Thinking the Faith, Praying the Faith, Living the Faith is written by the PC(USA) Office of Theology and Worship.
Thinking, praying, and living the faith is at the core of ministry in the Office of Theology and Worship. In the following videos, learn more about what thinking, praying, and living the faith means to the leadership of the Office of Theology and Worship. Discover why it matters and what difference it makes in our lives, work, and worship.
Charles Wiley
Barry Ensign-George
David Gambrell
Christine Hong
Karen Russell
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about the doors of the church, including one of Jesus’ “I am” statements from the gospel of John: “I am the gate” (John 10). Our gathering and sending, our going out and coming in, are – like Christian prayer itself – “through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
In subsequent reflection on this topic, it has dawned on me that the whole order of worship (or ordo) might be understood as a living out of the question “Who is Jesus Christ?” To put it another way, Christian liturgy is an enacted Christology.
This ought to be an eye-rollingly, forehead-slappingly obvious statement. Unfortunately, however, this kind of theological reflection often doesn’t enter in to the way we think about the structure and flow of worship. We tend to approach the order of worship as an agenda, a checklist: just one thing after another. Planning for worship is all too often cluttered and consumed with questions like and “when will we do the announcements?” and “who does what part?” and “where will the anthem(s) go?” and “are there too many prayers?” and “will it end in time for lunch?”
What if we could get back to basics, seeking to understand the structure of worship as, first and foremost, a way of encountering Christ?
It's probably easiest to see what I’m talking about in the order of worship for the Easter Vigil, which has four movements:
But one can apply the same kind of thinking to Sunday worship in the Service for the Lord’s Day. First, there is the setting of the service: the first day of the week, the day Christ rose from the dead. This points to the fundamental affirmation of faith that Christ is “the resurrection and the life” (John 11). Beyond that, there are a number of connections one might make within the ordo itself:
Please note that I’m not trying to force any kind of one-to-one correspondence between the “I Am” statements and the elements of the Service for the Lord’s Day. Nor am I interested in the “I Am” statements of John alone. You could mix these up in a variety of ways, and add any number of other biblical images and accounts (OT and NT) of the God we know in Christ Jesus.
The point is this: Deep in the bones of the order of worship is this singular, saving purpose: to proclaim Christ, light of the world, Word made flesh, living water, bread of heaven and true vine, resurrection and life, great I AM.