Tuesday, August 13, 2024

RECOVERING SACRAMENTAL THEOLOGY IN BAPTIST WORSHIP PRACTICE

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.


RECOVERING SACRAMENTAL THEOLOGY IN BAPTIST WORSHIP PRACTICE


In areas of theological discourse between various Christian traditions, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper perhaps hold some of the most disparate approaches. While non-Baptist traditions frequently utilize the term, “sacrament,’ to refer to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, contemporary Baptist traditions usually employ ordinance. Differences of view regularly regard what is believed to occur during the sacred acts: either the impartation of grace or an act of cognitive remembrance. Few would likely disagree with the truth that the acts are ordinances in that they were ordained and instituted by Jesus Christ himself (Mark 14:22-24, 1 Cor 11:23-26, Matt 26:26-30, Luke 22:14-23); yet, the notion that Baptism and the Lord’s Supper are sacraments leads to disagreement between contemporary Baptist and non-Baptist traditions. Nonetheless, a careful survey of the meaning of sacrament and its implications can bring greater compatibility between Baptists and non-Baptists.[1]


Baptist teaching and worship practice often prides itself on the doctrine of grace alone. Often unrealized in Baptist teaching, however, is the fact that sacrament is also built upon grace alone. In fact, sacramental theology is founded upon the work of God rather than the work of humankind. The word, “sacrament,” is derived from the church’s union and participation with Christ. The church’s present union and participation with Christ necessitates a recovery of sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice. This paper defends the need for the recovery of sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice on a fourfold basis:

1)      an explanation of sacrament’s essence,

2)      the foundation of sacramental theology in church history,

3)      the awareness of God’s place as subject over object in worship, and

4)      the groundwork of grace alone upon which sacramental theology subsists.

 

Rediscovering the Definition of Sacrament

To separate itself from Roman Catholicism, contemporary Baptist theology has departed severely from early church doctrine regarding the sacraments. Gregg Allison explains that a primary reason for such a departure is that the term, “sacrament,” “had too many connotations associated with Catholic theology and practice of baptism and the Lord’s Supper.”[2] Nonetheless, while the term, “sacrament,” did not appear in the writings of theologians and canonists until the twelfth century,[3] the explicit designation of sacred action in liturgical contexts certainly subsisted long before the usage of the word. “The triple immersion or affusion at baptism and the marking with the sign of the cross together with the kiss of peace at the Eucharist… – these are sacramentals.”[4] A common Roman Catholic understanding of sacrament is that it is a sacred and visible sign instituted by Jesus to give us grace, “by which divine life is dispensed to us.”[5][6] Even so, a sacrament, in its simplest form, is a sacred act; thus, the attempt to bring separation between ordinal theology and sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice is unnecessary.

While the Greek New Testament employs the word, μυστήριον (mystērion = mystery) (Rom 16:25-26, Eph 3:3-13, Col 1:24-27); the early church applied this term to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper because the acts were considered to reveal “a mystery of divine grace.”[7][8] As the Bible was translated into Latin, the word, sacramentum, was utilized instead of mystery.[9] By the fifth century, Augustine’s definition of sacrament as an outward sign of an inward and invisible grace became prevalent.[10] Although the word was not used by theologians until later, the concept of sacrament was assuredly present in the early church and the centuries following. Little evidence suggests that the concept of ordinances ever superseded that of sacraments when applied to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper. Today, the term sacrament often seems to cause discomfort among Baptists. A common assumption appears to be that sacrament implies a means of imparting grace; thus, Baptists frequently avoid the term. A differentiation, however, should be made between general grace (non-salvific or gifts God grants to his people each day) and salvific grace (that which specifically relates to one’s spiritual salvation), for many believers from sacramental traditions do not believe in the sacraments as a means of salvation but rather as a means for God’s people to participate with him. When such a characteristic is considered, the discomfort in using the term becomes less likely.

Sacramentalism holds manifold implications in the church, especially as it is stalwartly connected to the church’s union with Christ. John Frame highlights that the people who make up the church are “the people in covenant with God through Jesus Christ.”[11] To understand sacrament then, it is imperative to understand the nature of the church, for the essence of sacrament is derived from the church’s union with Christ.[12] In Baptist history, the term, ordinance, is most-frequently used to refer to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper; nevertheless, sacrament is not totally absent. William Kiffen (1616 – 1701 AD) signed both the First London Confession (1644/1646 AD) and the Second London Confession (1677/1688) and has been noted to use the term, “sacrament,” describing Baptism as “the Sacrament of the Spiritual Birth.”[13] Moreover, early Baptists most assuredly coupled ordinance with Spirit, as was ubiquitous among Puritans of the time (e.g. the London confessions). Particular Baptist, Benajamin Keach (1640 – 1704 AD), stated, “Some Men boast of the Spirit, and conclude they have the Spirit, and none but they, and yet at the same time cry down and vilify his blessed Ordinances and Institutions, which he hath left in his Word, carefully to be observed and kept, till he comes the second time without Sin unto Salvation.…”[14] Baptist theology is surely compatible with the church’s union with Christ and his presence on earth through his body, the church. Thus, while idiosyncrasies exist between ordinal and sacramental perspectives, the two are not incompatible.

