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We nodded our heads in agreement as the author explained the biblical basis for proper worship. He offered pertinent Scriptures, insightful commentary, and appropriate cautionary warnings. But as we read we waited and waited for him to tell us exactly what is biblical worship. How does God want us to worship him? What does it look like? And where is this instruction found in the Bible?
We nodded our heads in agreement as the author explained the biblical basis for proper worship. He offered pertinent Scriptures, insightful commentary, and appropriate cautionary warnings. But as we read we waited and waited for him to tell us exactly what is biblical worship. How does God want us to worship him? What does it look like? And where is this instruction found in the Bible?
After almost 900 words, the author drops it on us right at the end, without any cited Bible reference or explanation:
...don’t go “off the registry” to bring the Lord an insightful skit or a poignant movie clip or an interpretive dance. Our Triune God has registered for Bible-reading, Bible-preaching, prayer, congregational singing, and the celebration of baptism and the Lord’s Supper . . . so bring him what he asked for!
We are flabbergasted. THIS is the author's instruction on what constitutes proper worship?
Let's start by defining terms. "Worship" is the Greek word proskuneó, which means
to kiss the ground when prostrating before a superior; to worship, ready "to fall down/prostrate oneself to adore on one's knees"Now take another look at the author's list of do's and don'ts. Does the reader see anything in his list that even comes close to worship in the biblical sense of the word?
Let's explain. When the author talks about worship, he's not referring to the activity of worshipping or the heart posture associated with this. The author's idea of worship is not actually engaging in the worship of the Lord. No, worship for him is the way a church service should be conducted. The way his church does things. They way his tradition has done things.
This is what the author meant when he mentioned the "regulative principle of worship." This phrase isn't a casual idea, it's an official doctrine of Calvinism/Reformed Christianity. Calvin himself wrote,
God disapproves of all modes of worship not expressly sanctioned by His Word.
Calvin, like the author, was not describing worship itself, he was describing a proper church service.
This means that a proper church service does not include skits, movie clips, or a dance because those things are not found in the Bible. Ergo, they are not "worship." But, stuff that the author's church does and his church tradition has practiced, like reading the Bible, preaching a sermon, praying, singing, baptizing, and communion, those are worship because they are things to include in a church service.
We must deem this Bad Bible Teaching.
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