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The Scriptural Law of Worship
by Carl W. Bogue
What thing soever I command you, observe to do it:thou shalt not add
thereto, nor diminish from it.Deuteronomy 12:32
Officers in the Presbyterian Church take a solemn vow in which we
"sincerely receive and adopt" the Westminster Confession and Catechisms
"as containing the system of doctrine taught in the Holy Scriptures." And
yet, the vow we take and the worship we lead are often strange bedfellows.
Faith and practice often lead down two different roads. It is a question
of integrity that motivates this article. Although specifics are used for
illustration, I am not settled on (or desirous of fighting for) all the
specifics. What I care about very much is the principle involved. Do we
carelessly affirm without objection our Confession of Faith, while
ignoring the implications of that Confession? A case in point is the
scriptural law of worship, commonly referred to as the regulative
principle of worship.
Few would question the fact that the regulative principle of worship is
systemic to our Confession. It is not an unimportant incidental, but it is
a determinative principle of our own Reformation approach. Sola Scriptura!
Yet I perceive that few pastors really come to grips with it in practice.
We do things because we have always done them that way, or because they
are "effective," or they seem "nice" to us.
Take a sampling of worship from across the land and you will find that
tradition, pragmatism, success, and even superstitions, are foundational
to much worship; but rarely do we find a self-conscious submission to the
Reformation principle of Scripture alone. Gordon Clark tells of a
Christmas service in which a part of the so-called worship was performed
by a troupe of ballet dancers. Writes Clark:
When I remarked, upon being pressed for an opinion, that ballet was a bit
incongruous with divine worship, one of the ministers replied that any
exercise that stimulates love of humanity is appropriate in church. Then I
tried to tell him of the Puritan principle of the law of God from which we
should not turn aside, either to the right hand or the left. And since
this minister expatiated on love versus law, I quoted "if ye love me, keep
my commandments." But he concluded the conversation, politely enough, by
saying that my viewpoint appeared legalistic to him.[1]
There is little willingness to be in subjection to God and His Word,
especially among religious people. I said religious, not Christian.
Worship is fundamental to every creature. It is extremely important. Yet
the Church in general and Christians individually give all too little
thought to what they do and why they do it. There is no society of people,
however enlightened, that does not practice worship in some form.
Paragraph 1 of chapter 21 of the Westminster Confession asserts this fact,
and draws out the scriptural law of worship——what traditionally is called
the regulative principle of worship.
The light of nature showeth that there is a God, who hath lordship and
sovereignty over all; is good, and doeth good unto all; and is therefore
to be feared, loved, praised, called upon, trusted in, and served, with
all the heart, and with all the soul, and with all the might. But the
acceptable way of worshipping the true God is instituted by himself, and
so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshipped
according to the imaginations and devices of men, or the suggestions of
Satan, under any visible representation, or any other way not prescribed
in the holy Scripture.
In the following discussion, I want to note the nature of worship, the
scriptural law of worship, a specific scriptural example of this
principle, and subsequent results when it was violated.
The Nature of Worship
The first sentence of paragraph 1 (cited above) sets the stage. What is
here affirmed is that the obligation to render supreme worship and devoted
service to God is a dictate of nature as well as a doctrine of special
revelation. The worship of a Supreme Being is a universal instinct, and
because of the sovereignty, majesty, and holiness of the Object of
worship, it must be surrounded by such safeguards, restrictions, and
sanctions as will preserve the divine honor and secure the acceptance of
the worshipper and his worship.
Every worshipper of God needs a definite and clear understanding of what
is acceptable to God. Without such a revealed standard we are like the
Athenians of old, worshipping "unknown gods"! Why are we so inclined to
incur God’s wrath for illicit worship rather than diligently seeking and
heeding divine revelation on the matter? God is holy and jealous for the
purity of His worship. We, therefore, are to be watchful, lest we follow
the path of Romanism into all sorts of idolatry and human inventions.
Is this not of vital concern to us? Yet it is an ideal area for stepping
on toes. This is not our aim, but the questions must be asked. Is God the
sovereign Lord of all? Does He reserve the right to tell us what is proper
in His own house? Does He determine how we are to approach Him? Or, does
He leave a margin for our intrusion?
