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What
is Presbyterian
Worship Like?
The order of a Sunday worship service in a Presbyterian church
is determined by the pastor and the Session, the church's governing
body. It generally includes prayer, music, Bible reading and a sermon
based upon scripture. The Sacraments, a time of personal response/offering,
and a sharing of community concerns are also parts of worship.
The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) suggests that
worship be ordered in terms of five major actions centered in the
Word of God (gathering around the Word, proclaiming the Word, responding
to the Word, the sealing of the Word, and bearing and following
the Word into the world), but recognizes that "other orders
of worship may also serve the needs of a particular church and be
orderly, faithful to Scripture, and true to historic principles."
(Book of Order W-3.3202)
Prayer
"Prayer is at the heart of worship. In prayer, through
the Holy Spirit, people seek after and are found by the one true
God who has been revealed in Jesus Christ. They listen and wait
upon God, call God by name, remember God's gracious acts, and offer
themselves to God. Prayer may be spoken, sung, offered in silence,
or enacted. Prayer grows out of the center of a person's life in
response to the Spirit. Prayer is shaped by the Word of God in Scripture
and by the life of the community of faith. Prayer issues in commitment
to join God's work in the world." (Book of Order W-2.1001)
Music
"Song is a response which engages the whole self
in prayer. Song unites the faithful in common prayer wherever they
gather for worship whether in church, home, or other special place....Through
the ages and from varied cultures, the church has developed additional
musical forms for congregational prayer. Congregations are encouraged
to use these diverse musical forms for prayer as well as those which
arise out of the musical life of their own cultures. To lead the
congregation in the singing of prayer is a primary role of the choir
and other musicians. They also may pray on behalf of the congregation
with introits, responses, and other musical forms. Instrumental
music may be a form of prayer since words are not essential to prayer.
In worship music is not to be for entertainment or artistic display.
Care should be taken that it not be used merely as a cover for silence."
(Book of Order W-2.1003 - W-2.1004)
Scripture
"The church confesses the Scriptures to be the Word
of God written, witnessing to God's self-revelation. Where that
Word is read and proclaimed, Jesus Christ the Living Word is present
by the inward witness of the Holy Spirit. For this reason the reading,
hearing, preaching, and confessing of the Word are central to Christian
worship. The session shall ensure that in public worship the Scripture
is read and proclaimed regularly in the common language(s) of the
particular church." (Book of Order W-2.2001)
"The minister of Word and Sacrament is responsible for the
selection of Scripture to be read in all services of public worship
and should exercise care so that over a period of time the people
will hear the full message of Scripture. It is appropriate that
in the Service for the Lord's Day there be readings from the Old
Testament and the Epistles and Gospels of the New Testament. The
full range of the psalms should be also used in worship. Selections
for reading in public worship should be guided by the seasons of
the church year, pastoral concerns for a local congregation, events
and conditions in the world, and specific program emphases of the
church. Lectionaries offered by the church ensure a broad range
of readings as well as consistency and connection with the universal
Church." (Book of Order W-2.002 - W-2.003)
Preaching
"The preached Word or sermon is to be based upon the written
Word. It is a proclamation of Scripture in the conviction that through
the Holy Spirit Jesus Christ is present to the gathered people,
offering grace and calling for obedience....The sermon should present
the gospel with simplicity and clarity, in language which can be
understood by the people....the preaching of the Word shall ordinarily
be done by a minister of Word and Sacrament. (Book of Order W-2.2007)
"The Word is also proclaimed through song in anthems and solos
based on scriptural texts, in cantatas and oratorios which tell
the biblical story, in psalms and canticles, and in hymns, spirituals,
and spiritual songs which present the truth of the biblical faith.
Song in worship may also express the response of the people to the
Word read, sung, enacted, or proclaimed. Drama and dance, poetry
and pageant, indeed, most other human art forms are also expressions
through which the people of God have proclaimed and responded to
the Word." (Book of Order W-2.2008)
Sacraments
"The Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper are God's
acts of sealing the promises of faith within the community of faith
as the congregation worships, and include the responses of the faithful
to the Word proclaimed and enacted in the Sacraments." (Book
of Order W-3.3601)
Offering
"The Christian life is an offering of one's self
to God. In worship the people are presented with the costly self-offering
of Jesus Christ, are claimed and set free by him, and are led to
respond by offering to him their lives, their particular gifts and
abilities, and their material goods. Worship should always offer
opportunities to respond to Christ's call to become disciples by
professing faith, by uniting with the church, and by taking up the
mission of the people of God, as well as opportunities for disciples
to renew the commitment of their lives to Jesus Christ and his mission
in the world." (Book of Order W-2.5001 - W-2.5002)
Community
Concerns
"Worship is an activity of the common life of the
people of God in which the care of the members for each other and
for the quality of their life and ministry together expresses the
reality of God's power to create and sustain community in the midst
of a sinful world. As God is concerned for the events in daily life,
so members of the community in worship appropriately express concern
for one another and for their ministry in the world." (Book
of Order W-2.6001)
(Copyright © 1997, PresbyFax, Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.), Louisville, KY.)
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