RPTS
Graduation May 18, 2001 Text - I Corinthians 11:20-34
Bill Edgar
Teacher and People Gathered in One Place on the Lord’s
Day
I recently read a short exchange between two church members. George
said to Bob, “Pastor Steve really met our needs when our son
had his car accident. He was right there for us. I’m sure
glad he’s our pastor.” “Yes,” Bob answered,
“Pastor Steve helped you, but emergencies don’t happen
often. Usually, we see him only at church, and frankly, he puts
me to sleep. I sometimes wonder why we even go.”
Lord’s Day services. Like it or not, you men going into the
pastoral ministry will be evaluated on how well you conduct them.
People will discuss your preaching for its truth, but also for its
ability simply to hold their attention and “be interesting.”
They will note your prayers and music choices. Lord’s Day
services are a pastor’s top responsibility. Making things
more difficult for many pastors today are the worship wars taking
place in many churches. Will it be contemporary worship or traditional
worship? Will it be liturgical or “Spirit led?” So my
topic tonight is, “What are church services all about?”
Knowing the answer to that question will help you as you begin to
lead your churches in the worship of God.
When the Apostle Paul wrote to the large, divided, proud, and scandalous
church in Corinth, he addressed a church that was worshiping improperly.
There were showoffs who made a display of their spiritual gifts.
A man guilty of incest worshiped as a member in good standing; there
had been no church discipline. There was so much disorder in the
worship services that if outsiders came in they would think people
were crazy. Worst of all, observance of the Lord’s Supper
was an abomination, so bad that Paul wrote to them: “When
you come together in one place, it is not to eat the Lord’s
Supper.” (I Corinthians 11:20) The Corinthian saints, proud
of their large and gifted church, simply did not understand worship.
Paul had to reteach them how to worship God. What did he have to
say? We won’t look at all of his instructions, just three
things in chapter eleven that was read in your hearing a moment
ago.
First, church gatherings are different from the rest of life. This
may seem obvious -- it is obvious! -- but some then, just as some
now, couldn’t see the difference. The Apostle wrote, “Eat
at home.” Second, church gatherings are covenant ceremonies.
Therefore, worship can’t be a case of each church doing what
is best in its own eyes. “This cup is the new covenant in
my blood,” Jesus said. Third, church meetings are times of
judgment. Anyone who partakes of the cup in an unworthy manner,
drinks judgment to himself. Woe to those saints and woe to those
churches which come together and do whatever they like and fail
to discern the Lord’s body.
The first point: church gatherings are different from the rest
of life. In Corinth Christians observed the Lord’s Supper
as an ordinary home meal. Each ate when he was ready to, poorer
brethren went hungry, some got drunk. They did not understand that
their “eating” in church was a different kind of eating
than what they did at home. I can almost hear Corinthian saints
saying, “All of life is worship. Therefore, whether you eat
or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God. What better
way to glorify God than to eat and drink thankfully before him.”
(I Corinthians 10:31) But church is not home. Paul’s rejoinder
to their obliteration of the difference between Lord’s Day
services and the rest of life was to assert the difference. “What!
Do you not have houses to eat and drink in? Or do you despise the
church of God and shame those who have nothing?” (11:22) He
then reinstructed them on the proper way to eat the Lord’s
Supper, ending with this rule: “But if anyone is hungry, let
him eat at home.” (11:34) There is one way for eating at home,
there is another way for eating at church. Eating at home means
one thing, eating in church means something else.
Why do different rules apply to the saints when they eat at home
and when they “eat” in church? Because when the saints
come together each week, they appear before God to remember and
reaffirm his covenant with them. Life at home is lived within the
covenant, but it is not a time of covenant renewal.
Notice that Paul does not use the term “worship” for
church gatherings. Instead, he uses phrases like, “when you
come together” (11:18, 20), “... if the whole church
comes together in one place” (14:23), “Whenever you
come together” (14:26). The assembly of the church recalls
Israel’s assembling at Sinai to receive the covenant. After
that first assembly of Israel at Sinai, God called Israel to meet
regularly before him. “Three times a year all your males shall
appear before the LORD your God.” (Deuteronomy 16:16) Every
seventh day, in fact, Israel gathered for a solemn assembly. (Leviticus
23:3) Both before and after Christ came, God called the gathered
saints the “ekklhsia,” a Greek word meaning “assembly”
and a virtual synonym for another Greek word, also applied to the
gathered saints both before and after Christ, “sunagogh.”
