Kevin Reed - Reformed Worship, The Regulative Principle, etc. - Presbyterians and Presbyterianism
A Review and Commentary upon Worship in
Spirit and Truth, a book by John Frame
(Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed Pub. Co., 1996; paper, 171
pages)
John Frame's Worship in Spirit and Truth is a Sunday School manual purporting to summarize
biblical principles and practices of worship. Yet it really constitutes an
abandonment of both scriptural and confessional views on worship.
Reviewing a book like this is a frustrating
exercise in several respects.
First, there is the matter of definitions.
Frame claims to embrace the
regulative principle, the Westminster Confession, and other historic
formulations of reformed worship. Yet, upon close examination, the reader will
find that Frame has actually departed from the historic parameters of Reformed
worship
Second, Frame's methods of establishing his
own practices of worship are cursory at best. Numerous proof texts are
parenthetically scattered throughout the pages of his book; yet, he does not
provide a careful exegesis of these scripture references to demonstrate how
they support his more controversial conclusions. Perhaps we cannot expect a
detailed exposition of the Bible in a slim Sunday school manual. Nevertheless,
readers should ponder the scriptures carefully, instead of assuming that the
parenthetical texts actually provide support for the propositions adjacent to
them.
Third, Frame raises so many issues with
respect to both the doctrine and practices of worship, that it would take a
book-length response to sort through all his aberrations and reply to them
thoroughly.
Since we are called to be judicious stewards
of our resources, we shall not waste precious time chasing Frame down every
rabbit trail. Yet, because of the misconceptions created by Frame's remarks on the
regulative principle and the Westminster Confession, we will review the
historical development of the regulative principle of worship. We will then
address some of the troubling implications of Mr. Frame's position, especially
as it undermines the teaching of the Westminster Confession.
Readers interested in the biblical foundation for the regulative principle should study
the Reformation documents and writings referenced in the following discussion;
examine the accompanying proof-texts in the original sources (especially in a
complete edition of the Westminster Standards), to see the scriptural basis for
the reformed view of worship. Also, since the present reviewer has already
written a brief summary of his own understanding of the scriptural teaching on
worship,[1] we will not rehearse that same discussion here.
The regulative principle did not burst forth
ex nihilo during the Puritan era;
its ultimate foundation comes from scripture. The Protestant Reformers defended
both the authority and sufficiency of scripture, and they sought to apply the
sola scriptura rule to the subject
of worship.
The Preface to the French Confession of 1559
illustrates the connection between the regulative authority of scripture and
the proper worship of God:
We owe such respect and reverence to the word of God
as shall prevent us from adding to it anything of our own, but shall make us
conform entirely to the rules it prescribes. And inasmuch as the Roman Church,
forsaking the use and customs of the primitive church, has introduced new
commandments and a new form of worship of God, we esteem it but reasonable to
prefer the commandments of God, who is himself truth, to the commandments of
men, who by their nature are inclined to deceit and vanity.[2]
Article 5 of this confession stresses the
authority and sufficiency of scripture. Article 24 rejects a variety of Popish
practices, especially purgatory
monastic vows, pilgrimages, the prohibition of
marriage, and of eating meat, the ceremonial observance of days, auricular
confession, indulgences, and all such things by which they hope to merit
forgiveness and salvation. These things we reject, not only for the false idea
of merit which is attached to them, but also because they are human
inventions, imposing a yoke on the
conscience.[3]
Similar testimony will be found in a
confession drafted by John Calvin for the Reformed churches of France (1562).
The Confession states:
Now on our part, in accordance with his declaration,
that obedience is better than sacrifice (1 Sam. 15:22), and with his uniform
injunction to listen to what he commands, if we would render a well regulated
and acceptable sacrifice, we hold that it is not for us to invent what to us
seems good, or to follow what may have been devised in the brain of other men,
but to confine ourselves simply to the purity of scripture. Wherefore we
believe that anything which is not derived from it, but has only been commanded
by the authority of men, ought not to be regarded as the service of God.[4]
The Confession continues with a specific
application of the regulative authority of scripture with respect to practices
of worship:
Since men have turned aside from pure and holy
obedience to God, they have discovered that good intention was sufficient to
approve everything. This was to open the door to all superstitions. It has been
the origin of the worship of images, the purchase of masses, the filling of
churches with pomp and parade, the running about on pilgrimages, the making of
vows by each at his own hand. But the abyss here is so profound that it is
enough for us to have touched on some examples. So far is it from being
permitted to honour God by human inventions, that there would be no firmness
nor certainty, neither bottom nor shore in religion: everything would go to
wreck, and Christianity differ in nothing from the idolatries of the heathen.[5]
The Geneva Bible (1560) contains marginal
notes reflecting a Reformed understanding of worship. For example, a note on
Matthew 15:9 says, "God will not be honoured according to man's fantasy,
but detesteth all good intentions which are not grounded on his word."
