Saturday, February 2, 2008

#33. Singing with our hands raised.

There are few things we like as much as raising our hands during the middle of worship. Second only to this move is singing with your eyes closed. I don't regularly do either but I can understand someone getting caught up in the moment and enjoying themselves. My friend Meghan says that her mom used to make a runway for God to land on. And I think that's an amazing way to look at it. But to tell you the truth, I would much rather someone raise their hands and close their eyes instead of seeing people dance next to me. There's nothing that snaps me out of the worship zone faster than seeing a middle aged soccer mom grooving along to a praise song as if she was at a Bonnie Raitt concert. There's no call for that. Please stop.

19 comments:

Andrea said...

Interesting views, considering #29

Prodigal Jon said...

I think dancing, like anything else, is beautiful in the right context. And I'm not sure doing the robot next to me at church to a Steve Fee song is the right context. But you're right, I can't have it both ways, so people at church in my row, feel free to dance it up.

iwritetheblogs said...

The Robot is never acceptable. Anywhere. ;]

Bethany said...

I think this is one of those things that is bad if it's for show, or because everyone else is doing it, but if it really helps you worship to raise your hands, or dance, or whatever, I think you should do it. Now, obviously, if your dancing is so obvious that you're keeping others from their worship, you should perhaps take it down a notch or two, but otherwise, I think it has its place.

Heidi Lois said...

How bout you close your eyes and let soccer mom do her thang?? LOL! Oh, the Robot? Never mind. As usual, I agree with Bethany.

I always thought there was one kind of hands-raising till I went to a Third Day concert.

For instance:
"I want to lift you up."
"Lord, please fill my cup."
"Daddy, pick me up!"
"Jesus, I'm fed up." <--- I kid.

Beloved MaMa™ said...

but dancing like David did in his undies is definitely OK...

Tim Burge said...

1. Gotta differ with you on the soccer mom at Bonnie Raitt comment. The church we've started to go to ENCOURAGES people to move. The place is wide open with bad dancers, modern dancers, hand shakers, head bobbers, hand raisers, scarves waving, a flag...it's like a concert. And the energy is amazing! We go for 45 minutes and I've never felt so much like worship was happening.

2. Why oh why do we have songs that practically MAKE us raise our hands??? "We raise our hands to you, oh God" "I fall on my knees", etc. I don't raise my hands and usually don't fall on my knees when I sing that so I feel like a liar who's going to Hell after the lightning strikes.

Ethan said...

David was cool with it.

"Lift up your hands in the sanctuary and praise the LORD."
Psalm 134:2

Paul to.

"I want men everywhere to lift up holy hands in prayer, without anger or disputing."
1 Timothy 2:8

I like to lift my hands and close my eyes. I imagine the there is no roof and I am before the throne of God. He is smiling.

Michelle in Mx said...

My mother was very self conscious to lift her hands.
One day she felt God say to her "Am I not Worthy?"
She raises her hands in worship ever since.

elrj said...

Oh, only hand raising in certain churches. There are still plenty of us stuffy ones that sing things like "we bow down" or "we lift our hands" when we do neither and would never dream of it! Haha! Sad.

Christina said...

Topic suggestion: Address the differences in hand-raising/dancing/eyes-closing worship practices among denomination.

Example: Nazarenes are famous for one-hand-only. Only one. Two is too much. I didn't know this until I went to college and went to a Vineyard church where people do whatever they want - frequently both hands - and then I heard a joke about it back home. Sometimes I raise both hands at my Nazarene home church just to make a point. :)

matthew said...

Funny thing: no one raises their hands to hymns.

I was at a church a few weeks ago where they did "Amazing Grace (My Chains are Gone)". The congregation would sing the AG part like it was an obligation in order to get to the chorus, then: "My chains are" BOOM! everyone's hands are up!

Terynn said...

I am one of those (albeit non-soccer*) dancing moms. I had no idea this worship style bothered anyone but my own (mortified) teen-age children. Not that I care...that's between me and my God.

Oh well, at least I'm not in my underwear (ala King David). evil laughter

jason gabriel leonard said...

*enter annoying book recommendation mode*

Chapter 14 of Eugene Peterson's "A Long Obedience" totally challenged my views on this.

The gist being that we can control our bodies even when we can't necessarily control our hearts / minds some times.

Wil McMillen said...

I've been a Christian for 19 years, and I have yet to feel the need to do the Holy Bench Press.

For other people it's fine, but I just don't get it.

Andy said...

And I'll become even more undignified than this...

Lauren said...

So I tried to hold my hands up once. I couldn't do it. My arms just get too tired. I did try the half raised thing where I'm one hand clap away from praying.

Yeah, and I don't know if what I do is called dancing but sometimes I feel like I need to be really close to the pew in front of me and I kind of rock forward and back again. Anyone else do this?

Katie said...

"There's no call for that. Please stop." - so funny
also, i think it's annoying when the sang says "we lift our hands","we raise our hands", etc. and everyone does it. i mean, come on.
i do close my eyes a lot, but mostly it is so i can focus and not be distracted by all the shenanigans going one around me

Anonymous said...

basically, raising your hands is lifting up the words as well as your hearts to God in reverance. Not a necessity but definitely a humble position before God to say that this is all lifted to You for Your glory and no one else's