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Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

AI Worship (and Preaching)

“Can a soul-less artist produce a soul-full act of worship?”

I am very concerned about AI in general, and when it invades Christian preaching and singing, so much the worse.[i]

In 1996, I wrote an imaginary “Possible Scenario – Any Church, USA,” lamenting how some churches were projecting music and preaching on screens instead of having real people lead their worship. In the “possible scenario” the church pews became people-empty, but filled with cassette players. The silence was broken only by an occasional electronic “amen.”[ii] Not as good as Orwell’s book 1984, yet my “1996” has become “2026.” Except perhaps the members now won’t even bother with a source for electronic amens. Now here is this.

“How does Ray feel about this sudden success? He doesn’t. Because Ray doesn’t feel anything. His voice, his songs, his music, his appearance and even his ‘Mississippi Soul’ branding are entirely AI-generated. The current No. 1 ‘Christian artist’ is not a person. It is a product.”

The No. 1 “Christian artist” is neither Christian nor an artist. “He” is not even human.

We can complain about it – and rightfully so – but modern Christians have been headed toward this path for years. We just didn’t have all the technology previously (and don’t have all the technology now that we will have).

Disclaimer: I first saw this report at Baptist New Global (BNG), which I have linked to, and have not looked elsewhere for a better source. This link is definitely not a recommendation of BNG or the author of this piece. Nevertheless, we agree on the problematic nature of “AI worship.” “My real concern with AI-generated worship music is not so much that AI songs will ‘infect’ Christian worship, but that Christian worship already has drifted into a thin, commercialized space where emotional accessibility is mistaken for spiritual depth.”


[i] We have to wonder how many sermons are now created by AI rather than study, sweat, and prayer – and the Holy Spirit.
[ii] Yes, that was a few years ago! I updated it in 2016 to “CD players, DVRs and such like,” but I think that is mostly out of date now too.

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

Regulative Principle - Elements and Circumstances

1689 London Baptist Confession. “Of the Holy Scriptures.” 1.6

“The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for his own glory, man’s salvation, faith, and life, is either expressly set down or necessarily contained in the Holy Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelation of the Spirit, or traditions of men.

“Nevertheless, we acknowledge the inward illumination of the Spirit of God to be necessary for the saving understanding of such things as are revealed in the Word, and that there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government of the church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed.”

The elements of worship may be called the what of worship. These parts of worship are considered fixed according to the scriptures. Elements are not morally or biblically indifferent. An element of worship is a moral and biblical obligation commanded by God. A circumstance of worship is morally and biblically indifferent, a thing that may or may not be used. If used, it does not add anything to one’s worship. If omitted, it does subtract anything from one’s worship.

The 1689 London Baptist Confession (chapter 22) gives examples of elements of worship: prayer (22.3), the reading, preaching, hearing, and singing of the word (22.5), and the administration of baptism and the Lord’s supper (22.5). Some elements may be regular (that is, each time or most every time a congregation meets, or at stated times) and some may be occasional (for example, as with baptism performed when the occasion demands).

A circumstance of worship is something that comes along side of and is incidental to engaging in an element of worship. Prayer is an element of worship. Whether a congregation meets for prayer at 10 a.m., 10 p.m., or some time in between the two is a circumstance of worship; it neither adds anything to nor takes anything away from the moral and biblical nature of prayer itself. Singing psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs is an element or worship. Whether the songs are in a Christian’s memory, a hymn book, or stored and presented in some other way is a circumstance. That neither adds anything to nor takes anything away from the moral and biblical nature of the singing itself.

The circumstances of worship may be called the how of worship. These practices of worship are fixed by a congregation, and reflect the ways to worship God within the paramenters of morally and biblically performing the scriptural elements of worship. For example, a congregation may determine it is better for all to sing from the same hymn book rather than everyone singing from their various memories. The London Confession (1.6) says “there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government of the church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed.” 1 Corinthians 14:26, 40

Affirmed elements set forth in Scripture – such as preaching, praying, baptizing, giving, communing – are the natural, moral, and biblical elements of worship. The elements, the things which God commands, are all that should bind and compel the conscience of any worshipper. The circumstances which men introduce cannot and should not bind the conscience of any worshipper. However, they may help promote decent and orderly worship in the congregation. May we who know this remember this. May those who do not know this learn this.

May the Lord bless our understanding.


