Worship Then and Now
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Worshiping God is fundamental to God’s people. He wants the redeemed of all ages to honor and serve Him with reverence and joy. Unfortunately, worship is one of the most controversial subjects in churches today. Instead of worship uniting the church, “worship wars” have scarred denominations and fragmented the church. These types of disputes are nothing new. The fault lines of worship controversies have marred nearly every turning point in church history.
In this article I would like to compare the worship between Israel and the church. I hope that by drawing hermeneutical and theological distinctions between the Old and New Testaments, we might better understand the true nature of worship and God’s expectations for the church.
The Nature of Worship
The English origins of the word worship refer to “worth-ship,” or ascribing worth or value to something or someone. In relation to God, worship is the recognition of God’s worth or value as the infinite, true God. The most basic idea of worship is the right response of humans to the one true God. In Recalling the Hope of Glory, Allen Ross states, “Thus, in general terms, ‘worship’ refers to the appropriate response to the revelation of the holy God of glory. More specifically, Christian worship, whether individual or collective, is the structured and ordered expression of the proper response of the people of God to the revelation of God in Christ.” The Hebrew (hištahăwâ) and Greek (proskuneō) terms most often translated as “worship” convey the idea “to bow the knee” or “to prostrate oneself.”
Three dimensions identified
Daniel Block’s synthesis of Biblical worship in his book For the Glory of God is extremely helpful. He organizes worship into three dimensions: disposition, service, and life. Disposition refers to the heart attitude one must have to worship God, such as fear, reverence, and trust. Service refers to “cultic rituals” practiced by both Israel and the church. He defines these as “legitimate forms and systems of religious worship, especially external rites and ceremonies where homage is given to divine beings.” Life refers to the reality that a true worshiper must offer his or her entire life as a service to God (see Deuteronomy 10:12–13 and Romans 12:1–2). Ultimately, Block describes the phenomena of Biblical worship as the following: “True worship involves reverential human acts of submission and homage before the divine Sovereign in response to his gracious revelation of himself and in accord with his will.”
Three dimensions between the Testaments
When we compare Block’s three dimensions of worship between the Testaments, we see both continuity and discontinuity. With reference to dimensions of disposition and life, there is virtually no difference between Israel and the church. Believers in every dispensation must hold the right heart attitudes toward God. Whether a Jew brought a sacrifice to the temple or a Christian brings an offering to church, God expects worship to be given with reverence, fear, joy, thanksgiving, delight, and love. In the same way, both Jews and Christians must live worship in every facet of their lives. For believers, dividing the sacred and secular leads only to hypocrisy. All of life is sacred and must be lived for God’s glory (1 Cor. 10:31). In other words, both Old and New Testament believers could render true worship in corporate worship only when they were living for God the other six days of the week.
The greatest area of discontinuity between the worship of Israel and of the church is in the dimension of service; that is, the ritual forms of worship God required of each. Israel’s worship at the tabernacle or temple looked significantly different from the worship of the early church. We will explore these differences below. What is important to recognize is that just as God provided expectations for the dispositions and life of worship, He also provided clear expectations for corporate worship as well. God has revealed how believers are to approach Him. Some forms of worship are acceptable to God; others are not (Heb. 11:4; 12:28). Fundamentally, all worship must be on God’s terms, not ours. It is about pleasing God, not ourselves. Therefore, Biblical worship is God centered. God reveals not only Himself as the object of worship but also the acceptable ways His people can approach Him.
The Authority for Worship
So how do God’s people know what kind of worship is acceptable to God? Thankfully, God reveals in Scripture what pleases Him. This God-centered approach to worship naturally leads to the theological and historical quandary concerning the “regulative principle” versus the “normative principle.” The regulative principle asserts that the only permissible elements in public worship are elements explicitly mentioned in or inferred from Scripture. The normative principle asserts that anything is permissible in public worship if it is not prohibited by Scripture. While we need to avoid the extremes of its application, I generally affirm that the regulative principle supports a God-centered approach to worship. In other words, Scripture is the ultimate authority for us to know what pleases God. Unfortunately, many pastors and churches are tempted toward man-centered worship; that is, designing worship based merely on people’s tastes. The greatest influence in man-centered approaches to worship is culture instead of the Bible. (For further detail, see J. Ligon Duncan’s helpful discussion, “Traditional Evangelical Worship” in Perspectives on Christian Worship: Five Views.)