In the sense that Christ has commanded his people to partake in the Eucharist and Baptism, the two acts are ordinances; yet, because the church is firmly one with her Lord and Savior, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper are not inconsequential acts (i.e. Christ is not only present in the acts but also works through them). Therefore, Baptism and Communion, by their simplest and most basic definitions, are also sacraments. Stripped to its essentials, it is evident that sacramental theology does not oppose Baptist doctrine. In fact, to remove themselves from the likes of Roman Catholicism, Baptists have inadvertently detached themselves from a necessary Christian doctrine: the church’s oneness with Christ and his presence and work through the sacraments.

The definition of sacrament centers around a sacred act; yet, the sacred act involves not only the church’s action but also that of Jesus Christ. There surely subsists a mystery in the sacraments, for Christ’s presence and work through Baptism and the Lord’s Table is evident.[15] Baptist theology does not, by nature, oppose sacramental theology; therefore, such a concept should be embraced and a sacramental theology recovered in Baptist worship practice, for surely, a better understanding of the church’s union with Christ will aid in a better participation through the sacraments.

 

Sacrament in the Early Church

In believing that a sacrament is an outward sign of an inward reality, there is but one sacrament (Jesus Christ) and two manifestations (incorporation in Christ in Baptism and participation with Christ in the Lord’s Table). The church possesses an eternal and present union with Christ: such a truth is compatible with Baptist doctrine and worship practice and offers the foundation of sacramental theology, for the sacred acts of worship proceed from the overarching union with the Lord. The early church would have broadly considered the Sacraments in such a manner; as such, Baptist doctrine should be thought to oppose that of the early church. As stated earlier, the term, “sacrament,” was not used by theologians until centuries after the early church era; yet, the concept was assuredly present in the teachings and practices of the church.

Instructions found in the first-century Christian work called The Didache are based upon a forward-looking truth: “those whose lives were nourished on the broken loaf were earmarked for the final ingathering.”[16] This early church manual for worship and catechism and the writings of the church fathers contend that the acts of sacrament are not empty but entail more than mere cognitive recognition, for God employs his own work through the sacraments. Further, the trajectory of church history argues for such a unity; Ignatius of Antioch writes that the church operates as one unified body “with an undivided mind, breaking one and the same bread, which is the medicine of immortality, and the antidote which prevents us from dying, but a cleansing remedy driving away evil, [which causes] that we should live in God through Jesus Christ.”[17] The underpinning thought regarding manifold practices in the early church is that how the church operates is predicated on a union found only in Christ. Therefore, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper hold special significance because they are not only ordained by Christ and intended for the church to employ as an act of anamnesis but also as a sacrament through which the Lord’s presence is manifested.

Clement of Alexandria (c. 150 – c. 215 AD) considers the sacraments to be signs and symbols.[18] The idea that sacraments include more than Baptism and the Lord’s Table is not new to contemporary thought; nevertheless, most commonly, theologians and writers referred specifically to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper when using the term, “sacraments.” Such is the case with Clement of Alexandria. Furthermore, throughout church history, the sacraments were largely thought to be symbols of an inward reality. Tertullian (c. 115 – c. 220 AD) spoke of sacrament as an oath, even employing the common context of a military oath. He writes, “We have recounted, as I think, all the various causes of the wearing of the crown, and there is not one which has any place with us: all are foreign to us, unholy, unlawful, having been abjured already once for all in the solemn declaration of the sacrament.”[19] Tertullian further discusses “the man who was being prepared to act as images of this sacrament…”[20] Thus, while sacrament was surely used in multiple ways, in its broadest sense, when used in liturgical contexts, the word inferred signs and symbols. Baptist doctrine should hold no disagreements with such a broad perspective on sacrament.

Since the early church embraced the concept of mystery in her nature and actions, the term, “sacrament,” would not have been found to contest early church doctrine. Rather, sacrament was congruent. Baptist worship practice often prides itself in conforming to Scripture. Scripture, compiled by the hands of the Apostles, does not refute the idea of “mystery” in Baptism and the Lord’s Supper; rather, Scripture embraces mystery (1 Cor 2:7, Matt 13:10-11, Eph 1:9, Col 1:26-27). Moreover, even modern Baptist doctrine would not dispute the church’s union with Christ, for the Bible supports such a notion (Gal 2:20, John 15:5, Rom 6:3-7, Col 3:1-4). Therefore, to recover the intent and idea of sacrament in Baptist worship practice would not be to deviate from Baptist doctrine but to uphold it and enhance it.[21]

Baptist worship practice seemingly includes Baptism and the Lord’s Supper not as an act of anamnesis[22] but cognitive consideration alone (i.e. the acts are apparently considered devoid of God’s corporeal manifestation through them); nonetheless, the sacraments surely impart God’s graces and presence, albeit not salvific grace. Such a notion does not conflict with Baptist doctrine, for certainly, none of the Baptist doctrinal persuasion would disagree that God’s general graces are imparted in multifarious ways daily.

