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Answer the poll before looking up the definitions please. I only found out about this doctrine 2 days ago myself.
JR
JR
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I would be willing to discuss it with you, though I am not a Presbyterian. As I said, I find that a strict adherence to the regulative principle not consistent with even what either the Westminster or London Confessions taught. They both leave some wiggle room. Earnest C. Reisinger wrote an essay called " Thoughts on the Regulative Principle" that I thought was very good. I have tried to find a link to it but have been frustrated in my search to this point.Calvinist Dark Lord said:i hold to the regulative principle of worship without apology.
That said, it MUST be acknowledged that what is, and is not entailed in the regulative principle is hardly monolithic among reformed groups.
One could find differences between (for example) the Reformed Presbyterian Church in North America, and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. One holds to exclusive Psalmody, one does not. Yet both adhere to the regulative principle.
It would perhaps be a better idea to discuss the specifics of the regulative principle, if it could be done so as not to cause a flame war to erupt on this particular forum.
To borrow a concept from C.S. Lewis, when one dissucsses this issue, he or she is presuming a standard. Perhaps the standard is unspoken, but it is a standard none the less.
The issue comes down to the answer to the question:
Has God Told us HOW He is to be worshipped?If God has revealed that to us, then if follows that we are to obey that revelation without question...at least where it is clear and explicit.
If God has not made such revelation, by what authority does one presume their worship of God to be 'legitimate'?
This is an important question.
i believe of course, that God HAS revealed how we are to worship. Still, i'm open for discussion of the particulars of that revelation.
As for consistency, human inconsistencies in applying or even knowing how to apply a principle don't make a principle less true, do they?
There's definitely room for innovation in the essential parts of worship. Not everything is regulated by Scripture. But I think the parts are instituted by God, and thus regulated.
Aye, sort of like The Trinity...tread lightly lad.inchristalone221 said:Well, my problem with RPW isn't just people who apply it inconsistently, it's that the principle itself is logically incoherent. If only things found in scripture are to color our worship, than the RPW is excluded, as it is not found in scripture! It excludes itself, it's self-defeating, it falls to reductio ad absurdum, pick a cliche.
So then, has God also revealed how we are to worship Him? Again, tread lightly.This I agree in a way. I think that worship is, by definition, response. We worship God as He has revealed Himself through honest expression of our awe at His majesty.
inchristalone221 said:Well, my problem with RPW isn't just people who apply it inconsistently, it's that the principle itself is logically incoherent. If only things found in scripture are to color our worship, than the RPW is excluded, as it is not found in scripture! It excludes itself, it's self-defeating, it falls to reductio ad absurdum, pick a cliche.
Aye, sort of like The Trinity...tread lightly lad.
Whatever thing I command you, observe to do it: thou shalt not add thereto, nor diminish from it. Dt 12:32
You shall not do at all what we are doing here today, every man doing whatever is right in his own eyes Dt 12:8
You shall not add to the word which I am commanding you, nor take away from it, that you may keep the commandments of the LORD your God which I command you. Dt 4:2
But in vain they do worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men. Mt 15:9
Um, can you add something to Christ?inchristalone221 said:We need only Christ, who is our sacrifice, prophet, priest, and king.
I mean, if Jesus can't be added-to what you're talking about is ... a regulative principle in the new priesthood. It would prevent you from adding things to Jesus.
Do you think there is some kind of ecclesiastical regulation in the New Covenant? I mean, Israel was a redeemed group and they were given ecclesiastical regulation. Why doesn't the New Covenant have such a thing? (By way of explanation, 1 Cor 14 prescribes some ecclesiastical operations in church worship.)
Well, those things are forbidden by practitioners of the RPW. They're following a particular meaning to the RPW. The principle itself has to be combined with other principles of your theology to get to that conclusion.inchristalone221 said:The first corinthians passage fits in just as well with the NPW. We do all the things commanded in scripture but aren't afraid to add new, God-glorifying hymns to our hymnals or meet in a building or have Sunday School. Those things would seem to be forbidden by the RPW.
I *do* agree with Calvin that anything that interferes with the clarity of the Gospel indeed should be removed
The Calvinist Dark Lord, Libertarian, is a regulative.Calvinist Dark Lord said:Aye, sort of like The Trinity...tread lightly lad.
So then, has God also revealed how we are to worship Him? Again, tread lightly.
bradfordl said:Lev 10:1 And Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, took either of them his censer, and put fire therein, and put incense thereon, and offered strange fire before the LORD, which he commanded them not.
Lev 10:2 And there went out fire from the LORD, and devoured them, and they died before the LORD.
Lev 10:3 Then Moses said unto Aaron, This is it that the LORD spake, saying, I will be sanctified in them that come nigh me, and before all the people I will be glorified. And Aaron held his peace.
Sounds regulative. I've seen extremes of both sides that are problematic. My preference tends to be traditional, so I usually fall on the regulative side.
I think music can become too much of an issue because of the egos involved, and so don't mind when its de-emphasized to minimize the temptation. Never seen the musicians at the back of the sanctuary during worship. I often wonder if it would be such an attracive "ministry" if they were.