Church meetings are different from the rest of life, and differently
governed, because they involve the whole church assembling at God’s
call at a set time to renew his covenant. The assembled church is
not the family, it is not the state, it is not the saints living
in the world as salt and light, it is not a group of friends getting
together. It is the saints assembled before God with a sacrifice
to hear him, ask his favor, and pledge anew their loyalty to him.
Sunday services, our second point, are a time of covenant renewal.
Whether Communion be observed or not, every Sunday service leads
to Communion and depends for its spiritual reality on what Communion
signifies. When Israel met weekly in its synagogues for prayers,
their being heard depended on the Temple sacrifices offered daily
by the priests. When the church meets, the heart of its worship
is likewise in the heavenly temple where our Mediator serves. Each
Lord’s Day the church comes not to a mountain like Sinai,
but to “Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the
heavenly Jerusalem, to an innumerable company of angels, to the
general assembly and church of the firstborn who are registered
in heaven, to God the Judge of all, to the spirits of just men made
perfect, to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood
of sprinkling that speaks better things than that of Abel.”
(Hebrews 12:22-24)
Communion remembers Christ’s body broken for us and his blood
which ratified the “new covenant” promised by Jeremiah.
(Jeremiah 31:31) When we eat the bread and drink the cup, we partake
of the one Christ and in union with him appear before God. (I Corinthians
10:16-17) There is a Real Presence of Christ in Communion, and by
faith we take spiritual nourishment from Christ himself. Christ
himself is our covenant, the Servant of the LORD of whom Isaiah
prophesied, “I will keep you and give you as a covenant to
the people, as a light to the Gentiles, to open blind eyes.”
(Isaiah 42:6, 49:8) When you lead Lord’s Day services, you
come with the church before God’s throne to reaffirm your
part in Christ our covenant.
Biblical covenants have a definite structure. Whether made between
God and his people or between a human superior and his inferiors,
they have the same general structure. What the Westminster Assembly
called the “elements” of worship are nothing other than
ways of reviewing God’s Covenant of Grace with his church.
Covenants begin 1) by naming the parties to the covenant, continue
by 2) recounting the history of how the covenant parties came to
be associated, 3) review covenant duties, especially of the people
to their lord, 4) call down blessings and curses from God for performance
or nonperformance of covenant duties, and 5) conclude with a sign
by which to remember the covenant. Communion, like Passover for
the Old Covenant, is a sign of our continuing participation in the
covenant, while baptism, like circumcision for the Old Covenant,
is a sign of our entrance into the covenant. What about the rest
of what Westminster called the “elements of worship?”
The call to worship at the beginning of the service is God’s
call to his people to meet with him. The elders issue the call in
Christ’s name, setting the time and place for the saints to
meet. The call to worship names the parties to the covenant: God
and his saints.
The reading and explaining of the Scriptures review how we came
to be associated with God. While we were sinners, Christ died for
us, and the Holy Spirit converted us from a way of death to the
way of life. God’s mighty acts in history, both in Christ
and in our own individual histories, have brought us together before
God. The Preface to the Ten Commandments begins with the same essential
history. “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the
land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.” (Exodus 20:2)
Besides explaining the Scriptures, preaching includes exhortation,
that is, urging obedience to God. The Protestant Reformers John
Calvin and John Knox both included the Ten Commandments in their
church services, to convict of sin and to teach how to live. The
law of God, printed on the conscience of man at his creation and
republished in pure summary form in the Ten Commandments, reminds
sinners how they have failed to obey God and leads them to repentance.
The law of God also answers the question that looms for every new
believer: now how should I live? In the covenant review and reaffirmation
that is at the heart of the church’s gathering, the law of
God provides the basis for exhortation to be faithful to our Lord.
