Fervency in worship

I used the following quote as our call to worship last Sunday.
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The attributes of God call for fervency in worship. God is a great and glorious God, and when we approach His presence it becomes us to come with our affectins in the best array. Are yawning prayers fit for such a great God? Should we speak to such a majesty before we are well awake? He that does not offer up his best, robs God of His due, for He is a great God. He is also a living God. Is a dead-hearted prayer a suitable sacrifice for a living God? How can God, who is all life, enjoy our lazy, listless devotions?

Fervency is to prayer what fire is to incense….

Fervency unites the soul and directs the thoughts to the work at hand….

Doe not the living God and loving Father deserve all our zeal? O the shame of it! Let us not be cold in His worship, lagging behind the world’s zeal in pursuit of earthly mammon.”

— Puritan William Gurnall,
commenting on JAMES 5:16
(taken from Voices from the Past: Puritan Devotional Readings (Banner of Truth), edited by Richard Rushing

All things work together for good!

And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. – Romans 8:28

“In a word, whatever affliction we bear shall be for our soul’s gain. God’s rod and love go together. This is a sweet and blessed lesson indeed; it quietens the heart and supports the soul under its burdens (2 Cor. 4:16). What we lose in our bodies we gain in our souls. What we lose in our estates we receive back in grace. Thus we can bear up and comfort ourselves in our deepest sorrows. When God takes away creature comforts, by secret impressions of love upon the heart he strengthens the soul. We become ‘more than conquerors through him who loved us’ (Rom. 8:37). God teaches us in affliction that one thing is necessary. Affliction reveals how mistaken we are about our ‘must-bes’ and necessities. In our health and liberty we think this thing must be done. When think riches and honours are necessary and we must have our estates and lay up large portions for our children. But in the day of adversity, when death looks us in the face and God causes the horror of the grave, the dread of the last judgment, and the terrors of eternity to pass before us, then we put our mouths in the dust and sigh; ‘O how I have been mistaken! I have fed upon ashes, and my deceived heart has turned me aside.’ We can now see how the pardon of sin, an interest in Christ, a sense of God’s love, and the assurance of glory, are the only indispensables. Christ alone is the one thing necessary, and all others are but ‘maybes’ at best. All the world has is but loss and dung in comparison with the excellence of the knowledge of Jesus Christ our Lord. Without him the soul is undone to all eternity. They that do not learn this lesson in the school of the Word shall learn it in the school of affliction, if they belong to God.”

— Thomas Case
A puritan devotional reading From Voices from the Past
recently published by The Banner of Truth Trust