Sorry, brother, you missed my entire point. One one hand, I think a point could be made that altar calls are not REQUIRED by scripture, but as I stated before that altar calls are NOT prohibited by scripture - therefore, they are not UN-biblical. If used properly, they can be effective, used inproperly, ... well you just have a lot of 3x5 cards filled out.
Are dancing bears prohibited in Scripture, not directly, but I suppose if you look at a verse such as I Peter 4:11 it would rule our your dancing bears.
Salty
Dear Brother,
This is my point exactly. How do we determine what elements are to be included in worship? There are two approaches possible.
The first is called the
Regulative Principle of Worship, and is what Baptists have, in varying degrees, historically held. It states that God alone determines what is to be brought to Him in worship, and He has made it clear in the Scriptures. What He has command explicitly, and that only, is to be included. In this approach the Bible Alone "Regulates" worship. It would be a denial of the Sufficiency of Scripture to add to what God has commanded. If it is not command, then it is prohibited, and therefore un-biblical.
The second approach, called the
Normative Principle of Worship, says that in addition to what Scripture says, men may invent, create, and add to God's worship based on what men believe is good, enjoyable, smart in their eyes, or useful. This approach has historically been the practice of Roman Catholics, Anglicans, and Lutherans. They do not restrict their elements of worship to what God has commanded in New Covenant worship, but rather add things based on tradition, human "wisdom," and patterns of OT worship (which has been fulfilled in Christ) Over the last 100 years, Baptists have slowly moved away from the first approach and increasingly adopted the second. Of course, most don't even realize this because of our general ignorance of history. This approach says, "If we think an altar call is good, then do it." It all becomes a function of human wisdom, pragmatism (if it "works" - do it!), and often "tradition."
Think of it this way, if men must have a prohibition explicitly from Scripture for everything that cannot be used in worship, then just think how big our Bibles would have to be. In God's wisdom, what is commanded is to done in worship, what is not commanded is prohibited (and thus un-biblical). The Scriptures are sufficient!
Blessings!