Note: The Second London Baptist Confession is not our church confession of faith. However, it is probably both the clearest and most accessible Baptist confession of faith in regard to the Regulative Principle. Our church position statement is: “The sufficiency of Scripture for all matters of faith and practice insists that our congregational gatherings be restricted to those elements that Scripture requires – praying, thanksgiving, praising, singing, Scripture reading, preaching/teaching, giving, observing the ordinances, ordination and sending, testimonies, greetings, reporting the Lord’s work, decision-making, and church discipline. Any element must be understood from a command, approved example, or necessary implication of Scripture.”

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Worship in Hymns

WORSHIP IN HYMNS 
By Robert Inman Johnson

This essay first appeared in The Tie, a monthly publication of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Kentucky, circa 1948. The Seminary’s professor of Music, R. Inman Johnson, wrote “Worship In Hymns.”. I have not seen the original, but have taken this digested version from The Word and Work, April 1948, Volume XLII, pp. 88-90. Posting this is not an endorsement of everything Johnson writes in the essay. Nevertheless, he makes some good points, and I think you will find it an interesting representation of music and hymnology taught by Southern Baptists in the mid-20th century. Everything below is by R. Inman Johnson.

Hymns have been said to be directed toward God, toward the Christian (including ourselves), or toward the sinner. To God we sing our praise and thanksgiving and pour out our songs of aspiration, petition, and promise of faithfulness. For the Christian we sing songs of encouragement and lift each other in prayerful tones to God. To the sinner we show our love for God, His love for the sinner, and plead for the sinner’s acceptance of this love. These are high and holy ideals. Hence, we should give attention to the singing part of the service. 

We do not undertake to define “worship service” beyond saying it should result in an awareness of our relationship to God and His purpose for our lives. True it is that God may be met anywhere, in the sanctuary, in the street, or in the field. We may worship alone or as a component part of a congregation. To be a member of a congregation which gives itself to intense worship is a thrilling experience. We go away saying that God has been with us. 

Corporate worship must be directed through man by the Holy Spirit. There must be both preparation and correct performance. A real worship period does not just happen. We need to know how to prepare a service and the people need instruction in their responsibilities. The fact is, the preachers have not taught the people how to worship. Surely it is worthwhile, for only true worship promotes real spiritual growth. 

In choosing hymns for a service, we need to know the contents of the hymnal as related to the needs of the people. And, they should be chosen for a definite purpose, with some relationship of ideas. This idea may correspond with the ideas in the sermon or it may not. Certainly it should not be foreign or antagonistic to the sermon. Seldom do I know the sermon subject beforehand and I am often amazed at the fitness of my selections. If you ask, the Holy Spirit will help you choose the hymns. In evangelistic meetings, I usually wait to choose the invitation hymn until I see where the sermon is headed. 

In preparing ourselves to sing we need to remember that most good hymns represent a spiritual experience in the life of the writer. By our singing we make this experience our own. We should thrill with the idea that thousands of saints before us have sung the text and thousands will sing it after us. Thus we are members of one great choir which one day shall be gathered before the throne of God to sing eternal hallelujahs. What a privilege to join that choir of heavenly witnesses. 

If, then, in corporate singing we share the spiritual life of others, we should see to it that we grow in grace through a wide variety of experience. Often we fail here because we want good singing; hence, we choose over and over a few hymns the people sing well. New hymns and tunes should be introduced to deepen our Christian experience. 

For instance, in 58 chapel services and broadcasts we have sung 157 different hymns. This is a large number when compared with the average church repertoire. I have a typewritten copy of the index of the hymnal. When a hymn is selected, the date is written after it on this copy. Thus, too frequent repetition is prevented. In the limited church program, a hymn should not appear more than once per month. 

Many ideas may be followed in selecting hymns. Usually, when three hymns are used before the sermon, the first is a strong hymn of praise. The second spot may be used to introduce new or less familiar texts and tunes. Also, I like here the short hymns of definite worship value set to such tunes as Manoah, Bera, Belmont, St. Agnes, etc. They have both beauty and strength. The third hymn may be more subjective with a sense of individual devotion, consecration or aspiration. It should be thoroughly familiar. The fine gospel hymns are well placed here. 

Remember also that these three hymns should vary in key signature, mood and pace. It is tiring to sing consecutive songs in the same key and at the same rate of speed. Start with a good tempo, the next may be slower. The mood may change from objective praise to subjective examination of our own hearts. For instance, using the idea of serving Christ: 1. We praise Him with “Crown Him with Many Crowns.” 2. In a slower tempo and quite different quality of tone, we consider our relation to Him in “Must Jesus Bear the Cross Alone.” 3. In a stronger rhythm we make our promise in “O Jesus, I have promised to serve thee to the end.” 

