The Role of Holy Fear in Worship
*“Let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear: For our God is a consuming fire.”* — Hebrews 12:28-29 (KJV) In an age when much of what passes for worship feels casual, entertaining, or even performance-driven, the biblical emphasis on **holy fear** stands as a much-needed corrective. Holy fear is not the paralyzing terror of the lost or the cringing dread of slaves. It is reverential awe — a deep, trembling awareness of God’s infinite holiness, majesty, and otherness that shapes how we approach Him in worship. Without it, worship easily drifts into irreverence, self-expression, or emotionalism detached from truth. With it, worship becomes acceptable to God and transforming for His people. This theme flows directly from the blog idea I shared on “Strange Fire Before the Lord” (Leviticus 10). The Nadab and Abihu account is one of Scripture’s clearest warnings about what happens when holy fear is absent in worship. But the principle runs thro...