Dear Winter Park Family,
I have not found you to be a quiet congregation. You are passionate. You are committed. You care. One of the great joys of my early days with you has been the many theological conversations we have experienced together in my study or over lunch or simply spontaneously. I am grateful, so grateful, that you talk to me. Thus, I am surprised at your nearly utter silence over an early practice. For the first three months or so, after my arrival, I was in the practice of offering the same prayer each week after I read the sermon text. Remember? Here is the prayer:
O God – we gather not to be blessed, but to bless. We gather not to receive, but to give. O God – we gather to bless You and to give thanks and praise to You for the life, ministry, death, resurrection, and coming again of Jesus the Christ. Amen.
I wrote this some time ago. Originally it was not used as a prayer. Rather, it was a congregational responsive reading referred to, in the weekly order of worship, as “pastoral sentences”. I led the congregation in these pastoral sentences every week at the beginning of worship. The reason I developed these sentences is found in this Baptist News Global piece I wrote:
“And therein lies the problem. Church leaders need to (re)teach people the meaning of worship. Gathered worship is not about meeting anyone’s needs, although it can be personally satisfying. Worship is an expression of thanksgiving to God. Individual circumstances matter not. Perhaps the sun shines in our lives. Perhaps the rains pour in our lives. The Christian community, during all of life’s cycles, gives thanks to God for the gift of God’s Son, Jesus the Christ.”
Thus, what became a prayer at Winter Park Baptist Church was born as a small contribution to the herculean task of resisting the decline of the church. One reason worship participation has declined – either people do not participate at all, or they participate less in favor of other activities – is that people do not understand what we do when we gather for the worship of God. As I have said before, I am persuaded that the American god is entertainment – a football or basketball or baseball of softball or soccer game or a Taylor Swift concert or …. Of course, there is a place for entertainment in the life of the Christian. However, when stadiums are full and sanctuaries are half to a quarter full, we are much out of sorts. Due to the dominance of entertainment in our culture, I work hard to teach Christians that worship is not entertainment. If someone comes to worship with an entertainment mindset two things happen: 1) the person leaves frustrated or bored and 2) worship that is pleasing to God does not occur. Thus, in its original context, the pastoral prayer / pastoral sentences above were designed to lay the foundation for the worship experience.
I noticed early on that liturgy (responsive readings or responsive prayers) does not have a prominent place in Winter Park Baptist Church worship gatherings. Yet, I wanted to hold on to the pastoral sentences for all the reasons above and more. So, I decided to convert the pastoral sentences into a pastoral prayer for use in between the sermon text and the sermon itself. And I noticed early on, that while you talked to me much about the sermon, there was nothing said about my practice of offering to God the same prayer every week. I am told that no other pastor in recent memory has carried out this practice of offering the same prayer, before the sermon, each week. So, I was curious: why so quiet about a practice that is so new to our church?
As I pondered, I thought, maybe, there is disagreement with the prayer within our congregation. Perhaps some take issue with the opening sentence – we gather not to be blessed, but to bless. Of course, this statement does not exclude personal blessings that may come from gathered worship. It simply acknowledges that personal gratification is not the fundamental reason for gathered worship. Rather, we gather fundamentally to bless God. Nonetheless, I altered the prayer to this, “O God – though blessings may come, we gather not to be blessed but to bless.” And then, after a couple of weeks with this alteration in place, it happened! I received the lone comment I would receive concerning this practice. A faithful church member approached me and said, “I like the adjustment you made to the prayer.” A brief, but rewarding, conversation followed. And that is all I heard from an otherwise talkative church!
Through the years, I have thought long and hard about worship – what worship is and how we best carry it out. I have a very strong conviction that worship is the most important activity of the church of Jesus the Christ – worship is the central axis upon which all other church activity revolves. The worship of God in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:19) is what sets the church apart from other organizations. Indeed, the worship of God in Christ gives the church its edge, its distinct voice. It is my objective to carry out my pastoral responsibilities, whatever they may be, with a strong theological foundation. Thus, the development of the pastoral sentences / pastoral prayer as well as the practice of sitting during the postlude in the 11am worship service (a related topic but for another discussion) and other practices too.
So, I am curious. After reading this piece as well as my Baptist News Global piece, what are your thoughts about the use of the pastoral sentences / pastoral prayer in worship? Talk to me.
In Christ,
Paul
P.S. Here are the pastoral sentences / pastoral prayer once again for reference.
O God – we gather not to be blessed, but to bless. We gather not to receive, but to give. O God – we gather to bless You and to give thanks and praise to You for the life, ministry, death, resurrection, and coming again of Jesus the Christ. (Amen)