We are very conscious of what we would readily identify as gross
scriptural violations in the Roman Catholic Church, with its ceremonies
and human inventions. But Protestantism is not exempt from "aids to
worship" that rival the true worship of God. Although the lines have
blurred, historically one can see the difference on this issue between
Lutherans and Anglicans, who claim a place for rites and services which
may be approved by the Church so long as they are not forbidden by the
Scriptures, and the Reformed Churches (along with their descendants) who
take higher ground and claim that the line is drawn excluding everything
that is not by divine appointment. In other words, what is not commanded
is forbidden. Many Presbyterian and Reformed Churches have abandoned their
heritage in many areas, including worship. Some Presbyterian Churches
could rival the Lutherans and Episcopalians, if not Rome itself, with
their robes, candles, rituals, rites, advent wreaths and manger scenes.
The nature of worship, with the eternal, all-holy God as the object, is to
be protected by what Scripture alone teaches. Our Confession and
Catechisms seek to honor this principle, and it is inexcusable for one who
is an officer in a Presbyterian Church to be ignorant of, or to ignore,
the clear teaching of our standards. Question 51 of the Shorter Catechism,
regarding what is forbidden in the second commandment, states: "The second
commandment forbiddeth the worshipping of God by images, or by any other
way not appointed in his word." Question 109 of the Larger Catechism says,
in part, "The sins forbidden in the second commandment are, all devising,
counselling, commanding, using, and any wise approving, any religious
worship not instituted by God himself ... all superstitious devices,
corrupting the worship of God, adding to it, or taking from it...."
Therefore, the nature of worship leads us to consider the scriptural law
of worship.
The Scriptural Law of Worship
We see in the second half of paragraph 1 the explicit teaching on the
scriptural law of worship:
But the acceptable way of worshipping the true God is instituted by
himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be
worshipped according to the imaginations and devices of men, or the
suggestions of Satan, under any visible representation, or any other way
not prescribed in the holy Scripture.
We want to direct our attention to the scriptural teaching undergirding
this doctrine, what is traditionally referred to as the regulative
principle of worship. In the institution of worship, in both testaments,
what God appoints alone can stand; all else is excluded. Stated another
way: what God commands in worship is alone permitted.
One could expect and infer this principle from the fact that God is the
great and sovereign Lord whom we worship. Such a matter of divine worship
is hardly something left to the desires and inventions of men. God is Lord
of His own house, which cannot have two lords or masters. "I am the Lord,
that is My name; and My glory I will not give to another" (Isaiah 42:8).
"The sovereignty, majesty, and holiness of God require that in all matters
pertaining to our approach to Him in holy worship, it is His to command
and ours to obey."[2] God is God; there is none other! Scripture carefully
prescribes provisions to safeguard against human intrusions into God’s
realm.
The sacredness of this trust, the gravity of violation, is impressed upon
us in many places in the holy Scripture, but especially in Deuteronomy. In
Deuteronomy 4:1-2, God gives His firm command in general:
Now, O Israel, listen to the statutes and the judgments which I teach you
to observe, that you may live, and go in and possess the land which the
Lord God of your fathers is giving you. You shall not add to the word
which I command you, nor take anything from it, that you may keep the
commandments of the Lord your God which I command you.
If we see what follows, especially verses 13-19, we see worship is a part
of what God has in view. Notice especially verse 19: "And take heed, lest
you lift your eyes to heaven, and when you see the sun, the moon, and the
stars, all the host of heaven, you feel driven to worship them and serve
them, which the Lord your God has given to all the peoples under the whole
heaven as a heritage." The great King and Head of the Church is a jealous
Lord. He tolerates no rivals. In Deuteronomy 12, God is much involved in
giving details for worship. And in Deuteronomy 12:32, He gives a fitting
conclusion: "Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall
not add to it nor take away from it."
