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The Validity and Potential Value of a Liturgical Calendar (Part Four)

Part One     Part Two     Part Three

Being Intentional

When you intend to do something — some people today call that “being intentional” — you might plan it or schedule it.  Does scripture regulate or legislate intentionality?  This thing of being intentional even has a definition:  “making deliberate choices to reflect what is most important to us.”  King David begins Psalm 101 with intentionality:

1 I will sing of mercy and judgment: unto thee, O Lord, will I sing.

2 I will behave myself wisely in a perfect way. O when wilt thou come unto me? I will walk within my house with a perfect heart.

3 I will set no wicked thing before mine eyes: I hate the work of them that turn aside; it shall not cleave to me.

When you intend to do it, you might schedule it.  That’s good.  It’s how you ‘redeem the time’ (Eph 5:16).  How do you seek something first?  You’ve got to move it up in priority on purpose.  You will and then do of God’s good pleasure.  This is sanctification.  It’s how you keep something holy.

If I want to ensure I do something, I put it on a “to-do” list.  For the year, I write those actions on a calendar.  For an entire church, as a church leader, I have a church calendar.  What goes on that calendar?  I could put a “Jumper Day” on the calendar with intentionality.  Jumpers are those inflatable fun houses, serving as a kind of trampoline.  Let’s say instead, I intentionally schedule into the year of the church a spiritual emphasis.  Let’s call it a “liturgical calendar.”  Every year the church emphasizes scriptural events in the life of Christ and other biblical themes.

Using the Calendar

The Psalms are a guide for writing hymns.  The prayers of the Bible are a guide for what to pray.  In the Old Testament, God weaves into the year a means by which Israel will remember what God did.  This included the weekly Sabbath and then festivals.  This is a model, not for continuing to follow a Hebrew calendar, but for what to do with a calendar.

Israel began to observe also an event the occurred after the completion of the Old Testament, the Feast of Dedication.  It celebrated an event in the intertestamental period. Israel then added that Feast to the Hebrew calendar.  Jesus too observed the Feast of Dedication (John 10:22ff).  Like the other Feasts, the Feast of Dedication helped Israel remember what God did in saving Israel during the time of Antiochus Epiphanes and the Macccabees.

The New Testament church schedules services on Sunday.  Scripture doesn’t say how many, but many churches meet three times on Sunday:  Sunday School, Sunday morning, and then Sunday evening.  They might hold a midweek time too.  Through example, scripture regulates a Sunday gathering for the elements of New Testament worship.  It does not regulate how many meetings.

Keeping Holy

A believer can keep his speech holy.  He can keep his deeds holy.  A true Christian can keep his thoughts holy.  He can also keep his motives holy.

Paul says the believer can yield his members, his body parts, as instruments of righteousness unto God or yield them as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin (Romans 6:13).  Yielding his body parts as instruments of righteousness unto God is how he presents his body holy unto God (Romans 12:1).  Someone can “worship God in the spirit” (Philippians 3:3) or not do that.

Sanctification in the Truth

Sanctification in the truth starts with thinking and understanding what God says in His Word.  More than a hearer, he must also be a doer.  This requires volition, a readiness of will.  It also means a delight in what God said, a holy affection.

Sanctification in the New Testament follows the example of Jesus.  In John 17:19, Jesus prayed to God the Father:

And for their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified through the truth.

Jesus provided the perfect example to follow, and the Apostle John writes in his first epistle (2:6):

He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk, even as he walked.

Walking as Jesus walked is not arbitrary.  It is looking to the scriptural example of Jesus.  Also as John Owen wrote:

To see the Glory of Christ is the grand blessing which our Lord solicits and demands for his disciples in his last solemn intercession, John 17: 24.

The Glory of Christ

In 2 Corinthians 4:6, regarding sanctification, the Apostle Paul writes:

For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.

A church centers on the Person of Jesus Christ and Christ changes the church by its seeing of Him.  To conform to the image of the Son a church must see the image of the Son.