The foundation of early church thought and practice regarding the sacraments is the church’s union with Christ, a reality that is demonstrated most evidently in the sacraments. Without a firm grasp of the church’s union with Christ, sacramental theology may certainly be found to oppose worship practice. The mystery of the church’s union with Christ should not be considered as an antithesis to Baptist doctrine; rather, Baptist doctrine, in conformity with Scripture and the practice of the early church, should align with sacramental theology. For sacramental theology to be recovered in contemporary Baptist worship practice a proper understanding of the church’s present union with Christ must be realized.

 

The Subject of Sacrament

In Reformed worship, the event is usually set out as a singular dialogue; said another way, the individual elements and nuances of Christian worship comprise a complete conversation between God and his people. As such, there should not be considered a distinction between worship and any other part of the dialogue (e.g. sermon, music, etc.), for all elements entail the whole. Further, “what takes place in worship is expounded by reference to the reading and preaching of God’s Word and the right administration of the sacraments.”[23] Baptism and the Eucharist then, while merely parts of the entire dialogue, are, nonetheless, pivotal moments in the context of corporate worship. The historic fourfold order of worship includes the Gathering, the Table, the Word, and the Sending.[24] Moreover, the Table might be considered by many as the pinnacle of the worship service, which is largely still the case in liturgical traditions today. To recover an accurate perception of sacrament in Baptist worship practice, the notion of an overarching worship dialogue must be present; furthermore, such a dialogue must realize a proper subject.

In Christian worship, God is often seen as the object, which is certainly a true thought. Nonetheless, the subject of worship is often not considered or realized. Rather than understanding God as merely the object (one who observes while his people perform acts rendered unto him), God must also be understood as the subject (the one who acts),[25] for surely, it is God who facilitates acts of worship on behalf of his people. Through acts of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, God is present and working. A recovering of sacrament in Baptism worship practice will involve understanding that people are not the primary operatives in worship; the triune God is. In a mystic manner, through Christ’s union with the church, God is present in the elements of Communion and the waters of Baptism. The current trajectory of Baptist worship practice seems not to perceive the sacred acts of worship as works performed by people for God rather than acts which manifest not only God’s presence but also his work.

God is not only the object of worship but also the subject. Recovering the essence of sacrament in Baptist worship practice necessitates a foundational awareness of God’s presence in the sacred acts as subject. God’s literal presence and work in the lives of his people through corporate worship is essential to right sacramental theology. Thus, for Baptist worship practice to recognize a biblical understanding of sacrament, a deep understanding of God’s role as subject must first be achieved.

 

By Grace Alone: The Heart of Sacrament

For Baptists, a focus on grace alone is evident in their language; yet, in a misunderstood manner, much of Baptist worship practice suggests a focus on the works of humankind. The heart of sacrament, however, is grace alone, for sacrament is dependent upon the work of God rather than the work of humankind. The Reformed view is clear (even in traditions which practice infant baptism) that the sacraments do “not entail any kind of ex opere operato view.”[26] Such a statement is evident in early Reformed history as well as modern ecclesiastical traditions. Baptist worship customs should not have a concern of falsely implying that the sacraments provide salvific grace, for to believe so would be to believe that people may be justified through an act rather than by grace alone.

Sadly, “the Baptist tradition has been focused more on the proper subjects and correct mode of baptism than its meaning.”[27] Anecdotally, it is common for worshipers in Baptist contexts to experience an overemphasis on what the sacraments are not rather than what they are. Even if such a focus is an attempt of separation from Roman Catholicism, its lack of substance fails to capture the lifeblood of sacrament. Not only has church history been in agreement with the view of sacrament proposed here, early Baptist history has aligned with it as well. Michael A.G. Haykin contends, as a part of six theses related to Baptist piety and praxis, that “Baptism and the Lord’s Supper are means of grace in the hands of the Holy Spirit.”[28] The departure from the means of grace in sacrament is central to Baptist ordinal tradition and sacramental tradition; yet, such a deviation is based upon a perpetual misunderstanding that must be corrected. To recover sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice, an understanding of God’s grace must be realized.

As already mentioned, a distinction should be made between God’s general grace and salvific grace. Thus, while the sacraments do not hold soteriological powers, Baptism and the Eucharist are certainly acts in which God manifests his graces to his people. To differentiate between ordinance and sacrament, Tim Challies argues, “The significant difference between the two terms is God’s role in the act. When viewed as sacramental, Baptism is more than an act of man – it is a means by which God conveys grace.”[29] In the way that Baptism and the Lord’s Supper have been ordained, instituted, and commanded by Christ, surely, they are ordinances. To neglect the truth that the acts themselves, without offering a salvific bequest to God’s people, are also components of worship through which God’s presence is manifested is to effectively negate the core of the acts. For Baptists, grace alone is often said to be central to theology and practice. Nevertheless, the common Baptist ordinal perspective seems to point to man-centered action rather than God-centered employment. The heart of sacrament is grace alone.

