Monday, April 1, 2013

Monday, July 30, 2012

Worship and Liturgy



Principles of Worship and Liturgy

"Worship and liturgy should reflect something far more than culture or personal preference."
 
by Fernando Canale
Fernando Canale, Ph.D., is Professor of Theology and Philosophy at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary in Berrien Springs, Michigan.
 

Description of image above:
Martin Luther and his champion, John Frederick I, Elector of Saxony, kneel before the cross. This woodcut was created by Lukas Cranach, the Younger.  Source: Kirchen Postilla, das ist, Auslegung der Episteln vnd Evangelien, von Aduent bis auff Ostern (Luther, Martin, 1483-1546).
 
 
 

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Response to "HeavensGate" from Tue, July 10, 2012


Dear HeavensGate

Thank you very much for your comments.

Speaking for myself apart from the congregation, I have struggled not with the scoping and sequencing of worship (“forms and formats”), but as you have aptly observed the need to identify “the true nature of worship.” Once this “discovery” is achieved, indeed expressions, forms and formats of worship, may well fall in to place, as you have indicated.

Indeed, HeavensGate, there is understanding that worship is a God-centered activity, and so there is not naivety on this matter as you seem to presume. That being the case, I can quote you that “the main purpose of worship is to come to God, to give Him the glory, and to speak about His deeds.”

But this statement is easier said than done because as you also pointed out “worship is not something we do for ourselves. Worship is meant to be done for God and to God.” This being the case, you have indeed answered your own question of “who is to decide which form or format is appropriate for worship?” The answer to your question is not ‘I’ or ‘you.’ The one who determines form(s) and format(s) of worship is God. This being the answer to your question, then there must be “the right form of worship,” which is determined by God. There is the “correct form of worship” and that right form and correct form of worship is determined not by the worshiper, but by the one who is worshiped, the God that we (the worshipers) seek to worship. Torah is vivid on this determination through the story of Cain and Abel (Gen 4:3-5). The question of why was one form of offering (‘worship’) accepted over that of another is answered in the Christian scripture, Heb. 11:4: “By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain.” The apostle Paul indicates in Rom 10:17: “So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” So faith comes by the word of God. It can then be rendered that Abel’s offering by faith was in accordance with the word of God. If we worship God in faith, then do we not worship as the word of God directs? So indeed there are boundaries to form and format of worship that are acceptable to God, and one gleans what is acceptable form(s) and format(s) of worship from the word of God.

But, it is not that simple. One could deduce that a thorough search of “forms and formats” of worship of God from scripture may be the solution to identifying examples of ‘acceptable’ individual and corporate worship to be performed in our modern sanctuaries and contemporary settings. But worship according to Torah and the Christ is not that limited. When reading the words of God as spoken through the prophet Micah, the ‘world’ of acceptable worship of God explodes beyond any limited conceptualization of worship to include the whole of worshipers’ being and dong, including “mishpat” (justice), “chesed” (steadfast love), “tsana`” (humility). This means that worship as defined by the God who is to be worshiped is not limited to, for example, a Sabbath morning worship service, regardless of how well orchestrated in form and format, but extends into the very lives of those who worship God by doing God’s “mishpat” and “chesed” in “tsana`.” Interestingly, the characteristics of “justice” and “steadfast love,” we are told are identifiers (Isa 30:18), part of the essence, of God and are exactly those things which shall be carried out by the Christ (Jer 23:6). So, you see, HeavensGate, that you are correct. Once we have identified “the true nature of worship” the expressions, forms and formats of worship, will fall in to place. Indeed, when we have been clothed in Christ (Rom 13:14; Eph 4:24; Col 3:10), we shall take on the mind of Christ (Phil 2:5), so as to worship in truth and spirit (John 4:23).

I have gone this route of thought with you because of my struggle with the need to identify “the true nature of worship.” My struggle begins with the scriptural record, from the Hebrew Bible and Christian Scriptures that are filled with the evidence of peoples who wrongly derived what and how to worship God, and many times even got the whom to worship wrong. When I use the scriptural and historical evidence as a basis of how and what was done wrongly, then there must be a flip side of how and what is done rightly. This moves me toward your observation that the focus must be “what worship really is” and away from your mis-observing that what you have evidenced is an “abundance of good intent,” . . and a “plethora of personal opinions.” Indeed, “good intent” was never meant, but the search for what it means to worship God in spirit and truth (John 4:21, 23-24) was meant and pursued. The use of the first person pronoun, “I,” in the communication you responded to was meant to limit the application of a [dramatized] perspective to the writer of the communication, rather than to presume that perspective [dramatized or otherwise] as applicable to others. This intentional, limited, dramatized perspective was performed to draw others into the search [and the dialogue] for “what worship really is.” It worked!

