The Highest Form of Worship
The Highest Form of Worship
The Highest Form of Worship
By Dwight A. Pryor
Two years ago, Brad Young was interviewing for a teaching position at a
major Christian graduate school in the U.S. (not Oral Roberts School of
Theology where he presently teaches). At the time, he was completing
some seven years of study at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
culminating in his doctoral dissertation on rabbinic parallels to the
parables of Jesus. A vice-president of this prestigious, Charismatic
institution said to Brad that he believed learning Greek and Hebrew was
detrimental to true spirituality.
The roots from which our faith sprang are to be found deep in the fertile
soil of first-century Judaism. To a Jew of that day, the statement "Thirty
minutes of prayer is superior to three hours of study" would seem
peculiar and odd, to say the least. Studying Torah was the chief duty and
greatest privilege of every Jew. A fundamental tenet of Judaism was that
a knowledge of Torah was the highest good in life, and therefore every
effort should be expended toward that objective. "An ignorant man
cannot be pious," said Hillel. "Whoever acquires knowledge of the Torah
acquires life in the world to come" (Avot 2:7).
CONSISTENT WITNESS
3 The Psalms speak eloquently of the great love the Jewish people had
for the Torah, the Word of God. "Happy is the man...whose delight is in
the teaching of the Lord, and he studies that teaching day and night"
(Psalm 1:1-2 JPS). "The teaching of the Lord is perfect, renewing life"
(Psalm 19:7 JPS).
Unlike us, the Jews did not think of Torah as "Law." YHWH was not the
big I.R.S. agent in the sky, capriciously issuing harsh legalistic dictates
from above. Rather, YHWH was the teacher and Torah was His
revelation. It was God's gracious gift of guidance, direction, and
instruction--pointing us ever toward life and away from death. It is in
this sense, also, by the way, that Jesus (e.g., Luke 16:17) and Paul (e.g.,
Romans 7:12,14) speak so highly of God's revelation at Sinai.
4 "But," you protest, "we are a 'New Testament' church and therefore
the Shema is not our greatest commandment. Our great commission is
not to study, but to evangelize!" (Matthew 28:19). Whoops! Back to
square one. Never forget: Jesus was himself a Jew, a rabbi, who taught
Jewish people in the Hebrew language using well-known rabbinic
teaching techniques. And his followers, including the Apostles, were all
Jews and were all Jewish. They did not forsake their Judaism to follow
Him; they forsook themselves to embrace Him as the promised Messiah
and to follow Him as their Lord.
Considering all this, as well as the fact that much of the New Testament
was written by these men, we must always be alert to the Hebrew text
and context of our Christian Scriptures. In Matthew 28:19-20, for
instance, Jesus' emphasis is actually upon learning. "In your going," He
says, here is what's important, here's what I really want you to do: "Make
disciples...baptize them...and teach them." In Greek (mathetes), as well
as in the Hebrew (talmidim) behind the Greek, the meaning of disciple is
clear: a learner, a student, one who is taught. Paul's early rabbi, the great
Gamaliel, was noted for having 500 talmidim. He, like the rabbi Jesus,
was heeding the longstanding slogan of the Great Synagogue: "Raise up
many disciples" (Avot 1:1).
Paul joins the saints at Troas shortly after sundown on Saturday evening
(the first day of the week by Jewish reckoning). Because of their intense
desire for teaching, he speaks until midnight (v.7)--a six-hour sermon!
Young Eutychus, despite his exposure to the night air, falls asleep in the
window and slips to his death three stories below (v. 9). The impressive
thing to me, however, is not that at Paul's hand his life is renewed (v.
10); but that Paul and the saints immediately return upstairs to get back
to business--study. Paul instructs them for another six hours, until
daylight! (v. 11)
O that the Church today had that kind of intensity for learning, where
study and teaching would take precedence even over miracles! But the
greater truth is that the teaching of the Lord renews life (Psalm 19:7). It
is accompanied by signs and wonders because the Word of God is
powerful; properly understood and obeyed, it will never return void but
always yields a bountiful harvest.
FORM OF WORSHIP
We can see, therefore, that our biblical heritage evidences a high regard
for study. To the Jewish people of Jesus' day, it was more than a duty. It
was a priceless heritage and an awesome privilege. Before reading the
Word of God, the Jew would pray, "Praise the Lord to whom all praise is
due. Praise the Lord to whom all praise is due forever and ever. We
praise You, O Lord our God, King of the Universe, Who chose us among
all people to reveal to us Your Torah. We praise You, O Lord, Giver of
the Torah." Study, to the Jew, was an act of worship--the highest form of
worship. The sanctity of the bet midrash (house of study) exceeded even
that of the synagogue, according to the rabbi. "Greater is the study of the
Torah than the rebuilding of the Temple" (Meg. 16b), said another rabbi.
Why the premium upon study? Because it is through the renewing of our
minds that we become transformed vessels for true service, fully
equipped to do God's will. Our minds, therefore, are important. We were
created by God with our minds, and as creator, He wants dominion over
them. He commands us to worship Him with our minds, and empowers
and quickens our submitted minds to understand the revelation of
Himself in His word and in His Word made flesh. And through this
renewal process, we are liberated to life--as He promised we would be.
"If you abide in my teachings..." (John 8:31-32).
WHICH IS BETTER?
Let us, then affirm the whole of our Hebrew heritage. To our houses of
prayer, corporately and individually, let us also add houses of study. Let
us study the Word of God with due diligence and reverence, as a high
form of worship of the Most High God. And if we should hear the view
that "Thirty minutes on your knees in prayer is time better spent than
three hours of study," let our response be: "Why not spend three hours
on your knees in study?!"
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As founder and President of The Center for Judaic-Christian Studies in
Austin, Dwight A. Pryor often speaks at churches and conferences
across the U.S. His own graduate studies in philosophy and Hebrew
studies have equipped him to work with Dr. Roy Blizzard and the
members of The Jerusalem School.
Dwight has become a popular Bible teacher, noted for his capacity to
effectively communicate a Hebrew perspective to the Body of Christ.