The Protestant Reformation was a conflict
over many critical issues. Of all the issues contested between Romanists and
Reformers, no issue was more crucial than the question of true worship.
John Knox displayed a preeminent concern for worship.
Throughout his ministry, the Reformer proclaimed the scriptural law of worship: all forms of worship (and all religious
ceremonies) must possess clear scriptural warrant, if they are to be admitted
as valid means of worship. This concept has subsequently been called the regulative principle of worship,
because it regulates our approach to God in worship.
After Knox's first sermon, he and John
Rough were called before a convention of papal clerics to answer for certain
doctrines which the Protestants had espoused. Among the doctrines in dispute
were Protestant claims that "the pope is an Antichrist," and
"the Mass is abominable idolatry." A key point of contention was the
Reformer's position that "man may neither make nor devise a religion that
is acceptable to God; but man is bound to observe and keep the religion that
from God is received, without chopping or changing thereof."[1]
This last point hit at the central issue
by asserting the limits of church power. The issue soon became the focal point
of the discussion. The subprior asked Knox, "Why may not the church, for
good causes, devise ceremonies to decor the sacraments, and others [of] God's
services?"
Knox replied, "Because the kirk ought
to do nothing but in faith: and ought not to go before, but is bound to follow
the voice of the true Pastor." Later during the exchange, Knox added:
It is not enough that man invents a ceremony, and
then gives it a signification, according to his pleasure. But if anything
proceeds from faith, it must have the word of God for the assurance; for you
are not ignorant that "faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of
God." Now, if you will prove that your ceremonies proceed from faith, and
do please God, you must prove that God in expressed words has commanded them;
or else you shall never prove that they proceed from faith, nor yet that they
please God; but they are sin, and do displease him, according to the words of
the apostle, "Whatsoever is not of faith is sin."[2]
When the subprior attempted to divert the
discussion from the main issue, Knox responded with a scriptural rebuttal. Says
Knox, "May we cast away what we please, and retain what we please? If it
be well remembered, Moses, in the name of God, says to the people of Israel,
'All that the Lord thy God commands you to do, that do thou to the Lord thy
God: add nothing to it; diminish nothing from it.' By this rule think I that
the kirk of Christ will measure God's religion, and not by that which seems
good in their own eyes."[3]
A friar then sought to establish the
validity of papal ceremonies by alluding to 1 Cor. 3:11-12, claiming that the
ceremonies had withstood the refiner's fire, because they had endured for such
a long time. Knox seized the same text and used it to disarm his opponents.
Knox proved from scripture that the things which pass through the refiner's
fire are those which are established by the written word of God; and, further,
the written word actually militates against the ceremonies.
"God's word condemns your ceremonies;
therefore they do not abide the trial thereof," asserted Knox. He then
provided a paraphrased reference to Deuteronomy 4:
That God's word damns your ceremonies it is
evident; for the plain and straight commandment of God is, "Not that thing
which appears good in thy eyes shalt thou do to the Lord thy God, but what the
Lord thy God has commanded thee; that do thou; add nothing to it; diminish
nothing from it." Now unless you are able to prove that God has commanded
your ceremonies, this his former commandment will damn both you and them.[4]
Knox's understanding of worship is thereby
founded upon the abiding validity of the law of God. It also guards the
prerogative of Christ, as Head of the church, to govern the church strictly by
his word.
In 1550, Knox produced A Vindication of
the Doctrine that the Sacrifice of the Mass is Idolatry. As Knox unfolds his arguments against the Mass, he
provides an enlarged defence of the regulative principle.
At the beginning of his presentation, the
Reformer states a syllogism which undergirds his whole discussion: "All
worshipping, honouring, or service invented by the brain of man in the religion
of God, without his own express commandment, is idolatry. The Mass is invented
by the brain of man, without any commandment of God. Therefore, it is
idolatry."[5]
Of course, the conclusion of the syllogism
is dependent upon the validity of the major premise, and that premise is a
statement of the regulative principle of worship. Therefore, the Reformer devotes great energy to
providing proofs for the major premise.
After demonstrating the idolatry of the
Mass by his first syllogism, Knox proceeds to a second syllogism: "All
honouring or service of God whereunto is added a wicked opinion is abomination.