I desire to pick up the text at Isaiah 6 where you indicate: “biblical worship involves also physical expression and touches the senses.” You then, I understand, give Isaiah 6 to support this observation, which by the way, I agree that indeed worship can involve physical expression and can touch the senses. But the citation of “the four senses of seeing, hearing, smelling, and touching” from Isaiah 6 does not support your observation. It is exactly the references to seeing (v. 9b), hearing (v. 9a), and touching (v. 7[?)]) in Isaiah 6 that allude to a people who wrongly worshiped their God because these senses had been withdrawn from them (cf. Is 43:8; 44:18; Jer 5:21: Ezk 12:2l Acts 28:25-27; Matt 13:14; Mark 4:12; Luke 8:10; John 12:40; Rom 11:8; Deut 29:4). Indeed, this people could not worship their God rightly because they could not hear, see, or perceive their God. As a result, I marvel that you used these “senses” from the prophetic literature to support your observation, as oppose, to say, focusing on verses 3 of Isaiah 6. It is this verse that is indicative of the “true nature of worship.” It is Isa 6:3 that would indeed support your general conclusion that the “main purpose of worship is to come to God, to give Him the glory, and to speak about His deeds.” But, with what I can only determine to have been another agendum at work in your communication, you veered off in another direction that wholly works against your observation and general conclusion!

Isaiah 6:3 is explicit and purposeful for your argument. The seraphs proclaim, “Holy, holy, holy is the LORD Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory.” Is not this proclamation the basis of your general conclusion? The weightiness, majesty, brilliance, and honor – the glory – of God is proclaimed as visible. While wallowing through the “plethora of personal opinions” with a missed appropriation of the very definition you yourself put forward as defining “what worship really is,” the link between Revelation 4 and your text of choice Isaiah 6 was missed. Revelation 4 picks up Isa 6:1-3 and Ezek 1:4-28, and Rev 4:8-11, echoes Isa 6:3.

I hope to engage with you further in fruitful discussions on worship.

Meanwhile, may I ask you why it is that you choose to anonymously identify yourself with the name of a well-known cult group, “HeavensGate,” yet carry an emblem of the ”Three-Angels” message on a blank blog site? Is there indeed something that you are communicating to others through this name and device? The originators of the HeavensGate cult group understood themselves to be the two witnesses spoken of in the Book of Revelation (11:3). They are also responsible for the murder of 39 people in 1997.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

For Your Consideration . . .





From March 19-21, 2012, Candler School of Theology presented "The Singing Church: Current Trends and Emerging Practices in Congregational Song."

One of the themes that emerged over the course of three days of worship and workshops was the idea that the texts of hymns must be more carefully considered in order to be effective and meaningful to spiritual development. 

John Bell, a hymn writer and worship resource leader from Scotland, noted:
"In North America, you have a particular affection for interlined text in music, or staff music."
"In Europe, it's more common to have the verses separate from the music."
"It puts as much value on the text (of the hymn) as the tune."

Though Bell provided a handout with hymns and psalms that were sung during his event, he began his presentation by teaching several texts and tunes directly to the crowd.
"I do that to remind people they don't need music in front of them to sing," he said. "There are choirs in this world who would find it an inconvenience to read music while they're singing. They feel if it's not inside them, then it means nothing to God. We sing with greater integrity the less we have to read."
Bell attributes our dependence on hymnals and handouts to our lack of faith in our memories.
          "How can your faith be shaped by worship if you don't know what you've sung?" 
           "How can you relate spiritually to music if you don't have the words. . ."

Bell advocates closer reading of the words that churches sing; he emphasizes that (hymn) texts must be as functional as they are beautiful.

"A hymn isn’t just the text of a gifted poet; it’s something to which people can say 
‘amen.’"

"If the people can’t say ‘amen,’ then it’s not appropriate for congregational song."

Monday, July 2, 2012

Hiddenness, Steadfast Love, and Worship


“The sense of God’s absence implies relationship: it presupposes 
what has been, or anticipates what might become, . . . it remembers 
a taste or betokens a desire not yet satisfied” 
(Wainwright, Doxology, 1980:42).

In Psalm 13, the psalmist cries to God: 

"How long wilt thou hide thy face from me?"

Yet, the psalmist is able to proclaim of God: 

"... I have trusted in thy steadfast love,"

For the psalmist to be aware of God's hiddenness or absence is for the psalmist to remember a time when he was in the presence of God, and to long for the return of God's presence.

Because the psalmist is cut off from the divine presence, he is no longer able to participate in God's steadfast love.  As a result, the psalmist experiences distress; furthermore, neither is the psalmist under God's protection from external enemies. 

