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And turn in your Bibles to Exodus
chapter 20. Our text will be the same as
it was this morning. The first six verses, which is
the first two commandments, rightly dividing the commandments. Hear
the word of the Lord. And God spoke all these words
saying, I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land
of Egypt, out of the house of slavery, You shall have no other
gods before me. You shall not make for yourself
a carved image or any likeness of anything that is in the heaven
above or that is in the earth beneath or that is in the water
under the earth. You shall not bow down to them
or serve them. For I the Lord your God am a
jealous God visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children
to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me. but showing
steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my
commandments. This is the word of the Lord.
You may be seated. Let's pray. Again, we thank you for the reading
and the hearing of your word, which is a powerful means of
grace to edify your people. Just the hearing of your word
read. Holy Spirit, we pray that Your
anointing would go to our ears as we've heard Your Word, that
You would illumine Your Word to our hearts. We believe every
word of the canon of Scripture comes from Your mouth and is
authoritative for faith and life. Now, Lord,
grant strength again to your servant and the preaching of
your word. We pray in Jesus' name. Amen. As those who are here regularly
know, I began a sermon series just a short time back of some
sermons about the doctrine of the church. If before God's face
we're seeking the planet church because we believe he wants us
to do that, it's important for us to know what the church is.
And so we looked at a number of different texts. We looked
at Christ as the builder of his church from Matthew 16. We looked
at the marks of the vibrant church from Acts chapter 2. We looked
at the warfare of the church from Ephesians chapter 6. And
then we looked at the glory of the church from Psalm 87. Those
were the sermons up until today. Well, this morning I told you
I'm narrowing the focus. We're not only convinced that
the Lord wants us to plant a church, but a particular kind of church,
and that is a Presbyterian church. And not because we were born
and raised Presbyterian. Some of us were, some of us weren't.
Not because of tradition, but because we are convinced that
Presbyterian distinctions are in the Bible. It's what the Bible
teaches. Now, we know that we have brothers
and sisters in Christ that don't share all of those distinctions
with us, and that's perfectly fine. We have sweet fellowship
with our brothers and sisters who don't all agree with us.
So we're going to narrow our focus, beginning today, upon
what I'm calling distinctive Presbyterian doctrines, at the
same time recognizing that not only Presbyterians hold these
different doctrines. Now, it's when you hold them
all that you might be a Presbyterian. You've got to hold them all.
Some of these doctrines are held by much of the Church, some by
some of the Church beyond Presbyterianism. But when you put them all together,
this is why a Presbyterian Church is what it is. It's because of
what the Presbyterian Church believes that the Bible teaches. So we need to know that and to
be able to winsomely defend that and communicate that with our
brothers and sisters in Christ and say, well, I don't understand
why you believe this or why you do this. And so we're starting. that series today, the narrowing
of that series. Now, my plan is, I don't know
what the sermons are going to be yet, in two weeks when I'm
supposed to be back here, to look at incarnational themes.
People are thinking about these things in December, and it's
been my practice for many years, typically in December, to take
at least a couple of Sundays to look at and to preach themes
that the world is thinking about with the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ, but I haven't decided yet which text I'm going to employ
for that. I would remind those who are
here this morning, but those who weren't here, I will not
be here the first Sunday in January because I'm going to be preaching
in one of our churches that's going through some severe trials. They've asked me to come and
preach and the Commission has said Go, we will supply the pulpit
here. But Lord willing, the third week
in January, I'll be back and then we will start this series
up again. So the first question then in
terms of distinctive Presbyterian doctrines is, what do we see
as the first duty of the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ? And
like I said this morning, you might expect the regional missionary
would say, well, the Great Commission, evangelism. That's the first
duty of the church. And I said, no, that's the wrong
answer. The first duty of the church is worship. The Great Commission is our commission
to take the gospel to the nations. Why? So that more and more people
will be reconciled to God and come together and glorify his
name in worship. And when the church gets this
backwards, things fall apart. Our evangelism is unto our first
duty, which is worship. So this morning what we did is
we focused upon the two principles that have guided the church throughout
the centuries in terms of, well, what do we do in the public assembly
when we come together? And these two principles are
not consistent with each other. I mean, they are in one sense,
and in another sense, they're not. The one is called the normative
principle of worship. And it can be defined this way.