The manner of our singing has much to do with its effectiveness for ourselves and for others. Ineffective singing is by no means confined to the small rural church but is to be found in all classes of churches. It most often is the result of a lack of understanding on the part of the people of the worship value of hymns. God desires our hearts and minds, not merely the sacrifice of attendance on His services. Many of us go to church merely to hear the sermon, having no interest in the praise service. Many are too tired physically and mentally to sing, not realizing that a thrilling spiritual experience by means of a great hymn will completely remove this burden of fatigue. Our poor singing may be due sometimes to the hymns themselves, which may depict experiences quite foreign to our own and which, furthermore, give a situation in which we cannot conceive ourselves. Hence, congregational hymns should contain universal experiences, those to which we are all subject. This is true of the hymns which survive the test of years. A song which is local or limited in subject matter to a small group may be popular for a time but not for long. 

Again, poor singing may result from a poor fit of hymn and tune. A joyful hymn set to a doleful tune loses much of its worth for us. Likewise, a superficial tune may destroy the value of a noble hymn. 

…Many other things may enter to cause poor singing, such as acoustics, temperature, stuffy atmosphere, etc. I am convinced that the most intelligent congregational singing requires a director or precentor. By this I mean a person who can direct the people in their worship in song… 

Effective singing, solo or group, takes cognizance of the fact that music rises in intensity to a climax somewhere in the composition. All good hymn tunes progress in some way from the first chord to a climax. The hymn itself also reaches a point where emotion is most intense. Ideally these points in text and tune should coincide. This climax may result in more volume or in more intensity at the same level of volume. Certainly it should keenly intensify the meaning of the text in our consciousness. For after all, the text is the hymn. The tune makes easier and more emphatic the entry of its meaning into our hearts. 

It is the director’s problem to interpret text and tune for the congregation. One chief method is a change in dynamics from loud to soft or vice versa. Frequently we hear a leader say, “Sing the second verse softly.” Few stanzas call for quiet singing throughout at the same level. They demand a change of dynamics within themselves. This calls for controlled directing, not just “time-beating.” 

A good example may be found in the hymn, “Jesus, Lover of My Soul,” to the tune, Martyn. Beginning from the first stanza, quietly increase the volume and intensity until the words, “Guide me, O my Savior hide,” are poured out with all of our being. Diminish from “Safe into the haven, guide” to the end. The tune is well-suited to the stanzas. … There is no place here for lifeless singing. Let us by no means, though, confuse loud singing with intensified singing. Quiet singing with awareness of our purpose can be beautiful and thrilling. 

The goal of congregational singing is the participation of every individual present, suitable hymns varied in mood and tempo, a variation inside the hymn itself, and often a variation inside the stanzas. This demands a competent director and a responsive audience. 

Good “church music” may not always be good music, for the purpose of church music is spiritual growth. This then, which may also be said of preaching, is my answer: “Good church music is that music which in a given situation intensifies and promotes spiritual growth.” 

“In the midst of the congregation will I sing thy praise.”— Heb. 2:12.

Thursday, January 04, 2024

Worship

Worship defined: (verb) to render religious reverence and homage to God; to adore, pay honor and reverence to; to attend services of divine worship; (noun) the act of paying reverent honor, adoration, and homage to God; formal or ceremonious rendering of such honor and homage.

In some languages the equivalent word for “worship” literally means “bend over,” “fall down (before),” or “bow down (before).”

Our English word “worship” comes from the Old English worthscipe, “worth” + suffix “–ship” – acknowledging one in the condition worthy of reverence and honor. 

  • Worth: deserving honor, worthy, valued.
  • -Ship: quality, condition, state, or relation.
  • Worthship: condition of being worthy.
  • Over time this becomes “reverence paid to Deity.”

The Bible does not give an explicit or formal definition of worship. The biblical view of worship must be discerned from the teachings on the subject throughout the Bible.

Preparing to worship

The principle of worship proceeds from the concept that there is someone worthy to be worshipped (and then that there is someone in a position to worship, render honor).

Worship is regulated by the one worshipped; in truth, John 4:24. Deut. 12:32

The Regulative Principle of Worship – Whatever is commanded in the Scriptures for the public worship of God is required, and whatever is not commanded is prohibited. This principle accepts that only God and not man ordains how he will be worshipped. Exodus 20:3-6.

Worship is responding from an inner heart movement; in spirit, John 4:24

  • Fear before him
  • Humble yourselves

We see that God is worthy of our submission and homage, (then) we give him our reverence and respect (then) we are ready to do service and offer sacrifice. Romans 12:1

The London Baptist and Philadelphia Baptist Confessions describe acceptable worship: “…the acceptable way of worshipping the true God, is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshipped according to the imagination and devices of men, nor the suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations, or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures.”