Within this psalm, no mention is made as to why God has hidden the divine face from the psalmist or even why the psalmist should think that God is hidden. God's hiddenness in this psalm is unrelated to any sense of sin on the part of the psalmist. Neither is there any concrete evidence of sickness or the nature of the psalmist's suffering. 

Although it may be inferred that the psalmist is near death, death is not the problem for the psalmist. The problem for the psalmist is his separation from God.  God had deliberately hidden from the psalmist. 

Yet, it is as if God's hiddenness becomes God's purpose for and counsel to the psalmist. 

For one who has known the divine presence and has become reliant upon it, divine absence is a curious form of divine presence.  By evading the psalmist, God became more and more manifest to the psalmist.  It was God's very hiddenness from the psalmist that unmasked the psalmist's absolute need for his God.  But even more, there was disclosure of an intrinsic quality of God's presence, steadfast love.

Thus, God's hiddenness is not the absence of God.  Indeed, God can disclose the divine self in the very being of divine absence. This means that God's hiddenness actually becomes a mode of divine presence. Moreover, it is by the use of multiple modes of self-revelation that God manifests divine steadfast love.  It is apparent that one cannot set limits to the modes in which God may reveal the divine presence.  All that one can be certain of is God's steadfast love.

God hiddenness, of which suffering is the most profound experience, may indeed be a moment of communion with the God who is never really absent from the creation that this God made and never ceases to love.  For us who worship a God who indeed can hide from us, our final expectation is of open communion with this God, in this God’s visible glory - the final act of God’s steadfast love toward us.

Indeed, Paul states it best when he is:

sure that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord  (Romans 8:38).


See also:  God’s Surprising Silence by Frank M. Hasel (Perspective Digest)

Monday, June 25, 2012

Some Thoughts on Music as Worship


Colossians 3:16
Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.
---------------------------
Psalm 30:4
Sing unto the Lord, O ye saints of his, and give thanks at the remembrance of his holiness.
------------------------------------------------------

I have been thinking about the subject of music in worship, particularly as this subject has arisen much lately.  When I think upon this subject, one thing keeps coming to my mind: our minds are to be conformed to that which was in Christ (cf. Phil 2:5; Rom 8:29; 12:2; Eph 4: 22-24; Col 3:2; 1 Cor 2:15-16).  It seems that when this truly happens, contentions over type, style, and manner of music will go away; and what will remain is a vigilant determination toward whether the music leads to worship of God in spirit and truth (John 4:23-24); or more succinctly put, worshipers will discern the difference between a “musical experience” and music as worship of God. 

From the above scriptural passages (Col 3:16; Ps 30:4), I glean that singing praise to God is for saints, and songs of saints are directly related to God’s holiness. For faithful ancient Israelites, music in their worship of God was a means to Spirit-led prayer and praise — not a path to an emotional experience.  It seems to me that for the Spirit-led Church, the significance of music in our worship of God is also a means to Spirit-induced prayer and praise, and one additional feature – the letting of the “word of Christ” dwell in us through “psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in [our] hearts to the Lord. (Col 3:16).  

The power of music in the worship of the Church, including hymns, then is a rehearsal of the power and majesty of Jesus Christ, but is also a reflection of Christ in each and every worshiper.  The hymn in Philippians 2:5-11 (known as the Kenosis Hymn because of the Greek word ekenosen, “he emptied,” in verse 7) begins with the exhortation to let “this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” 

From the hymn in Philippians 2, I gather that the singing of hymns in the early Church, rehearsed the exaltation of Jesus Christ as the Son of man and Son of God.  If the experience of hymn singing in the modern Church reflects the power of hymn singing in the Early Church, then should it not take on the same dynamism of the “word of Christ” that ignited worship and resonated with the power of the Holy Spirit in the early Church?  Colossians 3:16 extols worshipers to sing filled with the “word of Christ.”  Singing certainly would have engendered emotions, but the foundation for song worship in the early Church as witnessed in Colossians 3 was the dwelling in and singing outward of the "word of Christ."
 
It seems to me then that singing saints can indeed sing filled with the power of Christ.  Paul’s commendation to be “renewed in the spirit of your mind” (Eph 4:23) and to speak “in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord” (Eph 5:19) is evidence of the role of the Holy Spirit in the music of the early Church and is to be in the modern Church.  Indeed, it seems that for a Spirit-led Church, the significance of music as worship is aptly expressed in Psalm 30:4.


 . . . And more of my favorite music as worship

            Click Here for “Ancient Words”
        
            Click Here for “As the Dear”
      
        
     
           Click Here for “Midnight Cry”
      

Sunday, June 17, 2012

SDA Material on Subject of Worship

(click on title to open page)

The fallacy of "getting something out of worship" (1998)
In Worship, her 1936 classic, Evelyn Underhill drew a decisive distinction between private prayer and corporate worship. Prayer is an asking, Underhill argued, ...
Webster tells us that worship has the meaning of reverence, honor, respect, homage, devotion, adoration, veneration. Worship has to do with acts of homage, ...