We will not do in the public assembly anything that God forbids
in his word. And that's the principle. That's
the guiding principle. That's the majority opinion.
It has historically been the majority opinion. The normative
principle is the principle of the Roman Catholic Church. The
time of the Protestant Reformation, we talked about this this morning,
the time of the Protestant Reformation, it was really the Reformed branch
of the Reformation that took to reforming the worship of God. Zwingli, Ecclempadius, I think,
was really standing behind and underneath Zwingli in the developing
of a liturgy that is found from mining the scriptures. Whereas
Lutheranism, Luther did not. Now, he brought us much in terms
of the Reformation. Same thing with the Church of
England coming out of the Roman tradition, and then Methodism
that came out of The Anglican tradition continued the normative
principle. And that is, by far and away,
the majority report in our day. But historically, it was the
Reformed branch of the Reformation that adopted the second principle. And that second principle is
called the regulative principle of worship. They didn't define
it that way. The reformers didn't. It's not
defined with those terms, even in the Westminster Confession
of Faith and another generation later. John Murray is probably
the one. He either coined the term or
certainly popularized the term beginning in the 1940s. And that
principle can be stated this way. We will only perform in
the public assembly what God prescribes as word and nothing
beside it. will only perform in the public
assembly what God prescribes in his word and nothing beside
it. And then we ask the question,
does the Bible support one or the other of these principles?
And we went to the second commandment as the foundation for what's
called the regulative principle. We know who God is by his revelation,
We worship him according to his revelation. We looked at the
second commandment. It's forbidding the making of
images to bow down and worship them. We interpreted that in
light of Exodus 32. where you have the event of Aaron
fashioning the golden calf, and demonstrated from a careful exegesis
of that text that the golden calf was not an Egyptian god,
but rather an image that Aaron fashioned of Jehovah God, of
Yahweh. It's clear in the text when you
read Exodus 32. After fashioning the golden calf,
what did Aaron say? Tomorrow will be a feast unto
Yahweh. And they met together and they
offered offerings that are prescribed later in the Levitical legislation
in that covenant that's given to Moses on top of the mountain.
While Moses was on the mountain, this was going on the bottom
of the mountain. They offered whole burnt offerings, offered
peace offerings. These are legitimate and rightful
offerings, but then they rose up to play. Because what did
the image tell them about the moral character of God? They
wanted something visible, something tangible that they could wrap
their minds around while they waited for Moses to come down
from the mountain. And so Aaron fashioned an image
that might depict Yahweh as being strong and virile and mighty. That's what a bull calf is. But
what of his moral character? This is why we are forbidden
to make images and to worship them of Yahweh. That grounds,
I believe, what we call the regulative principle of worship. Well, if
that's established, and I'm not saying I convince everybody,
although I think I'm pretty much singing to the choir here in
this congregation, the question comes in, how do we apply it?
And here's where the difficulties lie. Those who agree in principle
disagree in application. And this is where we have to
be charitable. And this is where in the Church
of Jesus Christ Reformed tradition people often aren't charitable
and become quite legalistic in their opinions about what the
Bible actually says to do in worship. You need to recognize
it's not easy to mind the scriptures and see precisely what God tells
us to do. And there are reasons for that.
One is, there's a difference in genre between the Old Covenant
and the New Covenant. The Old Covenant, the Mosaic
Covenant, comes to us in law. That's a genre, where God gives
commandments, and in His commandments, He gives express description
of this is what you do in my worship. Feasts, festivals, all
kinds of different sacrifices, circumcision, all of the ceremony
is expressly and clearly laid out. The regulative principle
is easy to follow under the old covenant because it's laid out
in law. The New Testament comes to us
in a different genre, gospel and epistles. Now, that's not
to say there's not law in the New Testament. Of course there
is. You have application in Scripture, and that's law. But the genre
is not the same as that under the old, where it comes codified
in law. And so, mining, what does God
approve of in New Covenant worship is more difficult. Then you add
the question, What from the old is abrogated and what's not,
that's even more reason to be charitable. Because it's hard
to know. And that's why, yes, we hold
to the principle, but the application of it is more difficult. And
we need to recognize that. That's why we need to be charitable.
