By Robin G. Jordan
In my article, “Morningand Evening Prayer – Public Worship or Private Devotions,” I examined a
number of problems associated with sacramental worship. The problems affect the
Anglican Church in North America as well as the Episcopal Church. Indeed, they
affect all denomination in which the predominant form of worship is
sacramental.
Sacramental worship may be defined as worship in which the
consecration and reception of the Holy Communion are the primary focus. The
consecration may include the offering of the consecrated bread and wine to God
as a representation or reiteration of Christ’s sacrifice or as a form of
participation in Christ’s hypothesized ongoing sacrificial activity. The
showing of the consecrated bread and wine to the congregation for adoration may
precede the communion. A portion of the consecrated elements may also be
reserved for subsequent adoration.
In the Anglican Church in North America the priest in charge
of the parish or mission determines what meaning is assigned to the
consecration and reception of the Holy Communion in a particular church. He
does this in two ways. One way is the practices that he follows—the ceremonial,
the gestures, and the postures he uses. The other is how he explains the
consecration and reception from the pulpit, in the classroom, in the
newsletter, and on the internet. What he believes or wants the congregation to
believe can be gleaned from these sources.
In its Fundamental Declaration the Anglican Church in North
America recognizes the 1662 Book of Common Prayer as “a standard of Anglican
doctrine and discipline” with the inference that the 1662 Prayer Book is one of
a number of doctrinal and disciplinary standards for Anglicans. The Fundamental
Declarations do not identify these standards.
Historically the Thirty-Nine Articles, the two Books of
Homilies, and the 1661 Ordinal, together with the 1662 Prayer Book, form the
doctrinal standard of Anglicanism. The Fundamental Declarations, however, leaves
to the individual what other standards he accepts.
The particular choice of wording also leaves him free to
disregard the 1662 Prayer Book as a standard. He may choose the
decrees of the Council of Trent to be his standard.
The Fundamental Declarations take the position that the
Thirty-Nine Articles represent the views of Anglicans at a particular time in
history. They are not binding upon our consciences today. We can disregard
them. This is similar to the position liberals take on the passages in the
Bible that condemn homosexual practice. They are the views of a particular
culture at a particular time in history.
The Fundamental Declarations also take the position that the
Thirty-Nine Articles contain only some principles of authentic Anglican belief
and other such principles exist elsewhere. They do not identify where. The
individual is left to decide for himself what these principles are and where
they may be found.
The end result is that the priest in charge of the parish or
mission may assign whatever meaning he likes to the consecration and reception
of the Holy Communion as long as he does not run afoul of his bishop. If he and
his bishop share similar views, he does not even have this restraint. Like the
priest, the bishop is free to assign whatever meaning he likes to the
consecration and reception. He is not conscience-bound to accept the doctrine
of the Anglican formularies any more than the priest.
As far as what meaning may be assigned to the consecration
and reception of the Holy Communion is concerned, the situation in the Anglican
Church in North America is like that in the Episcopal Church where church
doctrine in general is concerned. In the Episcopal Church a bishop cannot be
tried for espousing views contrary to church doctrine until all the bishops of
the church have been polled to determine what is church doctrine and whether
views the bishop espoused were contrary to that doctrine. In the Episcopal
Church church doctrine is whatever the preponderance of bishops believe is church
doctrine. What is church doctrine one week may not be church doctrine the next.
The consciences of Episcopal bishops are
not bound by the Anglican formularies or any other fixed standard, including
the Scriptures. They are the ultimate authority. Even a patently heretical
bishop is not likely to face trial for the views he espouses unless he offends
his fellow bishops in some other way.
Due to the particular interpretations of Scripture that are
prevalent in Anglican Church in North America even the Scriptures are not a
restraining influence. Clergy influenced by Anglo-Catholic movement or the
Ancient Future worship renewal movement give substantially more weight to
church tradition than to Scripture, using tradition to interpret Scripture.
They are not critical in reading the Patristic writers, submitting Patristic
thought to Scripture.
The Anglo-Catholic movement is a movement with the restoration of traditional doctrines and practices from the Church’s past as its objective. The Ancient Future worship renewal movement is a movement with the revival of traditional doctrines and practices from the Church’s past as its objective. The focus of the Anglo-Catholic movement is the Anglican Church. The focus of the Ancient Future worship renewal movement was initially evangelical and charismatic churches.
The Anglo-Catholic movement is a movement with the restoration of traditional doctrines and practices from the Church’s past as its objective. The Ancient Future worship renewal movement is a movement with the revival of traditional doctrines and practices from the Church’s past as its objective. The focus of the Anglo-Catholic movement is the Anglican Church. The focus of the Ancient Future worship renewal movement was initially evangelical and charismatic churches.