Such assertions are not absent from the New Testament. Christ strongly
rebukes the Pharisees for their humanistic traditions (see Mark 7:1-3;
Matthew 15:1-9). In Colossians 2, Paul gives us the well-known attack upon
"will-worship." In verse 16 and following, Paul speaks of holy days,
festivals, and the like. He deals with a prominent heresy of his day,
namely Gnosticism, which saw matter as evil and thus spiritualized
everything. From this outlook came a strong emphasis on asceticism and
monasticism. Then, moving to Colossians 2:23, we see what the inspired
apostle concludes: "These things have an appearance of wisdom in
self-imposed religion, false humility, and neglect of the body, but are of
no value against the indulgence of the flesh." "Appearance of wisdom"—
much worship appears pious, but it is appearance only, because it is
"self-imposed religion." It is not commanded by God, but self-imposed. The
King James version translates it, "will-worship."
"Will-worship" is an excellent phrase to remember, for that is what it
is——worship of one’s own will. Man tries to become God and decides what is
worship. It is a form of idolatry, whether in the restricted area of
worship, or the broader area, as is prevalent today under the name of
humanism, i.e., man as the measure of all things. In such cases, man
worships the creature rather than the Creator; and God condemns it. God
commands how He will be worshipped. We are not to add to or take away!
There is a corollary which is generally understood in any law, namely,
that when something is commanded the opposite is forbidden. The sixth
commandment states that you shall not murder. The opposite is the double
negative: you shall not, not protect life——i.e., do all you can to protect
life. So when the command says, "You shall worship the Lord your God, and
Him only you shall serve," it also prohibits the giving of worship to any
other. The worship of the sun, the moon, the stars, the Virgin Mary, the
Apostles, or any of the saints, is all cast out with one divine command.
The command to worship God covers it all; all other worship is wrong. The
fundamental point, however, is on the prohibition of whatever is not
commanded. Not just things contrary to the Word, but even apparently
neutral things. Jesus condemned the tradition of the Pharisees, not always
because it contradicted divine law, but because it was in addition to it.
The line between neutral and contrary is often blurred. Rome justifies
many of her perversions on the grounds that they are not contrary to the
Word. Worship of the Virgin Mary, confession to a priest, paying money to
get one out of purgatory, sale of indulgences to cover sin, and a legion
of other heresies are argued on such grounds. Even if some such things are
not forbidden (which is rarely the case), the plea to permit in worship
what is not forbidden is a Trojan horse filled with disaster. It was said
that John Newton was a great lover of cats. Once he possessed a mother cat
and a kitten. To aid the cats and keep down his own interruptions, he had
two holes cut in the door _ one for the old cat, and a smaller one for the
kitten. It had not occurred to him that the hole that would admit the
larger cat would also admit the kitten; indeed, it would not only admit
two cats, but any number of cats.[3]
When you make an opening in the door of God’s house large enough to admit
divided chancels, candles to aid worship, holy days and seasons such as
Ash Wednesday (dare I say Easter and Christmas?), that same hole is likely
in time to admit the worship of the Virgin Mary, prayers to St. Peter,
confession to a priest, holy water, kissing the Pope’s toe, and a whole
host of pollutions and monstrosities from which the Church, by God’s
grace, escaped in the great revival of biblical Christianity during the
Reformation of the sixteenth century.[4]
The great principle spelled out in paragraph 21:1 of our Confession, that
only what is commanded has a place in worship, is one of the great
cornerstones of the Reformation. Without this principle it is doubtful
whether "Protestantism" would ever have broken the Roman bondage. I see
nothing in Scripture, or, for that matter, in sanctified common sense,
that should cause us to waver in the least from the regulative principle
of worship as set forth so clearly in this paragraph.
Before moving to the next point, a question and a tentative application
emerge. It is a question we must take seriously. If God has spoken, can we
but obey? Not what seems right to me, but what does God say?
My struggle is very real and personal. I am convicted of things now that I
was unaware of several years ago. That struggle comes in application and
the ramifications of our applications. How do we change a long-standing
tradition if we are convinced it is wrong? Suddenly, or gradually? Your
congregation will ask: "Why is it wrong now, but it was acceptable last
week or last year?" My plea and my question are matters of principle. Are
we prepared to take Scripture seriously, wherever it leads us?