Unto the Mass is added a wicked opinion. Therefore it is abomination."
After proving this second syllogism, the Reformer produces even further
arguments against the Mass.[6]
Knox never retreats from his view that
Roman Catholic worship is idolatry. The Mass is the preeminent expression of
Rome's false worship. Nevertheless, the Reformer does not restrict his comments
to the Mass alone. Indeed, he contends, "All the glistering ceremonies of
the Papists are very dung, and abomination before God."[7]
The entire Romish system is corrupt
precisely because it constructs its worship upon a faulty foundation: human
traditions and the inventions of men. In contrast, Knox always stresses the
necessity of scriptural warrant for worship which is acceptable to God:
And the same we affirm of religion, which, if it be
pleasing and acceptable unto God, must have his own commandment and approbation
for a warrant. Otherwise, it cannot be but odious in his presence, as a thing
repugnant to his express commandment, saying, "Not that thing which
appears good in thy own eyes shall thou do to the Lord thy God, but what the
Lord thy God had commanded thee, that do thou: add nothing to it, diminish
nothing from it."
By
this precept of that eternal God who
is immutable, and can command nothing but that which is just are all people, realms, and nations (that will
avow themselves to be the inheritance of the Lord) bound and obliged to measure
their religion; not by the example of other realms, neither yet by their own
good intention, nor determination of men, but only by the expressed word of
God. So that what therein is commanded, ought to be done by the people of God,
what appearance or external show of holiness ever it has. And, therefore, have
we most justly rejected the rabble of ceremonies which the Papists held for the
chief exercise of their religion, as things having no better ground than the
invention and consent of men.[8]
Roman Catholics were not the only persons
to whom Knox addressed admonitions concerning purity of worship. Several times
during his life, Knox was also compelled to issue warnings against the Anglican
order of worship.
During the reign of Edward VI, Knox served
as one of the king's chaplains. In the autumn of 1552, the English prayer book
was undergoing revision, and a controversy developed over the manner of
celebrating the Lord's Supper. Prior to the publication of the revised prayer
book, the English church had a traditional practice of observing the Lord's
Supper with communicants in a kneeling position. Yet, due to the influence of
several Protestant Reformers, there was a growing opinion in favour of changing
to "table gesture" - that is, a celebration of the sacrament around a
table, with participants sitting as they normally would to receive a meal.
Thomas Cranmer and other bishops preferred
the older usage, and therefore a note was added in the new prayer book to
mandate a kneeling position. Knox opposed the view of the bishops, since he
advocated table gesture. He also declined an appointment as regular minister in
the Anglican church. In April 1553, Knox was called before the privy council to
explain himself. Among the questions posed to the Reformer was, "If
kneeling at the Lord's Table was not indifferent?"
Of course, kneeling at the Lord's Supper
smacks of Popery, as though recipients are rendering reverence to the elements.
In response to the inquiry of the privy council, Knox stated, "That
Christ's action in itself was most perfect, and Christ's action was done
without kneeling; that kneeling was man's addition or imagination; that it was
most sure to follow the example of Christ, whose action was done sitting and
not kneeling."
The lords of the English council engaged
in a dispute with Knox over the matter. Finally, they concluded that Knox
"was not called of any evil mind;" but "they were sorry to know
him of a contrary mind to the common order." Knox answered that "he
was more sorry that a common order should be contrary to Christ's
institution."[9]
The English order again became the subject
of conflict during Knox's pastorate among the English exiles in Frankfurt. The
congregation in Frankfurt was formed in the summer of 1554 by Protestant exiles
who fled their native country during the reign of Bloody Mary. Knox began his
ministry there in the autumn of that year.
When advocates for an Anglican order
disrupted Knox's congregation in Frankfurt, he again invoked the regulative principle to dispel their liturgical claims. The Anglican
order included many objectionable elements: the minister's surplice, appointed
lessons, prescribed prayers and fastings, ecclesiastical holidays, observance
of communion in a kneeling posture, allowance for private administration of the
Lord's Supper, the use of the sign of the cross in baptism, godfathers making
vows in the name of the child at the time of baptism, and the purification of
women after childbirth.
