Thanks all, but I was hoping to figure out how to test that the amp is grounded? How do I check the power cord? I have a DMM. Just don't know where to stick it 
Hopefully you're still alive and haven't electrocuted yourself just yet.
Since you have a DMM, stop shocking yourself to determine if there's voltage between your guitar and the mic. Set that DMM to AC Volts and measure from metal barrel of plug of your guitar cord to the metal body of the mic. You want zero volts, or at least something way less than ~120 volts. If you have 50 volts or greater, OSHA said you have a workplace shock hazard. You want much lower than that to reduce the potential for shock to nil.
I'm not familiar with mic phantom power, but if AC reads ok, check the same guitar to mic points with the meter set on DC volts just to be sure. Again, you want to see zero volts or at least very low levels.
While eleventeen has some good points about using a three prong outlet tester, if you check the outlet you're plugged into and it's fine, you're still at risk of a shock from the mic if the PA system has a ground problem. I would prefer checking voltage between grounded surfaces of all the electrical equipment in the room or on the stage to be certain you wouldn't get shocked if you touch something else while holding your guitar.
Concerning your amp: if you measure resistance between the amplifier's ground pin on the cord and your amp chassis at 0.3 ohm, you have a decent ground connection for your amp. Why not zero ohms? The wires in the meter leads has resistance. Try measuring the resistance by just touching the two meter leads together firmly. It won't likely read zero, but instead some low resistance less than a ohm. But that does nothing to ensure the outlet you're plugged into is wired correctly with a good ground for your amp.