It is not meant to negate the importance of ordinance, for certainly, Baptism and the Lord’s Table are ordinances; the intended scope is to recover a harmonious sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice. There subsists room for both ordinal and sacramental concepts in Baptist worship praxis. To recover sacramental theology, Baptist worship must return to a true realization of grace alone derived from a foundational understanding of the church’s union with Christ. Sacramental theology is predicated upon the nature of a church: a body saved by the grace of Jesus Christ alone and found in union with him. Grace alone is that by which God’s people are saved; grace alone is the heart of sacrament and, therefore, the heart of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.

 

Consecration for the Glory of God in Sacramental Theology

The footing of sacramental theology is the church’s present union and participation with Christ. Sacramental theology then was not originally predicated – as Baptist teaching commonly and incorrectly seems to teach – on sacred acts that offer salvific grace but rather serve as a catalyst for God’s abundance of grace. In a cyclic manner, God’s people are consecrated for his purposes; God then works on their behalf through the acts his people employ. “…it is the mystery of the Incarnation, in which the humanity in the Son’s person is assumed by divinity. Therefore, the Church is principally given in Christ as assumed by God, while the Spirit is still carrying the work of assuming sin-afflicted humanity into effect.”[30] God employs his work to change his people upon which his people participate with him in such work.

To recover a sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper must be viewed through the lens of the church’s present and eternal union with Christ. In such a union, the sacred acts of worship are participatory, not only between the people of God but between God and his people. A right view of the sacraments then necessitates a realization of the church’s union and participation with Christ. Additionally, church history is suggestive of a sacramental perspective of Baptism and the Lord’s Table; such a perspective includes Baptist history. While not negating the importance of ordinance here, sacrament, in its truest essence, does not oppose Baptist teaching and practice. Moreover, anecdotally, Baptist worship practice seems to dismiss the mystic participation between God and his people during Christian worship. God himself is the one who works through the sacraments; therefore, the efficacy of the sacred acts is not contingent upon the church’s action but God’s. Despite common Baptist teachings that the sacraments do not impart grace, ordinal perspectives often depend on the actions of humankind rather than God, but a sacramental view rests upon the notion of grace alone. Said another way, the heart of sacrament proceeds from grace alone and is centered around God’s work alone rather than humankind’s. The work of God’s people in the sacraments is merely participatory rather than obligatory.

God’s people are consecrated for the glory of God, a truth that is copiously evident in the sacraments. Sadly, a perpetuation of misunderstanding has caused Baptist teaching to deviate from the truth of sacramental theology. Baptist worship practice is compatible with the core of sacrament despite such misinterpretations. God’s people alone, consecrated for his own glory, hold the right and privilege to commune with their Lord and participate in his work and life through Baptism and the Lord’s Supper, a right that is established on the church’s oneness and union with Jesus Christ. Such an understanding demands the recovery of a sacramental theology in Baptist worship practice.




[1]Christians throughout history have generally accepted Augustine of Hippo’s definition of a sacrament as ‘the visible form of invisible grace’ (‘On the Catechism of the Uninstructed,’ 26.50). However, different Christian churches and traditions vary in their understanding of how the visible sign relates to the divine grace. There are two general understandings:

1.          The sign bestows or contains the grace.

2.          The sign depicts, represents, or symbolizes the grace” (Eugene R. Schlesinger, “Sacraments,” ed. John D. Barry et al., The Lexham Bible Dictionary, Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2016).

[2] Gregg R. Allison, “The Ordinances of the Church,” The Gospel Coalition, n.d., https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/the-ordinances-of-the-church/.

[3] J.D. Chrichton, “Sacramentals,” ed. J.G. Davies et al., The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Press, 1986), 473.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Catechism of the Catholic Church, par. 1131.

[6] The scope of this paper does not include misunderstandings of Roman Catholic doctrine on sacrament; nonetheless, it should be noted here that such a misunderstanding subsists and perhaps contributes to a distinct effort to bring about separation between Baptist and Roman Catholic doctrine.

[7] Gregg R. Allison, “The Ordinances of the Church.” The Gospel Coalition, n.d., https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/the-ordinances-of-the-church/.

[8] The Greek New Testament usage of mystery refers to what was hidden from humankind prior to God’s revelation through Jesus Christ. The early church applied such a term to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper because of its symbolism to the gospel (i.e. the mystery revealed in Jesus Christ).

[9] The term, “Sacrament,” should be considered in a broad scope, for even in Latin, sacramentum possesses a plurality of meanings (e.g. oath, sacred action, or even military oath).

[10] Ibid.

[11] John M. Frame, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Christian Belief (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2013), 1019.

[12] The importance of ordinance should not be dismissed in discussion of recovering sacrament, for certainly, Baptism and the Lord’s Supper are also ordinances. To contend for one is not to dismiss the other; both principles, although, disparate implications, may be true. The vitality sacrament in Baptism and the Lord’s Supper allows for acts also employed on the basis of the Lord’s instruction (i.e. an ordinance).

[13] Michael A.G. Haykin, Amidst Us Our Beloved Stands: Recovering Sacrament in the Baptist Tradition (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2022), 13.

[14] Ibid., 12-13.

