Worship Corner - Columns/Blogs, Song Stories and Articles
About Gerrit Gustafson

Gerrit Gustafson, based in the Nashville area, is a songwriter (Only by Grace, Mighty is Our God), producer - publisher (wholeheartedworship.com), author (The Adventure of Worship) and worship teacher (worshipschools.com).

Mother Teresa and Your Church's Worship


Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me. Matthew 25:40

Tucked away in an alley off a dingy street in Calcutta is a very nondescript doorway. I was a bit uncertain that it was even the right place. But that humble doorway, through which I was warmly welcomed by the Missionaries of Charity, also became an entrance for me into an understanding of worship that is branded deeply in my mind and heart.

Mother Teresa was probably not someone you would have thought as a worship consultant to your church. However, as you retrace with me that conversation in 1988, I think you might just discover an insight that, if put into practice, could deepen your life of worship and increase the sense of God's pleasure in it.

After presenting her with simple gifts -- a booklet I had written, and two popular worship recordings -- Give Thanks, with Don Moen, and Glorify Thy Name with Kent Henry -- I exuberantly described what I saw going on internationally in the area of worship. "It's a worldwide revival of joy," I reported. "God is clothing His people with garments of praise!"

Surely, I thought, I would declare the good news of what God was doing, and introduce these faithful servants of God to a greater and more glorious worship!

Her eyes were kind, but unimpressed, as she pushed back the cassettes saying that they didn't have any music players. They had chosen to live without such distractions.
I thought to myself "How can you be a worshiper and not be able to keep up with all the new songs!"

I was daunted, but quickly regained equilibrium and tried again. I was curious about how the Missionaries of Charity worshiped? "What kind of music do you like? What kind of instruments do you use? Do you like faster or slower songs?"

No instruments, I learned. Their early morning worship times were very reverent, and prayer was more prominent than singing.

A chance of a lifetime conversation, and I was blowing it. It's like we were speaking different languages.

I desperately recalled the words of my friend who had invited me to India and had helped set up this meeting. He had said to me "Ask what worship means to her?" So I did.

Finally, we connected. Her eyes brightened as her answer went something like this: "If you really want to bless the Lord and pour out your love on Him, He has told us how to do it." And then she quoted Jesus' words in Matthew 25: "In as much as you have done it to one of the least of these my brothers, you have done it to me." She said that when the Missionaries of Charity minister to lepers from the streets of Calcutta, they do it as an act of worship to Jesus. She challenged me with these words: "If you really want to lavish your love on God, pour out your life on the needy."

"Mother Teresa," I said, "would you pray for me that I would be a true worshiper?" She answered, "Only if you'll pray for me first that I would be one too." We prayed for each other. The picture is on my refrigerator.
On my flight home, somewhere between Delhi and Frankfurt, I came across these words in Hebrews 13: Through Jesus, therefore, let us continually offer to God a sacrifice of praise —the fruit of lips that confess his name. And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.

With such sacrifices -- vocal praise and acts of mercy and generosity -- God is pleased! I thought, "What a great title for a worship conference: 'With Such Sacrifices!'"

Just like the cross of Christ is vertical and horizontal... and just like the two great commandments -- to love God and love your neighbor -- reach upward as well as outward, so the true worship of God has two components: spoken praise to Him and selfless service to others. One without the other is an incomplete expression of worship.

So what would Mother Teresa have said to help the worship in our churches? Maybe her words would go like this: "You mustn't think worship only happens when you are singing; it happens also when you're serving others. Until we are vitally connected with those our Lord call 'the least of these,' we are not yet the worshiping churches He is looking for. Until we find delight in serving the insignificant -- the children, the powerless, the prisoners, the unborn -- God's pleasure in our worship is incomplete."

So if you're part of the worship ministry in your church, and it's all starting to feel a bit empty, maybe it's time to cancel the regular worship band or choir practice and find out where the "least of these" are so you can tell Jesus just how much you really love Him.


Would you like to comment?
Register for a free account or Login if you are already a member.

raleighsinger Posted 8/11/2009 6:56:56 AM
This past week as I walked up to the lady serving communion, I recognized her as Laura from the prison. She's an inmate with a life sentence who along with about 6 others are allowed to come to our service for 1 hour each Sunday before they return. I loved taking communion from her. Just in front of me was "Captain Rob, my homeless buddy who was slightly hung over. I had just gotten up from beside him as he sat with his head down praying for God's help in his life. Our new African American pastor, a feisty lady named Lisa just finished a great word to us about... uh... I forgot. Me? Divorced and recovered from an addiction to pain meds, now the worship leader. And so you've got the divorced, the depressed, the alcoholic, the felon, the homeless, both the scared and scarred, the successful and the not so, the lawyer, the convict, the barren, and the hurt all breaking some bread and sharing juice together as one community. Oh... and I think there were some people with some problems too. Maybe I forgot the message, because for me, seeing this stuff was the message.
fbcpraise Posted 4/9/2009 8:20:50 AM
JohnTheEvangelist Posted 4/4/2009 6:42:47 AM
In Life in the Spirit: Reflections, Meditations and Prayers, Mother Theresa gives credence to Universalist Beliefs. We need to minister to the poor, but if we fail to give them the message of salvation through faith in Jesus Christ, we have oppressed them worse than anyone.
Sacredise Posted 4/4/2009 2:47:07 AM
Thanks for this amazing article, Gerrit. Mother Theresa was a faithful follower of Christ and it is so helpful to hear her perspective on worship. Thank you for your humility in listening to her, and for your generosity in sharing it here. Contrary to a previous comment, I believe that her Gospel was the true one. Any Gospel that does not include serving the least, loving justice and living as Christ did in compassion and sacrifice is missing the bulk of Jesus' teaching and the Bible's instruction. Worship in Spirit and truth must include these, or our worship is nothing less than self-indulgent and empty - crying "Lord, Lord" but not doing the will of the Father, as Jesus taught in Mt. 7. For what it's worth
together as one Posted 4/3/2009 1:13:13 PM
Truth does matter, so be absolutely sure you are speaking it and teaching it. Truth Lover, have you read the early church fathers? Have you researched, on your own, the Catholic Church and it's core and true beliefs? Misinformation is the reason we are separate. Jesus weeps at our separation...
Truth Lover Posted 4/3/2009 11:33:55 AM
I love to worship God. The way we are to worship is in spirit and in truth. (Jn 4:23) M. Theresa, humanly speaking, did a lot to help the suffering of the lepers of Calcutta, but by teachijng a false gospel she condemned her hearers to a Christless eternity. Truth matters!

SongSelect / Copy Report
User Id:
Password:
     Remember Me
Login Now




Christian Copyright Licensing International
Copyright © 2009 CCLI, Inc. All rights reserved.