One of my
neighbors was ordained years ago to the office of Elder in the Reformed
denomination of which I'm a member. Thankfully, he has since time
aligned himself with a non-denominational Bible church. While still in his former denomination I remember this
man saying to me in my dining room how he was looking to spend the church’s money in the hiring of an
extremely talented non-Christian electric guitarist who would be paid to
critique the church’s corporate worship style. This “consultant” would help the
church become more “cutting edge” in their worship so that they might attract
the lost.
A few years
before that I attended a Reformed church (same denomination) in San Diego while
away on business. Before the first song the minister apologized to the congregation
by saying that although they would be standing to sing "because we are Presbyterian," he assured them there was no need to stand. This amendment was not intended to accommodate the aged but rather it was intended to
communicate a laid back approach to worship. The elementary school aged boy in
front of me took the minister up on the offer (and then some). He sat
comfortably sprawled out in his chair as he read a racing car magazine. As the
pastor paced the stage with his Big Gulp in hand, he drew the analogy in his sermon
that the Savior on the cross was like the pastor’s daughter who had been held
down by force on a hospital bed by her father as the doctor administered a painful needle. After several other misleading word-pictures including defining justification as "a fancy word for having a new heart,” the minister ended the sermon by singing the benediction
in a rock style genre while strumming a guitar. His parting words boasted “be a
Christian but live like a golfer.”
Today I
attended a church (same denomination) by invitation because of a baptism that
was to take place. Amazingly in God’s plan I was used to persuade the
parents of the biblical case for covenant baptism – all the more reason I felt
a happy obligation to worship away from my home church. Out of twenty five
minutes of singing, no song except for the offertory was familiar to anyone in
my family. The only familiar tune was America the Beautiful. Contemporary is
one thing. Sectarian and esoteric is something else. To be so far detached from
not only the historic Christian church but the church of this present age so as
to sing all unfamiliar tunes to the well churched ear is, I
think, problematic.
In today’s
worship we were told that biblical repentance always brings forth fruit, but a
Christian can be one who has not yet repented. After the service was over and
the Senior Minister was walking down the aisle, the atmosphere was so casual
that a prominent member felt at liberty to yell to the Senior Minister that the
congregation agrees to pray and look out for the baptized children even though
the minister had forgotten to take a show of hands, apparently a tradition of
theirs that was overlooked that Sunday. The Senior Minister was seemingly
embarrassed.
Much can be
said about the casual approach to worship that is pervasive in the church today
and more often than not accompanied by a corrupted gospel message, which is no
gospel at all. It is good to be reminded from time to time that Moses takes off
his shoes when he encounters God; Isaiah is undone; Job puts his hand over his
mouth and repents in dust and ashes; Peter asks the Lord to depart from him
because he is a sinful man; and John falls down as a dead man. Does our
adoption as sons in Christ somehow diminish the sacred and the holy? Or is it
true that a God who is not perceived as transcendent, but only worshipped as our
friend, is not the true and living God? If joy without reverence is not
God-inspired joy, then it must be the work of the flesh.
I believe
the unsaved have a better intuitive grasp of appropriate worship than professing
Christians do sometimes, which is why it breaks my heart to see un-churched
relatives attend such “worship” services. Casual “worship” becomes a
stumbling block to the lost (and the saved) because it is not consistent with
who God is and what he has done in his marvelous works of creation, providence
and grace. It seems to me that evangelicals were more outraged by the
inappropriateness of Michelle Obama touching the Queen in 2009 than they
are with casual worship before a righteous and holy God.
Even in
the Reformed church I’m afraid, Reformation is being replaced by
Revolution. There seems to be a concerted effort to overthrow
corporate confession of sin; assurance of pardon; historic Trinitarian creeds;
OT and NT Scripture reading; Psalm singing; hymns written by theologians,
sung by the one holy, catholic and apostolic church; and expository preaching. How can this be deemed an improvement?
I know there
is no perfect church, and I don’t think I’m looking for one – far from it I
think. I’m just looking for decency and order for my household. Thankfully, we
have much more than that at my home church. By God's grace we enjoy the elements of Reformed, Trinitarian worship.
Lord
willing, we’ll worship at our home church this coming Sunday.