[15] The reality of Christ’s presence is usually not debated; the essence of Christ’s presence, however, is (e.g. his literal physical presence or his spirit which abides in his people). While not in the scope of this paper, the acceptance of Christ’s presence is fundamental to a proper understanding of sacramental theology.

[16] Aaron, Milavec, The Didache: Text, Translation, Analysis, and Commentary (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2003), 68.

[17] Ignatius of Antioch, Epistles of Ignatius, trans. Tim Perrine (Christian Classics Ethereal Library, n.d.), ch. XX.

[18] Clement of Alexandria, “Works Book V Elicudations,” in Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. 2, ed. Philip Schaff, 368-1265 (Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library, originally published 1885), 1013.

[19] Tertullian, “The Chaplet.” In Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. 3, ed. Philip Schaff (Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library, originally published 1885), 208.

[20] Ibid., 336.

[21] Being mindful of the fact that ordinance is also not contrary to the teachings of Scripture and the early church, embracing the concept of sacrament enhances one’s understanding of Baptism and the Lord’s Table.

[22] Here the term refers to more than mere mental remembrance but a realistic cognitive and spiritual participation with what or who is considered (i.e. anamnesis not only remembers but also participates).

[23] David Fergusson, “The Theology of Worship: A Reformed Perspective,” in Worship and Liturgy in Context: Studies and Case Studies in Theology and Practice, ed. Duncan B. Forrester and Doug Gay, 92-106 (London, UK: SCM Press, 2009), 74.

[24] Robert E. Webber, Planning Blended Worship (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1998), 21.

[25] Webber, “God: The Object or Subject of Worship?” Robert E. Webber Institute for Worship Studies, September 1, 2005, https://iws.edu/2005/09/robert-webber-god-object-or-subject/.

[26] Stephen Wellum, “Baptism and the Relationship between the Covenants,” Kingdom of God, August 17, 2007, 107, chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://kingdomresources.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/wellum_baptindd.pdf.

[27] Haykin, 18.

[28] Ibid., 90.

[29] Tim Challies, “Baptism: Sacrament or Ordinance?” Tim Challies (blog), Challies, July 28, 2004, https://www.challies.com/articles/baptism-sacrament-or-ordinance/.

[30] Prokop Broz, “Belonging to Christ and Belonging to the Church,” Theologica roc. 4, c. 2 (2014): 315.

Thursday, August 1, 2024

PERSEVERANCE IN DIFFICULTY AS AN ACT OF WORSHIP

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.

PERSEVERANCE IN DIFFICULTY AS AN ACT OF WORSHIP

Acts of worship come in manifold forms. I continually teach that worship and music are not synonymous; yet, the individual nuances that comprise the act of worship are numerous and multifarious. One such apparatus that fosters worship is difficulty. Difficulty, however, does not automatically equate to worship; it is the response to difficulty that has the potential to result in worship. When perseverance is coupled with difficulty, the result is God-exalting worship. Perseverance in difficulty, therefore, is an act of worship. Thus, in the discussion of perseverance in difficulty as an act of worship, there are four vital essentials which should be considered; realizing these essentials then allows Christians to respond properly to the surety that is difficulty.

Difficulty Is the Ultimate Evidence of Christian Worship

Christian worship, predicated on the mediation of Jesus Christ, holds a profound link between the church’s (the body of Christ) honoring of the risen Lord and her sharing with him in suffering. Worship is participatory in nature and not only in a horizontal manner (with the saints) but in a vertical manner (with the Lord); therefore, Christian worship is surely contingent upon how believers share not only in the glorification of Christ but the suffering of Christ, for suffering precedes glorification.

The Apostle Paul argues that all believers who aspire to live a godly life face the certainty of persecution (2 Tim 3:12). While to varying degrees, persecution is a surety for the believers and indeed the mark of one changed by Jesus Christ. As I have contended often in my ministry and teaching, worship is foundational to all Christian belief and practice. Worship then must include evidence (i.e. something must result from worship of the triune God); that evidence is difficulty. Christians are to model their lives after that of Jesus Christ who faced unwavering difficulty throughout his life and ministry. Believers, therefore, should consider difficulty a blessing and the highest evidence of Christian worship, for when God’s people suffer, they share in the suffering (and subsequently the glorification) of their Lord Jesus Christ.

Perseverance Converts Difficulty into Doxology

How believers respond to difficulty is also crucial. Difficulty without a proper reaction is not God-worship but self-worship. Perseverance is the vehicle that moves difficulty from a place of testing to worship; perseverance then converts difficulty into doxology. Without negating the challenge of perseverance in difficulty, Scripture’s commands to the believer are firm.

Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer” (Rom 12:12).

“Hold fast what you have, so that no one may seize your crown” (Rev 3:11).

“…we rejoice in our sufferings…” (Rom 5:3).

“Do not fear what you are about to suffer. Behold, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison, that you may be tested, and for ten days you will have tribulation. Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life” (Rev 2:10).

Perseverance, therefore, is a command of Scripture. Said another way, the absence of perseverance is an improper way to face difficulty (i.e. it is sin). Christians should be encouraged and mindful of the fact that Jesus Christ, in his human nature, faced every difficulty humans face with perfection (Heb 4:15). The imperative variable for difficulty’s transformation into God-honoring worship is perseverance.

