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You are here: Home / 2015 / Archives for February 2015

Archives for February 2015

To Prepare for Lord’s Day Worship, 1 March 2015

25-February-15 by Pastor Larry Wilson

10 AM Worship

Scripture: Philippians 3:7–16
Sermon: “Never Stop Striving to Be Renewed
More and More After God’s Image” (2)
Sacrament: The Lord’s Supper
Hymns: “Safely Through Another Week” (Tune: Dix [1976 Psalter Hymnal #320])
“Thy Works, Not Mine, O Christ” (TH 524)
“Love Divine, All Loves Excelling” (TH 529)
“My Jesus, I Love Thee” (TH 648)
Doxology: “Gloria Patri” (TH 734)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

3 PM Worship

Scripture: John 5:30–47
Sermon: “Preview of Jesus’ Trial”
Hymns: “Christ, Whose Glory Fills the Sky”
“One Day He’s Coming” (TH 327)
Psalm 50:1–6 (TH 316)
Doxology: Psalm 72:18–19 (TH 312:4)

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

The Evening Worship Service

25-February-15 by Pastor Larry Wilson

Over a decade ago, Dr. Robert S. Rayburn wrote:

In our day, the evening service is rapidly disappearing from the Sunday schedule of the Christian church. This is a great change and, in my view, a most unfortunate one.

A 1985 survey of the favourite hymns of British church-goers placed several evening hymns in the top ten (including The Day Thou Gavest, Lord, is Ended [No. 1], and Abide with Me [No. 7]). It is painful to contemplate generations of Christians growing up and not learning to sing these superb hymns so beloved of generations of the saints. But if there are no evening services, it is unlikely that these hymns will retain a place in the church’s mind and heart. The number of the elect who were summoned to faith and life in Christ by preaching in Sunday evening services must be very large. But now there are only half as many services in which a man or woman, boy or girl, might hear the words of life.

Are there good reasons for the church to meet twice on the Lord’s Day? Well, there must be, for the church has done so virtually without exception throughout her history. At Faith Presbyterian Church we love to sing Hail! Gladdening Light, one of the earliest Christian hymns extant, dating from at least the 3rd century and perhaps earlier. It was a hymn for the evening service of the early Christian church. The arguments for a second Lord’s Day service—that is, an evening service—include these:

First, God made provision in the liturgical regulation of the tabernacle and temple for both morning and evening sacrifices every day and he explicitly required these to be continued and increased on the Sabbath Day (Num. 28:1–10).

Second, Psalm 92, which is explicitly identified as a psalm “For the Sabbath Day,” reads, “It is good…to proclaim your love in the morning and your faithfulness at night” (cf. Ps. 134:1).

Third, in the New Testament we have record of evening worship on the Christian Sabbath, that is Sunday (Acts 20:7) and we have it in a book that very clearly intends to set before us facts representative of the life of early Christianity. Interestingly, what might be called the first Sunday “service” of the new covenant epoch took place at night when the Lord on Easter evening met his disciples gathered in a room in Jerusalem.

Fourth, just as morning has a special significance in the history of salvation (e.g. our Saviour rose from the dead in the morning), even so many events have sanctified the evening (e.g. the Saviour’s birth, the transfiguration, the struggle in Gethsemane, etc.). There is something appropriate in the church worshipping at the time that recollects such sacred and important events.

Fifth, there is the consistent witness of the Christian tradition, from early Christianity, to English Puritanism and Scottish Presbyterianism’s “afternoon” service, to Anglican evensong.

Sixth, there are a variety of practical considerations that, together, strongly recommend the practice of an evening worship service on the Sabbath Day.

For example, such a service provides another opportunity for ministers to preach and teach the Word of God. All the more in our day—when the church is not as biblically literate as it once was—reducing the number of times Christians hear the Word read and taught is hardly a recipe for spiritual prosperity; it is hardly a recipe for renewal. I give my own testimony as a preacher that, were it not for the evening service—a well attended evening service for which I am very grateful—there are a many parts of the Bible the congregation would never have had taught to it; there are many biblical themes that would never have been taught so comprehensively were I limited to a single sermon each week.

Further, the evening service provides a helpful structure to support the sanctification of the Lord’s Day. Christians universally find it much easier to keep the Lord’s Day holy and make proper use of its time if the hours following the morning worship are an interval between two services. Then there is a limited amount of time in the middle of the day to put to proper use before it is time to return to church. The definite structure of the day lends itself to obedience and to a wise use of the day.

