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Throughout church history, there has been a tendency for serious, theologically-minded believers (and we should all want to be serious, theologically-minded believers) to fall into the trap of being overly critical of the way in which other believers approach the adiaphora circumstances of worship. (Pastor Batzig does not bother to define the word "adiaphora," but Derek Thomas will do so in the quoted excerpt later. For clarity, we shall do so now. It means, "a Christian Protestant theological theory that certain rites and actions are matters of indifference in religion since not forbidden by the Scriptures.")
It will help us to note the three-fold distinction of the regulative principle of worship (RPW) prior to answering any specific questions about our practical preferences. The RPW is built upon the biblical supposition that God wants His people to worship Him in His own prescribed way. (This "biblical" supposition will not be documented with the Bible.)
The RPW divides into three categories, when considering the biblical teaching, forms, elements, and circumstances. The elements of worship are those things that should be included in worship whenever appropriate. The elements include such things as a call to worship, the singing of Psalms and hymns, confessions of sin and faith, assurances of pardon, the reading and preaching of God's word, the administration of the sacraments (i.e., baptism and the Lod's Supper), giving, vows, thanksgivings, and a benediction. Every biblical element of worship does not all need to be included in each and every service; however, they are the essential elements of true worship. (A series of undocumented statements. Where in the Bible are these principles articulated?)
The forms of worship are the ways in which the elements are carried out. For instance, do we stand with our heads bowed or kneel when we pray? Both forms of prayer are descriptively set out in Scripture. (Where? Please, sir. Cite the verses!)
The circumstances of worship, however, are the adiaphorisms (Pastor Batzig uses this word a second time without defining it.)
“The communion, or supper of the Lord, is frequently to be celebrated; but how often, may be considered and determined by the ministers, and other church-governors of each congregation, as they shall find most convenient for the comfort and edification of the people committed to their charge. And, when it shall be administered, we judge it convenient to be done after the morning sermon” (*Sigh* Apparently the frequency that communion happens is some sort of significant issue. It falls to us to quote the Scriptures:
1Co. 11:24-25 and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of me.” 25 In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.”
Scripture is not vague here. Whenever one drinks of the cup. That is, every time the church comes together for a meal, the cup must be partaken of in remembrance. That is the model of the early church [Ac. 2:42].
The contemporary ritual of communion makes it a solemn ceremony, which the author thinks is what Paul and Jesus were referring to. But Paul is in the midst of a long discussion about the faults of the Corinthian church when they assembled together [1Co. 11:18]. The church gathered to eat together.
Communion is the gathering of the Body for a meal, and that meal [and every meal when the church gathers together] is communion. We discuss this in great detail here.)
"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. Within an adherence to the principle there is enormous room for variation—in matters that Scripture has not specifically addressed (adiaphora). Thus, the regulative principle as such may not be invoked to determine whether contemporary or traditional songs are employed, whether three verses or three chapters of Scripture are read, whether one long prayer or several short prayers are made, or whether a single cup or individual cups with real wine or grape juice are utilized at the Lord’s Supper. To all of these issues, the principle “all things should be done decently and in order” (1 Cor. 14:40) must be applied.
However, if someone suggests dancing or drama is a valid aspect of public worship, the question must be asked — where is the biblical justification for it? (To suggest that a preacher moving about in the pulpit or employing “dramatic” voices is “drama” in the sense above is to trivialize the debate.) The fact that both may be (to employ the colloquialism) “neat” is debatable and beside the point; there’s no shred of biblical evidence, let alone mandate, for either. So it is superfluous to argue from the poetry of the Psalms or the example of David dancing before the ark (naked, to be sure) unless we are willing to abandon all the received rules of biblical interpretation. It is a salutary fact that no office of “choreographer” or “producer/director” existed in the temple. The fact that both dance and drama are valid Christian pursuits is also beside the point." (As mentioned, we critiqued this article here.)While God calls us to be zealous for the purity of His worship, we must be equally zealous to resist the temptation to think that the circumstantial ways in which we administer the elements of worship ought to be binding on every other local congregation. We should be exceedingly slow to call something evil that God has not called evil. We should, instead, seek to discern whether or not the particular way in which we carry out the adiaphora circumstances of worship merely falls into the realm of our subjective opinion about what may be good, better, or best. When we recognize this, we will not seek to put down other fellowships that may not carry out the circumstances of worship in the same way as we think that our congregation should do so. (This is perceptive and wise. We appreciate the author's insight here.)
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