In our doctrinal and position statements, our church declares “The sufficiency of Scripture for all matters of faith and practice,” which declarations insist that our worship is dictated by God to us through his Scripture.

  • Psalm 29:2 Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name; worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness.
  • Psalm 95:6 O come, let us worship and bow down: let us kneel before the Lord our maker.
  • Psalm 96:9 O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness: fear before him, all the earth.
  • Psalm 99:5 Exalt ye the Lord our God, and worship at his footstool; for he is holy.
  • Revelation 4:10 the four and twenty elders fall down before him that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for ever and ever, and cast their crowns before the throne, saying,
  • Revelation 5:14 And the four beasts said, Amen. And the four and twenty elders fell down and worshipped him that liveth for ever and ever.
  • Revelation 7:11 And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces, and worshipped God,

Reverential Anthem

Friday, March 03, 2023

Corporate Worship, Masculinity, and Leadership

“For the past 30-50 years, the church has been infatuated with keynote Christianity where infotainers crack jokes and sprinkle in Scripture. As a result, these pulpiteers have left thousands of congregations with a Christ the people want but not the Christ that God sent. In truth, we have made a Jesus in our own image…We have traded the fire and brimstone preaching of the early 20th century for the soft and encouraging Ted-Talk style infotainers of today. We have moved from classic hymns about doctrine and sacrifice and piety to emotional love songs where people sway their hips to ‘Jesus is my boyfriend.’”

Dale Partridge

“…what do we call a person who shepherds and exercises oversight over the church of Christ? We call that person an elder. What is clear when we recognize the ‘building up’ significance of corporate worship is that planning and leadership within the context of a church’s corporate worship is a pastoral teaching function. Therefore, the leadership of a church’s worship, including the planning of services and leadership within the service, ought to be performed by God-called, spiritually qualified elders. Biblical worship is led by the Great Shepherd and his under-shepherds.” 

Scott Aniol

Monday, September 12, 2022

Worship, by Brian Crossley

When the Creator of heaven and earth performed the final act of creation, it was His pleasure to create man in His own image. In all of creation, it is man alone who has the capacity to see into the depths of space, to marvel at the order and design of the universe, and to delight in the beauty with which God has clothed His creation. As we contemplate the wonders of God’s handiwork, there are two contrasting impressions which are certain to invade our thoughts. On the one hand, we cannot help but be humbled at the awareness of our own insignificance to the creation. On the other hand, as we witness the grandness of His creation, the spirit that is within us simply demands our praise of the God whose Word brought it all into being.

This is the essence of worship – to fall upon our knees in humble adoration of the Most High God, Creator of heaven and earth. This, brethren, is the ultimate reason for which we were created in His own image. There is no higher achievement to which man can attain than to testify of God’s glory, His sovereignty, and His holiness. He, and He alone, is worthy of worship!

Psalm 113:5 “Who is like unto the Lord our God...”

Brian Crossley; As published in The Baptist Waymark, Volume IV, No. 6, Nov-Dec 1996, page 4

Friday, August 20, 2021

Informed Worship links

Steve M. Schlissel, pastor of Messiah’s Congregation in Brooklyn, New York, has written series of articles on what he calls Informed Worship. Links are below. Also there is a summary reviewing Steve Schlissel’s articles and a book with some discussion of the normative and regulative principles. I am posting this to save so I can find it, as well as for readers who might find the discussion intriguing.

Thursday, August 19, 2021

Regulative Principle

Where does the Bible teach “The acceptable way of worshiping the true God, is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshiped according to the imagination and devices of men, nor the suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations, or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures”?

In the story of Nadab and Abihu and the offering of “strange fire” (Lev. 10); God’s rejection of Saul’s non-prescribed worship — God said, “to obey is better than sacrifice” (1 Sam. 15:22); and Jesus’ rejection of Pharisaical worship according to the “tradition of the elders” (Matt. 15:1–14). All of these indicate a rejection of worship offered according to values and directions other than those specified in Scripture.