We even had one of our members at one time that was committed
to singing only the song. So what did I do? Did you notice
what I did every Sunday night? Because I love singing the psalms
too. I picked only psalms to accommodate the conscience of
our brother who can sing the psalms of the Lamb now and we're
thankful for that. But we have to be charitable
with each other in terms of the application and oftentimes the
church is not. So I'm going to move from preaching
more to a more didactic or teaching approach to try and help us with
application. And there are three terms that
have been coined that aren't in the Bible. You can't go to
Concordance and find this in the Bible. So there are theological
constructs that help us understand and maneuver our way through
the scriptures. But they're very important, and
you need to understand the difference between them. Those three terms
are elements, forms, and circumstances. Now, sometimes elements are called
parts of worship. In fact, that's what you see
in the Directory of Public Worship in the Orthodox Presbyterian
Church. But I prefer the word element because elements are
things that are basic. They're things that are foundational.
Now, what is an element? An element is whatever God tells
us to do in worship. That's what an element is. Whatever God says, do. Now, I'm
not going to take the time, because I don't have the time, although
I've taught a course a number of times on reformed worship
at the college, and I've taken the time to mine the scriptures
there, but we don't have time to do that now. But just to suggest
to you what it looks like in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church
and in some of our other sister denominations in terms of the
elements of worship. What are they? The singing of
praise, prayer, the preaching of the word, sacraments. These are all elements that you
can find that the Bible says we are to do either by command
or by what is approved in the worship of God in Scripture.
These are elements of worship. There are also occasional elements
of worship. like oaths and vows. What happens
when someone makes a profession of faith? What happens at an
ordination? What happens when we present
our children for covenant baptism? They're oaths and vows. Why are
they occasional? Because they're occasioned by
having a lawful candidate. Baptism is an occasional element. We don't have a baptism because
we're a church. We have baptism because somebody
needs to be baptized, a lawful candidate. We preach, why? Because we're a church. We preach
because it's the assembly. That's a regular element. And
if someone comes along and says, we had a wonderful service Sunday
night. The Holy Spirit fell during the
worship. I'm quoting what somebody told
me one time. And he meant by worship, the singing part up
front. The Holy Spirit fell so much in the singing, people started
to testify. And the Holy Spirit blessed so
much, the preacher didn't even get to preach. I said, you didn't
have worship. He said, what do you mean we
don't have worship? I said, the Bible prescribes the preaching
of his word. I don't care if you have to be
there three hours. The preacher needs to get up and preach for
it to be public worship. We worship by listening to the
word of God proclaimed, you see. These are elements of worship. You can even break down. In some
ways, although sometimes these can be forms, but what about
confessions of faith? You find them in the Bible, and
so we utilize them in the public assembly. Elements are the things
that God tells us to do. Okay, they're non-negotiable.
But we have to be charitable. Why do we have to be charitable?
Because they're difficult to mine in Scripture. Is the offering an element of
worship? I think so. I got brothers and sisters in
Christ who have the same principle who don't think so at all. That
one's harder to establish than you might think. Quite frankly,
if you're looking at the New Testament, so is singing praise.
People talk about speaking to one another in psalms, hymns,
and spiritual songs. Neither of those are in the context of
public worship. of those statements. And yet,
I'm convinced we're to sing praises. I think this is one of the things
that continues from old to new as well. An element is what God says do.
So what do we do? Under the principle before God,
we do our best to mind what the scripture says to do, and then
we seek to do those things and seek to be faithful, knowing
we might not get it all right. But we're doing our best. And
our brothers and sisters who might differ with us on whether
this is an element or not, we don't get bent out of shape with
them. Because they're zealous to do the same thing we are.
Worship as God prescribes His Word. That's where charity needs
to come in. But the elements are non-negotiable. I said baptism is an occasional
element. What about the Lord's Supper?