In those churches where the Christian family is home from church at 11:00 a.m. or 1:00 p.m., with the remainder of the day to its end stretching before them and with no occasion to return to church, the sanctification of the day is provided no support and now depends entirely on the determined exercise of the will. We are finding in American evangelicalism that this is a recipe for disaster so far as the holiness of the Sabbath day is concerned. But, if keeping the Sabbath holy is one of the great engines of Christian faith, holiness, and joy—as the Bible teaches that it is—the loss of the Sabbath in the evangelical church is no small thing.

Furthermore, there is a character to the evening that lends to worship a particular character. Generations of Christians have known this from hallowed experience. The English poet, Meredith, has a line, “the largeness of the evening earth.” G.K. Chesterton, commenting on that line, wrote, “The sensation that the cosmos has all its windows open is very characteristic of evening…” The special character of evening hymns bears witness to the particular set of holy thoughts that crowd the soul in the evening hours. Christian worship on the Lord’s Day evening gains a special character from the hour.

God’s people through the ages have prized the second service. Christian children growing up with Sunday evenings at church remember them with a special fondness. Most Christians, I suppose, have the memory of a special spiritual atmosphere that attached to evening worship. We are, after all, talking about only another hour or two out of the entire week. Surely we should have a good reason—a very good reason—why we would not make a special effort to be in God’s house, to sing his praise and hear his Word, twice on the Lord’s holy Day. A day devoted to his worship and to the refreshment of our souls in him, surely is very naturally a day that begins and ends in God’s house, among God’s people, with his Word in our ears and his praise in our hearts.

by Dr. Robert S. Rayburn, pastor of Faith PCA in Tacoma, Washington, USA, June 30, 2003

Filed Under: Uncategorized

All Things For Good

21-February-15 by Pastor Larry Wilson

The story is told that, after a terrible shipwreck, a single survivor washed up on a small, uninhabited island. A believer in Christ, he prayed fervently to God for rescue. Day after day, he scanned the horizon for help, but saw nothing but water. Nothing but water! He tried to think of other things, but these lines from Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner kept echoing through his mind:

“Alone! Alone! All, all alone!
Alone on a wide, wide sea.
And not a saint took pity on
my soul in agony.”

With great difficulty, he managed to gather enough driftwood and debris to build a little hut to shelter him from the elements and to protect what few possessions he had salvaged. One day, after scavenging for food, he returned to find his little hut in flames, with smoke billowing up into the sky. He was stunned with disbelief, grief, and anger. He felt that now the worst had happened, that all was lost. He cried out, “God! How can you do this to me?” In hopeless despair, he fell to the sand and waited to die. Early the next day, he was awakened by the sound of a ship approaching the island. It had come to rescue him. “How did you know I was here?,” the weary man asked his rescuers. They replied. “We saw your smoke signal.”

The story is fictional, but the truth it illustrates is factual — “And we know that God causes all things to work together for the good of those who love him, who are called according to his purpose” (Rom 8:28). As the old gospel song puts it, “I don’t know what tomorrow holds, but I know Who holds tomorrow.”

“How good is the God we adore,
our faithful unchangeable Friend!
His love is as great as his pow’r,
and knows neither measure nor end!

“’tis Jesus the First and the Last,
whose Spirit shall guide us safe home,
we’ll praise him for all that is past,
and trust him for all that’s to come.”

(Joseph Hart, 1759)

Filed Under: Uncategorized

A Perfect Church, Or I Quit!

20-February-15 by Pastor Larry Wilson

In the wake of the Reformation, the anabaptists emphasized a pure church—they wanted a church that consisted exclusively of regenerate people who lived holy lives. Luther, Calvin, Ursinus, and other such reformers quickly distanced themselves from this unbiblical view of the church.

Some people in our day also withdraw from the church assembly because in their eyes it is impure, imperfect, or hypocritical. I love what J.C. Ryle said about this:

“…when St. Paul said, ‘Come out and be separate’, he did not mean that Christians ought to withdraw from every church in which there are unconverted members, or to refuse to worship in company with any who are not believers, or to keep away from the Lord’s Table if any ungodly people go up to it. This is a very common but a very grievous mistake. There is not a text in the New Testament to justify it, and it ought to be condemned as a pure invention of man. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself deliberately allowed Judas Iscariot to be an apostle for three years, and gave him the Lord’s Supper. He has taught us, in the parable of the wheat and tares, that converted and unconverted will be ‘together till the harvest’, and cannot be divided (Matt. 13.30). In his epistles to the seven churches, and in all St. Paul’s epistles, we often see faults and corruptions mentioned and reproved; but we are never told that they justify desertion of the assembly, or neglect of ordinances.