I began today by reminding you that churches will evaluate you
on how well you lead worship on the Lord’s Day. Part of their
reaction to your leadership will depend on their own preparation,
something over which you have no direct control. Saints who come
in faith will hear the call to worship as God’s voice speaking
to them and will be glad for the invitation. Those who are living
without faith will hear only your voice. Saints gathered in faith
will hear in the reading and preaching of the Scriptures the voice
of God speaking to their hearts. Yes, it is a man reading and preaching,
but he is God’s man speaking God’s Word. They will answer
“amen” in their hearts and quite properly “amen”
with their voices. When you preach, it is not primarily your ideas
that you are expressing, but the faith and experience of all of
the saints. The Word of God is their Word also. Amen!
Should people come to church expecting God’s blessing? Absolutely
yes! One man said to me recently, “Why do I come to church
each week? Because I go away refreshed.” The new covenant
is a covenant of grace, and every part of the Lord’s Day service
is a means of grace to the faithful. The Holy Spirit grants grace
through his Word to the hearts of believers. The church’s
gathering should please God, and what pleases him more than to give
gifts to his people? The saints’ gatherings are a means of
grace and blessing to them.
A central part of the church’s gathering is prayer. When
Israel gathered before God at Sinai, they made requests of God.
They asked, among other things, not to hear his voice again. Let
him speak to us through Moses, they said. (Exodus 20:18-21) They
also expressed their awe of him, answering, “Amen. All that
the LORD has said we will do.” (Exodus 24:7) When you or someone
else leads the church in prayer, you ask favors from your King,
you give him thanks for past blessings, you ask forgiveness for
failures pleading for mercy through Christ’s blood, you bless
God’s name and praise him. The saints’ gatherings are
not for the bare recital of covenant facts, they are for the present
communion with God, with a repeated central request, “Lord,
have mercy, “ “Lord, let your face shine on us,”
“Lord be gracious unto us and give us peace.” Everyone
says “Yes” to the call to worship, every saint says
“Amen” to what God has done and to his law, all pray
together silently -- or not so silently -- while the leader prays.
People will evaluate you pastors on how well you conduct Lord’s
Day services, but never think that they are your performance. All
of the saints are appearing with you before God to embrace him and
his Word and to ask his help. Your calling is to lead them in doing
that, not to persuade them what a nice and friendly guy you are
or how gifted you are.
Here is the third point: church meetings are times of judgment.
Covenants include blessings and curses. Notice how blessings and
curses are intertwined with the Ten Commandments: “for the
LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain,”
“visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto
the third and fourth generation,” “showing mercy to
thousands, to those who love me and keep my commandments,”
“that your days may be long upon the land which the LORD your
God has given you.” Peter wrote that judgment begins at the
household of God. (I Peter 4:17) Therefore, since the saints meet
before God with whom they are in covenant, it is not surprising
that Paul warns the Corinthian saints about God’s judgment
when they meet. His words are stern. “Therefore whoever eats
this bread or drinks this cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner
will be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.” (11:27)
Why? Because he does not do so in humble faith. He does not remember
that he is meeting with God, so unrepented sin and unmended relationships
do not worry him. He fails to distinguish between church gatherings
and the rest of life in which eating heartily is fine. In Corinth
God had brought sickness and death to many in the church because
of their unfaithful taking of Communion, the sign of his covenant.
(11:30)
Since blessings and curses are part of the covenant, God’s
judgments of excommunication are done in the midst of the assembly.
Concerning the man guilty of incest Paul told the Corinthians what
to do. "In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when you are
gathered together, along with my spirit, with the power of our Lord
Jesus Christ, deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of
the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of our Lord Jesus
Christ.” (I Corinthians 5:5) Such judgments are necessary
to “purge out the old leaven.” (I Corinthians 5:7) But
along with judgments go God’s blessings. It is with a blessing
that Paul begins his letters: Grace and peace to you from our Lord
Jesus Christ. We likewise begin our gatherings with God’s
gracious invitation, his call to worship. We conclude them with
God’s blessing, the benediction. “May the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy
Spirit be with you all.” “May the Lord’s face
shine upon you and give your peace.” That is the blessing
which we seek from God when we gather together in one place.
