From another thread i've been inspired to ask he question, what are the differences\distinctions\definitions between praise and worship?
The word "praise" is related to the words "prize" and "price" in English. Think of the word "appraise"; its etymology goes back to to the idea of holding something to be of high value, and then took on the meaning of to speak of something (or someone) of being of high value or importance, and thus could be synonymous with flattery. In a religious context it is synonymous with laud, a now mostly archaic word that is derived from Latin meaning "to extol", to declare the greatness of someone or something.
The English word worship, unlike other words like laud, praise, or adoration (which all ultimately originate from Latin), is natively of Anglo-Saxon origin, it is literally the Old English word meaning "worth" with the suffix "-ship" added to the end; worship is "worth-ship". And its meaning can be varied depending on time and context. One might occasionally see archaic uses of the word "worship" when speaking to or of nobility in a medieval European fedual context, as in "His Worship" or "Your Worship", similar to "Your Majesty" or "Your Highness"; it refers to deference, respect, admiration. Though the word "worship" is also used, especially in a modern context, almost exclusively in a religious sense to speak of what is owed to God on account of His greatness, on account of His works, on account of what He has done and who He is. That is, God is to be adored, honored, respected above all else.
Praise of/to God is a form of worshiping God, so there's an obvious overlap in that. Worship includes the declaration of God's holiness, of God's love, of God's works, of God's goodness, His grace, His kindness, etc--that is worshipful praise.
Very often, in a traditional Christian setting, worship is something that happens when we come together in the Liturgy, i.e. the church service, where we hear God's word read, we offer prayers--confession of our sins and repentance, thanksgiving, praise, bearing our worries and needs before God in prayer--we celebrate the Lord's Supper, we offer sacred song to declare God's praise and to hear the truth of our faith, we profess our faith together before each other and God. All of that is worship, it is the entire interplay between God meeting us in His gifts of Word and Sacrament and our response of confession, praise, thanksgiving, and our need. Hence the traditional term "liturgy", from Greek
leitourgia, meaning "a public act"; as what we do when we come together is borrowed from the way Jews met together both in the synagogues as well as at the Temple in Jerusalem, but distinctively made Christian.
But, even larger than that, worship encompasses everything we are saying about God through what we say, how we live, our attitudes, everything. Worship is not merely what happens when we come together on Sunday morning, it is about our entire way of life as it relates to God--that God in everything is honored.
In a way it goes back to Creation, when God made us in His image and likeness. We were created to bear God as reflections of Him. Think of it like an angled mirror, God created us to reflect Him to the rest of creation by how we live our lives in relation to Him, one another, and with all other creatures; and likewise we reflect the rest of creation back to God as worship. It is a "priestly" kind of thing, where God made Heaven and Earth to be His Temple, and created us to be priests who serve here in His likeness and caring for His house. Of course, we know how that went down in the Garden of Eden (not very well), and so the image of God was marred and distorted because of sin.
But in Christ, we believe, we are being restored, the image is being restored as we are conformed to the image of Christ, and God calls us to live fully a life lived in the Holy Spirit by His power, in and by our union to Jesus Christ, and under the love and grace and kindness of God the Father. So that the Holy Trinity is here, working on us, and as Christians learning what it means to be God's image-bearers as we follow Jesus, God the Son made man. Of course, because of the problem of sin and death in this fallen world, and we ourselves still bear the wounds of Adam's sin in the weakness and mortality of our bodily flesh, we mess up, we miss the mark (sin) all the time and so we trust in God's mercy toward us in Jesus to keep us, hold us, save us. As we now look forward to the day when Christ returns, the dead are raised, and God makes all creation new, setting all things to rights.
So the truest worship of God is still yet to come, when, as St. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15, God is finally all in all. But the foretaste of it is even now, in this Christian Church where Christ reigns as Lord, and the Holy Spirit breathes new life day by day, under the loving care of a loving Father in heaven.
-CryptoLutheran