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All About Worship

What kind of hymns do you like?

10% said:
I prefer only the stately hymns from ancient times, such as Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silent, and hymns from the Reformation era, such as A Mighty Fortress Is Our God or Now Thank We All Our God.
2% said:
I prefer only contemporary hymns, such as There Is Plenty of Room in the Family or Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, There’s Something About That Name, by Bill and Gloria Gaither.
2% said:
I prefer only revivalistic hymns from the nineteenth century, such as Bringing in the Sheaves and The Old Rugged Cross.
83% said:
I prefer all of the above, and I would like for the service to contain all types of hymns.
3% said:
No response.

If you are choosing hymns, it is best to pick a variety. Note also that ancient hymns are five times as popular as contemporary hymns. I suppose that for many people finding an eternal God only in contemporary form is an oxymoron.

What style of preaching do you like?

6% said:
I prefer stirring preaching, with all the rhetorical fixings.
31% said:
I prefer calm, reasoned preaching.
62% said:
I like all types and would prefer a variety.
1% said:
No response.

From this I gather that if you’re prone to dynamic preaching, you can safely tone it down from time to time.

Which method of preaching do you prefer?

10% said:
I prefer for the preacher to preach without notes.
0% said:
I prefer for the preacher to read from a manuscript.
36% said:
It’s okay for the preacher to use notes, if it isn’t obvious.
54% said:
I don’t care one way or the other.

The manuscript preachers among us should probably take pains to make the mechanics of manipulating the papers as unobtrusive as possible.

Do you think applause is appropriate in a worship service?

48% said:
Yes, it is right for the congregation to express their appreciation for the musicians, the choir, and the soloists.
50% said:
No, the congregation is not the audience, God is. By applauding, the congregation is usurping God’s role in the service.

This is a controversial issue, it appears. Too much and too frequent applause in church apparently can turn off a lot of folks.

About scripture readings in church

According to the last poll, all churches have at least one scripture reading as part of worship, and 73% of them have more than one reading. This week’s questions concern the usual relationship between the scripture readings and the sermon.

What is the relationship of the scripture reading to the sermon?

If you were the pastor (or, if you are the pastor and if you had free reign), what would be the relationship between the scripture reading and the sermon?

All of the people whose pastors preach expository sermons prefer it that way. More than half of the people whose pastors preach topical sermons prefer expository sermons. Again, this poll confirms an earlier one that people prefer expository sermons.

Do you think your church should [continue to] use the lectionary?

This means that 85% of you prefer to use the lectionary! So far, in all my polls, it has always turned out that most of the people who don’t like something have never tried it. I don’t know if that is the case here, because I didn’t structure the questions that way, but I suspect it is. The lectionary is one of those tools that I find indispensable. Once a Nazarene pastor confided in me that he was having trouble selecting passages for worship, because he always seemed to be going over the same ones. I suggested the lectionary and he thought it was a great idea. So don’t assume your pastor is not using the lectionary, just because there is no talk about it in your church! Although I theoretically agree that one should be able to break from the lectionary when necessary, it is amazing how seldom that happens—not because the lectionary is wonderful, but because the scriptures are.

Have you ever consulted standard reference works to verify what your pastor said in the sermon, only to find out that he or she did not thoroughly research the scripture reading? (Or, if you are the pastor, have you ever discovered after the fact that you goofed?)

There’s not much correlation between the type of sermon (expository or topical) and the incidence of error, because topical sermons inherently contain less verifiable data. But these results show that pastors are human! Like all humans, pastors constantly need to refocus themselves on their work. And if you are a pastor, let this be a warning that your sermons really are getting through and people really are following them up with personal study!

