Several
times over the past few months, our worship has included a more
structured time of corporate confession, confession of faith and
corporate prayer. It is a more “liturgical” practice than has been
typical of churches in our evangelical and Reformed family. The
conversations I’ve had with folks afterward have all been interesting,
and mostly positive.
These
“experiments in our corporate worship” grow primarily out of my concern
for the lack of deep roots - deep in the Spirit, Scripture, thinking
and community - that seems to be the experience of many American
believers. I look around and see a very “make it up and figure it out as
you go” sort of individualistic faith. Take our rightful emphasis on a
“personal relationship with Jesus” place it in a consumer focused
culture and slim it down with hectic, overcrowded lives and what is left
seems very different than the faith that turned the world upside down
as recorded in the Book of Acts.
I realized this summer while reading Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Prophet, Martyr, Spy
by Eric Metaxas that there were some distinct patterns of life together
in the underground seminary that he led. There was a reason that 80% of
his seminarians resisted the Nazis, when only 20% did across Germany.
They included corporate confession and Bible meditation.
Shortly
after that, I heard a presentation by Jim Belcher - author of Deep
Church - at a meeting of our presbytery. He shed more light on
everything floating through my heart and head. Click Here for my blog post for more detail and to hear that presentation.
This week, I came across a stirring article: Three Views: Why Confess Sins in Worship When It Seems So Rote? How the habit heals us. Click Here to link to the article:
The
value of corporate confession comes simply from the fact that we are
doing it with people-those we've been glad to share ministry with, and
those we find more difficult to appreciate. A person in the next pew may
have slighted us; we may have just learned that a person across the
aisle was insulted by something we said. Corporate confession is a time
to air it all out and reflect on our regrettable tendency to harm one
another. It is a great equalizer, reminding us that we are all guilty of
sinful actions and omissions, and that we all need forgiveness.
The
Gospel of Grace builds a different kind of community than the “consumer
- vendor” way of our world. It’s a community that shares life
together, and sooner or later, that will mean facing our sin against one
another and needing to confess that sin with one another to God and to
one another. Let's keep learning to do exactly that.
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