For Israel
The primary authority for Israel’s corporate worship was the Law, the first five books of the Old Testament. At Sinai, God made a covenant with Israel that officially formed the nation (Exod. 19). This covenant is known as the Mosaic Covenant. At the center of the Law were the Ten Commandments (Exod. 20), which provided the foundation for Israel’s worship. In the Law, God revealed the regulations for all the sacrifices, feast days, and ceremonies that governed Israel’s worship. The rest of the Old Testament reflects Israel’s obedience and disobedience to the Law’s regulations.
For the church
The primary authority for the church’s corporate worship is the New Testament. Jesus predicted the formation of the church during His ministry (Matt. 16:16–18) and founded the church at Pentecost (Acts 2). While Acts provides descriptive narratives of the church’s worship, the New Testament epistles provide the backbone of the didactic material. Kevin Bauder explains this in his book Baptist Distinctives: “Baptists consistently affirm the absolute authority of the New Testament in all matters of church faith and order… . Only the New Testament tells us what the church is. Only the New Testament tells us what the church is supposed to do. Only the New Testament tells us how the church is supposed to be organized.”
Of course, these assertions about authority need hermeneutical and theological nuancing. Bible-believing Christians affirm that the entire Bible is inspired and profitable for doctrine and Christian living (2 Tim. 3:16–17). The entire Bible progressively reveals Who God is and what He is like (Heb. 1:1–2). Both Testaments reveal God’s moral standards, which flow from His immutable character (1 Cor. 10:6, 11). We should not reject or minimize the Old Testament’s teaching on worship, as some evidently do. Instead, using Block’s dimensions of worship, we need to look to the Old Testament to understand, first, the proper attitudes of worship and, second, what a life of worship looks like. The most dissimilarity will be in Block’s third category of cultic service, but categories of worship (such as prayer, preaching, and singing) and principles of worship are still valid.
So what changed in God’s redemptive plan that called for a change in worship? After the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God’s program shifted from the nation of Israel to establishing a spiritual people gathered from every nation—the church (Eph. 2:11–22; Rom. 11:11–36). The key hermeneutical difference is that New Testament believers are not living under the Law (i.e., the Mosaic Covenant) but under grace (Rom. 6:14–15). Christ brought the Law of Moses to its intended goal at the cross and instituted the Law of Christ (Rom. 10:4). God had planned all along to bring the law of Moses to an end and institute the New Covenant, what the writer of Hebrews called a “better covenant” (Jer. 31:31–34; Heb. 7:22; 8:6; Eph. 2:14–16). In the church, believers now live “under the law of Christ” and are obligated to obey God’s expectations for this dispensation (1 Cor. 9:21; Gal. 6:2; 1 John 3:23–24; 4:21).
These hermeneutical and theological distinctions are critical to developing a Biblical approach to worship. Their understanding and application separate Protestant worship from Catholic and Orthodox worship. They separate dispensational and covenant approaches to worship. They separate traditional and progressive approaches to worship as well.
The Practice of Worship
So how did Israel’s practice of worship differ from that of the church? In this section I would like to explore a few key comparisons and contrasts. First, let’s consider the place of worship. For Israel, the temple was the center of worship. But Jesus declared in His exchange with the Samaritan woman that an hour was coming when true worship would not be centered in Jerusalem (John 4:21). This became reality in Acts as the church spread from Jerusalem to “the uttermost part of the earth” (Acts 1:8). Today the universal church spans the entire globe and manifests itself not in church buildings, but in the local assemblies of the redeemed.
Second, consider the day of worship. God gave the Sabbath observance to Israel as a sign of the Mosaic Covenant and encoded it as the fourth commandment in the Decalogue (Exod. 20:8–11; 31:12–17). Israel was to keep the last day of the week holy, cease from all nonessential work, and worship God (Lev. 23:2; Isa. 58:13–14; Ps. 92). Are Christians expected to keep the Sabbath? This is a complex issue. Some traditions, such as Reformed Christians, answer affirmatively and see Sunday as the Christian Sabbath. Sabbatarians generally argue that all Ten Commandments are binding today, since the moral aspect of the Mosaic law is eternal. I would argue, along with most dispensationalists, that the Sabbath is not for Christians. Since the Mosaic law has been abrogated, New Testament believers are not bound to Israel’s covenant in its entirety, including its seal. Paul makes this clear about the Sabbath in Colossians 2:16–17 and infers it in Romans 14:1–12 and Galatians 4:9–11. Instead, most Christians worship on Sunday, the Lord’s Day, as seen in the early church (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor. 16:2; cf. Rev. 1:10) and as ultimately established in church history by the time of Constantine.
