Not the ranting of a curmudgeon on the pitfalls of worship forms but a few remarks about the relationship between worship forms and culture inspired by an article in this month's issue of Christianity Today. In "Here We Are to Worship," (page 33) Brad Harper and Paul Louis Metzger give us six principles that should guide our efforts to keep worship relevant and authentically Christian. They draw these principles from John D. Witvliet's book, Worship Seeking Understanding.
The burden these six principles place on us is to answer this question in the affirmative: "Do changing worship forms adapted from popular culture facilitate an authentic encounter with God in Christ through the Holy Spirit as described by the Scriptures and understood by historic Christian orthodoxy?"
1. All liturgical action is culturally conditioned.
We've got to determine the level of contemporary culture's influence on our worship. How deeply influenced are our worship forms by Western consumer culture?
2. The relationship between liturgy and culture is theologically framed by creation and the Incarnation.
Creation implies that human cultural activity is a God-given good, and the Incarnation, with Christ coming in the flesh and taking upon Himself a particular cultural identity, shows us that God is fully capable of revealing Himself through the particularity of human cultures. Thus, popular culture forms and symbols can be utilized powerfully and positively in worship.
3. Integrating liturgy and culture requires us to be critical of our own cultural context.
Does a culturally-conditioned worship form represent God and communicate the Gospel with integrity? For instance, are we coming before the throne of God to offer him the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, or, are we simply looking for an ecstatic experience of a higher plane of reality? Are the needs we seek to address in worship the biblical needs of forgiveness of sin, repentance, and reconciliation with God and neighbor, or, are we simply seeking to address the popularly cultivated desires that drive the consumer marketplace?
4. The extremes of either complete identification with or rejection of a given culture should be avoided.
As Harper and Metzger state it, "The best array of worship forms will illustrate that the church is both embedded in culture, speaking through its constantly changing forms, and also a countercultural community, one that represents transcendent values and truths that confront cultures' fallenness."
5. Worship must reflect common elements of the Christian tradition through the unique expressions of a particular cultural context.
In tailoring a church's worship to a particular culture or subculture, we must be careful that those outside that particular culture be able to connect the church's worship to Christ and the Gospel. Harper and Metzger make the point that the strategy adopted by larger churches of offering both a contemporary service and a traditional service effectively divides congregations, as younger people invariably opt for the contemporary service and the older for the traditional. If we continue to divide churches into smaller and smaller segments, such as adult Sunday school classes and youth groups, for instance, when are there opportunities for a particular church to come together as a single multigenerational and multicultural community to worship its common Lord?
6. The liturgical actions of the church—including proclamation of the Word, common prayer, baptism, and Eucharist—are among the "universal" or common factors in the Christian tradition.
While it is essential for the Church to communicate the Gospel and draw people to worship God in ways that appeal to their particular cultural situations, we must not forget that the Church is a historical community that "always finds its identity in the same God revealed in Jesus Christ." As such, we must maintain a certain continuity in our symbols and forms of worship with those of the past. The symbols, rituals, creeds, and texts that have united Christians throughout the ages are nonnegotiable because without them we forget who we are and we risk losing the central theological and relational realities that can only be expressed therein.
Imagine expressing Christ's sacrificial death and the life we must live as a response in any way other than through the cross. What about the Lord's Supper? In light of the importance of bread in the biblical narrative (think about the manna in the Exodus, the showbread in the temple, or the miracle of the loaves and fishes) and the appropriateness of breaking bread to symbolize the breaking of Christ's body, could we use anything other than bread here? Can you think of a replacement for wine that better represents life, blood, sacrifice, and judgment? How better do we express the central reality of the Church, namely, Christ dead, buried, and risen, and the communal character of His body than through this most elemental meal?
How does this all relate to the question of contemporary versus traditional worship? I think these principles are sustainable in either worship form. At any rate, in either form we must maintain the tension between the ancient, normative liturgical actions and the culturally-determined innovations that aim at relevant expression of "the faith once delivered to the saints" and worship of the Triune God. Perhaps the best way to do so is to combine elements of contemporary and traditional worship forms.
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3 comments:
Interesting. However, I'm not sure I can agree with your final conclusion: "Perhaps the best way to do so is to combine elements of contemporary and traditional worship forms." When I think of how the Orthodox Liturgy has survived almost unchanged (for the most part) for at least 1,500 years and how it's transcended Byzantine culture, Russian culture, Arab culture, and now post-soviet culture, I realize that it's probably a good example that shows how worship doesn't need to be "contemporary." It's true that each culture leaves it's mark (e.g., Russian vs. Greek), but that mark is insignificant compared to what's happened to the liturgy under Protestantism and Vatican II.
When considering contemporary forms of worship (i.e., making worship fit a "modern" lifestyle) I can't help but consider the Church Fathers' teaching on the fall of Adam. According to the Fathers Adam fell because he turned his contemplation away from God and to himself, that's the original sin. I can't help to think that if we make worship for us, rather than making ourselves for worship, haven't we just reenacted the original sin of contemplating ourselves instead of God?
P.S. Happy Feast of the Transfiguration
Dustin, you raise the fundamental question. For whom is our worship, Is it for us, or, is it for Him? I agree. We can't make worship for us, but must make ourselves for worship. That will preach!
My worry is that the church becomes too much like the world if we let the culture dictate how we worship or what we believe. Yet we are also called to be all things for all men. Nevertheless, the church must always be in a position to critique the culture and call it to repentance. The duality between church and culture is undesirable but the church must always be in the position of conforming culture to the dictates of the Gospel rather than the other way around.
As far as the Orthodox liturgy is concerned, if ain't broke, don't fix it! Catholicity is at play here. That an Orthodox can enter an Orthodox church in any part of the world and know exactly what is going on and Who is being exalted and lifted high is quite impressive.
Indeed, I hope you have enjoyed a blessed Feast of the Transfiguration.
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