Let me open up a can of worms. What in the element itself, what
in the supper itself tells you it's occasional rather than regular? Why do we baptize? We have a
lawful candidate, therefore it's occasional. Why do we celebrate
the Lord's Supper? Because Jesus told us to. So you know my position. I think
every Sunday we should be having the Lord's Supper. That's my
position, and I don't impose it upon our mission works. It's
not even the majority position in the OPC, but it's a growing
position in the OPC. But these are questions that
we ask, and these are places where we're charitable with each
other as well. An element. What does God tell
us to do? Now, what is a form? Well, the
form is the content of a particular element of worship. We have a
great deal of liberty regarding forms. For instance, what psalm
are we going to sing? Are we going to sing 98A, which
is everybody's favorite? Are we going to sing Jesus, lover
of my soul, a hymn? which we believe in the OPC is
lawful to sing because it's a doctrinally faithful, God-glorifying, gospel-centered
hymn to sing. When we don't sing 98A every
Sunday, we might want to. It'd be good to sing it quite
often. Now, we have liberty to pick. But we can't pick, well, let's
sing Psalm 98a, and for our second hymn, let's sing Mary Has a Little
Lamb. Understand? We have a liberty
to pick, but that liberty has boundaries around it. Only psalms
and hymns, of course all the psalms are faithful because they're
inspired by God, but only hymns that are faithful and are edifying
to the people of God and glorify God in our singing. We can't
do that, you see. Another form, what's Scripture?
What's the text of the sermon? What's the content of the sermon?
These are formal considerations. The text happens to be the same
tonight as it was this morning, but next time I'm here, it's
going to be a different text. I have the liberty as a minister,
I got 66 whole books to pick from and have liberty to pick
any of them, but I can't pick the Quran. You understand? These are formal
considerations. What prayers? What's the content
of the prayers? Do we use the Lord's Prayer,
which I wish we did more liturgically. We have liberty in terms of forms,
but we don't have liberty in terms of elements. Why? Because God sets the protocol
when his people come before him. And we want to obey him and follow
his protocol. But there is much liberty in
terms of forms. The particular content of a particular
element on a particular Sunday. These are formal considerations.
And in my view, the arrangement of the liturgy is a formal consideration. We're not like the Church of
England. We're not like the Roman Catholic
Church where the church sets the liturgy. No. The session has liberty. That's
why you can go from one Orthodox Christian church to another.
And while there's a lot of similarity in the liturgies and worship,
oftentimes there are nuanced differences. And here in this
mission work, you have different men to come and preach. Sometimes
they will develop a different liturgy that they prefer. That's
okay. As long as the elements are all
properly performed. Now, it's important, I think,
for us to think in terms of, use our common sense and logic
in the ordering of the elements. We don't begin the service with
the benediction and end it with the greeting and salutation.
We begin it with a greeting and salutation and call to worship.
We end with benediction. That makes sense, you say. We
find benedictions in the Bible. We find salutations and greetings
in the Bible. And therefore, they find their
way into our liturgies. We find call to worships in the
Bible. Therefore, we find them in our
liturgies. And so there's some logic and
common sense that's used in the ordering of the elements. I think
it's important to think in terms of a dialogical approach. where God speaks and the people
respond and God speaks the people respond between the elements
working through in terms of putting together a liturgy but once I
have that liturgy and I think this is the perfect biological
approach all the elements are here that I don't thereby say
you have to use this liturgy because we have liberty you can't
go to the concordance and look up liturgy and find, OK, here's
the liturgy for worship. It's not there in the scriptures. These are formal considerations. And there's a great deal of latitude
and liberty in terms of formal considerations. So an element,
what does God say do? Form the specific content of
a particular element in a particular service. The third word is circumstance. We get that from the Westminster
Confession of Faith. Chapter 1, where it says there
are some circumstances. Chapter 1 is about Scripture
and how Scripture regulates everything that we're to believe and everything
we're to do. That's what Chapter 1's about.