Of particular significance are Paul’s responses to errant public worship at Colossae and Corinth. At one point, Paul characterizes the public worship in Colossae as ethelothreskia (Col. 2:23), variously translated as “will worship” (KJV) or “self-made religion” (ESV). The Colossians had introduced elements that were clearly unacceptable (even if they were claiming an angelic source for their actions — one possible interpretation of Col. 2:18, the “worship of angels”). Perhaps it is in the Corinthian use (abuse) of tongues and prophecy that we find the clearest indication of the apostle’s willingness to “regulate” corporate worship. He regulates both the number and order of the use of spiritual gifts in a way that does not apply to “all of life”: no tongue is to be employed without an interpreter (1 Cor. 14:27–28) and only two or three prophets may speak, in turn (vv. 29–32). At the very least, Paul’s instruction to the Corinthians underlines that corporate worship is to be regulated and in a manner that applies differently from that which is to be true for all of life.
Particular elements of worship are highlighted: reading the Bible (1 Tim. 4:13); preaching the Bible (2 Tim. 4:2); singing the Bible (Eph. 5:19; Col. 3:16) — the Psalms as well as Scripture songs that reflect the development of redemptive history in the birth-life-death-resurrection- ascension of Jesus; praying the Bible — the Father’s house is “a house of prayer” (Matt. 21:13); and seeing the Bible in the two sacraments of the church, baptism and the Lord’s Supper (Matt. 28:19; Acts 2:38–39; 1 Cor. 11:23–26; Col. 2:11–12). In addition, occasional elements such as oaths, vows, solemn fasts and thanksgivings have also been recognized and highlighted (see Westminster Confession of Faith 21:5).

The regulative principle as applied to public worship frees the church from acts of impropriety and idiocy — we are not free, for example, to advertise that performing clowns will mime the Bible lesson at next week’s Sunday service. Yet it does not commit the church to a “cookie-cutter,” liturgical sameness.
What is sometimes forgotten in these discussions is the important role of conscience. Without the regulative principle, we are at the mercy of “worship leaders” and bullying pastors who charge noncompliant worshipers with displeasing God unless they participate according to a certain pattern and manner. To the victims of such bullies, the sweetest sentences ever penned by men are, “God alone is Lord of the conscience, and hath left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men, which are, in anything, contrary to His Word, or beside it, in matters of faith or worship. So that to believe such doctrines, or to obey such commands out of conscience, is to betray true liberty of conscience: and the requiring of an implicit faith, and an absolute and blind obedience, is to destroy liberty of conscience, and reason also” (WCF 20:2). To obey when it is a matter of God’s express prescription is true liberty; anything else is bondage and legalism.
Often people confuse the issue by bringing up things that have to do with the elements of the gathered meeting, either directly or that facilitate it. The communion table. The hymn books. The box where offerings are placed. The pews on which we sit. The table on which the pulpit Bible rests. Lights help us to see the Bible and the hymn books, and a little HVAC can contribute to the comfort of being there in extreme temperatures. However, these are temporal elements of a facility in which Christians meet, and are not elements of worship themselves. We need to learn how to “rightly divide the word of truth.”

Monday, December 14, 2020

Charley Pride dies, and other music and worship links

The posting of links does not constitute an endorsement of the sites linked, and not necessarily even agreement with the specific posts linked.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

And Can It Be, and other worship links

The posting of links does not constitute an endorsement of the sites linked, and not necessarily even agreement with the specific posts linked.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Principles of Worship

While it is probable that some churches have no conscious or consistent “principle” of worship by which they discern what is good and allowable or bad and prohibited, nevertheless most Baptist (and Protestant) worship practices will fit generally into the following recognized categories – Informed, Normative, and Regulative.[i]

The Informed Principle of Worship
What is commanded in Scripture regarding the public worship of God is required; whatever is prohibited is forbidden; and whatever is not forbidden is permissible. This is a relatively new term to describe what is an older practice of worship (in principle).[ii] Steve M. Schlissel of Messiah’s Covenant Community Church in Brooklyn, New York has especially actively promoted it. The Informed Principle of Worship is something of a compromise that tries to strike a balance between the Normative Principle on one hand, and the Regulative Principle on the other. Schlissel claims that both the Normative and Regulative “propositions fail to meet the test of tota scriptura,” adding further “What is not forbidden might be permitted. It depends.”

The Normative Principle of Worship
Whatever is not forbidden in the Scriptures may be lawfully used in the public worship of God. If a practice is not explicitly contrary to God’s Law and has not been forbidden in the Word, then it may be employed in worship. For example, since the Bible does not specifically forbid putting on a play/drama, interpretive dance, or pledging the flag, then these are acceptable to do as a form of worship under the Normative Principle. Anglican pastor Greg Goebel boils down the Normative Principle to “seeking to obey Scripture, honor our past, and worship him in Spirit and in Truth.”[iii]

On the one hand, the Normative Principle may encourage creativity of practice and expression, as well as appear more relaxed and spontaneous. On the other hand, it opens the door to the inventions and imaginations of men that cannot be supported by Scripture and yet cannot excluded because they are not specifically addressed (forbidden) by Scripture.

