lecture halls called cathedrals.  Informality gave way to liturgy, 
        pomp and ceremony.  Church meetings became a spectator sport with 
        the congregation watching a performance by the spiritually elite.  
        In such an atmosphere, fulfilling 1 Co 14:26 became increasingly 
        difficult.  About all that could still be fulfilled was Eph 5:19b 
        and Col 3:16b, so “worship” became the primary focus of these 
        performance shows. 
        
At the other extreme, just as church meetings are 
        not fundamentally to be “worship services,” neither are they to be 
        therapy groups for the wounded.  A church meeting is not supposed 
        to be a counseling session focused on the needs of one person.  For 
        instance, to center primarily on healing is to violate the “prime 
        directive” of 1 Co 14:26.  “All” must be done for the strengthening 
        of the entire “church.”  Yes, the whole church can be edified 
        through the miracle of healing, but as with worship, this must not be an 
        overemphasized channel through which all strengthening is routed.  
        This would be like plucking a one string guitar! 
        
In conclusion, all things that occur in a church meeting 
        must be “unto edifying” (1 Co 14:26, KJV).  As long as we label our 
        church meetings “worship services,” people will tacitly assume that 
        worship is the chief reason for the meeting.  If edification does 
        occur, it will be incidental or at best haphazard.  It is an axiom 
        that institutions drift away from their original purpose for 
        existence.  Could it be that such is the case with our church 
        assemblies? 
  
  
        
        