Remembering the Assembly


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Selected Scriptures
January 10, 2021
Lord’s Day Worship
Sean Higgins
The sermon starts around 18:55 in the audio file.
Or, The Pulpit, the Pews, and the Priesthood of Believers
Series: Our Worship #2
Introduction
The feedback after last Sunday’s sermon about liturgical feedback was encouraging, as in, many of you were encouraged. There is more to say today, and there will be more to say after today. My observations about what the liturgy has been working into us over the last decade or so are what they are, but those observations don’t say much about our objectives for following such a liturgy. While we can and should be thankful for the fruit, the liturgical seeds we’re sowing were not chosen just because we thought they would prepare us for something. They were chosen because we thought they would help our worship.
We always say something, not just by our words, but by what we choose to do and how we choose to do it, even when it becomes routine. Most of the time we just eat dinner and talk about the day. Sometimes the dinner is special and we talk about how tasty it was. But most nights we don’t all talk about the recipes used and the methods followed and the food presented. It’s all important, even strategic at different levels, but not explicit. We eat, we’re strengthened, we get back to work.
Our liturgy is like a recipe. It’s there, and those who lead the Lord’s Day liturgical charge consider it as they prepare, but we only talk about the recipe explicitly a few times a year. While there are many aspects to body life, our corporate worship on Sunday mornings is unique, and it works on and in us (and even through us) in ways that are worth knowing about. As should become more apparent as this message continues, the ingredients are not something only a few should know.
When I asked the elders about this round of liturgy reminders, they all agreed that it was worth setting a full table. We have been joined by a good number of worshippers who may like the taste, but may not have heard why we make it like this. We also have some among us who’ve been among us all along, but they are now twelve years-old instead of two, or they are saved instead of not, or they are different than they were and at a new stage of appreciating the meal. Then there are the rest of us who need regular reminders because we haven’t memorized the recipe. (Every once in while, someone who has otherwise enjoyed the taste freaks out when they hear what’s in it, but that’s not the norm.) I’m making the same meal of messages once more, but so far fresh.
We will consider the five Cs, why we chose to cook with those ingredients, what flavor we’re going for. But before that, there is an assumption that is only an assumption if you stop thinking about it.
Our liturgy (the recipe and ingredients and pattern) is for the worship of the assembly. It should not be surprising that one’s understanding of who worship is for affects how worship is conducted.
Our gathering together on the Lord’s Day is for corporate worship not for large-group evangelism. We meet as a church, we meet as those belonging to the Church, as those who confess that Jesus is Lord and believe in our hearts that God raised Him from the dead. Of course not everyone who comes is a Christian, and there are congregations, in different contexts of history and cultures, where one might expect a higher number of spiritually dead men to attend. But we are a group of worshippers, and the liturgy should help Christians to worship, not constantly question whether we are Christians.
That “church” (as a verb) is for the church (as a noun) is not assumed by many churches/pastors. But I’ve observed that of the churches that do think church is for the church, many still treat it like the worship of the church is for Christians, and treat them much more as individuals than as an assembly. It is [...]
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By Trinity Evangel Church