Sunday, August 8, 2021

THE FULL COUNSEL PART 4: A GREATER CONNECTION TO THE CHURCH UNIVERSAL

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A GREATER CONNECTION TO THE CHURCH UNIVERSAL

            The Nicene Creed emphasizes a belief in one holy catholic and apostolic church. Often, Protestants seem to grow uncomfortable or even disassociate with such a statement likely because of misunderstanding its meaning. Catholic, in the context of the Nicene Creed, simply means universal; apostolic means originating with the Apostles of Christ. With such an understanding, all Christians should agree. Protestants and evangelicals may boldly declare in truth that they are a part of the one holy catholic and apostolic church. Christians are a part of a body before they are individuals. Thus, God’s people throughout the ages are linked together as a part of a single organism. Liturgy not only exhibits unity among the people of God but also affords God’s people to experience a greater connection to the church universal. Through liturgy, Christians share with global saints throughout time, share with Christ himself, and exhibit unity in Christ. Though from every nation, Christians comprise one body dispersed throughout the world and display unity through their use of the same resource and tool: liturgy.

Liturgy Shares with Global Saints throughout Time

            The bride of Christ is a universal body comprised of every tribe, nation, tongue, color, race, language, and time. Historic liturgies have been utilized by the church for centuries and, thus, connect the people of God irrespective of external boundaries and differences. When local churches today employ historic liturgy in their worship contexts, they share in the same practices the saints throughout the centuries have also employed. By linking God’s people through liturgy, the worship of a timeless and boundless God transcends time itself, geographic location, and language and race.

            God is timeless and has never been bound by time. Time, in fact, is his creation for the bounds of humans, not himself. His church then is also timeless. Lest the people of God forget that the church includes saints from all generations and eras, Christians today are a part of the same body in which the Apostles subsist. Prominent saints in the Christian faith might not often be considered to be in the same group as God’s people today; yet, the most seemingly insignificant child of God in smalltown, USA is a part of the same body as Martin Luther, Charles Spurgeon, and John Calvin. Moreover, for those who utilize a historic liturgy, the same practices are employed that have been used by many of these significant saints of the past. Additionally, the church today is connected to the church tomorrow, for both are a part of the same body. Liturgy employs practices that have been executed for centuries and will continue to be used until the return of Christ. Therefore, liturgy aids in a noteworthy connection between saints throughout the ages.

            Through liturgy, the church of God also transcends geographic location. Records of historic liturgies have been found throughout the globe. The Christian nation is comprised of many geographic nations. In fact, God’s heart is for the nations (Ps 46:10). Believers’ call to missions is a reflection of the heart of God, for Christ’s bride, for whom he died, includes people of every nation. S.J. Stone (1839-1900 AD) composed the following words, which speak of the bride of Christ:

Elect from every nation, yet one through all the earth:

her charter of salvation, one Lord, one faith, one birth;

one holy name she blesses, partakes one holy food;

and to one hope, she presses with every grace endued.

The oneness of the church in Christ is marvelously and mystically exhibited when God’s people use liturgy, for while the people of God worship in one geographic

 location, his people also worship him in another with the use of the same tool.

            The church of God also transcends language and race, which is revealed in the use of liturgy. When Christians gather as one global body for the weekly worship of one God, a mystical unity occurs, which cannot be explained by human logic or divided by human boundaries. Moreover, the connecting tool is often found in the order and elements utilized by those who worship God, i.e. the liturgy. The same historic liturgies that have been used by saints of the past and will be used by saints of the future are often used by Christians around the globe irrespective of external factors. Therefore, the same medium of spiritual formation that existed in the early church continues to exist for God’s people presently, for liturgy shapes and connects the people of God.

            Through liturgy, Christians around the world are shaped by God himself. While no Christian’s spiritual formation is the same, liturgy, being an instrument of formation in God’s people, is the same; while liturgy may be adapted contextually, the message it presents is the same message that rings true throughout the ages. God’s people, thus, are shaped and connected through liturgy. Even in a free tradition, liturgy grants believers the profit of being connected to a larger body: namely the body of Christ transcending time and external factors. God’s people, therefore, comprised of all combinations of age, race, time, and geographic location, share with one another in a marvelous and mystical unity by their use of liturgy.