Therefore, we see that at the heart of
Reformed worship is the concept that God may not be worshipped by means of
human devising, even upon the pretense of good intent; rather, genuine worship
must be offered by the means which God has enjoined in his word.
To illustrate how the regulative principle
provides the basis for practices of corporate worship, we turn to the Genevan
Order a directory for worship which
was adopted by the congregation of English exiles living in Geneva at the time
of Calvin.[6]
In the Preface to the Order, a connection is
drawn between the sufficiency of scripture, and the worship of the church:
We, therefore, not as the greatest clerks of all, but
as the least able of many, do present unto you which desire the increase of God's
glory, and the pure simplicity of his word, a form and order of a reformed
church, limited within the compass of God's word, which our Saviour has left
unto us as only [alone]
sufficient to govern all our actions by; so that whatsoever is added to this word
by man's device, seem it never so good, holy, or beautiful, yet before our God,
who is jealous and cannot admit any companion or counsellor, it is evil,
wicked, and abominable.[7]
Therefore, the worship practices of the church,
here styled "ceremonies," are restricted to those modes enjoined by
scripture:
For as ceremonies grounded upon God's word, and
approved in the New Testament, are commendable (as the circumstance thereof
does support), so those that man has invented (though he had never so good
occasion thereunto), if they are once abused, import a necessity, hinder God's
word, or be drawn into a superstition, without respect ought to be abolished.[8]
Having stated these general principles, the
Genevan Order goes on the summarize the basic practices of worship which will
be found in Christian worship:
We have contented ourselves with that wisdom which we
have learned in God's book, where we are taught to preach the word of God
purely, minister the sacraments sincerely, and use prayers and other orders
thereby approved, to the increase of God's glory, and edification of his holy
people. As touching preaching, forasmuch as it is allowed of all godly men, we
may at this time leave the probation [proof] thereof. And also for the ministration of the two
sacraments, our book gives sufficient proof.[9]
Following this statement, there is a brief
defense of congregational psalm-singing, which was a practice recently restored
among Protestant congregations.
The contents of Genevan Order reflect the
principles outlined in the Preface. The order allows only such elements of
worship as may be established by God's word. The weekly service on the Lord's
day is composed of the following items: (1.) a congregational prayer for
confession of sin; (2.) congregational singing of a psalm, followed by (3.) a
prayer before the sermon; (4.) the sermon (coupled with the reading of
scripture); after the sermon, (5.) a prayer for the whole estate of Christ's
Church; (6.) congregational singing of another psalm; (7.) the minister
pronouncing a blessing (taken from scripture) upon the congregation. Forms are
also provided for the more occasional aspects of public service, such as
baptisms and the administration of the Lord's Supper.
Although the Order contains a number of
prayers and admonitions for worship, it includes an explanatory note making it
clear that ministers are not bound in a slavish adherence to the book:
It shall not be necessary for the minister daily to
repeat all these things before mentioned, but beginning with some manner of
confession, to proceed to the Sermon; which ended, he either uses the prayer
for all estates before mentioned, or else prays, as the Spirit of God shall move
his heart, framing the same according to the time and matter which he hath
entreated of.[10]
Elsewhere in Reformed creeds, readers will
find ample testimony to the regulative principle. The Heidelberg Catechism
(1563) states it in a nutshell:
Question 96. What does God require in the second commandment?
Answer. That we in nowise make any image of God, nor worship
him in any other way than he has commanded in his word.
So far, we have restricted our citations to
public formularies and documents drawn from the era of the Reformation. These
quotations are representative of many other public testimonies, as well as the
opinions of individual Reformers.
Calvin considered the subject of worship to
be foundational to the Christian faith. In his tract On the Necessity of
Reforming the Church, the Genevan
reformer states that the entire substance of Christianity may be comprised
under two principal heads: "first, of the mode in which God is truly worshipped, and secondly, of the source from which salvation is
obtained."[11] Elsewhere, he writes, "to debate about the mode
in which men obtain salvation, and say nothing of the mode in which God may be
duly worshipped, is too absurd."[12]
Calvin says that "the rule which
distinguishes between pure and vitiated worship is of universal application, in
order that we may not adopt any device which seems fit to ourselves, but look
to the injunctions of him who alone is entitled to prescribe." The
reformer continues:
I know how difficult it is to persuade the world that
God disapproves of all modes of worship not expressly sanctioned by his word.