Let me suggest a couple of examples that some may never have taken
seriously. The first concerns Christmas. Where in Scripture are we
commanded to incorporate the celebration of Jesus’ birthday as an annual
integral part of worship? You will find a lot of tradition, but zero
exegesis.
On the basis of scriptural teaching, as reflected in paragraph 21:1 of the
Confession, I wish there were no intrusions at all in worship which
promote the celebration of "holidays" such as Christmas (or Christ-mass as
it was originated in Roman error). I struggle with whether I may purposely
coincide an incarnation related exposition of Scripture with the day when
men wrongly imagine to do so is somehow a sacred obligation. So also with
Easter——named, I might add, after the pagan goddess of spring! To preach
and sing about the birth and the resurrection of Christ is certainly
proper worship. Celebration of Christmas and Easter as annual holy days is
not. My battle is whether my saying so is enough, or whether my preaching
topic gives the appearance of condoning what is wrong.
But here is a challenge for you as a worshipper. You come to worship on
that Sunday in December that is considered to be "Christmas Sunday." We
sing three or four non-Messianic Psalms, including Psalm 83, which praises
God for utterly wiping out His enemies; and I preach an expository sermon
on demon possession, or on 2 Samuel 21 and the execution of Saul’s
grandsons. Would you feel cheated? Would you feel as if you had not really
worshipped? Would it seem less spiritual to you? Would you be embarrassed
for the guest you brought for an expected Christmas worship service? If
that is so, I suggest you have a serious spiritual problem and are in need
of repentance and serious rethinking about worship.
The other example concerns our Covenanter friends. They sing exclusively
Psalms in worship. The average Presbyterian would be horrified to think he
couldn’t sing "The Old Rugged Cross" or "I Come to the Garden." My
challenge to you is to know why you disagree, if you do! Is it because of
will worship, i.e., you will decide how you worship God? Or is it because
you are convinced God in His Word commands you to sing man-inspired hymns?
We say we agree with them about the regulative principle, that only what
God commands is permitted. But I fear many Presbyterian pastors and elders
have never really brought their practice to the touchstone of Scripture.
They sing hymns for the same reason Roman Catholics cross themselves and
have statues of Mary and the saints. Their tradition instills it, and it
feels worshipful to them. That is not a valid reason. Does God command it?
We do exclusive Psalm-singers a grave injustice if we put them down in a
way that makes our affirmation of the Catechisms and Confession hypocrisy.
An exclusive Psalm-singer can tell you why he is in terms of the
Westminster Confession, 21:1. My challenge to you is that you had better
join with him unless or until you can justify non-Psalms in a way
consistent with the regulative principle. Any thing less is will-worship.
God says: "Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not
add to it nor take away from it."
A Biblical Example
Let us now consider an example from God’s Word, specifically an example
that underscores God’s displeasure with those who violate His law of
worship. It is perhaps the most dramatic example of all: Nadab and Abihu
and the lesson of "strange fire." It is a lesson we should never forget.
"Strange fire" has specific reference to Leviticus 10:1-2:
Then Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer and put fire
in it, put incense on it, and offered profane fire before the Lord, which
he had not commanded them. So fire went out from the Lord and devoured
then, and they died before the Lord.
From this event, let us consider five aspects: (1) the setting, (2) the
sin, (3) the sincerity, (4) the successors, and (5) the sophistry.
First consider the setting. In moving from Leviticus chapter 9 to 10, we
have a melancholy transition from a scene of high, festive, but holy
rejoicing, to a scene of awful judgment and heart-rending sorrow. The
tabernacle had been finished. Aaron and his four sons, Nadab, Abihu,
Eleazer, and Ithamar, had been consecrated to the priesthood. The
sacrifices had been prepared. Moses and Aaron had solemnly blessed the
congregation. The divine requirements had been complied with; and
attesting to God’s acceptance of their services, His glory had appeared to
all the people with fire from heaven miraculously descending upon the
altar and kindling a flame never to be quenched. God was pleased and so
gave testimony. In the midst of this solemn and holy occasion, when all
the assembled host were bowing before the Lord in joyous worship, an act
of rash, presumptuous sacrilege on the part of Nadab and Abihu occurred;
and in a moment the scene turned from one of worship to one of woe.