Third, God gave different leaders to Israel and the church to lead God’s people in worship. The worship leaders in Israel had a national dimension, for God called judges, kings, prophets, and priests to lead the nation in both spiritual and civil matters. For the church, God calls leaders to lead primarily in spiritual matters. Paul lists five offices God gave to the church: apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers (Eph. 4:11). Apostles and prophets were foundational for the church and appear to have ceased (Eph. 2:20); evangelists (i.e., missionaries) and pastors/teachers continue. To this list we should add deacons (Acts 6:1–6). Baptists have historically held that the local church has two Biblical offices: pastor and deacon (1 Tim. 3). Pastors, also identified as elders and bishops, are the primary worship leaders in the church.
There are many similarities between the leadership of Israel and leadership in the church. God designed the offices and called individuals to serve as leaders in the Old and New Testaments. God expected godly character and righteous living from all Biblical leaders. Just as the Lord is the Great Shepherd, all Biblical leaders were called to shepherd God’s flock. There are also some interesting differences. One rests in the fact that since the church is not a nation, church leaders have no civil responsibilities. This may seem like an obvious point, but some church traditions that confuse church and state mix civil and religious duties. Another difference is the priesthood. Hebrews makes it clear that the levitical priesthood was inadequate (Heb. 7). Now every Christian is a priest who can serve, offer gifts, and have direct access to God through Jesus, our great High Priest (Heb. 13:15–16). Similarly, all of Israel’s prophets, priests, and kings anticipated God’s ultimate leader—Jesus Christ. He is the King, the Prophet, and the Priest, which the New Testament makes clear.
Finally, let’s consider service. Israel’s religious service, or “cultic rituals,” centered around worship at the tabernacle and temple: sacrifices, feast days, new moons, circumcisions, prayers, singing, and homilies. All these religious practices are outlined in the Mosaic law. The New Testament summarizes all the rituals in the Mosaic Covenant as “a shadow of things to come” (Col. 2:17; Heb. 10:1). They point to the person and work of Christ. Scripture does not provide as many details about corporate worship for the church as it does for Israel. It does, however, prescribe several aspects of worship: the public reading of Scripture (1 Tim. 4:13); the preaching of Scripture (2 Tim. 4:2); public prayer (1 Tim. 2:1–8); corporate singing of psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs (Eph. 5:19; Col. 3:16); giving (1 Cor. 16:2; 2 Cor. 8—9); and the practice of baptism (Rom. 6:3–6) and Communion (1 Cor. 11:23–34).
While most of these aspects of public worship have parallels with Israel’s worship, the ordinances are uniquely Christian. Some church traditions hold that infant baptism is the Christian replacement for circumcision. But these attempts simply fail to convince. The Biblical model is believers’ baptism by immersion (Acts 2:38–41). It is a onetime initiatory rite for a believer to identify with Christ and His church that pictures the death and resurrection of Christ (Matt. 28:19–20; Rom. 6:3–6). The roots of Communion are in the Passover, as Jesus instituted the ordinance at the Passover meal during Passion Week. The elements of the Lord’s Table commemorate the body and blood of Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross. Communion is one of the key distinctives and sacred aspects of Christian worship.
Conclusion
In this article I have drawn several comparisons and contrasts between Israel’s worship and the church’s worship in the hopes that we might better understand how to worship our great God. We need to study both Testaments more to worship Biblically and to ensure that we are approaching God in a manner that pleases Him. Biblical worship not only pleases God, but it should also unite the church. One day all the redeemed will stand before Christ and offer devout praise and honor in unison. I look forward to that day
This article was originally published in the May/June 2021 Baptist Bulletin. Copyright © 2021 Regular Baptist Press. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Doug Brown 2020 Bio
Douglas Brown (PhD, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) is the academic dean and senior professor of Biblical Studies at Faith Baptist Theological Seminary. He has taught at Faith since 1999 and serves as an assistant pastor at Faith Baptist Church in Cambridge, Iowa.
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