I’m contending for purposeful, intentional seeing, thinking, and understanding the glory of Christ.  The New Testament emphasizes certain events in Christ’s life.  To be sanctified by the example of Jesus, to walk as He walked, and to see His glory, you must focus on Him.  Jesus appeared on earth in real history in real time.  He was here.  In His time here, He accumulated important events in His life.  The gospels, Acts, the epistles, and Revelation talk all about them.  Put those on the calendar.

Keep Your Year Holy

Validity and Value

Don’t emphasize the events of Christ’s life according to their traditional dates on the calendar.  Do emphasize them on their traditional dates.  I like my emphasis on the calendar better than your no emphasis.

Putting the events of Christ’s life and other important biblical themes on your calendar is a way to keep your year holy.  I’m saying there is a value to it.  It is a means by which to accomplish many requirements for the believer from the New Testament.  It’s not the putting it on a calendar that accomplishes the seeing, thinking, and understanding of the truth.  It is the actual doing of seeing, thinking, and understanding.

Words mean things.  The keeping in keeping something holy means something.  This year I handed out a Bible reading calendar.  Scripture doesn’t regulate the calendar I handed out.  The calendar is how someone might keep things holy.  Someone can have a calendar and remain unholy.  I’m saying a calendar is valid and of value.

Remember and Emphasize

I didn’t hand out a fun-time-a-day calendar to our church.  Our calendar did have one verse for each week for scripture memory. Scripture doesn’t regulate that.  Does scripture regulate scripture memory?  I’m guessing people won’t be arguing over a Bible reading calendar and a scripture memory calendar.  Neither are in the Bible.

Believers should assume that they can keep something holy.  They are told to keep things holy.  Yes, in the Old Testament God instructs Israel to keep the Sabbath holy (Exodus 20:8).  By what I read some people write, you might think that I’m writing this series for the purpose of keeping the word “Christmas” holy or keeping a date for Christ’s birth holy.  I’ve not written anything like that.

I believe it’s been clear what I’m advocating.  Some argue against it with what seems to be red herrings and straw men.  I say, let’s be purposeful about remembering or emphasizing the events of Christ’s life during the year.  A church can schedule more than that, but I support the use of a liturgical calendar to keep the church year holy.

The Validity and Potential Value of a Liturgical Calendar (Part Three)

Part One     Part Two

Regulative Principle of Worship

Over a period of time, professing Christians formulated from scripture what was termed, “the regulative principle of worship.”  I believe in that.  This took awhile in the history of Christianity to develop.  I believe it because it is scriptural and, therefore, I want to follow it.  The Second London Baptist Confession of 1689 expresses it:

The acceptable way of worshiping the true God, is instituted by himself, and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshiped according to the imagination and devices of men, nor the suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations, or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures.

One example of the seriousness of regulating worship by scripture is that of Nadab and Abihu, when they offered strange fire to the Lord (Leviticus 10).  Offering strange fire meant changing the recipe for the incense for the altar of incense in the holy place.  Silence was not permission for them to offer a different recipe.

God prescribed a specific recipe, spelling out percentages of the ingredients.  Scripture regulated the recipe.  That was an element of Old Testament worship.  Since God spelled it out, that’s all you could do.  Nadab and Abihu changed it.  God killed them for that.  This indicates the seriousness of it.

What changes with observing Christ’s birth around December 25th?  Next year Sunday is actually December 28.  Emphasizing Christ’s birth changes nothing that God prescribed.  It’s not like changing the recipe for the altar of incense.  I contend it does not violate the regulative principle of worship.

Application of the Regulative Principle

Canon of Dort

Like one Reformation group, the Puritans, another, the Dutch Reformed Church, whom like the Puritans I’m not endorsing, committed to the Regulative Principle of Worship.  In 1618-19, that group held their Second Synod of Dort, the Dutch term for the town of Dordrecht.  This council explained its decisions in a document, The Canons of Dort.  In Article 67 of the Canon, the council says:

The Churches shall observe, in addition to Sunday, also Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost, with the following day, and whereas in most of the cities and provinces of the Netherlands the day of Circumcision and of Ascension of Christ are also observed, Ministers in every place where this is not yet done shall take steps with the Government to have them conform with the others.