“In short, we must not look for a perfect church, a perfect congregation, and a perfect company of communicants, until the marriage supper of the Lamb. If others are unworthy churchmen, or unworthy partakers of the Lord’s Supper, the sin is theirs and not ours: we are not their judges. But to separate ourselves from church assemblies, and deprive ourselves of Christian ordinances, because others use them unworthily, is to take up a foolish, unreasonable, and unscriptural position. It is not the mind of Christ, and it certainly is not St. Paul’s idea of separation from the world” (Practical Religion, pp. 293–294).

Exactly. We should not forsake the assembly and become lone ranger, churchless Christians simply because we find faults in a church. We will always find it easy to spot impurity, imperfection, and hypocrisy in the church militant in this poor, fallen world during this present evil age. We might have to move from one church to another one for good doctrinal or practical reasons, but we shouldn’t “quit church” completely just because we cannot find a perfect one.

Compare:

  • A Prelude to Apostasy: Habitual Avoidance of Public Worship.
  • A Disembodied Gospel
  • Churchless Christians
  • The Church of God As An Essential Element of the Gospel

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Five Touchstones of Vital Worship

20-February-15 by Pastor Larry Wilson

“God is really among you” (1 Corinthians 14:25b)

Again and again we hear it. Some say, “Our worship seems so lifeless! How can we vitalize it? I know! Let’s add guitar and drums!” Others respond, “No! Worship should be marked by reverence!” The first group counters, “But shouldn’t it also be marked by joy?”

God does say that worship that is vital—both alive and life-giving—will be characterized by both reverence and joy. Why then do we keep finding ourselves choosing between them?

Could it be because we imagine that worship is primarily something that we do? Our sin is such that we easily fail to take seriously that the heart of true worship is that the living God himself meets with and works in his people through his means of grace. He alone can genuinely vitalize and build up his church. Since that is so, we need to get out of his way anything that might eclipse or distract from his supernatural working.

When our Lord himself is vitalizing worship, what will it look like? 1 Corinthians 14 gives five touchstones.

The Centrality of God’s Word

First, in vital worship, God addresses his people through his Word. Above all, worship is a meeting of the Triune God with his people. The Father draws near through his Son who works by his Holy Spirit to draw God’s people near to the Father in faith through the Son’s mediation (Eph. 2:18).

The Holy Spirit uses God’s Word to create this response of faith (Rom. 10:17; Eph. 6:17). That is why prophecy—the “forthtelling” of God’s Word—was permitted in public worship, while uninterpreted tongues was not (v. 28). Prophecy instructs and thereby edifies (v. 3). But because no one can understand uninterpreted tongues, they cannot build up (v. 2). On the other hand, interpreted tongues could properly be used in public worship during the apostolic era because it was a form of prophecy that brought God’s Word in an understandable way that could convert or edify people (vv. 5, 13, 18–19).

Prophecy and tongues have fulfilled their purpose; we don’t seek them today. Still, the underlying principle remains: the gifts our Lord designed to be central to public worship are those which he gives to teach and edify the church. In other words, the ministry of God’s Word will be central to vital worship.

Clarity and Order

This implies a second touchstone: “Let all things be done for building up” (v. 26). In vital worship, every element should be clear and understandable so that it edifies the church and God’s redeemed children.

Moreover, we tend to think that worship that is truly vital and vitalizing will be spontaneous; but surprisingly, God insists, third, that public worship should instead be marked by order. Why? Because it is God himself who gives vitality and he “is not a God of confusion but of peace” (v. 33). In view of that, in worship “all things should be done decently and in order” (v. 40).

One Voice at a Time

Fourth, because the Triune God of order himself is present to build up the church, only one “voice” will speak at a time in worship. In vital worship, God and his people commune with one another. Accordingly, there is the voice of God speaking to his assembled people, and there is the responsive voice of the congregation speaking to God. These voices are to be clear and distinct.

Those who have the spiritual gifts—and have been authorized to use them—speak on God’s behalf. Through them, our Lord himself addresses his gathered people. God says that “two or at most three, and each in turn” may speak (vv. 27, 29). Note that, first, only a few in the congregation may represent the voice of God in worship. Second, only one voice is to speak at a time (vv. 30–31). Our Lord wants his voice to be clear and edifying. And so verse 31 insists, “prophesy one by one, so that all may learn and all be encouraged.”

This is a fundamental principle of vital worship. Accordingly, in elements of worship where God speaks to the congregation, only one voice is to speak at a time. Likewise, in elements of worship where the congregation speaks to God, only one voice is to speak at a time.