Liturgy Shares with Christ

            Liturgy also possesses the inherent benefit of sharing with Christ. Said another way, since liturgy is centered around the person and work of Christ, believers, through the liturgical tool, share in the story, glory, and work of Christ. Scripture instructs God’s people to share in the sufferings of Christ (1 Pet 4:13); yet, sharing in all aspects of Christ should be an outcome of Christianity as well. Through liturgy, God’s people share, in a succinct and clear way, with God the Son and his work.

            Through liturgy, Christians first share in Christ’s story. Worship is designed to tell the story of God and his work, which is focused through the work of Jesus. Scripture is centered around Jesus; liturgy is centered around Jesus; therefore, when local churches employ historic liturgy, God’s people share in Christ’s story by learning it, declaring it, and living in the reality of it. Christ’s story in Scripture is complete; his work in the lives of his people, however, is not. The church today holds the matchless privilege, through liturgy, of sharing in Christ’s story by participating in what he does and declaring what he has done through the ages. In a pointed way, through liturgy, the story of Jesus is told and retold among believers of all ages and geographic locations. Different people they may be, the story of Jesus rings clearly across the hearts and lips of all people when liturgy is utilized.

            Liturgy also grants God’s people the opportunity to share in the glory of Christ. Paul contends that by sharing in the suffering of Christ, his people will also share in his glory (Rom 8:17). Liturgy does not possess any special power but declares the gospel message and the glory of Christ alone. By utilizing liturgy, believers, who are promised to share in the glory of Christ, receive a foretaste of such glory by what is boldly declared. Liturgy, tested and tried, centers around the truth of Scripture and the glory of God through Jesus Christ. Therefore, liturgy affords splendid occasion for the church to declare not only the glory that Christ is worthy to receive but the glory with which the bride of Christ will also share.

            Moreover, through liturgy, believers share in the work of Christ. The church’s supreme work is the work of Christ, which gives glory to God. Extending from such work then are the nuanced tasks given to local churches and individual believers. Liturgy declares the work of Christ in an overarching sense; churches and individuals, however, hold a place within Christ’s overarching work so that he is glorified. Through liturgy, the broad work of Christ is declared not only through his work in the text of Scripture but through sincere prayers crafted by saints through the ages. Through liturgy, God’s people join in declaring the work of Christ past, present and future and share in that work with their Lord.

Certainly, local churches may receive these benefits without historic liturgy; nonetheless, I contend that historic liturgy, led by the Holy Spirit and proven by Scripture and saints of the past, is the most precise and intentional method of receiving the full benefits mentioned here. It should be no argument, however, that for such discussed benefits to be received, focused intentionality is necessary. Liturgy simply removes the vetting process since such has already been accomplished.

Liturgy Exhibits Unity in the Church

            Through the shared orders employed by Christians around the globe and throughout the centuries, liturgy exhibits unity in the church like few resources can. While one local church utilizes planned and heartfelt scriptures and prayers relevant to the story of God told throughout human time, countless churches around the globe employ the same elements in their worship practices. It is as if God’s people join in one mission, one cry, one prayer, for one God through the elements offered in worship. Tertullian (155-220 AD) suggests, “The unity of the church of God is a perpetual fact; our task is not to create it, but to exhibit it.”[1] A predominant way the church has exhibited unity for centuries is through liturgy. Through liturgy, the church has exhibited for centuries and continues to exhibit unity in purpose, in belief, and in practice.