Earlier in Article 63, it writes:

The Lordly Supper shall be administered once every two months, wherever possible, and it will be edifying that it take place at Easter, Pentecost, and Christmas where the circumstances of the Church permit. However, in those places where the Church has not yet been instituted, first of all Elders and Deacons shall be provided.

Helvetic Confession of 1564

Another Reformation group in Switzerland wrote Helvetic Confessions in 1536 and 1564.  The second of these writes:

THE FESTIVALS OF CHRIST AND THE SAINTS. Moreover, if in Christian liberty the churches religiously celebrate the memory of the Lord’s nativity, circumcision, passion, resurrection, and of his ascension into heaven, and the sending of the Holy Spirit upon his disciples, we approve of it highly. but we do not approve of feasts instituted for men and for saints. Holy days have to do with the first Table of the Law and belong to God alone.

Finally, holy days which have been instituted for the saints and which we have abolished, have much that is absurd and useless, and are not to be tolerated. In the meantime, we confess that the remembrance of saints, at a suitable time and place, is to be profitably commended to the people in sermons, and the holy examples of the saints set forth to be imitated by all.

Variations of Applications

All of these varied groups, including the Puritans, claimed the Bible as their final authority.  They disagreed on the application of the regulative principle.  Some said “no” on the organ.  Certain ones said only psalms and no hymns.  Groups differed on a liturgical calendar.  They had their unique reasons for all of these variations, but all believed and practiced the regulative principle of worship.

Puritans sprinkled infants.  How many infants do we see baptized in scripture, let alone sprinkled?  Sure, Pilgrims and Baptists separated from the Church of England.  Many Puritans, however, saw no problem with a state church as seen in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.  Puritans heavily involved and led the English Civil War.  Most Puritans would not use musical instruments and sang only Psalms (total Psalmody).

Word Meanings

“Christmas” derives from “Christ’s Mass.”  “Sunday” derives from “Day of the Sun” and Hellenistic astrology.  If I called you “gay” in the not too distant past, that was considered a compliment.  Not anymore.  The word “mass” comes from the Latin missa, which means “to send or dismiss.”  You could argue that “Christmas” literally means “Christ sent,” like John 17:18, “As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.”

If I say, “Merry Christmas” to you, I’m not saying, “Go have a merry time at Roman Catholic Mass.”  No.  This is a joyous time, like when the ark returns to Jerusalem in 2 Samuel 6.  This symbolizes God’s presence back in Jerusalem and David celebrates with all his might.  Christmas means “Christ’s birth” to most.  Be gone the idea that every word must revert to its original etymology.  It’s one reason we revise our dictionaries — words change in meaning based on usage.  Here’s a definition you might read:  “the annual commemoration by Christians of the birth of Jesus Christ on Dec 25.”

Special Occasions

Philadelphia Confession

A liturgical calendar acknowledges special occasions.  The Philadelphia Confession of 1742 says:

The reading of the Scriptures, preaching, and hearing the Word of God, teaching and admonishing one another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing with grace in our hearts to the Lord; as also the administration of baptism, and the Lord’s supper, are all parts of religious worship of God, to be performed in obedience to Him, with understanding, faith, reverence, and godly fear; moreover, solemn humiliation, with fastings, and thanksgiving, upon special occasions, ought to be used in a holy and religious manner.

Jesus and the Feast of Dedication

I call to your attention the words, “special occasions.”  Churches advocated for special occasions.  Regarding this, Stephen Doe writes concerning the regulative principle of worship:

God commands us to worship him once weekly in a corporate manner, but allows us to apply biblical principles to worship him at other times. The church under the new covenant does not have less liberty than the church under the old covenant; we are not the underage church, but the church which has been baptized in the Spirit of Christ. If we were to apply the regulative principle without clearly understanding these things, then we would have to condemn the apostolic church for meeting daily, since God had never commanded such meetings. Instead, they understood that what God was commanding was for them to worship him acceptably (cf. John 4:24; Rom. 12:2; Heb. 10:25; 13:15).

This balance is seen in the example of our Savior, who exercised his liberty of conscience, while not violating the regulative principle, when he attended the Feast of Dedication (that is, Hanukkah; cf. John 10:22). That was an extra-biblical feast not commanded by God in Scripture, but begun by the Jews to commemorate the rededication of the temple after the close of the Old Testament. Jesus was free to go up to Jerusalem or not to go up. God commands us to worship, and Jesus was using that occasion to obey the command of God.