Scarcely had the heavenly fire come down in mercy to consume the
sacrifice, when it again descended to consume the sacrificers. The words
were few, but of fearful and solemn significance. The enormity of their
sin is seen in the punishment which immediately came upon them. They were
struck dead with their firepans in their hands, without a moment of
warning. That is the setting.
Secondly, we need to be clear about the sin! What was the essence of their
sin? Several commentators mention aspects that may be part and parcel to
their sin. But there is agreement as to the primary sin which was so
displeasing to Jehovah. They sinned by offering strange fire before the
Lord. Verse 1 tells us they each took a censer, or firepan. A firepan was
a vessel for carrying live coals. The priest would put the coals in the
pan and sprinkle them with the frankincense, in order to create an
agreeable aroma in the sanctuary. Profane fire was offered in those
firepans, i.e., fire other than that which the Lord had commanded. God
sent a supernatural fire to consume the first sacrifice offered to Him.
This fire was to be kept perpetually alive, and from it only were coals to
be taken for the burning of incense. This was what God commanded as part
of their worship. This procedure is specified, for example, in Leviticus
16:12: "Then he shall take a censer full of burning coals of fire from the
altar before the Lord, with his hands full of sweet incense beaten fine,
and bring it inside the veil."
You see the point emerging: the regulative principle! It was not that God
had specifically forbidden other fires to be used. The issue is His
appointment of a particular fire, and the conclusion is that whatever is
not commanded is therefore forbidden. Many professing Christians would no
doubt be offended at such a restriction. After all, all they did was
worship God in a way He had not commanded, not in a way He had explicitly
forbidden. Why should it matter where the fire came from? So they used
fire of their own making! It would probably burn as brightly and consume
the incense just as well. No doubt many would say, "It is just as good."
But it lacked the peculiar mark of sanctity. It was not of God’s
appointment; it was not divine fire. If you can understand the nature of
their sin, then everything else will fall into place. If you miss what was
wrong with their fire, you will fight every conclusion along the way. Was
God displeased? Was their act sin? As a mighty judgment, fire from heaven,
like a blazing bolt of lightning, consumed them, and they died before the
Lord. Whether it was in a way not commanded, or at a time not commanded,
or in a place not commanded, the key point is this: it was not commanded,
and therefore it was wrong. They had intruded a merely human device into
holy things, thus usurping God’s prerogative, and they died for their sin!
One could leave it there, but there are at least three more things we need
to understand.
We should consider, thirdly, the presumed sincerity of Nadab and Abihu. We
are not told, but I would imagine they meant well in what they did. It may
have seemed to them the right thing to do. After such a marvellous display
of God’s power as they had witnessed, why not, as a token of reverence and
adoration, offer incense in the most immediate presence of Jehovah? Why
should minor variations from God’s appointment as to the manner, time, or
place matter very much—so long as they were sincere, and their motive was
worship? Is that not the way our minds would work? Nevertheless, their
motive and sincerity made no difference. Fire from heaven consumed them.
Good intentions do not stop God’s judgment on disobedience. In fact, if we
can infer anything from this incident, it is the added responsibility of
those in authority and privilege. Nadab and Abihu had so recently been
consecrated to the priesthood. They were sons, indeed the two eldest sons,
of Aaron the high priest. They were honored men in Israel. They
accompanied Moses and their father to the summit of the holy mountain and
were favored with a vision of God such as mortal eyes had never seen. None
of the 70 elders who went are mentioned by name, but Exodus 24 expressly
designates Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu. Now they had just been
assisting their father and Moses in the sacred offerings. They were at the
summit. Yet amidst it all, they sinned. And the gravity of their sin may
not be dismissed because of their sincerity.
A fourth and important consideration for us concerns the successors of
this sin. The particular sin of Nadab and Abihu can never be repeated now.
But as to its inner nature and essence it is perhaps the most common sin
in all ages. For the essence of their sin was what Paul, in Colossians 2,
calls will-worship, or self-made religion. They did not consult the
revealed will of God regarding the way in which He would be served, but
their own fancy and inclination, what "seemed good" to them. God’s
directions were full and explicit; but Nadab and Abihu apparently imagined
that the fragrance of their incenses, and its intrinsic suitableness to
express their good intentions, were sufficient to let them neglect strict
obedience to the revealed will of God regarding worship.
