Worship Is Bigger Than You Think

Most Christians have inherited a theology of worship far too small for the Bible they carry. This article argues that the full biblical architecture of worship — grounded in Yahweh's ontological uniqueness, performed before real divine beings, transacted through the medium of the divine name, threatened by idolatry that is never merely innocent error, embodied in a Spirit-indwelt community that is itself sacred space, and moving toward an eschatological consummation in which the redeemed join the heavenly council in the worship of the new creation — demands a cosmic framework that most evangelical traditions have barely begun to recover. When worship is seen in its full biblical dimensions, the Sunday gathering does not shrink. It becomes something you can barely contain. If you want more deep, biblical-theological content like this, subscribe to my Substack: *[https://dalemoreau.substack.com](https://dalemoreau.substack.com)*