Quoting Hart & Muether . . .
Much of today's worship is oriented, consciously or not, around the idea of entertainment. Pastors and elders fall under tremendous pressure to conduct services that are lively, practical, and relevant in order to keep the people in the pews interested in what is happening. The constant fear is that members will leave a boring style of worship for the church across town with better music, a bigger and younger congregation, and with better lighting and sound systems.
Sermons are becoming messages geared more to "felt" needs than to driving home the needs that the bible says fallen men and women (both redeemed and unredeemed) have. And the message itself is delivered by someone who tries to come across as a "regular guy," not God's servant who is a steward of the mysteries of God, who must handle the word of truth with care, and who has been set apart for this holy task.
Writing in the Christian Century, Edward Farley recently commented that contemporary worship creates a tone that is "casual, comfortable, chatty, busy, humorous, pleasant and at a time even cute." He goes on to suggest that
Some defenders of contemporary worship even go as far as to deny that there is any distinction between the purposes of worship and the purposes of entertainment.
Another book puts it more cautiously when it asserts that worship should take place in "an informal service with a friendly, welcoming atmosphere, and contemporary styles in language and music". Following this logic, worship style becomes a matter of taste. We would agree, but only if the taste that He is referring to is God's taste. Irreverent worship is a violation of God's holy style. God desires reverent worship, worship that reflects the seriousness that is inherent in a religion that required the death of His only begotten Son in order to redeem a chosen people from the bonds of sin and misery, and to deliver them into the glorious blessedness of God's children.
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