I was asked to post this here, for discussion by those who can't post in the "Baptist Only" section. A moderator advised it is OK to seemingly double-post for this purpose.
In his blog article But There’s No Liturgy in the Bible, es Lampkin argues that liturgy is biblically based.
In his blog article But There’s No Liturgy in the Bible, es Lampkin argues that liturgy is biblically based.
...James K. Smith argues that we are surrounded by competing liturgies; the liturgy of the Mall, of Higher Education, of the Sports complex.
The people of God have a liturgy. It may be a deliberate, biblically grounded, historical liturgy, or it may be a contemporary liturgy dictated to us by the commercially oriented pop culture.
There are no quick and easy Bible references. It requires a comprehensive cover-to-cover examination of the Bible, from creation to the culmination of history.
The first Christians, all Jews, continued to worship in the temple, but found in the sacrificial death and resurrection of Jesus the culmination, the fulfillment, of the sacrifices instituted in Leviticus.
Is his reasoning biblically sound? historically accurate? currently relevant? What do you think?For the next several centuries, the worship practices of the Church continued. The Church, as a human institution under the direction of the Holy Spirit, altered and corrected the liturgy as needed.
It wasn’t until 19th century American Revivalism that the church began to question the Biblical, historic liturgy of the church.