The opposite persuasion which cleaves to them, being seated, as it were, in
their very bones and marrow, is, that whatever they do has in itself a
sufficient sanction, provided it exhibits some kind of zeal for the honor of
God. But since God not only regards as fruitless, but also plainly abominates,
whatever we undertake from zeal to his worship, if at variance with his
command, what do we gain by a contrary course? The words of God are clear and
distinct, "Obedience is better than sacrifice." "In vain do they
worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men," (1 Sam.
15:22; Matt. 15:9). Every addition to his word, especially in this matter, is a
lie. Mere "will worship" (ethelothreeskeia) is vanity [Col. 2:23]. This is the decision, and
when once the judge has decided, it is no longer time to debate.[13]
Among the reformers, none was so forceful as
John Knox. Speaking plainly on the subject, Knox said: "All worshipping,
honouring, or service invented by the brain of man in the religion of God,
without his own express commandment, is idolatry."[14]
Knox's views led him to oppose both the worship of Rome, and many elements of
the Anglican liturgy.
In another succinct statement, the Scottish
reformer said: "I feared not to affirm, that of necessity it is, that such
as hope for life everlasting avoid all superstition, vain religion, and
idolatry. Vain religion and idolatry I call whatsoever is done in God's service
or honour, without the express commandment of his own word."[15]
It should now be clear that the regulative
principle, although not called by that term, was a concept already widely
understood among Protestants; it was not a latter-day invention of the
Puritans.[16]
Note specifically that the Reformation
documents clearly show that the regulative principles grows out of the sola
scriptura rule of Protestant
theology. The central idea is that the church must restrict its worship to the
means enjoined by scripture, and may not worship God "in any other way
than he has commanded in his word" (to borrow the words of the Heidelberg
Catechism). It is further noted that good intention is not a sufficient basis
for adopting methods of worship which are human innovations.
Having traced the regulative principle
within earlier Protestant formularies, we now come to a brief consideration of
the Westminster Standards. The Westminster Standards were produced amidst a
convulsive period in English history. By the mid-1600s, matters of worship had
been brought to the forefront of theological controversy in England. Thus, the
doctrine of the Westminster Standards is quite exact and discriminating when
touching the subject of worship.
Following Reformation theology, the
Westminster divines begin with an assertion about the authority and sufficiency
of scripture. The Confession illustrates the connection between the sola
scriptura principle and the proper
worship of God.
The whole counsel of God concerning all things
necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith, and life, is either
expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be
deduced from Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added (1:6).
More specifically touching the subject of
worship, the Confession states:
the acceptable way of worshipping the true God is
instituted by Himself, and so limited by His own revealed will, that He may not
be worshipped according to the imaginations and devices of men, or the
suggestions of Satan, under any visible representation, or any other way not
prescribed in holy Scripture. (21:1,
emphasis added).
Note that the crucial word in that last
sentence is the term prescribed.
The text does not say that that
men are free to utilize any mode of worship unless it is prohibited in scripture; but it expressly says that worship is
limited to ways prescribed in
scripture. This marks an essential difference between the Reformed regulative
principle, and the looser notions of Anglicans and Lutherans.[17]
The Confession then describes various
"parts" of worship which are enjoined by scripture:
prayer, with thanksgiving the reading of the
scriptures with godly fear; the sound preaching and conscionable hearing of the
Word, in obedience unto God, with understanding, faith, and reverence; singing
of psalms with grace in the heart; as also, the due administration and worthy
receiving of the sacraments instituted by Christ; all are parts of the ordinary
religious worship of God: beside religious oaths, vows, solemn fastings, and
thanksgivings, upon special occasions, which are, in their several times and
seasons, to be used in a holy and religious manner (21:3-5).[18]
When speaking more particularly of the
sacraments (in relation to the covenant of grace), the Confession notes certain
distinctions between the Old Testament ordinances and worship in New Testament.
Under the gospel, when Christ, the substance was
exhibited, the ordinances in which this covenant is dispensed are the preaching
of the Word, and the administration of the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's
Supper; which, though fewer in number, and administered with more simplicity,
and less outward glory; yet, in them, it is held forth in more fulness,
evidence, and spiritual efficacy, to all nations, both Jews and Gentiles. (7:6)
Thus, even a cursory glance at the
Westminster Standards reveals the scope of the regulative principle of worship.
The proper exercises of worship are restricted to those "parts" of
worship specifically enjoined in scripture. Later writers sometimes refer to
the parts of worship as "elements," just as earlier writers sometimes
spoke of "ways" or "modes" of worship. Regardless of the
specific terminology used, the concept is clear enough: the only proper means
of worship are those which God has established in the scriptures for our
present use.
Men are not free to invent new methods of
worship for themselves, nor to impose such innovations on others. "God
alone is lord of the conscience, and hath left it free from the doctrines and
commandments of men, which are in any thing contrary to His Word; or beside it,
if matters of faith or worship" (WCF 20:2).[19]
For the sake of clarification, the
Westminster divines added the following statement, which is often abused:
there are some circumstances concerning the worship
of God, and government of the Church, common to human actions and societies,
which are to be ordered by the light of nature and Christian prudence,
according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed
(1:7).
