Worship is Life
This powerful message challenges us to reimagine what worship truly means in our daily lives. Drawing from Romans 12, we're reminded that worship isn't confined to the 20 or 30 minutes we spend singing on Sunday mornings—it's the entire fabric of our existence. Paul's words urge us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices, making our everyday, ordinary lives—our sleeping, eating, working, and walking—an offering to God. This means every interaction at work, every moment in traffic, every conversation at home, and every transaction at the coffee shop is an act of worship. The convicting truth is that we're always worshiping something; the question is what or who. When we recognize that the person who cut us off in traffic, the difficult coworker, the homework assignment, or the server at the restaurant are all opportunities to worship Jesus through our responses and attitudes, we transform from Sunday worshipers into daily disciples. This perspective shift calls us to examine whether we've been worshiping at our own altars throughout the week, making it difficult to enter God's presence corporately. True worship isn't dependent on our favorite song being played—it's a lifestyle of surrender that begins the moment we leave the sanctuary and continues until we return.