            Liturgy exhibits unity in purpose in that its aim is directed toward the glory of God through the proclamation of his story. To ask one hundred different people what the purpose of Christian life is would be to expect one hundred different answers. Jesus himself said, however, that the greatest commandment is to love God with all the heart, soul, mind, and strength (Luke 10:27). Such a commandment is even greater than the Great Commission (Matt 28:19-20), which many believers would attest as the purpose of the church. The purpose of the church, nevertheless, revolves around God and his glory, i.e. all other purposes and tasks are derived from the underpinning purpose of God’s glory. Liturgy is designed for the purpose of worship: the goal and indeed the purpose of Christian life. Too many churches have given worship an evangelistic purpose to reach those who do not know Christ. While worship is certainly evangelistic in nature (since it declares the gospel), a lost person has no capacity to worship or pray to God. Worship is for Christians and no one else. A worship service then should be crafted to worship God without regard to anything else. Liturgy accomplishes this said goal by eliminating distractions, i.e. anything that replaces the focus of worshiping God. Therefore, through liturgy, the church’s unity is exposed in her purpose.

            Liturgy also exhibits unity in belief. Liturgy expresses the core tenets of the Christian faith and orthodox beliefs, which have been present in her life for centuries. Many liturgical traditions even utilize historic creeds, e.g. the Apostles Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed to state what they believe. Such creeds, however, stem from the truth of Scripture, around which historic liturgy is designed. Thus, to employ liturgy is to reveal the orthodox beliefs of Christianity. Moreover, by using liturgy, churches exhibit unity since they express beliefs that are shared and confessed in the same manner by believers around the world.

            Liturgy lastly exhibits unity in practice. As Christians resort to liturgy, their worship gatherings take the same focus and themes as countless worship gatherings around the world. On a given Sunday, many churches utilize the same scriptures, themes, and prayers as other believers around the world so that the expression of worship and prayer offered join as one: unity among the people of God. The mystical unity of the church is certainly exhibited in a tangible and even corporeal way through the employment of liturgy.

            While free traditions may desire to separate themselves from liturgy because of its connection with Catholicism or insincere practice, my argument has, thus far, been, that liturgy is certainly not insincere; furthermore, my contention is that liturgy is not linked solely to Catholicism, for even Protestant believers throughout the centuries (many of whom opposed Catholicism during the Reformation and from whom current Protestant practices originated) have used liturgy in their worship gatherings. Free traditions have an invaluable resource at their disposal in liturgy. Vetted by the church in the many centuries prior, liturgy provides a marvelous tool for the church to visibly exhibit unity. Believers should consider themselves a part of a single body (namely the body of Christ) more than individuals. Surely, Christ loves and has a personal relationship with individual Christians; yet, believers are a part of the bride of Christ first and foremost. A proper understanding of the oneness of the church, therefore, should impact the way God’s people worship, for their state of mind will primarily reveal a plurality rather than an individuality. Liturgy allows for this concept to be exhibited in a real and tangible manner. Even if liturgy is modified contextually, liturgical practices reveal an unbreakable unity in the church; it would be firmly advantageous for free traditions to understand such a benefit that comes from the use of liturgy.

A Church That Understands Her Identity

            Liturgy does not hinder Christian worship but rather frees and clarifies it. Through liturgy, the church succinctly declares the story of God and does so in a unified way, as believers around the world declare the same story. The church is one body: one holy and apostolic body. Christians then should understand even their individual identity as a part of the whole more than an individual. The Apostle Paul discusses the makeup of the church in his letter to the Ephesians (Eph 4:1-16). A church who understands her role in the body of Christ understands the importance of worship that unveils unity in the body; liturgy allows for such an unveiling. Through liturgy, God’s people experience a greater connection to the church universal by sharing with saints throughout time, sharing with Christ, and exhibiting her unity. The church’s identity is in Christ. Liturgy reveals not separation between various churches but a mystical unity of the church universal. Free churches, therefore, would not be negatively impacted by liturgy but positively. A church that uses liturgy likely understands her identity but also reinforces it since the gospel and the story of God is continuously and repeatedly declared among the people. In this manner, liturgy is exceedingly beneficial to the people of God in every tradition including free traditions.



[1] Dow Kirkpatrick, ed., The Doctrine of the Church (New York, NY: Abingdon Press, 1964), 187.