This statement actually constitutes another
restriction: that is, it serves as a reminder that even in circumstantial
matters not expressly covered in scripture, the church is still to be governed
by the "general rules of the Word." Nevertheless, some modern authors
try to use this statement as an escape clause, by claiming that numerous
aspects of worship are merely circumstantial matters left to the broad
discretion of the church.
Other writers have covered this subject
thoroughly,[20] so we will not provide a lengthy discussion of the
topic here. But we pause to note that "circumstances" described in
this statement are matters "common to human actions and societies:"
meaning that they pertain to the corporate organization of any society, whether
secular or sacred.
For example, to convene its assemblies,
every society must have a method of establishing a time and place for meeting.
Thus, the church, in order to fulfill its duty for corporate worship (Heb.
10:25), must establish an hour and location for its services. Scripture does
not mandate a specific time or place; this is clearly a
"circumstance," to be governed by the general rules of scripture.
Therefore, the elders, as the biblical officers of the church, will establish a
time and place conducive to the edification of the congregation.
The collective testimony of the Reformed
creeds and writers proclaims the following principle: Each part of worship must
be enjoined by scripture, if it is to be admitted as valid form of service to
God. (Regardless of the terms used to designate the parts of worship
terms such as modes, elements, means, forms, ways the
Reformed creeds and authors were speaking of the same basic concept.)
We are now prepared to examine Mr. Frame's
paradigm for worship and the regulative principle. We shall see that he departs
from Reformed doctrine of worship; and he specifically repudiates the teaching
of the Westminster Confession.
John Frame claims to believe in the
regulative principle and the Westminster Confession. In chapter 4 of his book,
he opens a discussion of the regulative principle, rightly noting the
deficiencies of Rome, Canterbury, and Lutheranism. He quotes WCF 21:1, noting
that the operative word is "prescribed" (p. 39). So far, so good.
He then moves to a section of applications,
asking, "Is there, then, no role for human thought, planning, or
decisions, in the worship of God?" (p. 40). He provides a negative
assessment of some (unnamed) Puritans and Scottish Presbyterians who supposedly
drew a sharp distinction between secular and sacred matters. Yet, the Puritans
or Scots did not claim that decisions on circumstances were purely secular;
rather, circumstances may be considered indifferent matters considered
abstractly, but they obtain a sacred significance when implemented in some way
for the service of God.
Because circumstances are restricted to
actions "common to human actions and societies," Frame concludes that
matters such as specific words in prayer are not covered by the confessional
doctrine of circumstances; and thus, the church is endowed with wide latitude
in applications pertaining to prayer. Here he is setting up the reader for
later deviations from the confessional paradigm.
Frame claims that his formulation "does
not contradict the confession, but goes beyond it" (p. 43). But is this
so?
Moreover, Frame caricatures the Puritan
position, by accusing it of drawing a sharp distinction between formal services
and other meetings at which worship takes place (such as family worship).
Certainly some modern churches have drawn that distinction, but we challenge
Frame to find this as a general teaching of either Puritans or Scottish
Presbyterians. To Puritans and Scots alike, the elements of worship used in
corporate worship were the same elements employed in the home, except for the
public ordinances (the sacraments). (See the Westminster Directory for Family
Worship.)[21]
Frame now carries his
"application" further, treating the content of singing in church on the level with minor
discretionary matters. "Different churches legitimately apply God's
commands in different ways. God commands us to sing; some churches may apply
that command by singing three hymns during their services, others four. Some
may sing primarily traditional hymns, others contemporary songs" (p. 45).
Notice how Frame encompasses in his view of application, not only the number of songs used, but the content of the singing as well. With the wave of his hand he
has just dismissed one of the most serious controversies in Presbyterian
history, by putting the content
of song in worship on a level with the decision to sing a particular number of songs. Incredible!
In chapter 5, Frame sets the focus on public
worship. He opens by disclaiming a paradigm composed of "elements" of
worship:
The Puritans developed the doctrine of
"elements" or "parts" of worship. Worship, they believed,
is made up of certain clearly distinguishable elements: prayer, the reading of
scripture, preaching, and so on. The regulative principle, they held, requires
us to find biblical warrant for each of these elements.
But
there are serious problems with this approach. The most serious problem is that
there is no scriptural warrant for it! Scripture nowhere divides worship into a
serious of independent "elements," each requiring independent
scriptural justification. (pp. 52-53).
