Good worship is worship that empowers a person to live for the Lord without needing a "fix." Counterfeit worship is worship that gives people an emotional fix. In other words, it produces an altered state of consciousness and conjures emotional states in a person that they find themself needing more and more. They just don't seem to feel "right" throughout the week and need their fix. They don't need to worship the Lord necessarily, they just need that emotional high.
Show me where the Bible warns about any of these concerns. You have set up your own standards--not Biblical ones-- about things to warn people to watch out for.
I sing praises to God when assembled with other believers no matter what it feels like. Many other people do, too. I don't feel like I am getting an emotional 'fix.' Some people are more given to emotion than others. I can find no scripture that condemns experiencing emotion while praising the Lord. As I pointed out earlier, the Psalms command people to rejoice. The Psalms were used as a hymn book for Israel. I just saw over 40 references to 'rejoice' in the Psalms with an online Bible search.
If someone does experience joy as a by-product of praising God, is that a bad thing? Would it be wrong for someone to genuinely praise the Lord when he feels bad, for example?
Consider Psalm 42
5 Why are you cast down, O my soul,
and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him,
my salvation 6 and my God.
(ESV)
When someone is downcast, it is good for that person to hope in God and praise him.
What does James say people in certain emotional states should do?
James 5
13 Is any among you afflicted? let him pray. Is any merry? let him sing psalms.
14 Is any sick among you? let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord:
People can direct their emotional energy into prayer and praise. It is okay. It is taught in scripture. There is none of this fearmongering you are spreading, "Oh no, if I might get hypnotized."
Emotional responses are not the Holy Spirit. But having emotional responses is not forbidden.
You're not going to necessarily see someone who looks like a zombie. About the only way to tell if someone has been hypnotized and brainwashed is to observe their behavior. Are they following a leader who teaches obvious false doctrine? Does the church teach the Bible or does it have a charismatic leader who teaches extra-Biblical revelation?
So where are you getting these teachings that would have you condemn people
praising God when the Bible does
not warn about these concerns of yours? Are you listening to a leader with a lot of charisma-- in the secular sense? Are you claiming extra-Biblical revelation for these teachings of yours? I cannot find any of these warnings in scripture? Are you promoting this supposed 'science' you are promoting here about hypnotism over the teaching of scripture on rejoicing, praise, and worship?
These teachers rely heavily on people accepting whatever they say uncritically.
Mmmhmmm, uncritically, as in accepting someone's theories and assertions without seeing whether there is any basis for it in the Bible.
Can they explain why they believe what they believe other than "well, the teacher teaches it?"
Can you give us any reason to believe what you are saying is true besides you say so? Can you give us any reason we should be worried about being hypnotized while praising God?
Here's a video you may find helpful.
This speaker acknowledges praising God through dancing. I wouldn't want to imitate pagan practices, but similarity between pagan practice and Christian practice does not necessarily make the Christian practice wrong. The Bible said to build altars out of unhewn stone. The pagan Canaanites also built altars out of unhewn stone. That doesn't make the Bible wrong.
He tells of Haitans working themselves into a frenzy to conjure up spirits. In his mind, this is associated with feelings of euphoria that come from four chemicals. Maybe I am operating under a different world view, but I wouldn't rule out someone conjuring up spirits to actually get demonized. It could be someone in a ritual sings and just gets worked up emotionally and doesn't happen to get demonized by doing it, also.
Our doctrine and understanding of the spiritual world should not be derived from Haitian occultic practices. We should look to the scriptures. The Bible doesn't warn us that if we get too emotional, we might conjure a demon. Even if Haitians work themselves into emotional states to do so. What about cultures where shaman try to conjure up demons by other means-- without singing until they get into a high emotional state? If there is a somber demon-conjurer, does that mean very serious Christians are in danger of getting demon-possessed, of conjuring up a spirit? Demons don't get to make the rules for us.
If someone thinks 'praise and worship' is all about getting a certain feeling instead of having a heart to praise God, that's something that needs to be corrected. Even an underlying theme focusing on people's feelings instead of God may need to be corrected as well. I have heard teaching on the topic from Charismatic and Pentecostals, also. There is also a difference between perceiving the Spirit at work and just feelings. There is more to our faith and the work of God than chemicals in the brain or atoms and molecules having chemical reactions.
The Bible actually specifically allows people who are in certain emotional states to respond with prayer or praise. It is allowed. If you are afflicted, you are allowed to pray. I am assuming getting emotional strength to endure, comfort, etc. is allowed. Paul wrote about getting comfort from the scriptures. If you are in a tough emotional state, you are allowed to pray for comfort, praise God for comfort, read scripture for comfort. It is not forbidden. If a 'dopamine rush' is going on in the brain during this time-- so what? If Haitian spirit-conjurers get dopamine rushes while singing or chanting, this is no basis for condemning a Christian getting a dopamine rush while praising God or reading the Bible or praying.
Judge righteous judgment.