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Home/Biblical and Theological/Why You Should Love to Go to Church

Why You Should Love to Go to Church

Come to the waters and be refreshed.

Written by Chris Gordon | Saturday, March 21, 2026

There is a reason God had to give a commandment in the New Testament to let no one neglect the assembling together of God’s people as is the manner of some ( Heb. 10:24-25). The Scriptures warned that there would be a problem of people saying they don’t need to come to church. We live in those times.

 

Psalm 84 says, “How lovely is your dwelling place, O LORD of hosts.” The words “dwelling place” refer to God’s tabernacle. The tabernacle was the place that God had chosen to come down and meet with his people in the wilderness. The God of heaven and earth had descended to meet with his people that they might call upon his name and worship him in the beauty of his holiness.

Notice the fervency of the psalmist; he is describing his love to come to worship. Deep within his being he longs, even faints, to think about the worship of God.

 

Worship in the Old Testament Was Filled with Joy!

We often think of Old Testament worship as full of requirements, laws, and sacrifices so that there must have been no joy in coming to worship. But here the psalmist is rebuking the idea that the worship of God was some sort of chore, or some hard demand God put upon his people. That is not what it was at all.

The psalmist is describing that he found coming to the Lord’s house as the exact opposite, it’s lovely. How lovely is your tabernacle! It’s as if he says, “The worship of the Lord thrills my soul; it is my greatest passion, to be where God dwells. The worship of you, O Lord, is the most satisfying thing I have ever done with my life.”

This isn’t the only place such a description of worship is given. Psalm 27 states,

One thing have I asked of the Lord,
    that will I seek after:
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
    all the days of my life,
to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord
    and to inquire in his temple. (Ps. 27:4)

The worship of the Lord for these saints was the ultimate blessing.

 

The Psalmist Is Speaking About the Spiritual Blessings That Flow from God’s Presence.

Why is worship so important? The Psalmist is not putting emphasis on places of stone or wood nor the physical structure of the tabernacle. He is speaking about the spiritual blessings that flow from God’s presence as he had chosen to come down and tabernacle among them. There is an understanding presented to us in this psalm that when God’s people gathered corporately for worship on the Sabbath, there was something happening that you couldn’t get anywhere else.

You will notice in Psalm 84 that the psalmist’s heart and his flesh are crying out for the living God:

My soul longs, yes, faints
    for the courts of the Lord;
my heart and flesh sing for joy
    to the living God. (Ps. 84:2)

God himself had chosen to come and dwell among them in that place. 

The Lord Always Wanted His People to Call the Sabbath a Delight.

For the Old Testament saints, it wasn’t a question of how often they had to come to worship. Forcing worship would be the most unnatural thing to do in light of what they understood. The Lord always wanted his people to call the Sabbath a delight (Isa. 58:13).

Read More

Related Posts:

  • The End of Exodus
  • Why Is There Beauty in the World?
  • Let the Favor of the Lord be Upon Us
  • A Portable Sinai
  • The Word Dwelt--Like a Tabernacle

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