The apostle Paul tells us that faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God (Romans 10:17). The reading and preaching of the word are a critical part of the
process by which an individual comes to faith. Through the proclamation of the
gospel God plants the seed of faith, germinates it, and waters and nourishes
it.
The Thirty-Nine Articles stress faith as a necessary
pre-condition to the receipt of the sacrament of the Holy Communion. Article
25 tell us that through the sacrament of
Holy Communion God works invisibly in us and quickens, strengthens, and
confirms our faith in Him. Article 29 tells us that only those who have a vital
faith can receive any benefit from the sacrament of the Holy Communion. Only
they are partakers of Christ.
Faith must be present
in order for God to make it more active, stronger, and more certain. It does
not have to be a strong faith but does need to be present. Likewise faith must be present in order for
us to participate in the benefits of Christ’s passion and death, his body
broken for us, his blood shed for us.
When too much emphasis is placed upon sacramental worship
and the traditional doctrines and practices wed to that worship, the
proclamation of the gospel is not just neglected. The traditional doctrines and
practices that are so much a part of sacramental worship proclaim “a different
gospel.” Rather than offering the gift of eternal life through faith in Jesus
Christ , they offer something else. Instead of offering the Bread of Life, they
offer a stone.
If we are committed to fulfilling the great commission, this
knowledge should make us think twice. Jesus commanded the Church to go and
proclaim the gospel to the farthest reaches of the earth. He did not command
the Church to take a particular form of worship to ends of the earth.
Much of what is touted as sacramental worship is human
invention—the ornaments, the ceremonies, and the unscriptural doctrines. A
gospel-centered celebration of the Holy Communion is simple and unadorned. It
focuses upon what is most important. It follows the reading and preaching of
the word and the proclamation of the gospel. Only what is essential to the
celebration is present—a minister of the gospel, bread and wine, a gathering of
believing Christians, and the intention to do what Christ himself ordained.
A gospel-centered celebration of the Holy Communion is not
the representation or reiteration of a sacrifice. It is not a pleading of a
sacrifice. It is the proclamation of a sacrifice. “…every time you eat this
bread and drink from this cup you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes (1
Corinthians 11:26).
When believers drink from the cup, they share in the blood
of Christ. When they eat the bread, they share in the body of Christ (1
Corinthians 10:16). To those who “rightly, worthily, and with faith,” receive
the cup and bread, the Holy Spirit applies the benefits of Christ’s passion and
death (Article 28).
This is entirely a spiritual operation. The substance of the
bread and wine is not changed when bread and wine are consecrated—set apart for
sacramental use. Nothing is added to their substance. The bread is bread and
the wine is wine.
If we are committed to fulfilling the great commission, we
recognize the need for non-sacramental forms of worship as well as balanced
services of the word and sacrament. We do not tie ourselves to a particular
form of worship. We also recognize that whatever form worship does take, it
must be centered on the gospel. It must not draw attention away from the gospel,
obscure the gospel, or proclaim “a different gospel.”
In the forms of service that the Anglican Church in North
America’s Liturgy and Common Worship Task Force has produced to date,
sacramental ministry of the priest and sacramental worship are emphasized. This
is not a positive development.
In a denomination that accepts the authority of the Bible
and is committed to fulfilling the great commission, the emphasis would be upon
the gospel ministry of the pastor and gospel-centered worship. The task force
would be preparing for the use of the local church forms of service that
conform to the teaching of Scripture in doctrine and practice and provide a
wide variety of gospel-centered worship options from which the local church
could choose.
The role of the task force, like that of the province and
the diocese, would be to support the gospel ministry of the local church, not
undermine it. The task force would be producing forms of service that included
alternative forms of morning and evening worship as well as services of Morning
Prayer, Evening Prayer, and Holy Communion. All of the forms of service would
be designed for use as regular services of public worship.
All kinds of churches and
all kinds of worship are needed to reach North America with the gospel. For a
denomination to limit its local churches to one particular form of worship is
poor stewardship of what God has given that denomination. It is unwise to say
the least.
A denomination that imposes
such a limitation on its local churches is like the servant who was given one
talent. Instead of investing it and making a profit for his master, he buried
it. A denomination that limits its local churches to a single form of worship
should remember the master’s reaction when he learned that the servant to whom
he had given one talent had not employed it to his master’s advantage. In imposing this kind of limitation on its local churches the denomination is not being
faithful. It is placing the dictates of tradition before the imperative of the
gospel. It risks God taking from it all that he given it and giving it to
another.
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