I'm not worried about worshipping the wrong God.
Neither were the Jews who executed Jesus Christ. They even cursed themselves and their children with his blood. (Matthew 27:25)
Jesus said that those who profess to be Christians, (calling him "Lord") when the final judgment comes, but who fail to "do the will of the Father" will NOT be shown favor. (Matthew 7:21-23)
The scriptures record plenty of people worshipping Jesus and he never corrected them.
There is a very good reason for that.....it wasn’t “worship” that he accepted.
Again we see original language word studies are vital or we can be taken off on wrong tangents.
The Greek word for “worship” is the same word as “obeisance”. Are these actions the same? No!
The Greek
pro·sky·neʹo corresponds closely with the Hebrew
sha·hhahʹ as to conveying the thought of both obeisance to creatures
and worship to God or a deity. While the
manner of expressing the obeisance is perhaps not so prominent in
pro·sky·neʹo as in
sha·hhahʹ, where the Hebrew term graphically conveys the thought of prostration or bowing down, some lexicographers suggest that originally the Greek term did emphatically portray this same idea.
How do we know which word to use? Easy....as with the Hebrew term, the context must be considered to determine whether
pro·sky·neʹo refers to obeisance solely in the form of honor or deep respect,
or obeisance in the form of religious worship. Where reference is directly to God (John 4:20-24; 1 Corinthians 14:25) it is rightly rendered "worship".
When the magi visited the child Jesus did they "worship" him? (Matthew 2:2) No! These pagan astrologers had not come to
worship a new god, but to do
obeisance to a new king. To render "worship" when "obeisance" is meant causes the truth of the scriptures to be twisted. You would be amazed at how many doctrines exist that are not of biblical origin, but made to appear as if they are. The master deceiver has been at work for a very long time. We can never take anything for granted.
You in the US call judges in the courts "Your Honor" but under the British system, (also followed by Australia) which was more closely tied to an older culture, judges were called "Your Worship" based on the meaning of that word in Greek.
Not all is as it seems....