King Uzziah is another man in history who sought to worship God in his own
way. King Uzziah entered the temple to burn incense before the Lord. That
he was king was now irrelevant. The priests were horrified, and 80 of them
rushed in after him and opposed him, saying, "It is not for you, Uzziah,
to burn incense to the Lord, but for the priests, the sons of Aaron, who
are consecrated to burn incense. Get out of the sanctuary, for you have
trespassed! You shall have no honor from the Lord God" (2 Chronicles
26:18). The king was offended to think his worship was not acceptable to
God. Enraged, he persisted, and sacred Scripture tells us that God caused
a leprosy to appear on his forehead. "They thrust him out of that place.
Indeed he also hurried to get out, because the Lord had struck him" (verse
20). The king was a leper to the day of his death. For any one, even the
king, to intrude into the temple, and thus add to God’s command, was an
offense to God; and God showed His displeasure.
When Nadab and Abihu offered strange fire and were slain, Moses told Aaron
it was the Lord who spoke in judgment. Leviticus 10:3 states: "Then Moses
said to Aaron, "This is what the Lord spoke, saying: ‘By those who come
near Me I must be regarded as holy; and before all the people I must be
glorified.’"
In all ages men have been prone to commit this same sin. It is true in the
New Testament dispensation the Lord has left more freedom within worship
than in the detailed ritual of Old Testament ceremonies. It is also true
that there will always be differences among faithful Bible-believing
Christians who seek God’s honor. Exegetical questions, questions of
liberty, and how far such liberty extends are necessary questions. But
this much is clear: wherever we lack clear divine warrant for what we do
in the worship of God, we need to be exceedingly careful lest, like Nadab
and Abihu, we be guilty of offering "strange fire" which the Lord has not
commanded. Go into a typical place of worship today, and you will see a
multitude of remarkable devices and practices by which, it is imagined,
the worship and adoration of God are furthered. The generation of Nadab
and Abihu is not extinct. Will-worship, self-made religion, has confused
the commands of God with the practices and traditions of man. Nadabs are
numerous; Abihus abound. Their successors are in control, although God has
never changed His law.
This brings us somewhat naturally to our last point, namely, the sophistry
associated with this debate. Sophistry is a word coined in reference to
the Sophists of the fifth century before Christ, a school of philosophers
that were more concerned with their clever use of reason than they were
with truth. Their skill was in using reason to win an argument by
deceiving their less able opponents. It was not true reason, but a subtle
deception, and thus when people use what seems reasonable to convince one
of an untruth, it is called sophistry.
The deception goes like this: Is God’s law still in effect? That is, may
we not do these extras now? And they answer, no, we are free from the law.
Or perhaps they will reason that God does not regard it as a serious
offense, otherwise we would see such judgments every day as happened to
Nadab and Abihu. You see the deception! How many use it in practice every
day.
Because they don’t see God’s judgment, they are at peace. But because
those who offend God do not reap the punishment immediately is no proof
that God has ceased to hold men accountable for intruding on holy ground
and offering strange fire. One judgment of this kind gives us a warning
for all time. Because all liars are not struck dead for their
prevarications, as were Annanias and Sapphira, is no indication that God
has ceased to hate lying. One swift, terrible judgment like that should
suffice for all time and give us some idea as well about the everlasting
punishment for such, when all debts are truly settled. One example of
Nadab and Abihu should be clear. "In vain do they worship Me, teaching as
doctrines the commandments of men."
Some would react strongly against the practices of Rome. Others might be
offended when pizza and Pepsi are substituted for the bread and wine in
the Lord’s supper. But some of these same critics think a white rose
dipped in water is a nice aid to the sacrament of baptism, or that a
proliferation of symbols and candles aids them in a more spiritual
worship. There are advent wreaths and alleged pictures of Jesus. Where was
the line drawn? What other than will-worship makes symbolic candles upon
the communion table (misnamed altar) differ from Nadab and Abihu’s strange
fire? You decide one thing; Rome decides another; and Nadab and Abihu do
their thing. There is only one way for those who would worship God in a
way acceptable to Him. Do what He commands alone. Do not add to it, or
take away from it. That is the regulative principle of worship. What God
thinks of those who violate it is clear in Leviticus 10:1-3.
