Coram Deo
Puritan Board Junior
As I contemplate the depth of worship with reverence and awe with a holy fear I have started to rethink somethings further about worship and have been studing in more detail Reformed Worship. As most of you know this has led me to Exclusive Psalmody, A-Cappela Singing, and Some Corporate Prayers. I have also seen and find biblical the benediction at the end of the Worship. I have read countless books and research many articles on the topics. I have read Knox, Gill, Directory of Public Worship and John Calvin. It is John Calvin that has brought me to this point of this thread. As I read John Calvin and his Worship I have learned that he thought that the Reading the Law should be in every worship, because through the law comes the knowledge of sin and our need for Christ. In the beginning he had it sung but later said that it should be read since singing was for only the psalms. He also felt that a Corporate Biblical response was needed either after each commandment or at the end of the reading of the law. The Kyrie "Lord have mercy".
I know that the law was read during worship according to the scriptures and the kyrie is a biblical response lifted right out of the scriptures.
So my question is to all of the PB, what are your thoughts about the Reading of the Law by the Corporate Body or by the Pastor and the response of the Kyrie by the corporate body.. Tells us why you are for it or against it and your best biblical defense.
I am starting to lean this way and I do not see any problems with it according to the RPW and find Calvins arguments for it very logical.
Coram Deo,
Michael
I know that the law was read during worship according to the scriptures and the kyrie is a biblical response lifted right out of the scriptures.
So my question is to all of the PB, what are your thoughts about the Reading of the Law by the Corporate Body or by the Pastor and the response of the Kyrie by the corporate body.. Tells us why you are for it or against it and your best biblical defense.
I am starting to lean this way and I do not see any problems with it according to the RPW and find Calvins arguments for it very logical.
Coram Deo,
Michael