About scripture readings in worship

When I grew up, we had no scripture readings in church. The pastor just read a short passage that served as his ‘text’ for the sermon and that was that. The Revised Common Lectionary is becoming more and more popular every day. Even if you belong to a denomination that doesn’t normally use such things, and even if you don’t have formal scripture readings in church, don’t assume there is no lectionary in your church. Many pastors in such churches use the Revised Common Lectionary behind the scenes as a tool for worship and sermon planning. The lectionary provides for four readings each Sunday, so as a result of its influence, I think we will all see an increase in the public reading of scripture during worship, in accordance with 1 Timothy 4:13. Even though the Revised Common Lectionary only dates from 1992, the idea of a lectionary is extremely old. One of the stated purposes of publishing the Book of Common Prayer in 1559 was to revise the lectionary. The ancient Church used lectionaries, as did the Jewish synagogue before then.

Does your church have formal scripture readings?

In churches with two or three readings…

Even if the pastor uses the lectionary, it doesn’t mean that all four readings will get used.

Who reads the scripture readings?

How do you read the psalm?

Do you stand for the gospel?

In churches with four readings…

Who reads the scripture readings?

How do you read the psalm?

Do you stand for the gospel?

In churches where the pastor just reads a selection before preaching…

I had intended to discover how many church had no scripture readings other than the pastor reading the ‘text’ upon which the sermon is based, but I got a surprise. Apparently even these churches now have other readings.

Who reads the scripture readings?

How do you read the psalm?

Do you stand for the gospel?

These results remind me of a paradox that I have experienced in visiting churches. I don’t understand why this is, but the more a church insists on the importance of the Bible, the less it seems to use the Bible in worship! I visited a service in an Episcopal church in which nearly everything that was said was either a paraphrase or a quote from the Bible, and on the next Sunday I visited a service in a ‘Bible church’ in which the only mention of the text of the Bible outside the sermon was half a verse quoted by the pastor! On another occasion, I attended a service in a Baptist church in which they never even mentioned the Bible!

I’m still scratching my head over this one. However, I do exhort you all to use the Bible more in worship.

Lay Readers
The use of formally trained lay readers goes back to the earliest centuries of the church. Today it is a good idea, because it gets more people involved in the service. It’s kind of paradoxical, but you find the greatest number of lay worship leaders in traditional churches such as the Episcopal Church; and in the more “contemporary” churches, you are more likely to find a pastor running the whole thing alone or with a song leader.
The Psalms
From the time of Calvin to about the time of Isaac Watts, there were no hymns in Reformed churches. Instead, they chanted psalms or sang metrical versions of the psalms, which you will still find in Presbyterian hymnals. Orthodox, Roman Catholics, and Episcopalians also commonly chant the psalms. It’s appropriate to chant the psalms, because that is the easiest way to sing them, and they were originally written to be sung. Chanting is one of those things that if you do it at all, you have to do it every week. If you do it every week, the congregation will grow to love it. Otherwise it gets awkward and doesn’t work.
Standing for the Gospel
The custom of standing for the gospel reading is an institutional memory of the time before pews. It is a sign of respect, just as one stands for a monarch or a judge. It is traditional for the preacher to read the gospel reading immediately before the sermon.

My Church

In case you are wondering, here’s what we do in my church:

About responses and responsive readings in church

Many churches use corporate responses in worship. For example, the minister might say, “The Lord be with you” and the congregation responds in unison, “And also with you.” (This set of responses comes from Ruth 2:4.) Or, after a scripture reading, the reader might say, “the Word of the Lord” and the congregation responds in unison, “thanks be to God.”

Many congregations also have a responsive reading, usually a psalm, where the reader and the congregation alternate.

The purpose of the responses is to make sure that the congregation actually worships and that it does not become an audience, as in medieval times, that just watches worship. They also are intended to make the congregation realize that they are the Body of Christ, not just a random collection of individuals.

Does your church use responses or responsive readings?

That means that 87% of you have responses or responsive readings in church.

What is your opinion about responses and responsive readings?

Of the people whose churches do not have responses or responsive readings:

Of the people whose churches have responses or responsive readings occasionally:

Of the people whose churches have responses or responsive readings every week:

It appears from these results that this is a “try it, you’ll like it” situation. If you have started attending a church that uses responses and responsive readings, give it a month or two; apparently it will grow on you.

If you are a pastor, and you want to start using responses and responsive readings in church, it’s clear that you should make it a part of every worship service.