Now this a very crafty description. Frame
speaks of the "Puritan" view, and then goes on to describe a paradigm
which parallels the Westminster Confession. Strictly speaking, this is not
wholly inaccurate, since the Westminster Confession was written by Puritans.
Yet, it might have been more shocking to his Presbyterian readers if Mr. Frame
simply had come out and said directly, "I oppose the teaching of the Westminster
Confession in its description of the parts of worship."
It is important to realize that, in
rejecting the idea of elements (or parts) of worship, Frame has undermined
sections 3-6 of chapter 21 of the Westminster Confession. The Confession
specifically uses the term "part" or "parts" three times
within these sections, in its description of worship. Therefore, to reject the
concept of parts to worship, is to reject the teaching of the Confession.
Moreover, as we have seen, the concept of
parts of worship is much older than
the Puritans. It is interwoven within numerous Reformed creeds and advocated by
writers from the outset of the Reformation. Thus, Mr. Frame has not only
dismissed the Puritans, and the Confession; in his self-proclaimed wisdom, he
has also cast off the teachings of the Reformers.
Further still, Frame resorts to exaggeration
when he characterizes the Puritans as holding to rigidly
"independent" elements, since Reformed writers do not deny the
interrelationship and overlapping nature of various parts of worship. The key
to the Reformed view is its demand for all means of worship to have clear
scriptural warrant, not whether each part is rigidly independent of others.
Frame speaks against the "technical
sense of Puritan theology," and "the elaborate Puritan
methodology" (p. 54) which he decries as insufficient. He has now moved
from damning the Puritans with faint praise, to unveiled opposition. And let it
be remembered that, by opposing the Puritans, he is in some respects heaping more
scorn upon the confessional standards, since they were written by the Puritans.
If Mr. Frame clearly demonstrated where the
Puritans were wrong, with firm exegesis from scripture, we would take his
arguments more seriously. But the professor is given to general assertions
which he does not prove, either from scripture or history. Are we supposed to
accept matters as Mr. Frame characterizes (and caricatures them), simply
because he says so?
Mr. Frame cannot wholly escape a dilemma
created by his own denial of the confessional description of elements of
worship. He still has to find some nomenclature in the English language to
describe the various "parts" of worship. Thus, Frame speaks of
"aspects" of worship. He then formulates his own list of the parts o.k., "aspects" of worship. These fit under a heading entitled,
"My List," which in itself reveals the direction of his reasoning.
Since Frame has rejected the Reformed/confessional/Puritan idea of
biblically-mandated parts of worship, he does not provide us with a divine
pattern for worship. Instead, we discover Frame's tidy list of "things to
do in worship" (p. 55). (Perhaps with the acumen of the medieval
schoolmen, Mr. Frame can explain to us the subtle differences between
"things," "aspects," and "parts" in worship.)
Frame uses the assumptions he has introduced
(against the parts of worship) to raise controverted issues in which he has an
interest. Obviously if he can dispense with the confessional paradigm on
worship, it leaves him with greater latitude to inject numerous
"aspects" which do not fit within the confessional paradigm of
worship.
Throughout the course of the book, Frame
makes allowance for uninspired hymnody, instrumental music, ecclesiastical
festival days, choral anthems, drama, and sacred dance in worship. He defends
the idea of children's church and, in a footnote, he leaves the door open for
paedo-communion. Is it any wonder Frame is uncomfortable with the confessional
paradigm for worship, since it would exclude such extravagant claims?
In arguing his case, Frame adopts a dubious
method of hermenuetics. For example, consider his section on drama in worship
(pp. 92-94). Frame does not produce a scriptural command to employ drama in
worship. Instead, the symbolic actions of prophets, the typological character
of OT feasts, and Christ's use of parables within scriptural narratives, are
produced as sufficent grounds to justify drama in worship. Frame has now
stretched his construction of the regulative principle beyond any form which
would be recognized in historic reformed paradigms of worship. Make no mistake
about it: we can adhere to reformed and confessional views, or we can adopt
Frame's position; but there is no way to have them both. The disparity is too
great.
Now this fact raises a troubling issue about
the author's integrity. In the Preface to the book, Frame claims, "In my
view, the Westminster Confession is entirely right in its regulative principle that true worship is limited to what God
commands" (p. xiii). (Including drama, right?) Turning the page, we are
assured, "My own theological commitment is Presbyterian; I subscribe
enthusiastically to the Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms, and I
trust that that commitment will be quite evident in this book" (pp. xiv-xv).
Unfortunately, Frame's commitment to confessional Presbyterianism is precisely
what is not apparent in the book.