The Regulative Principle of Worship
Whatever is commanded in the Scriptures for the public worship of God is required, and whatever is not commanded is prohibited. This principle accepts that only God and not man ordains how he will be worshipped. The law of exclusion is a complementary idea, noting that the specification of one thing in worship is the prohibition or exclusion of every other thing that is different from it.[iv]

The Regulative Principle of Worship is not man putting blinders on God, but God putting a bit in man's heart. God knows and looks upon our hearts, but we do not know our hearts. God should be not worshipped by the imaginations and inventions of men, but according to the word of God contained in the Scriptures. Or, as the Second London Baptist Confession puts it, “…the acceptable way of worshipping the true God, is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will…”[v] Affirmed elements set forth in Scripture – such as preaching, praying, baptizing, giving, communing – are therefore the natural and biblical elements of worship. That which God introduces and not man is all that should bind and compel the conscience of any worshipper.


[i] If you are aware of others, I am interested to know of them.
[ii] While the term is acceptable, it is pejorative in the sense it implies the other two views are uninformed.
[iii] The Anglican tradition says the Normative Principle teaches that worship “should retain traditions that have a long history, wide use, and are not forbidden or contradicted by Holy Scripture.”
[iv] For example, when God specifies gopher wood, he excludes oak wood.
[v] The Regulative Principle relates specifically to spiritual elements of worship that God requires by command, precept, or example. It is not about wearing togas because they did so in first-century Rome, or whether we arrive at the meetings on foot, horseback, train, or automobile. There are also things that have to do with the elements of the gathered meeting, either directly or that facilitate it. The printed Bible, from which we read, preach, and teach. The communion table. The hymnbooks. The box where the offerings are placed. Some not as important or necessary as others. The pews on which we sit. The pulpit on which the Bible rests. Lights help us to see the Bible and the hymnbooks, and a little HVAC can contribute to the comfort of being there in extreme temperatures. However, those are not part and parcel of spiritual worship. We can sing from memory, sit on the floor, and solace ourselves with a funeral parlour fan.

Friday, December 06, 2019

The Psalmist’s Harp, and other worship links

The posting of links does not constitute an endorsement of the sites linked, and not necessarily even agreement with the specific posts linked.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Tozer on the third stanza

One of the commonest expressions heard in the public worship service is the leader’s directive, “Sing the first, second and last verses;” or, “Omit the third verse, please.”
….

I suppose it is not of vast importance that the third stanza is so often omitted in the singing of a hymn, but just for the record let it be said that the worshipers are deprived of the blessing of the hymn by that omission if, as is often true, the hymn develops a great Christian truth in sermonic outline. To omit a stanza is to lose one link in a golden chain and greatly to reduce the value of the whole hymn.

The significant thing, however, is not what the omission actually does, but what it suggests, viz., a nervous impatience and a desire to get the service over with. We are, for instance, singing “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” We long to forget the big noisy world and let our hearts go out in reverent worship of that Prince of Glory who died for us, but our sad sweet longing is killed in the bud by the brisk, unemotional voice of the director ordering us to “omit the third verse.” We wonder vaguely whether the brother is hungry or has to catch an early train or just why he is so anxious to get through with the hymn. Since all standard hymns have been edited to delete inferior stanzas and since any stanza of the average hymn can be sung in less than one minute (“When I Survey the Wondrous Cross” clocks at thirty seconds to the stanza, normal tempo!) and since many of our best hymns have already been shortened as much as good taste will allow, we are forced to conclude that the habit of omitting the third stanza reveals religious boredom, pure and simple, and it would do our souls good if we would admit it.

If it were only in our hymn singing that this spirit were found I would probably not have brought the matter up at all, but I find it in pretty near every department of the religious life. Not the doing of evil deeds only but the omission of good deeds weakens the soul and invites the judgments of God. The same worldly, impatient spirit that shortens a hymn also shortens our prayer time and reduces the amount we give to the Lord’s work, as well as the number of services we attend each week.
….

Let’s sing the third stanza.