But it recognizes there are some circumstances, there are some
things regarding in particular worship and polity that aren't
expressly set down in scripture. And so what do we do? We look
around and see what do other human societies do in these kinds
of things to make these sorts of decisions. There's a great
deal of latitude when it comes to circumstances. Great deal. What time's the service? God
says we're to worship him on the Lord's Day. We know that. But what time? Well, our service
here is at 930 in the morning, at 6 o'clock in the afternoon. I know another one of our churches,
their morning worship is at 10 o'clock in the morning, and their
afternoon worship, at least for now, is 4 o'clock in the afternoon. I remember at Reformation, our
mother church, when we worshiped only one service, on sunday at
three o'clock in the afternoon why because the bible surely
says it has to started eleven not now it's certainly says we
have to end at twelve it's got to say that somewhere it doesn't now what do we use use common
sense what if the commission meets tuesday and says We're
going to set the morning worship service at three o'clock in the
morning. Does it have the liberty to do that? It does. But it doesn't
say what time. If it did, what would you be
required to do? Be here at three o'clock in the
morning, unless you go to another church in the morning and then
come here at the normal time for Sunday evening. The session's
not going to do that. For one thing, it would be foolish. It would be foolish, because
people would struggle to listen, to participate in the worship
of God. But that is a circumstantial
consideration. Should we amplify the voice of
the preacher? Can we go to the concordance
and look up electrical amplification didn't even exist. If someone
wants to apply the regular principle that says you can only do what
the Bible says, it doesn't say anything about electricity, so
all preachers have to shout, no matter how big the auditorium
is. There are preachers that could
be heard for two miles. That's what they said about Whitefield.
And his voice could be heard clearly for great distances. God gave him that instrument.
He didn't give it to me. Now, we're intimate enough and
small enough here that we don't amplify the voice, but if we
were in a bigger auditorium, would it be necessary? Would
it be required? No, but it's a circumstance that's
wise. It enhances the worship. Circumstances
are not unimportant. They help and abet us. They surround
the circumstances. They surround the worship. They're common sense decisions
that are made that help us in worshipping our God. Now here's something important
about circumstances and how they differ from elements and forms. They have absolutely no spiritual
content in them. None. And it has to be kept that
way. You might say, well, what do
you mean by that? If you say we ought or we must
do something, you've elevated it to the place of element. But if God didn't say do it,
you can't do that. Let me give an illustration.
I have a friend who will be unnamed because I'm going to be critical
of him. He's one of my closest friends, so I kind of delight
in doing this. But I'm still not going to call
his name. OPC minister. In his very first congregation,
he was in the mainline church at that time. He had two churches
and one of them had a split chancel. You know what a split chancel
is? Split chancel is where you have the pulpit on one side and
where you have a lectern for the reading of scripture on another
and where the table is elevated in center. And he told me, I'll
never preach the split chancel church again. Why? Because of
the theological implications. Now think about it. There actually
is a theology that surrounds that arrangement of furniture.
Split chancel. Scripture is important, the preaching,
the reading. But what is central? What is the focal point? What is most important in the
worship of God? It's sacrament. That's why the
Roman church has split chancels. And those who have followed in
that tradition have split chancels. And they do it for theological
reasons. He says, I'm only going to preach
when the pulpit is centered, the communion table is centered,
and the pulpit is elevated. That's the theology. That's Reformation
theology. He's right. It's Reformation
theology. That both sacrament and the preaching
and reading of the word are central to worship But sacrament depends
upon preaching. Preaching is elevated over sacrament.
That is Reformed theology. Here's the problem. If you say,
we must or ought to arrange the furnishings this way, show me
chapter and verse in the Bible that tells you where you're to
put the pulpit. You can't even find the word
pulpit in the Bible. Now, the arrangement of the furnishings
of the Old Covenant are codified. They are laid out there. They are precise. You have the
westward direction of Tabernacles it's set up as they go from place
to place the Holy the Holy of Holies is always on the western
end of it all the furnishings are Expressly set down in scripture
and told where there to be but there are no furnishings that
are given to us in New Covenant worship Now does it hurt my feelings? to preach in a church where the
arrangement is consistent with the theology, it doesn't. But
I'm not going to say we ought or we must make it elemental. We don't do it here at the communion
tables over here. It's over here. Why? Because
of our circumstances that we have in terms of how we must
arrange for the furniture that we have. I'm thankful for the
furniture, although this pulpit makes it very difficult to read.
I've never seen one quite at this sharp an angle, and I worry
all the time that my notes are going to fall off or my Bible,
but it's what we have, and so we're thankful to God for it. But we don't have to have a pulpit.