What about singing to the Lord? Paul assumes that when we meet
together we will sing. We sing to the Lord with grace in our hearts,
bringing a sacrifice of praise to him. We also sing to each other,
so that in song the saints teach and admonish one another. (I Corinthians
14:26, Ephesians 5:19, Colossians 3:16) It is in our singing that
it is most clear that while Lord’s Day services may be led
by the preacher, they are the activity of the whole people. Furthermore,
in singing it becomes obvious that God’s Word to his people
is broader than any text or sermon theme.
In our church we use the oldest and most universal of all church
hymnals, the Book of Psalms. Any preacher who has ever tried to
match Psalms to his preaching has discovered a wonderful thing.
The Psalms don’t match our sermons very well. In each Psalm
God weaves together many elements of his truth, and the singers
move quickly from praise of the Creator to confession of sin to
pleas for help. In the Psalms all of God’s truth is sung,
refracted through the experiences and emotions of the saints. All
parts of the covenant, who God is and who we are, God’s law,
his mighty acts of salvation in history, blessings and curses, are
repeated in the Psalms. Nothing is omitted, especially not Christ.
With our eyes opened by the Holy Spirit and the veil lifted, we
see Christ portrayed again and again in the Psalms.
In considering how the assembly of the saints is a covenant ceremony,
we return finally to the Lord’s Supper where we began. Every
covenant has a sign attached to it by which its participants will
know that they are in the covenant. The sign of God’s covenant
with all mankind in Adam was a tree. God’s covenant sign with
Noah and his descendants was the rainbow. The sign of God’s
covenant with David was the temple in Jerusalem that his son Solomon
built. The sign of the New Covenant is the Lord’s Supper.
The call to worship, the reading and preaching of the Word, our
confession of sin, prayer, singing to God and to one another, prepare
us to renew our part in the Lord by communing with him, whether
we commune weekly or yearly.
The centrality of the Lord’s Supper in our worship makes
plain the nature of church assemblies: they are covenant ceremonies.
The “elements” of worship are not unconnected activities
which the church does one after the other in no particular order.
On the contrary, they are all of them means of grace in which the
church, meeting before God’s throne, remembers Christ our
covenant and pledges itself to serve him.
New graduates, many of you will soon be ordained and installed
as pastors in Christ’s church. Some of you may already be
pastors. Your calling from God is to lead the church before God
when it gathers on the Lord’s Day. You will speak God’s
Word to his people, you will pronounce his blessing upon his people,
you will distribute the bread and the wine to the saints. You will
call them together, you will remind them how God saved them, you
will exhort them how to live now that they are saved, you will lead
them in prayer to God, you will pronounce God’s blessing on
his saints, you will choose the songs that they sing, and you may
well have to pronounce God’s judgment on the erring. Doing
these things is your calling. Your congregations will evaluate you
on how well you conduct Lord’s Day services. God will also
judge you on your work, a thought that should sober us. James wrote,
“My brethren, let not many of you become teachers, knowing
that we shall receive a stricter judgment.” (James 3:1) Paul
told Timothy, “Be diligent to present yourself approved to
God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing
the word of truth.” (II Timothy 2:15) You men will build on
a foundation that stretches back to Christ and his Apostles. May
what you build endure even fire itself. In Corinth Apollos built
on the foundation laid by Paul. So did many others. What of their
work? Paul wrote: “Now if anyone builds on this foundation
with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each one’s
work will become clear; for the Day will reveal it, because it will
be revealed by fire; and the fire will test each one’s work,
of what sort it is.” (I Corinthians 3:12-13) I don’t
quote James and Paul to frighten you, but to remind you that the
preacher of God’s Word has a high calling. God will hold you
accountable for your work. When God gives much, he requires much.
And this also is a faithful saying, “If a man desires the
office of a bishop, he desires a good work.” (I Timothy 3:1)
Elders as well as deacons who serve well “obtain for themselves
a good standing and great boldness in the faith which is in Christ
Jesus.” (I Timothy 3:13) What more could you ask? May God’s
blessing and the might of his power go with you. Amen.
Back to Sermon Transcripts