Indeed, what Frame professes to give with
one hand, he takes away with the other. In the Preface, he shows his true
colors:
Presbyterian worship based on the biblical "regulative principle," which I
describe in these pages was in its
early days very restrictive, austere, and "minimalist."[22] It excluded organs, choirs, hymn texts other than
the Psalms, symbolism in the worship area, and religious holidays except for
the Sabbath.[23] Presbyterians in the "Covenanter"
tradition, such as those in the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America
and a few other denominations, still worship this way, but they are in that
respect a small minority of conservative Presbyterians today.
Nevertheless,
the Puritan theology of worship that produced this minimalism is still taught
in theologically conservative Presbyterian churches and seminaries as the
authentic Presbyterian and Reformed view of worship. This is partly because
that theology is reflected in the Westminster Confession of Faith and
Catechisms, to which these churches subscribe. But the Westminster standards
actually contain very little of the Puritan theology of worship. The Puritan
and Scottish divines who wrote the Westminster standards were wise enough not
to include in them all of their ideas on worship.
The
result has been that although few conservative Presbyterian churches actually
worship in the Puritan way, the Puritan theology of worship remains the
standard of orthodoxy among them. This discrepancy sometimes leads to guilty
consciences. I have talked to pastors, for instance, who are unwilling to go
back to exclusive use of the Psalms in congregational singing, yet feel awkward
about singing hymns. They almost seem to think that they ought to worship as
the Puritans did, even though they have no intention of doing so. They worry
that this wavering amounts to an inconsistency in their commitment to the
Reformed faith and to Presbyterian orthodoxy.
These remarks contain a startling admission.
Frame rightly notes a discrepancy between what Presbyterians profess in their doctrine and what they practice in worship. Rather than demand conformity in
practice to confessional doctrine, Frame is encouraging Presbyterians to
abandon the doctrine.
In doing so, Frame speaks out of both sides
of his mouth. As noted, he wants to assure readers of his commitment to the
Westminster Standards. Yet, in the same breath, he acknowledges that he is
constructing a new paradigm for worship:
The result of our rethinking, I hope, will be a
somewhat revised paradigm for Presbyterian worship: one thoroughly Reformed in
its assumptions, affirming the regulative principle and the statements of the
Westminster Confession and Catechisms, but allowing greater flexibility than
the Puritans did in applying God's commands for worship.
Here again, Frame has tried to cast the
Puritans in a negative role, and get readers to accept his distorted portrayal
of the Westminster Standards. It's a bold play on Frame's part similar to a straight-faced press conference given
by a political spin doctor.
Can he really expect readers to believe
that, "the Westminster standards actually contain very little of the
Puritan theology of worship"? Has he seriously studied the Confession
(chapters 1, 20-22, 27-29), the Larger Catechism (#104-121), and the Shorter
Catechism (#45-62)? Further, we have not even considered the Westminster
Directory for Public Worship, as well as the Directory for Family Worship. Now,
we know that Frame does not adhere to these documents, because they do not have
constitutional status in his denomination (cf. Frame, p. 17, note 2).
Nevertheless, it is certain that the Westminster Assembly would not divorce
these documents from the rest of the Standards; and thus the divines would not
accept Frame's characterization that "the Westminster Standards actually
contain very little of the Puritan theology of worship." And how would
they react to Frame's patronizing nonsense that they "were wise enough not
to include in them all of their ideas on worship"? Certainly the
Westminster Standards contain enough Puritan theology to refute Mr. Frame's ideas
about worship.[24]
We applaud Mr. Frame's pastoral desire to
help his fellow Presbyterians who are suffering from "guilty
consciences." Might we suggest that the true remedy for their
"wavering" and "inconsistency" is repentance, and a return
to the biblical teaching and practices of the Reformed faith and Presbyterian
orthodoxy?
The larger tragedy is that Mr. Frame's book
is in itself a testimony to the low spiritual condition of
"conservative" Presbyterian churches in America. Frame has openly
admitted the discrepancy between confessional doctrine and ordinary practice
within Presbyterian denominations. Consider further, that Mr. Frame teaches at
a Presbyterian seminary; he is also a Presbyterian pastor (P.C.A.); his book is
published by a Presbyterian publisher; the blurb printed on the back cover of
his book includes endorsements by four other seminary instructors who teach at
institutions which profess to be Presbyterian and Reformed.
These facts raise distressing implications
regarding the disingenuous nature of confessional subscription within both the
churches and the seminaries. There are also troubling ramifications concerning
the doctrine of scripture, since the regulative principle rests upon the
foundation of the sufficiency of scripture, with respect to worship. Frame's
book furnishes patent evidence that ecclesiastical discipline is lacking in the
churches, and that seminary professors can teach heterodox views with impunity.
If Presbyterians took their creed seriously, Mr. Frame would be removed from
both the seminary and the pastorate, and not allowed to teach. But in the
current situation, the majority of pastors, seminarians, and the people are
partners in the crimes of corrupt worship and confessional laxity. "A wonderful
and horrible thing is committed in the land; the prophets prophesy falsely, and
the priests bear rule by their means; and my people love to have it so"
(Jer. 5:30-31).