Adventist ministers in several parts of the world are frustrated about the form of their weekly worship hour. We have used pretty much the same order of service, ...

The Power of Worship (1963)
We find a comprehensive definition of worship in the Seventh-day Adventist Bible Dictionary, page 1153: Worship is "the attitude of humility, reverence, honor, ...

From innovative worship forms to contemporary music to a preaching style that touches the heart, churches have tried numerous ways of attracting and retaining ...
 
The Praise and Worship movement (P&W) and its newest cousin, the Emergent ... The common use of PowerPoint technology in worship services also favors ...

Music and worship (1991)
Adventist worship encompasses enormous cultural and stylistic variety. Caleb Rosado reminds us pointedly that in discussions of worship and music, ...

Music in worship (2010)
The proper use of music in worship remains a difficult topic in the Christian church. Music, intensely complex, can be interpreted in many different ways. Typically ...

101 ideas for better worship services (1991)
Consider the following suggestions, designed to add life and vigor to worship services. They are not described in great detail, giving ample opportunity for each ...

Friday, June 15, 2012

My thoughts on Worship for June 15, 2012

There are times when the musical selections were ‘just right,’ when the prayers deeply touched me, and when the message went to the heart of issue for me that week.  Indeed, I went away blessed and felt great.  But recently when thinking about worship, I have asked myself about those ‘great worship services’ where I went away ‘feeling great.’  I felt great, but did God feel great too?  In asking this question of myself, I seek to rise beyond my preoccupation with self in order to ascend to a level of worship of God where God is the focal point, not me.

In trying to answer my question (for myself), I asked another question, “What is the chief end of humankind?” The answer, humankind’s chief end is to glorify God and to be in presence of God forever.  If I am anywhere near correct in answering this question, then this means that God in my life and the worship of God must be a top priority in my life.  But how do I achieve that prioritization (of course, I know with the Holy Spirit)?

 . . . .and now for some Hebrew . . .  (for those of you who know me).  In Hebrew language the words translated into English as “praise,” “worship,” “exalt,” “magnify,” and “glorify”  all are expressions that acknowledge the greatness of God and place worshipers (like me)  under God and in submission to God’s Lordship.  Indeed, the English translators of the Bible had to invent the word “worship” to express the Hebrew nuance of “worth-ship” of God, where God is accorded the highest place (priority), specifically as it regards praise.

In Revelation chapter 4, there are twenty-four elders surrounding God’s throne in heaven and there are four living creatures there as well.  The twenty-four elders are dressed in white and have crowns of gold on their heads.  The four living creatures day and night, never ceasing, cry out “'Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty, who was, and is, and is to come.”   Then there is more.  Every time the living creatures glorify God, the twenty-four elders bow down before God enthroned and worship the God who lives for ever and ever. The elders cast their crowns before the throne and cry aloud: “You are worthy, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power, for you created all things, and by your will they were created and have their being.” (Rev 4: 8-11).  Now that is worship!

By my reading again Rev 4: 8-11, I realized that my understanding of worship of my God takes on a different value when faced with the reality and majesty of God as described in this piece of biblical text.

If praise is the main activity of worship and glorification of God in heaven, it makes me think that should not praise also be central to our worship of God here within God’s creation.  So, it seems to me that worship may not necessarily be enhanced by, say, increasing the number of hymns sung or Scripture readings, but encompasses more the delight of worship and preference for worship of God where, say, my attitude and relationship to my God reflects the (top) priority of God in my life. 

Jesus’ words to the Samaritan woman reflects best what I am trying to convey: “Believe me, woman, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem … a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks. (cf. John 4:21, 23-24).

Articles on Worship

I have been looking for SDA articles on the subject of worship, and came across these articles that I think can help us in discerning and planning worship.  The first article is entitled "Worship of Our God," and is found in the Oct-Dec 2011 issue of the Elder's Digest.  Don't have a copy, not a problem.  Here is the PDF link to the Oct-Dec 2011 issue; the article starts on page 22.

http://www.eldersdigest.org/assets/archives/ED%20Q4%202011.pdf

I also found these articles on Worship:

Elder's Digest Q1, 2012:

        http://www.eldersdigest.org/assets/archives/ED%20Q1%202012.pdf

*  "Counterfeit Worship: To Worship is to Discern"
      [starts on page 24]

*   "Contemporary Christian Music: Is it Honoring to God? Should it Be Used in Church Services?
      [starts on page 11]