Go to any modern evangelical church. None of them have pulpits
anymore. The preacher just walks around. I'd rather have a pulpit. What I'm saying is we need to
recognize what's the difference between an element, a form, and
a circumstance. It's not that circumstances are
unimportant. They are very, very important. The setting of the
time is important. And in our culture, the setting
of an ending time is pretty important to some. Application of the voice is important. And here's where you have certain
things where principle does kick in. What if you have X number
of dollars and you have a lot of people that want an organ?
which Dabney called the devil's instrument. I don't think Dabney
was right about that. He was right about a lot of things.
They want an organ, but lightning has struck and the PA system
is down and it's a big auditorium and it's going to cost, let's
say fix the organ because buying an organ would cost way more.
To fix the organ, should you fix the organ or should you fix
The amplification of the voice. Here's where principle kicks
in. What's more important? The organ playing for the singing
or that the Word of God be heard? You fix the amplification system
first. And then pray that the Lord would
make provision to be able to fix the organ if you're not Dabney. Actually, I don't like singing
to a pipe organ. I like hearing a pipe organ played
on a Saturday. It tends to dominate and drown
out. I think that's Dabney's point.
I prefer piano. Why? You can hear the parts.
It's a good instrument to accompany. But these are preferences. They're
preferences. They're not principle. We cannot
make our preferences Principle or we've elevated it to the place
of element and God alone Reserves the right to say these are the
things that you do in worship, and that's why we delight in
it Rather than being restricted, but we can't do slam-dunking
for Jesus you had to be here this morning We can't do slam-dunking
for Jesus. That's too restrictive and That's
tying my hands behind my back in the worship of God. No. Our joy is, I want to please
my God, which means he sets the protocol, and I want to do what
he wants me to do. And even if I get something wrong,
maybe not as bad as David did with the ox cart. We don't want
any of us falling over in the middle of the service. But even
if we get something wrong, Our motivation in our heart is to
please the God who calls us into his presence. We need to recognize
something about our worship. I said it this morning. Our worship
is not only regulated by what God says do. Our worship is also
regulated and our approach to God in worship by who God says
he is. who God says He is. Our theology. And some people come to our churches,
our worship service, they think, well, boy, that's dull. We don't
think so at all. Why do I want to sing a trite
little chorus of I love Jesus repeated a hundred times when
I can sing Jesus' love for my soul or Psalm 98a? Understand? And the thing is, we need to
be understanding of people who come from other traditions, who
have never asked any of these questions, who have never experienced
anything like what we're doing. They come and they say, why do
you have order in your worship like you do? Why do you have
to have a bulletin to come to your church? Why don't you, all
you have to do is bring your Bible? Why do you have to have
a program to follow? And you say, well, God says let
everything be done decently and in order. Paul said that when
he's regulating the worship of the church in Corinth. And you
can explain to them in a non-condemning way what we thought about this
question. Does God have any opinions about
what we do in worship? I heard it put this way to me
one time that I thought was pretty clear. Let's say you're on a
worship committee in a church. God forbid your church has a
worship committee. Your session needs to be the
worship. But there are a lot of churches that have a worship
committee where people decide what you're going to do in worship.
You're on the worship committee and you're in there together
and you're all deciding about, should we do some changes? You
wouldn't call it liturgy, but it is. Liturgy just means an
order or a list. And somebody speaks up and says,
well, you know, I'm getting tired of these old hymns that we sing
all the time, when most of the time they're not even old hymns.
We sing old hymns. But I'm getting tired of these,
and the kids can't stand them. I think that we should sing some
more contemporary choruses. And then somebody else speaks
up and says, ah, we got the light bill to pay, we got the preacher
to pay, and the kids don't put money on their offering plate.
We better not make mom and dad upset, certainly not grandpa
and grandma. I think we need to stick to some
of these historic traditional hymns and the worship. And someone
else says, well, I think the preacher preaches too long. Talking
about me, probably. I think the preacher preaches
too long. I get tired. Why didn't the preacher
have a shorter sermon, and then let's let the young people do
a drama? Well, that's a way to communicate.