Certainly, perseverance is not easy. God, however, leaves no one with excuse for a lack of perseverance under intense trials, for he did so himself. Christians may ponder why God allows demanding situations in the lives of his people. Being mindful, however, of the fact that people live in an imperfect and fallen world, it is necessary to realize that a perfect setting will come to God’s people (Rom 8:18). The toil and adversity of life in a world that is surely not the home of any Christian exists as a tool which God uses to sanctify his people by transfiguring such circumstances into doxology. Believers then should rejoice, for when difficulties arise, they are but opportunities to worship God through perseverance, which is exceedingly greater than the conditions themselves.

God Is Most Worshipped in Difficulty Rather Than Ease

Jon Piper has famously stated that God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him and has further clarified that such truth persists in difficulty, not ease. Comfort has never been a mechanism in which to glorify God. I submit that any believer may examine the course of their life and find it challenging to observe a point when they glorified God more through ease than they did through struggle. Trials are not arbitrary and meaningless occurrences that happen to God’s people as a surprise to him; rather, each difficulty that evolves in a believer’s life is purposeful (by God) and designed (by God) to accomplish specific objectives (for God). Stated another way, difficulties are not only allowed by God but also planned by him. God is sovereign in all things including difficulties. To speak of God’s sovereignty and providence only in times of pleasure is to falsely realize who he is, for his providence abounds even in difficulties.

Christian worship should be considered synonymous with the glorification of the triune God. Thus, any means in which he is glorified is worship, which assuredly includes perseverance during trials. In fact, difficulties provide prospects of worship that otherwise would not exist. Therefore, Christians should rejoice in trials rather than complain. Even in lamenting over difficult circumstances, believers should hold their focus on the opportunity of worship that presents itself, for God is most worshipped through such difficult occasions outstandingly more than in times of decadence.

Difficulty Connects Christian Worship to the Worship of Israel

The Old Testament story of Israel uniquely declares a people who faced difficulty. From the days of slavery in Egypt to the days of exile from their own homeland, God’s people faced numerous challenges. In a similar manner, global Christians now face tests. How believers respond to such tests signifies a heart of worship or the lack thereof. What difficulties do, however, is connect Christian worship to the worship of Israel, for God’s people in Israel declared and proclaimed a holy and majestic God[1] even during times of difficulty. For Christians to behold an explicit example of how to respond to difficulties, Scripture is replete with models. As Israel lamented, Christians should lament; as Israel persevered, Christians should persevere; and as Israel worshipped, Christians should worship.[2] Difficulties are certain; nonetheless, such circumstances are opportunities for God’s people to worship. Perseverance then is not only the right response to trials, it is indeed an act of worship.



[1] Such a truth is evident specifically throughout the Psalms.

[2] Such a statement does not negate the incorrect view of the Messiah but rather presupposes an Old Testament notion of the Messiah, which the Jews missed.

Monday, July 1, 2024

EMOTIONS IN WORSHIP

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.

EMOTIONS IN WORSHIP

            Worship ministry is often associated with music. Although worship is not synonymous with music, there should be no denying that music is assuredly a strong part of worship, particularly in a corporate sense. Further, the connection between music (or the arts in the broadest sense) and human emotion holds a formidable tie. In fact, I would contend that the emotional aspect of Christian worship is frequently overutilized and overemphasized, albeit perhaps without proper realization; yet, to separate from the misguidance of emotion-based worship, many churches unfortunately whitewash their practices of anything that resembles the God-ordained unique and emotional impacts artistic expression yields. Thus, there subsists a delicate balance between overemphasis of emotion in Christian worship and a dishonoring deception by the removal of emotion in Christian worship practice.

            Several questions arise in the discussion of emotions in worship. Therefore, to facilitate the discussion of this topic, my aim is to answer four crucial questions.

1.      Should emotions play a role in Christian worship?

2.      What (or who) should be the source of emotions in worship?

3.      What other human elements should be present in Christian worship?

4.      How should churches balance emotions and other necessary elements in worship?

Answering such questions will offer guidance and balance in approaching the appropriate use of human emotion in Christian worship.

Should Emotions Play a Role in Christian Worship?

            Artistic stratagems are utilized to evoke and even arouse human emotions continuously, e.g. music in movies. Aesthetics are powerful tools; should such attempts, however, be made in juxtaposition with Christian worship? Without dismissing the necessity of emotions in Christian worship and without elevating them to an unnecessary and selfish level, my answer to this question is yes. Emotions should surely play a significant role in worship, for God created human emotions and designed them to be used for the benefit of his people and to the glory of his name. Like other aspects of human life, however, emotions may be utilized for honor or dishonor and, in fact, seem to often be used for the latter. One might point to Paul’s definition of love (1 Cor 13) and suggest that emotion is nowhere to be found; yet, emotion is unwaveringly connected to action throughout Scripture, e.g. delight (Ps 37:4), affection (Rom 12:10), anger (Ps 37:8), and joy (Ps 5:11). To deny the necessity of emotion is to effectively deny its existence, which would be a lie. I am reminded that even when Elizabeth visited Mary, John the Baptist, within her womb, leaped for joy (Luke 1:41), for Mary carried the Savior of the world within her own womb. Emotion then plays a significant role in many biblical accounts and in the context of Christian worship, e.g. throughout the Psalms. In its simplest form, therefore, the answer to the first question is yes, emotions should play a role in worship.