Excerpted from “Chapter 34,” The Price of Neglect, and Other Essays, Aiden Wilson Tozer (1897-1963)

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

“Regulative Worship” in Baptist Thought

Some random quotations on “the Regulative Principle” from Baptists

First London Confession (1644/1646)
Article 7: “The Rule of this Knowledge, Faith, and Obedience, concerning the worship and service of God, and all other Christian duties, is not man’s inventions, opinions, devices, laws, constitutions, or traditions, unwritten whatsoever but only the word of God contained in the Canonical Scriptures.” (John 5:39; 2 Tim. 3:15-17; Col. 21:18, 23; Matt. 15:9)
Article 8: “The rule of this knowledge, faith, and obedience, concerning the worship of God, in which is contained the whole duty of man, is (not men’s laws, or unwritten traditions, but) only the word of God contained [viz., written] in the holy Scriptures; in which is plainly recorded whatsoever is needful for us to know, believe, and practice; which are the only rule of holiness and obedience for all saints, at all times, in all places to be observed.” (Col. 2:23; Matt 15:6,9; John 5:39, 2 Tim. 3:15,16,17; Isa. 8:20; Gal. 1:8,9; Acts 3:22,23)

Article 40: “The Light of Nature sheweth there is a God, who hath a Sovereignty over all, but the holy Scripture hath fully revealed it; as also that all Men should worship him according to God’s own Institution and Appointment. And hath limited us, by his own revealed Will, that he may not be worshipped according to the Imaginations and Devices of Men, or the Suggestions of Satan, under any visible Representations whatsoever, or any other way not prescribed in the holy Scriptures…” (Rom. 1.19, 20. & 2.15; I Chr. 16.29; Psalm 95.6, 7, 8 & 99.7 & 99.5; Deut. 8.6; Psalm 103.7 & 14.6; Mark 7.7; Psalm 99.8, 9 & 106.29, 39; John 4.24; Rev. 9.20)

Chapter 22” “…the acceptable way of worshipping the true God, is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshipped according to the imagination and devices of men, nor the suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations, or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures.” (Texts cited in relation to this article of faith are Jeremiah 10:7; Mark 12:33; Deuteronomy 12:32; and Exodus 20:4–6)

John Spilsbery (1593–1668)
“…whatsoever is done in the worship of God, in obedience to Christ, without His command, or apparent example approved of by Christ, is of man, as a voluntary will-worship, after the commandments and doctrines of man; the which Christ testifies against as a vain thing…The holy Scripture is the only place where any ordinance of God in the case aforesaid is to be found, they being the fountain-head, containing all the instituted Rules of both of Church and ordinances.” (Spilsbery, A Treatise Concerning the Lawfull Subject of Baptisme, 1643/1652)

Hercules Collins (b.?-d. 1702)
“It is sufficient that the Divine Oracles commands the baptizing of Believers, unless we will make ourselves wiser than what is written. Nadab and Abihu were not forbidden to offer strange Fire, yet for doing so they incurred God’s Wrath, because they were commanded to take Fire from the Altar.” (Matt. 28.18-19; Mark 16.16; Lev 9.24, 10.16) (An Orthodox Catechism1680)

William Kiffin (1616–1701)
“...no part of God’s law, or worship, whether we respect the manner or form, or the matter and substance thereof, is to be altered without the express order and direction of GOD himself...where a rule and express law is prescribed to men, that very prescription is an express prohibition of the contrary.” (Kiffin, A Sober Discourse of Right to Church Communion, 1681)

John Gill (1697–1771)
“…for an act of religious worship there must be a command of God. God is a jealous God, and will not suffer anything to be admitted into the worship of him, but what is according to his word and will; if not commanded by him, he may justly say, Who hath required this at your hands?” (Gill, A Body of Practical Divinity: Or a System of Practical Truths, Deduced from the Sacred Scriptures, 1796, p. 899)

John Fawcett (1739–1817)
“No acts of worship can properly be called holy, but such as the Almighty has enjoined. No man, nor any body of men have any authority to invent rites and ceremonies of worship; to change the ordinances which he has established; or to invent new ones. This appears to us so clear a case, that we need not to enlarge upon it.The divine Word is the only safe directory in what relates to his own immediate service. The question is not what we may think becoming, decent or proper, but what our gracious Master has authorized as such. In matters of religion, nothing bears the stamp of holiness but what God has ordained.” (Fawcett, Sermon, The Holiness Which Becometh the House of the Lord, April 20, 1808, p. 25)

John Leadley Dagg (1794-1884)
 “It is our duty to maintain the ordinances of Christ, and the church order which he has instituted, in strict and scrupulous conformity to Holy Scriptures…When the finger of God points out the way, no place is left to us for human preferences.” (Dagg, “Duty of Baptists,” in Manual of Theology, Volumes 1-2, 1859, p. 300)

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834–1892)
“‘Thus says the Lord’ is the only authority in God’s Church. When the tabernacle was pitched in the wilderness, what was the authority for its length and breadth? Why was the altar of incense to be placed here, and the brazen laver there? Why so many lambs or bullocks to be offered on a certain day? Why must the Passover be roasted whole and not boiled? Simply and only because God had shown all these things to Moses on the holy mount; and thus had Jehovah spoken, ‘Look that you make them after their pattern, which was shown you on the mount.’