The events on a liturgical calendar are not special occasions because a church sets them apart for observation.  No, they are special because they are events in the life of Jesus Christ.  If a church adds Thanksgiving, Mothers Day, and Fathers Day, those are justifiable.  These do not violate a regulative principle.

Keeping Holy

The term holiday has diminished in its meaning.  If I say, Happy Holiday, today, I might mean something akin to a Hallmark card greeting.  It probably is the opposite of holy, the meaning of “Holy Day” or “holiday.”  When we observe it, set apart for special emphasis, then it is holy, like the ground around the burning bush with Moses.

Exodus 20:8 says, “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.”  I could say, “Remember the birth of Christ, to keep it holy.”  “Remember the resurrection of Christ, to keep it holy.”  If we can keep something holy, then we can sanctify something.  We can set something apart to keep it holy, rather than just being a worldly item during the year.  Churches can and should do that.  This is the value aspect, I’m advocating, for a liturgical calendar.

(More to Come)

The Validity and Potential Value of a Liturgical Calendar (Part Two)

Part One

The Suggestion of a Church Calendar

Perhaps as you read, I don’t have to argue for Christmas and Easter.  You accept that already for your church calendar.   Churches should acknowledge and honor the birth and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  They include the birth and resurrection in the prayers, singing, and preaching of their corporate worship.

I suggest that a church have a calendar with events for the worship of the Lord.  Scripture does not require the special days, but a church should acknowledge the truth of them.  They can do that by putting them on the calendar, very much like inserting them into an order of service.

The Requirement of Order

The belief, teaching, and practice of scripture requires order.  You see order all over the Bible.  This is the nature of God.  Romans 8:29-30 reveal an order of salvation:

29 For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren. 30 Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.

Here’s the order:  (1) foreknowledge, (2) predestination to conform to the image of the Son, (3) call, (4) justification, and (5) glorification.  Other examples of order exist.  Consider Matthew 5:23-24:

23 Therefore if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee; 24 Leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.

Here’s the order:  (1)  Decide to bring a gift to the altar, (2) remember brother has ought against you, (3) Leave the gift before the altar, (4) go, (5) be reconciled to the brother, (6) come back to the altar, (7) offer your gift at the altar.

The Truth of Order

God is a God of order.  God requires order.  “Order” translates the Greek, taxis.  According to BDAG, it means:  “an arrangement of things in sequence,” “a state of good order,” and “an arrangement in which someone or something functions.”  Here are two usages of the word by the Apostle Paul:

1 Corinthians 14:40, “Let all things be done decently and in order.”

Colossians 2:5, “For though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit, joying and beholding your order, and the stedfastness of your faith in Christ.”

Very often the priesthood, like that of Zacharias in Luke 1:8, is called an “order.”  The worship of Israel required order.  If you think about the tabernacle, it started with an outer court, then an inner court, the altar of burnt offering followed by the laver, and then into the holy place.  It ended in the holy of holies.  God prescribed order in the worship.

Worship, Order, and a Church Calendar

When one reads the account of the Lord’s Table in the New Testament one sees a particular order of observance.  This is seen in Matthew 26:26-27, Mark 14:22-23, Luke 22:17-20, and 1 Corinthians 11:23-29.  Someone takes the bread, gives thanks, breaks it, explains it, partakes of it, remembers, and then in the same manner takes the cup.  He takes the bread first and then the cup.  One could say that the order makes sense as it will always.

True worship requires order.  A calendar puts the events of Jesus’ life in an order and observes them according to that plan.  It treats them like they occurred.  They happened at a time of the year.

One does not have to put events on a calendar to give them acknowledgement and honor.  Doing so, however, fulfills a principle of order, which is in the nature of God.  That obeys doing things in order.  It ensures the church will think on these events, meditate on them, emphasize them, and include them in prayer, singing, and preaching.

(More to Come)

AUTHORS OF THE BLOG

  • Kent Brandenburg
  • Thomas Ross

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