What (or Who) Should Be the Source of Emotions in Worship?

            Beyond the resounding affirmation that emotions should play a role in worship, believers must determine to what extent. A seventeenth-century theory called the Doctrine of the Affections suggested that artistic works could represent or even control human passions and emotions. Perhaps, in a modern context, many churches attempt to regulate or influence human emotions by the aesthetic devices used in worship, e.g. music (including tempo and style), lighting, etc. If the answer to whether emotions should play a role in worship is an emphatic yes, how then do Christian measure the extent to which emotions should be utilized? Jonathan Edwards perhaps offers the clearest answer to this question. He writes: “I should think myself in the way of my duty to raise the affections of my hearers as high as possibly I can, provided that they are affected with nothing but truth, and with affections that are not disagreeable to the nature of what they are affected with.”[1] Thus, the answer to the question centers not around emotions themselves but the source of emotion, which should be not the aesthetic contrivances employed but the one for whom they are employed, namely triune God. Leaders of worship should strive to destroy any tool that manipulates human emotions in worship so that the glory of God is seen and God himself is the only one who regulates the emotions of God’s people in worship.

What other Human Elements Should Be Present in Christian Worship?

            The heart often represents the seed of the emotions in biblical literature. It is no coincidence that the greatest commandment (Mark 12:30) teaches to love God with the heart, soul, mind, and strength but begins with the heart. Emotions then are central to honoring God, particularly in the context of corporate worship. Nevertheless, other elements are involved, e.g. the soul, the mind, and the strength. The Apostle Paul, after instructing the Church at Corinth to employ orderly worship, says, “I will pray with my spirit, but I will pray with my mind also…” (1 Cor 14:15). There is seemingly an overemphasis of the heart in Christian discussions. While the heart is substantial in the greatest commandment and in acts of worship, the heart must be complemented by soul, the mind, and the strength. Christians must live (and worship) with a constant realization that the human heart is evil and deceitful above all things (Jer 17:9). While uninhibited worship is right and necessary, the concept has perhaps been distorted to be tantamount to emotional worship that excludes the mind, i.e. the heart overrides other areas of human involvement. God-honoring worship, however, must include a delicate balance of other elements besides emotions. Moreover, it is the responsibility of worship leaders to guide God’s people in such a manner that emotions are present but not exaggerated.

How Should Churches Balance Emotions and Other Necessary Elements in Worship?

            Understanding that emotions are imperative in Christian worship and that emotions must be steered by God himself rather than the aesthetics of the worship gathering, churches should ascertain how to balance emotions and other necessary elements. To aid in such a task, I have three suggestions that, if implemented, will help tremendously in balancing emotion with other elements necessary for God-honoring worship.

            First, worship leaders must read and understand the congregation. Without crafting worship gatherings to conform to the desires of people, worship leaders should be aware of what congregants need, even if the congregants themselves do not know, which could certainly include violating the wishes of the people. Nonetheless, such an understanding could bring God’s people to a place where he can move and work in their lives in as magnificent way that otherwise would not have happened.

            Secondly, worship leaders should ensure that every element of the worship gathering has a purpose. For example, music should not be used as mere filler or prayers to merely kill time and fill space. Each element should hold a specific purpose designed to play an important role in the entirety of the worship gathering; if the element does not have a specific purpose, it should be removed or modified.

            Thirdly, worship leaders should strive to create a dialogue with the content of each worship gathering, i.e. worship gatherings should not be compartmentalized to individual elements, e.g. music (including individual songs), sermon, invitation, etc. All aspects of worship should center around an evident dialogue and theme; all parts should tell a singular story of God and his people. I would even suggest that the gospel narrative should be told through every worship gathering. Christian lingo often separates sermons and the Eucharist from worship by forcing the term, worship, to be synonymous with music; yet, messages and sacred acts such as the Eucharist and Baptism are assuredly vastly important parts of worship. To engage in a singular dialogue then, the elements of worship should not be compartmentalized and separated from the entirety of the gathering. Consider the worship gathering as one event, a seamless dialogue (and narrative) between God and his people.

            If churches endeavor to approach worship with these three suggestions in mind, I believe the balance between emotions and other aspects of Christian worship will be ameliorated magnificently.

Worship: An Experience, Not a Feeling

            Christian worship should be considered an experience more than a feeling. While feelings may surely arise during the process of worshipping God, an experience ensures life-change, while feelings do not. Feelings are fleeting and temporary while experiences change hearts and minds. God’s people must measure their emotions in worship against what the mind knows, what the soul experiences, and what the strength faces. The standard is God’s word; if anything violates the truth of Holy Scripture, Christians are to steer clear of such items. In conclusion then, emotions are necessary and good in Christian worship. Nonetheless, a balance exists between emotions and experience. It is the role of God’s people and especially those who lead in worship to safeguard worship gatherings that do not manipulate human emotions but rather allow the Holy Spirit to conform the emotions of God’s people to points of life-change. Such conformation is the balance of human emotion in Christian worship and should be treated sensitively by local churches.