Notes
1. See Biblical Worship by Kevin Reed (Dallas: Presbyterian Heritage, 1995).
2. English translation is published in Philip Schaff,
ed., The Creeds of Christendom
(1931 [6th edition]; rpt. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1983), 3:357. Likewise, the
Scottish First Book of Discipline ( 1560) draws a direct connection between the
authority of scripture and ecclesiastical ordinances related to worship. In an
explanation to the first heading of doctrine in the Book, the Scottish church
declares: "We affirm that, All scripture inspired of God is profitable
to instruct, to reprove, and to exhort. In which books of Old and New Testaments we affirm that all things
necessary for the instruction of the kirk, and to make the man of God perfect,
are contained and sufficiently expressed. By the contrary doctrine, we
understand whatsoever men, by laws, councils, or constitutions have imposed
upon the consciences of men, without the expressed commandment of God's word:
such as be vows of chastity, forswearing of marriage, binding of men and women
to several and disguised apparels, to the superstitious observation of fasting
days, difference of meat for conscience sake, prayer for the dead; and keeping
of holy days of certain saints commanded by man, such as be all those that the
Papists have invented, as the feasts (as they term them) of apostles, martyrs,
virgins, of Christmas, Circumcision, Epiphany, Purification, and other fond
feasts of our lady. Which things, because in God's scriptures they neither have
commandment nor assurance, we judge them utterly to be abolished from this
realm; affirming further, that the obstinate maintainers and teachers of such
abominations ought not to escape the punishment of the civil magistrate."
The First and Second Books of Discipline (Dallas: Presbyterian Heritage, 1993), pp. 25-26.
3. Article 24; as published in Schaff, Creeds of
Christendom, 3:373-74, emphasis
added.
4. Selected Works of John Calvin: Tracts and Letters (1844; rpt. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1983), vol. 2, p.
147.
5. Selected Works of John Calvin: Tracts and
Letters, vol. 2, pp. 148-49.
6. The Genevan Book of Order: The Form of Prayers
and Ministration of the Sacraments, etc., Used in the English Congregation at
Geneva (1556; rpt. Dallas:
Presbyterian Heritage, 1993). The congregation was pastored by John Knox. It is
important to stress that this order is not a liturgy. The Scottish historian,
C.G. M'Crie notes: 'The expression "Liturgy" applied to the Form of
Prayers was both unfortunate and infelicitous. For whether the term be taken in
the more restricted technical sense in which it is applied to the Communion
service at the altar, or in the wider and more popular acceptation according to
which it describes prescribed and obligatory forms or offices of worship, it is
altogether inapplicable to any Presbyterian service-book, which never aims at
being more than a directory, with forms for optional use.' C.G. M'Crie, The
Public Worship of Presbyterian Scotland (Edinburgh: William Blackwood, 1892), p. 106.
7. The Genevan Book of Order, page 25.
8. The Genevan Book of Order, page 27.
9. The Genevan Book of Order, page 30.
10. The Genevan Book of Order, page 63.
11. On the Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544; rpt. Dallas: Protestant Heritage Press,
1995), p.15; or, as published in The Selected Works of John Calvin: Tracts
and Letters (1844; rpt. Grand Rapids:
Baker, 1983), vol. 1, p. 126.
12. The True Method of Giving Peace to Christendom
and Reforming the Church (1548) in
Selected Works: Tracts and Letters,
vol. 3, p. 260.
13. On the Necessity of
Reforming the Church, p. 18; or,
as published in Selected Works of John Calvin: Tracts and Letters, vol. 1, pp. 128-29. Cf. Necessity, pp. 23-24, 47-50, 96-97; in Selected Works:
Tracts, vol. 1, pp. 132-33, 151-53,
189-90. Also, see the forthcoming book, Come Out From Among Them:
'Anti-Nicodemite' Writings of John Calvin (Dallas: Protestant Heritage Press). Also note: Calvin's Commentary on Deuteronomy 12:29-31; Calvin's letters, to
Somerset (22 Oct. 1548; Letters,
vol. 2), to King Edward (January 1551; Letters, vol. 2), to the Frankfurt church (Letters, vol. 3, pp. 117-19), to Richard Cox (as reprinted in
Knox's Works, vol. 4, pp. 58-60).
14. A Vindication of the Doctrine that the Sacrifice
of the Mass is Idolatry (1550); in
Works, vol. 3, p. 34; Selected
Writings (Dallas: Presbyterian
Heritage, 1995), vol. 1, p. 23. Readers interested in Knox's teaching about
worship should obtain the Selected Writings of John Knox, and give special attention to the first 100 pages of
the volume. See also the essay on "The Biblical Law of Worship," in
the volume, John Knox: The Forgotten Reformer by Kevin Reed (Presbyterian Heritage, forthcoming).