You find that in the Bible, okay, in terms of worship. And so the
discussion goes, and finally somebody raises their hand and
says, I have a question. I hear what Sally thinks, and
I hear what Tommy thinks, and I hear what Joe thinks we ought
to do. I wonder if God has an opinion
about what we should do. God has anything to say. And
sadly, most of the church have never asked that question. It's never been asked. And when
we ask it and we go to see, we see He has much to say. Because in the end, He's the
King of kings and Lord of lords. He's the one that has invited
us into His presence. And if you would dress a certain
way, and if you would bow a certain way, if the Queen of England
were to come in to visit, even though she's not your queen,
because that's protocol, and you recognize that stature, how
much more do we look to God himself to set the protocol? I often
think of Moses before the burning bush. What did God say to him? Take your sandals from off your
feet. And I don't want to talk about
other churches, I don't want to do it, but I have been to
church services where you get the sense that it's as if God
said to Moses, kick off your shoes, let's chill for a while. When I think Moses didn't know
what to do, Do I look at the bush? No, I can't. Do I even
lift my eyes as He slowly undoes the sandals
from His feet, knowing He's on holy ground? You see, that's
when your theology informs your worship. This is who God is. And we're coming into His presence.
And were it not for His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, His death
on the cross in our place, He died in our place, if we're not
united with Him and completely robed in His righteousness instead
of our filthy rags of unrighteousness, we would be cast from His presence.
Instead, because of Jesus, God says, come, folks. And we come in the Son into His
presence. And it is a delight when you
know you've done everything you can do to work your way through
the Scriptures to see what pleases God. This is the best that we
can understand it. And this is what we're going
to do with everything that is within us. Because this is the
God that we love and that we serve. This is the God who has
saved us in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. And the worship is not tall.
It's why our little churches are robust in their singing. And what you can do when people
criticize is don't condemn them. They don't understand. Just explain
to them. I wouldn't have it any other
way. Do you realize who's here? Do you realize the Triune God
is here? It is liberating and exhilarating. Emotions should be the caboose,
not the engine. There's nothing wrong when I
see men this morning with tears running down their face during
the preaching of the word. I saw it on the back row. I saw
it right there. But I saw it on the back row. With the Gerstner illustration
in particular. Emotions are not bad. Sing with gusto. Listen to the
Word of God. Weep! I often do. But emotions are not the goal
of worship. It's to honor God and to honor
the Lord Jesus Christ. So remember elements, forms,
and circumstances that will help you and help you understand why
we do what we do in this church. Let's pray. Father,
we thank you for the Lord Jesus Christ. We know that we would have no
place with you apart from him. Indeed, our end would be outer
darkness, a place of weeping and gnashing and teeth and a
lake of fire. And that's what we deserve. But because of Jesus, we are
reconciled to You, and our end will be the new heavens and the
new earth, the vision of God, a heightened
communion that we cannot even imagine for eternity. And between now and every Sunday, to get a foretaste in this assembly. Oh, the wonder of this gospel. We pray in Jesus' name. Amen. Let's turn in our hymn list to
number 172. Let us love and sing and wonder. 172. Let's stand together and sing. Let us love and sing and wonder. Let us praise the Savior's name. He has hushed the law's loud
thunder, He has quenched Mount Sinai's flame, He has washed
us with His blood, He has brought us nigh to God. Let us love the Lord who bought
us, Pity'd us when enemies called us by His grace and taught us,
gave us ears and gave us eyes. He has washed us with His blood. He presents our souls to God. Let us sing, though fierce temptation
threaten hard to bear us down. For the Lord, our strong salvation,
holds in view the conqueror's crown. He who washed us with
his blood soon will bring us home to God. Let us wonder grace and justice,
join and point to mercy's store. when through grace in Christ
our trust is just as fast and ask no more. He who washed us
with his blood has secured our way to God. Let us praise and
join the chorus of the saints enthroned on high. Here they trusted Him before
us. Now their praises fill the sky. You have washed us with Your
blood. You are worthy Lamb of God. And God's people said, Amen. Receive the benediction blessing
by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. The love of God the Father
and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with you all. Amen. They waited to fall out until
after the sermon. The stuff just hit the floor.
when I'm too old and decrepit to get down and get them. There you go, sir. Thank you very much. Thanks for
your hard work there. Thank you. Thank you, brother. You're more than always. I've always enjoyed being with
you. learn a lot. I love this congregation. I'm
glad.
Presbyterian Worship a Didactic Approach
Series Presbyterian Govt./ Theology
| Sermon ID | 1292044116241 |
| Duration | 52:32 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Exodus 20:1-6 |
| Language | English |
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