[1] Jonathan Edwards, Works, 4:387.

Friday, May 31, 2024

THE PREEMINENCE OF THE SON

Audio for the following may be found here. You may also listen to podcast episodes here.

THE PREEMINENCE OF THE SON

            While Christian worship is surely trinitarian, it is also christocentric. One may question how both may be true; yet, considering Christ’s complete work in Christian life, an acknowledgement of the christocentricity of Christian worship becomes apparent. Subconsciously, perhaps, many people consider God solely as the Father without realizing the co-equal nature of the Son. Paul argues for Christ’s preeminence in his letter to the Colossians. As worshippers of the living God, the preeminence of Christ is vital to God-honoring worship. Here is what Paul writes:

He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross (Col 1:15-20).

The preeminence of the Son here is clear and should be considered in such a manner that Christian worship teaches and reveals the preeminence of Christ. With that mentioned, there are four constraints that must guide how Christian worship is employed.

The Son Is Eternal

            Paul’s letter to the Colossians offers clarity on who Jesus is. Certainly, Jesus is God incarnate; yet, the humanity of Jesus must never overshadow the deity of Jesus, for he is God, i.e. the Son was present and involved in creation order, for he created everything himself. The Apostle Paul contends that all things were created by Jesus (Col 1:16). I was once asked if Jesus is eternal. After thinking for a short amount of time, I responded by saying that the Son is eternal but since Jesus did not enter reality until the incarnation, his human form did not exist prior. A manifold doctrine, the concept that Jesus is God and, therefore, created everything is difficult for many people to grasp. Nonetheless, Jesus, hence forth, is eternal because the Son is eternal; yet, the Son is co-eternal with the Father and Spirit, for he has always existed as God. Jesus then is preeminent because he is the Son and, thus, eternal.

The Son Is Provident

            Jesus’ preeminence is also evident in his providence. Paul argues that the Son holds all things together (Col 1:17). Such a statement stalwartly reiterates Paul’s argument that the Son existed before all creation (Col 1:16) and was not created, i.e. there was never a time, as Arius argued, when Jesus did not exist. Providence, however, should be considered differently than is commonly discussed. Christians tend to speak of God’s providence in terms of his provision and catering to human desires, as if God could not be provident if circumstances do not fit human expectations and comfort. For example, God is considered provident when he heals someone or provides financial needs; God, nevertheless, is provident irrespective of such actions. God is provident when someone dies, although loved ones prayed for healing; God is provident when bills are late, although prayers for financial provision were plentiful; and certainly, God is provident when human expectations are not met. It is, in fact, selfish and wrong to blame God when situations go awry, as if humanity deserves God to respond according to expectations because his chain was jerked. God is provident; it is who he is. Christians would be wise to remember the words of Paul in suggesting that all things are held together by Jesus Christ. Further, such truth should comfort God’s people, for no matter how dire the situation, Jesus controls everything. Believers may rest in such assurance and worship God boldly because of it.

All Things Proceed from the Son

            Because Jesus is God, created everything, and all things are held together by him, all things proceed from him. The question then is not whether Jesus created and controls all things but his purpose in doing so. In Christian theology, perhaps, the most basic and fundamental truth is that of God’s glory, i.e. everything exists and was created for God’s glory. Therefore, believers should find joy in the fact that anything which occurs in life occurs to glorify God. When trials are present, something is happening, i.e. difficulties are not meaningless but hold a purpose in the overarching purpose of God’s glory. Paul says that all things are through Jesus and for him. In fact, Paul argues elsewhere that all things are from God, to God, and through God (Rom 11:36). Everything then proceeds from the Son and by his allowance. Christ is first before all creation (Col 1:18) and, as God himself, created everything and allows all things to exist. All things then proceed from God the Son and center around his work. Christian worship is christocentric because everything centers around Jesus. In this manner then, the Son is preeminent and should be worshipped in a way that the centrality of Christ is exceedingly evident.

Christian Worship Centers around the Son

            Everything in Christian life centers around the Son. Certainly, worship is trinitarian; yet, the Son is the center even of gospel work, for the Son subsists as the mediator between God and humankind and indeed between all gospel-oriented activity. Christ then is preeminent. When God’s people gather to worship, all activity is employed to the glory of the Father, through the Son, and in the power of the Spirit. Worship then is trinitarian and yet christocentric. Paul directs the reader’s attention to the centrality and preeminence of the Son in Colossians 1; Christians worship, therefore, should be pointed to Christ’s accomplished work and his continued providence. Without the preeminence of Christ, all human endeavors are futile. It is, Christ, however, who makes it possible for believers to worship God boldly and without hindrance. Paul presents the case for the preeminence of Christ. Believers now may experience it in corporate worship and in their own personal lives. Everything centers around the Son, for he is preeminent.