| Christ Church Anglican | |||
| "Penitence, Prayer, Praise, Proclamation: The Nature of Worship" | |||
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In some combination, all four of these elements are found in all three of
the great worship services of Anglicanism, namely, the Holy Communion,
Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer. They are also found to some degree in the
Ministration of Holy Baptism, the Order for Confirmation, and the
Solemnization of Holy Matrimony. Other services and devotions, for example,
the Litany, concentrate on one or the other of these elements, but complete
worship contains all four. Penitence: The Christian approaches God with regret for his errors and disobedience and a conscious desire to amend his ways. This is an age in which “anything goes” and people do not like to admit the possibility of anything so disagreeable as even minor sin. But Christians know that there is sin in everyday life and that the worst thing they can do is to deny it. “I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance,” said the Lord. And so we begin Morning and Evening Prayer with a General Confession. And before we dare approach the Holy Table in Communion, we also join in the General Confession. Only as we inwardly cleanse ourselves by penitence are we prepared to worship God. Prayer: Along with penitence, prayer is the establishment of communication with God. Worship is not a one-way broadcast but a two-way communication. Prayer may of course be silent and wholly private between the worshipper and God. Or it may be corporate prayer, said or sung by the worshippers together, or it may be collected prayers of the people, gathered up and offered by the Minister in the form of a “Collect.” Prayer is an opening of our hearts to God, a baring of our souls |
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| and inmost thoughts, a
conscious acknowledgment that from God, “no secrets are hid.” Prayer may be
for ourselves or for others. It may seek God’s mercy and protection or
invoke His all-knowing will for the world and us. It may include penitence
and it may include praise and thanksgiving. Whatever it says, it is our
manner of reaching out to establish contact with God, of admitting that we
are finite and He is infinite, that we are creatures and He is the Creator,
that we live only in, by and through Him. Praise: God sent us here; He will take us back. He is the author and Creator of all that is. “We are the people of His pasture and the sheep of His hand,” as the Venite puts it. He is all-wise, all-seeing, all powerful. He is the source of all that we have. Therefore it is natural to praise Him, to extol Him, to pour out our respect and thanks and awe in praise. This may take the form of a song, such as the Venite, the Benedictus, the Jubilate Deo and other canticles. It may be expressed by a hymn or by a loud Amen or Alleluia. It may be expressed by the Sursum Corda and the Sanctus, “Holy, Holy, Holy,” or the Gloria in excelsis, in the Holy Eucharist. It may be expressed in prayer. But it should come from a heart full of reverence and love and thanks. “Praise God from whom all blessing flow.” Proclamation: Christian worship is also marked by the proclaiming of the Christian message, the Gospel. This proclamation is done by various means. It is done by selected Scripture readings – the Lessons in the Daily Offices, the Epistle and Gospel in the Holy Communion. It is also done through the singing of hymns, which carry some part of the message from God to us. It is very directly accomplished through the sermon preached by the Minister, for this should expound the Gospel and the moral and religious and supernatural teachings of our faith. By proclamation, by teaching, by learning, we understand God’s purposes better and draw closer to Him. These, then, are the four elements of worship: penitence, prayer, praise and proclamation. All four are present in any full and complete service of corporate worship and all four should be present in some measure or form in our private worship. Worship is the individual’s approach to God, God’s response to him, and the resulting mystical union of man with God. |
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| This page is part of a series of Anglican teaching leaflets originally written by Perry Lankhuff and offered by Christ Church Anglican. The full listing of available subjects categorized by topic can be found by following the link for Anglican Faith. | |||