A Concluding Hypothetical Example
I want to conclude with a hypothetical example. Like the text from
Leviticus, the example pertains to the clergy. But this should not
distract us from the fact that every creature is responsible for purity
before God, and my error is no excuse for your participation in sin. All
of us must one day give account before God for our actions.
This is my example. It is hypothetical. It is valid to the degree that it
reflects accurately God’s Word. It may well be offensive to some. But I
hope it will vividly set forth the application of Leviticus 10:1-3, and
the teaching of 21:1 of the Confession.
A young man, well-schooled, was ordained to the gospel ministry. His
father and grandfather were both pastors before him. It was a joyous day
when he was ordained and called to his first congregation. The following
Lord’s day, his first in his new congregation, there was a great spirit of
excitement among his flock. The church had lost its vitality. Membership
was down. Maybe the answer was the new shepherd.
The pastor was equally motivated and desirous of seeing revival within the
congregation. The congregation sang vigorously, the pastoral prayer was
well-organized and reflected well what the congregational prayer should
be. The sermon was a powerful exposition of the Word, giving evidence of
study and ability. Then at the close of the sermon, the pastor declared
that there was something missing in the congregation’s worship, something
which he would institute this very first Sunday as a regular part of their
worship service, something which has blessed many congregations and
brought revival and success to dead churches.
"Right now, and every Sunday," the young man said, "we will have an
invitation, an altar call, and the unsaved will be invited to come forward
to receive Christ."
The congregation stirred momentarily from its lethargy, and thought to
itself, "How clever and zealous is our new pastor!"
"This is what I want you to do right now," the pastor said. "Get up and
come to the front. Don’t let distance keep you from Jesus Christ. If you
want to receive Jesus Christ, the way to do it is to come forward."
And before the organ could even begin to play "Just As I Am," fire came
down from heaven and consumed him. The father and grandfather were both
present for their son’s first service. As they came forward to carry his
body from the front of the sanctuary, the congregation as one remembered
the words which Moses said to Aaron in Leviticus 10:3. "This is what the
Lord spoke, saying: ‘By those who come near Me I must be regarded as holy;
and before all the people I must be glorified.’ "
Perhaps nothing will make my point clearer than to say, to anyone offended
by this example, the option is not tolerance. If the example is wrong and
Scripture does command such invitations as part of worship, then any
pastor not making such an "altar call" is sinning as clearly as if the
sermon or prayer were being deleted. As Iain Murray has stated with such
clarity, "If the evangelist’s choice in employing ‘the invitation’ is an
optional one it cannot have scriptural evidence to warrant it, for in that
case the evangelical preacher would be under an obligation and have no
option."[5] But further, if you say it is an option without scriptural
warrant, you have repudiated 21:1 of the Confession.
My plea is for a confessional church to take its Confession seriously. If
the principle is correct, we must either have or not have the various
particulars on the basis of scriptural warrant. If it is "optional," it is
prohibited.
Notes
1. Gordon H. Clark, What Do Presbyterians Believe? (Philadelphia:
Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1965), p. 185. Back.
2. William H. Vincent, "The Scriptural Law of Worship," in The Psalms in
Worship, John McNaugher, ed. (Pittsburgh: The United Presbyterian Board of
Publication, 1907), p. 24. This quote summarizes the argument of Vincent’s
article, which was most helpful. Cf. especially pages 25-27 for a compact
summary of biblical examples in this matter. Back.
3. Vincent, p. 28. Back.
4. Vincent, p. 28. It should be noted that Vincent includes the singing of
anything but Psalms in with the violations of the regulative principle.
That particular is not the focus of this paper, although the principle
involved is. Each particular must be determined on exegetical and
hermeneutical grounds. Back.
5. Iain H. Murray, The Invitation System (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth
Trust, 1973), p. 11. Back.
Copyright ©© 1983 by Carl W. Bogue
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