The sacred scriptures of the religious community, the pulpit or stand from which readings and preaching take place, beads or other objects used by the worshipper as he performs his devotions also focus attention upon the holy and participate in its powers. Images of the gods, totems, or other religious objects—in a variety of forms and materials—also have been employed in worship. Such objects must be understood to represent, not to be identical with, the divine being or power that they portray. Some religious communities (Judaism and Islam in particular) have placed severe limits on the making and use of such representations of the deity. For many religious communities, however, worship without objects representing the divine power is impoverished (as in Hinduism); worshippers apparently need such portrayals of the presence of the divine among them. The plastic arts (e.g., sculpture) have flourished as a result of such religious usage, despite the danger that the representation can indeed become identified with the holy and worshippers come to believe that they are enabled to exercise control over the gods. Activities
Activities likewise have had a significant import in focusing attention on the holy. The divine liturgy of Eastern Orthodox churches provides a dramatic portrayal of the view that God works for the salvation of humankind. Incense, vestments, icons, music, and the processional and ritual movements of the liturgy are united into a reenactment of Christian deliverance from the powers of sin and death and move the congregation toward active participation in the divine life.
The sacred dance also has occupied a large place in worship, including dances in connection with hunting, marriage, fertility rites, Sufism (Islamic mysticism), and the Christian liturgy. Dancing serves in particular to open the way for religious ecstasy, a phenomenon known in many religions. The shaman of Central Asia, the traditional healers among the American Indians and Australian Aborigines, and many other leaders in worship are susceptible to ecstatic seizure. Ecstatic utterance was characteristic of the priestesses at Delphi in ancient Greece and of the sibyls (prophetesses) at a number of Greek and Roman cult sites, as well as of participants of Pentecostal worship services in Christianity since the 20th century. Evidence of a person’s being overwhelmed and overpowered by a spirit or divine entity has been highly valued in many religions and continues to be honoured among some.
Other activities include prayers (public and private, which are a part of almost all acts of worship), the preaching or teaching that accompanies many services of worship, and the active silence of worship (e.g., the Quakers). Music is another of the most widespread activities of worship. Certain forms of music are considered unsuitable for worship—the group of free churches known as Churches of Christ, for example, prohibit instrumental music in worship. Other focuses
Other means for focussing attention on the presence of the holy have a long and significant place in worship. The veneration of ancestors is known in many religious communities (e.g., Confucianism, Shintō); shrines in honour of the ancestors were maintained in Greek and Roman homes in antiquity. Heroes of the tribe, the region, or the city were also focuses for acts of devotion in many religions.
The most noteworthy focus of worship in a vast number of religious communities, however, was the king or the emperor. The king was viewed in ancient Egypt as the incarnate deity, entitled to be worshipped along with the other gods. In early Mesopotamian religion the king was viewed as the adopted son of God and was venerated along with the high god. Such a sacred kingship was believed to be a gift of the gods; the king represented the god on earth and partook of his divine powers.
The desire of worshippers to have an example of strength, beauty, wisdom, and riches appears to be the motive behind the great honour lavished upon kings and emperors. Impoverished persons apparently took pleasure in the rich dress, the many wives, the corpulence, and the lavish expenditures of their kings, even as they resented their own deprivation. Worship was believed to be enriched by the indications of excess, the overabundance of vitality and riches. These were pointers to the heavenly world, to the richness of life for which the worshipper longed and prayed. Thus, much of the trappings of worship and the lavishness of temples, churches, and shrines is accounted for by this longing for opulence on the part of those denied it.
Priests, ministers, and other leaders of religious services may also serve as focuses for worship. The leader may wish not to be associated too closely with the power of the holy, but, even so, worshippers tend to attach to such persons a special quality of holiness, or a special capacity to mediate the divine powers through acts of worship and through their counsel. The leader’s primary function is, in fact, to enable the worshipper to participate more actively in the act that is designed to produce communion between the divine and the human. Conclusion
It is not necessary to believe in a personal God or a transcendent heavenly power in order to worship. Essential to an act of worship is the belief that there are powers outside of one’s present experience that can be brought to bear upon that experience through prayer, meditation, or some other act of worship. A full human life may often require acts and modes of celebration—activities that bring into focus the heights and depths of human being and experience—that offer a way to transcend and understand ordinary existence and provide renewal of life for humanity and for the world itself. Walter Harrelson The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Citation Information
Article Title: Worship
Website Name: Encyclopaedia Britannica
Publisher: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Date Published: 20 June 2012
URL: https://www.britannica.com/topic/worship
Access Date: August 31, 2019
Additional Reading
Mircea Eliade, Traité d’histoire des religions (1949; Eng. trans., Patterns in Comparative Religion, 1958), is a standard work with much information on worship. James G. Frazer, The Worship of Nature (1926), is a classic work but is now out of date. Walter Harrelson, From Fertility Cult to Worship (1969); and F.H. Hilliard, How Men Worship (1965), are popular, brief treatments of worship in the major religions. John S. Mbiti, Concepts of God in Africa (1970), has valuable source materials but is difficult to use because of the variety of materials placed together. Geoffrey Parrinder, Worship in the World’s Religions (1961), is a popular work, accurate and helpful, but brief. H.H. Rowley, Worship in Ancient Israel (1967), is a standard and comprehensive work. Evelyn Underhill, Worship