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What is
Christian Worship?
Worship: At the Heart of Our
Relationship with God
The Westminster Shorter
Catechism begins as follows:
1. What is the chief end
[i.e. goal] of man?
A. Man's chief end is to
glorify God, and to enjoy him forever.
This reflects a common
Christian perspective that all of Christian life is focused on
God and on our fellowship with him and other people. Our care
for others is in this context. That doesn't mean that others
are only side-issues: loving others means that we genuinely
care about them. However Christian experience is that our
relationships with other people must be put into the context
of a relationship with God, or those relationships will start
to become unbalanced.
For many Christians, worship
is at the heart of our relationship with God, both as
individuals and a community. In worship we focus on God: on
hearing a message based on the Bible, on prayer, and on the
sacraments. Of course individual Christians can do many of
these things in private. However in worship we ground our life
as a community in a corporate experience of God.
The Content of Christian
Worship
It is not possible to give a
complete description of Christian worship. Congregations
worship in quite different ways. Worship services vary from
formal services with wonderful classical music and
well-planned liturgical actions, to a small group gathering
around a table and using an impromptu service with rock music.
Worship tends to have two
major centers: the Word and the Sacraments. The Protestant
tradition tends to emphasize the proclamation of the Word.
This includes readings from the Bible, and a sermon, which
will normally help the congregation understand the reading and
apply it to them. Historically, the sermon was a major means
of conducting adult Christian education, and of spurring both
individuals and congregations to make necessary changes.
Protestant worshippers had a surprising appetite for sermons:
three-hour sermons were not uncommon. (This appetite does not
seem to have survived into the 20th Century.)
Of course Catholic worship
also includes readings from the Bible and some exposition.
This is normally referred to as a "homily", rather than a
sermon. However the center of worship in the Catholic church,
as well as other "liturgical" churches, is the sacrament of
Communion, which will be discussed below. For them it is
normally celebrated at every regular service. The elaboration
and formality tends to be greater than it is in Protestant
churches. Protestants normally celebrate communion either 4
times a year or once a month.
In addition to the Word and
sacraments, services of all groups include prayers and
singing. One analysis of the prayers classifies them according
to the acronym ACTS: Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, and
Supplication. Another variant is ACTIS, with the I standing
for Intercession.
Services often begin with a
combination of prayer, responsive readings and music which
simply celebrate being in God's presence. This is adoration.
Fairly early in the service
there is normally a prayer of confession. In confession we
express both our individual faults and those of the community.
We ask God to help us to amend them, and receive assurance
(normally in words taken from the Bible) of God's willingness
to do so.
Thanksgiving acknowledges
God's goodness to us. Thanksgiving is important in the
Christian life. As we thank God for things, we put those
things into the context of our relationship with God.
In Supplication we ask God
for what we need. In worship, this supplication normally
includes the needs of the congregation, nation, and world.
Intercession is a specific kind of request, directed towards
the needs of others. Intercession is particularly important to
Christian life, because it is one of the key elements in the
pattern of "exchange" that I referred to in a previous
article. Through intercession we bear each other's burderns,
and join the other members of the community in putting their
requests before God.
The Sacraments
The one aspect of worship
which is most specific to Christianity is the sacraments. This
is also the element that is the most dangerous to describe in
a document such as this, which is intended to describe
Christianity in general. That's because the definition of
sacrament is somewhat different among different groups.
However a good general definition is that a sacrament is "an
outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace"
(from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer). The sacraments each
involve a specific symbolic action (the "sign") that make
visible God's action for us. For Protestant theologians, this
must be connected with a specific promise of God, as recorded
in Scripture.
It's probably best to think
of a range of actions that can be described as sacraments. At
the center we have Baptism and Communion, which are practiced
by all Christian groups (although some call them "ordinances"
rather than "sacraments"). These are actions that were
specifically commanded by Jesus.
Next, there is a group of
additional ceremonies that are regarded as sacraments by the
Catholic and Orthodox tradition. Initially, there wasn't an
exact list of these. One medieval writer identified 30.
However in the Catholic tradition, a standard list of seven
was identified in the 12th Century. That list includes
Baptism, Communion, Confirmation, Penance, Annointing of the
Sick, Holy Orders, and Marriage. While Protestants generally
consider only Baptism and Communion to be formal sacraments,
there is some flexibility. Luther was willing to accept
Penance, if properly understood. Calvin considered the laying
on of hands in ordination to have a sacramental quality.
Finally, note that many other
activities have at least some sacramental character: for
Christians, the whole world, and our own activities, should
all serve to make visible God's activity with us. As an
example, Calvin identified the rainbow as having a certain
sacramental quality: it is a visible sign of a promise of God.
Baptism
Baptism marks a person's
entry into the Christian community. It involves water:
depending upon the group, it may be anything from a symbolic
sprinkling to complete immersion. The water symbolizes being
cleansed from sin. More specifically, it symbolizes dying with
Christ and being raised with him. This symbolism is clearest
when immersion is used: being lowered into the water reminds
us of Christ's death, and being raised from the water, of his
resurrection. This understanding is used even among those who
don't literally immerse the candidates.
Communion
Communion is a symbolic meal,
involving bread and wine. It commemorates Jesus' last meal,
which he ate with his followers the night before he was
killed. This meal seems to have been a Jewish Passover Seder,
in which bread and wine are key elements. Jesus gave them a
new significance, as symbols of his body and blood, which he
was about to sacrifice in his death. Jesus commanded his
followers to remember his death for them by eating bread and
drinking wine in his name. He promised that he would be
present with them as they did so, in a very direct way.
Different Christian groups
understand Christ's presence in communion differently. When he
instituted communion, Jesus said of the bread "This is my
body". While some Protestants understand this as purely
metaphorical, most Christians believe that Jesus is in some
way present in communion. Many Christian traditions believe
that in some sense the bread and wine used in communion become
Jesus' body and blood. This is referred to as Christ's "Real
Presence". Catholics, Orthodox, Lutherans, and Reformed all
hold some variant of this concept.
For Catholics this involves
an actual metaphysical change in the bread and wine. While the
physical properties of bread and wine remain, the metaphysical
identity is changed to Christ's body and blood. Lutherans and
Reformed do not accept this metaphysical change. For Reformed
theology, Christ's body remains physically in heaven. In
communion we truly eat his body and drink his blood, but this
is a spiritual matter mediated by the Holy Spirit. Lutherans
believe that there is an actual identification of bread and
wine with Christ's body and blood. Other Protestants take a
more metaphorical approach.
In the Catholic tradition,
the consecrated elements are treated with the same respect
that Jesus would be if he were physically present. That is
because they are actually Jesus' body and blood, so Jesus
really is physically present. For that reason, it is perfectly
appropriate to worship the consecrated elements. Most
Protestants regard this with something between disbelief and
horror.
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