“It is even so in the Church at the present day; true servants of God demand to see for all church ordinances and doctrines, the express authority of the Church’s only Teacher and Lord.” (Sermon, Sunday Morning, September 25, 1864, “Thus says the Lord”—or, The Book of Common Prayer Weighed in the Balances of the Sanctuary)

James Madison Pendleton (1811-1891)
It may be laid down as a principle of common sense which commends itself to every unprejudiced mind that a commission to do a thing or things authorizes only the doing of the thing or things specified in it. The doing of all other things is virtually forbidden. There is a maxim of law: Expressio unius est exclusio alterius.* It must be so; for otherwise there could be no definiteness in contracts between men, and no precision in either the enactments of legislative bodies or in the decrees of courts of justice. This maxim may be illustrated in a thousand ways. Numerous scriptural illustrations are at hand; I will name a few. God commanded Noah to build an ark of gopher-wood. He assigns no reason why gopher-wood should be used. The command, however, is positive, and it forbids the use of any other kind of wood for that purpose…The institution of the passover furnishes a striking illustration, or rather a series of illustrations. A lamb was to be killed—not a heifer; it was to be of the first year—not of the second or third; a male—not a female; without blemish—not with blemish; on the fourteenth day of the month— not on some other day; the blood to be applied to the door-posts and lintels—not elsewhere.” (Distinctive Principles of Baptists, pp. 18-19 1882)
* “The expression of one thing is the exclusion of another.”

David Wise (date unknown)
“The church is to observe and uphold the commandments of Jesus Christ. We have not been given any authority to add to or take away from the commandments of Jesus Christ for our conduct in the Church, but rather our commission is to observe and keep the commandments of Jesus Christ and the ordinances of the Church in the exact original manner that they were given and prescribed by Jesus Christ.”

“We affirm that God regulates his worship by insisting upon the non-negotiable elements of worship. We deny that it is ever right to admit into the public worship of God elements because he has not forbidden them. Worship is always a matter of what God commands, never a matter of what he has not condemned. Worship is always a matter of what we must do, never a matter of what we may do.”

Tuesday, April 03, 2018

3 Reasons Contemporary Worship is Declining, and other music links

The posting of links does not constitute an endorsement of the sites linked, and not necessarily even agreement with the specific posts linked.

Monday, December 25, 2017

Star of the east

[1. Hail the blest morn, when the great Mediator,
Down from the regions of glory descend!
Shepherds, go worship the babe in the manger,
Lo, for his guard the bright angels attend.]

2. Brightest and best of the sons of the morning!
Dawn on our darkness and lend us thine aid!
Star of the east, the horizon adorning,
Guide where our infant Redeemer is laid!

3. Cold on his cradle the dew-drops are shining;
Low lies his head with the beasts of the stall,
Angels adore him in slumber reclining,
Maker and Monarch and Saviour of all!

4. Say, shall we yield him, in costly devotion,
Odors of Edom and offerings divine?
Gems from the mountain, and pearls from the ocean,
Myrrh from the forest, and gold from the mine?

5. Vainly we offer each ample oblation;
Vainly with gifts would his favour secure:
Richer by far is the heart’s adoration;
Dearer to God are the prayers of the poor.

[6. Low at his feet we in humble prostration,
Lose all our sorrow and trouble and strife;
There we receive his divine consolation,
Flowing afresh from the fountain of life.]

[7. He is our friend in the midst of temptation,
Faithful supporter, whose love cannot fail;
Rock of our refuge, and hope of salvation,
Light to direct us through death’s gloomy vale.]

[8. Star of the morning, thy brightness, declining,
Shortly must fade when the sun doth arise:
Beaming refulgent, his glory eternal
Shines on the children of love in the skies.]

Written, mostly, by Reginald Heber. This appears as “EPIPHANY.—No. II. R. H.” in Hymns, Written and Adapted to the Weekly Church Service of the Year by  Reginald Heber (London: John Murray, 1827, pp. 25-26). It has 5 stanzas – the ones above labeled 2, 3, 4, & 5, with the “brightest and best” stanza repeated. The Shepherd’s Star in Southern Harmony has 7 stanzas, but not “brightest and best.” It is used, however, in Star in the East, where it serves as a repeating chorus. B. F. White has five stanzas in The Sacred Harp with Star in the East – which is the same song as The Shepherd’s Star in Southern Harmony.