Silence

This implies, fifth, that vital worship will be marked by substantial silence. Jesus said that in this new age of covenant fulfillment, worship is in Spirit and in Truth—that is, by the Holy Spirit and through the mediation of Christ (John 4:23–24). This adds a new dimension and dynamic to worship. Old Testament saints could truly worship but, by comparison, they were sort of kept at an arm’s length. But thanks to Christ’s accomplished work and thanks to the Holy Spirit’s application of that work, New Testament worship is personal and intimate in a way that Old Testament saints could only long for. Our great heavenly High Priest grants access into the very throne-room of God (Heb. 10:19–22). Our Lord Jesus thus graciously makes it possible for you to experience a new and deep interaction with the living God by his Spirit through his Word. And so there’s a tremendous activity that goes on when—in worship—the Triune God himself speaks to you and you genuinely listen in silence.

This helps toward understanding verses 33b–35. “As in all the churches of the saints, the women should keep silent in the churches. For they are not permitted to speak…” That prohibition is clear and emphatic. What we mustn’t overlook, however, is that the principle that the apostle applies to women also bears on everyone else’s attitude in public worship. It’s striking that this same imperative—“keep silent” (sigao)—is applied two other times in this same context (vv. 28, 30) —to men! The living God alone is the subject and object of true worship. Accordingly, when it’s not appropriate for you to speak, “keep silent.” That goes for everybody—men too, not just women.

How can we follow this? First, realize that in worship, non-speaking does not mean non-worshipping. God calls every one to participate actively during every element of worship. At the same time, the way you do that in most of public worship is by means of outward silence. As the minister reads or preaches God’s Word, everyone else is to be silent. But when you are really worshipping, then a lot of activity will go on in your silence. You will actively listen for God’s voice. The Holy Spirit will inwardly apply God’s Word. You will respond in faith. You will commune with your Lord himself by means of his ordinances. To keep silent in worship is not the same as to not participate in worship. Indeed, in order to participate fully, most of the congregation has to keep silent for most of the worship service.

Second, when the congregation as a whole speaks as a single voice to God, you should join your voice too. Your voice sincerely raised together with the church is part and parcel of vital worship. But so is your silence. The genuine worship which you offer God in silence is just as important and just as spiritual and just as vital. When God allows only a few men to speak on his behalf or to speak on behalf of the congregation, he does so precisely to enable you to enter more fully into the essence of worship—the intimacy of Spirit-and-truth communion with the living and true God.

How does this help toward solving our worship dilemma?

Vital worship thus is intensely Spiritual. Does this help expose why we keep finding ourselves choosing between reverence and joy in worship? Francis Schaeffer observed that it is possible to counterfeit holiness in the flesh, but it will be legalistic and censorious. It is possible to counterfeit love in the flesh, but it will be superficial and permissive. But it is impossible simultaneously to counterfeit holiness and love in the flesh; only the Holy Spirit can produce holy love and loving holiness.

Could it be that our worship dilemma arises because we are too fleshly? It is possible to counterfeit reverence in the flesh, but it will be sterile and joyless. It is possible to counterfeit joy in the flesh, but it will be shallow and irreverent. But it is impossible simultaneously to counterfeit reverence and joy in the flesh; only the Holy Spirit can produce reverent joy and joyful reverence. “It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh is of no avail” (Jn. 6:63a).

Accordingly, while these principles do have implications for our worship practices, the first step toward resolving our worship dilemmas is not to make external changes to those practices. The first step to cure counterfeit reverence is not to add guitars and drums, nor is the first step to cure counterfeit joy to insist on solemnity. The first step is to get down on our knees in repentance unto God for our sinful reliance on the flesh; it is to admit before him that in fact we are “wretched, pitiable, poor, blind, and naked” and that the grace of God in Christ is our only hope; it is to seek the Lord for the internal changes that will draw us into close fellowship with himself (Rev. 3:17–20).

Vital worship depends wholly upon the living God. And the living God is not limited by external circumstances. The living God can produce vital worship—Spirit-and-Truth communion with himself—in any circumstances, from cathedrals to catacombs, using a whole spectrum of preachers from brilliant orators to faithful plodders, using a whole spectrum of music from dazzling to dirge-like.

But you never will really enjoy Spirit-and-Truth communion with the living God unless the Holy Spirit regenerates you. It is impossible for you to participate in the spiritual intimacy of New Covenant worship unless you are in living contact with the living Christ. Apart from that, vital Biblical worship will always seem boring to you.

Moreover, unless you are abiding in Christ, vital Biblical worship will still seem boring to you. You’ll go to worship just to meet other people, or just to be entertained, or just to be intellectually stimulated, or just to be emotionally stirred, or just to be motivated to action. But you’ll miss the main point. Worship is first and foremost about communing with the living, life-giving God.

 

~ by Larry Wilson, February 2009

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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