Aristotle’s (Christian)
worship
I go to plenty of Christian worship services. That’s
the (usually) weekly gathering of God’s people as an expression of and preparation
for the whole of life worship that Scripture commends as the acceptable respond
to God’s mercy in Christ (Rom 12:1-2). It’s also an anticipation of life as part
of the crowd in the throne room of God’s new creation.
That’s an opportunity to think about the essence of gathered
worship – especially as I have just marked a bunch of student papers discussing
services of worship and attended my first charismatic service last Sunday as
part of celebrating the conversion of a Singapore nephew.
Aristotle has a useful distinction between substance
and accident. The substance of a thing is its “stuff’ that must be there for the
thing to be the thing that it is. The accident is the outward form of the substance.
Substance is definitional and ontological. Accident is contextual and variable.
Here’s some accidental expressions of my recent worship
experience:
·
The nephew’s church that was pitched
at a young audience through the hipsters on stage, a mesmerising moving display
on screen through most of the service, almost constant drum beat and four-note
keyboard offerings;
·
The very traditional service that I often
attend with vast pipe organ, robed choir, collared clergy, sung Lord’s Prayer
and set “free” liturgy;
·
A friend’s church at which I recently
preached in jeans and open necked shirt and where people raised hands, called out
etc.
I respect the first because its where a nephew was
found by grace. I love the second because it resonates with something in me – the
music in that church touches me like no other. I love the third for its energy
and life-connection – this otherwise fatigued preacher was energised.
Back to the student papers. They typically identified
the following elements as core to gathered worship:
·
It’s about God, not the worshippers;
·
Worship should be first vertical (directed
to God);
·
Worship should also be horizontal
(foster fellowship);
·
Worship should edify God’s people (in
all the senses of that word);
·
What we do should be Word-regulated
and gospel-shaped;
·
Gathered worship is significant in
itself and as preparation for life worship;
·
Essentials are:
o Reading
and preaching Scripture,
o Prayer
on multiple horizons (eg, Adoration, Confession, Thanks, Supplication)
o Sacraments,
o Singing
How do substance and accident relate?
Substance is easy ... it must be there for it to be
called worship.
Accident is tougher, because it varies. Those variations
will be a product of times and circumstances. Who is gathering? What is their sense
of space and time? Do they privilege order and predictability or spontaneity
and flexibility? And so, the questions roll.
How are these questions to be answered? Some different
answers may be: let’s do as we’ve always done; let’s do as we’ve not always
done; let’s do what I like; let’s do what most of the people like.
Here’s another way of answering those questions by
asking some further questions. It fits with what some older Christians called the
“general rules of the word”:
·
What will most glorify God? (1 Cor
10:31)
·
What will most build others up? (1
Cor 14:26)
·
What will least give needless
offense to others? (1 Cor 10:32)
·
What is decent and in good order? (1
Cor 14:40)
We can add a biggy to these worthy questions:
·
What will most point people to Jesus
and help them grow into him and in him? (Col 1:28; Eph 4:13-15)
A final observation: none of this is about me. It’s
all about serving God and others. And that’s why the charismatic service that
doesn’t “fit” to my style, the traditional service that I cherish and the service
that energises me are not the point. The point is to ask what celebrates God
and points people to his grace in Jesus. That’s no accident, Aristotelean or otherwise.