15. Appellation from the Sentence Pronounced by the
Bishops and Clergy: Addressed to the Nobility and Estates of Scotland (1558), in Works, vol. 4, p. 468; Selected Writings, vol. 1, p.474.
16. Two forthcoming publications will amply demonstrate
the opinions of the preeminent Reformers: Come Out From Among Them:
'Anti-Nicodemite' Writings of John Calvin (with an introductory essay tracing Calvin's concern for worship
throughout his tracts and treatises); John Knox: The Forgotten Reformer (by Kevin Reed), chapter 2, "The Biblical Law
of Worship."
17. The Shorter Catechism states the matter succinctly:
"The second commandment forbiddeth the worshipping of God by images, or
any other way not appointed in his word" (Answer 51).
18. See the parallel teaching of the Larger Catechism,
questions 108-109. For a clearer idea of what the Westminster divines mean by
"special occasions" and the extraordinary parts of worship, see the
"Appendix" to the Directory for Public Worship.
19. This is the correct wording of this section or the
Confession, as published in The Westminster Confession of Faith by S.W. Carruthers (Manchester: R. Aikman, 1937).
Cf. The Collected Writings of John Murray (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1982), vol. 3, pp. 291-95).
20. See John L. Girardeau, Instrumental Music in the
Public Worship of the Church
(Columbia, 1888), chapter 4, especially p.135ff.
21. I dare say that Frame's own church is more likely to
draw a false dichotomy between "formal" worship and other Christian
meetings. For example, his book is designed to be used for Sunday schools. When
those Sunday schools convene, and instruction is undertaken in the setting of a
church meeting, Frame encourages open discussion (p. xiv). Need we ask: Are the
women present for these discussions to be regulated by the apostolic injunction
which governs the "public worship" services? "Let your women
keep silence in the churches: for it is not permitted unto them to speak; but
they are commanded to be under obedience, as also saith the law. And if they
will learn any thing, let them ask their husbands at home: for it is a shame
for women to speak in the church" (1 Cor. 14:34-35).
The usual answer given is that since a
Sunday school is not a "worship" service, then women may freely
participate with comments and inquiry, an outlook which Frame seems to share
(cf. p. 75, note 6). The division between "formal" worship services
and other "informal" public meetings for instruction is not a
Puritan, Scottish, or confessional distinction at all. It is a modern
accommodation to feminism in churches which are soft on biblical authority. So
we ask Mr. Frame not to blame the Puritans for the errors of our times; for
they are not the origin of such sophistries.
22. Frame is here adopting the language used by James
Jordan, another heterodox writer. Mr. Jordan has a history of publishing
speculative views on worship. For a brief appraisal of Jordan's views, see
The Canterbury Tales: An Extended Review and Commentary based upon the Geneva
Papers by Kevin Reed (reprinted
article; Dallas: Presbyterian Heritage, 1984, 1996).
23. It should be noted that Reformers and Puritans
opposed some of these practices upon additional considerations beyond a bare
statement of the regulative principle. They often invoked scriptural
prohibitions which directly condemn superstitions and imitations of pagan
worship (such as Deut. 12:1-4, 29-32). The application of biblical injunctions
against superstitions and imitations are not a focal point of this review, and
Frame does not deal with such prohibitions in any significant manner.
Nevertheless, readers should realize that the Reformed doctrine of worship is
broader in scope than might be apparent from the present discussion about the
regulative principle.
24. We encourage serious readers to make an experiment.
Compare Mr. Frame's doctrine with any standard Puritan (or Reformed) exposition
of the second commandment, or old-line Presbyterian explanation of the Westminster
Standards. Ask yourself: "Which discussion takes scripture more seriously?
Which one is really attending to the details of the biblical text?"
Compare the Westminster Directory for Public Worship with Mr. Frame's
description of his own worship services in chapter 13. Which service tends most
to the honour and glory of God?
Copyright © 1996 by Kevin Reed
The electronic version of this document has
been provided as a convenience for our readers. No part of this publication may
be transmitted or distributed in any form, or by any means (electronic,
mechanical photocopying, or otherwise) without prior permission of the
publisher. Inquiries may be directed to: Presbyterian Heritage Publications,
P.O. Box 180922, Dallas, Texas 75218, U.S.A.
Necessity of Reforming the Church (1544) by John
Calvin - Would
John Calvin Excommunicate John Frame? by Dr. Reg Barrow -
Presbyterians and Presbyterianism - Reformed Worship, The Regulative Principle, etc. - Kevin Reed