Knox decried the Anglican order, saying,
"By the word of God we must seek our warrant for the establishing of
religion, and without that to thrust nothing into any Christian
congregation." He continued with this rebuke:
Forasmuch as in the English Book were things both superstitious,
impure, and imperfect (which he offered to prove before all men), he would not
consent that of that church it should be received; and that in case men would
go about to burden that free congregation therewith, so oft as he should come
in that place (the text offering occasion) he would not fail to speak against
it.
Further, Knox affirmed his view that a
slackness to reform religion was one reason why God's anger had been provoked
against England.[10]
The issue was not simply a dispute over a
few outward ceremonies and forms of worship. Rather, it was a battle between
two radically different underlying conceptions of worship. One view contains
the very seed of idolatry, because it allows men to fashion worship in a manner
of their own choosing. The other view jealously strives to preserve the purity
of God's worship, by admitting only those practices established in scripture.
The regulative principle governed Knox's entire
perspective on worship.
Consequently, when he had the opportunity to engage in tasks of Reformation,
the regulative principle also provided the foundation for building many public
standards of Reformed worship.
Knox returned to Scotland in 1559; he was
finally able to lead in the work of Reformation in his homeland. First and
foremost, the Scottish Reformation was charactrized by a purification of
worship. Knox continually sought to cleanse the church and the nation from the
corruptions of false religion.
Throughout his labours, Knox was fearless
in preaching the word of God. In June 1559, Knox headed toward St. Andrews,
planning to preach "for reformation to be made there." When the local
papal bishop heard about these plans, he took measures to stop Knox. The
bishop's design was simple: if Knox presented himself to preach at St. Andrews,
the Reformer would be saluted with a dozen guns, "whereof the most part
should light upon his nose."[11]
Fully aware of the bishop's "good
mind" toward him, Knox proceeded with his plans to preach, refusing to be
intimidated in the slightest way. The Reformer took as his text selections from
Matthew and John passages which
describe Christ's cleansing of the temple. Knox drew parallels between the
corruptions in the temple and the contemporary corruptions of Popery. He noted
Christ's actions in order to stress the responsibility of reformation by
"those to whom God gives the power and zeal thereto." Knox's message
was so effective that "the magistrates, the provost and bailies, [as well]
as the commonalty for the most part, within the town, did agree to remove all
monuments of idolatry, which also they did with expedition." During the
process, the papal priests remained stupefied, "even as dumb as their
idols who were burnt in their presence."[12]
This pattern of Reformation became
widespread in Scotland. The word of God was preached in boldness; the people
were seriously impressed with their responsibility to purify their worship and service
unto the Lord; public manifestations of corrupt worship were removed.
Knox described the conquest of the land
with great vigour. "The images were stolen away in all parts of the
country; and in Edinburgh was that great idol called St. Giles first drowned in
the North Loch, [and] after burnt, which raised no small trouble in the
town." Of course, the Papists did not take too kindly to these activities.
"For the friars rowping [croaking] like ravens upon the bishops, the bishops ran upon the queen, who to
them was favourable enough, but that she thought it could not stand with her
advantage to offend such a multitude as then took upon them the defence of the
evangel, and the name Protestants."[13]
Knox recorded the reformation of St.
Johnston: "the places of idolatry of gray and black friars, and of the
charterhouse monks, were made equal with the ground; all monuments of idolatry,
that could be apprehended, consumed with fire; and priests commanded, under
pain of death, to desist from their blasphemous Mass." An Abbey, 12 miles
from St. Andrews, "was reformed, their altars overthrown, their idols,
vestments of idolatry, and Mass books, were burnt in their own presence, and
they commanded to cast away their monkish [habits]."[14]
The dead idols of Popery were replaced by
the living word of God, as true knowl edge and pure worship began to flourish.
Public services and family devotions exhibited those elements of worship found
in scripture: prayer, the reading and preaching of the word, singing of psalms,
and the proper administration of the sacraments.
In order to promote true religion, a new
Confession of Faith ( 1560) and Book of Discipline were drawn up. The Book of
Discipline asserts the authority of scripture, and it demonstrates that the regulative principle is merely a natural
application of the sola scriptura
rule of Protestant theology. The
explication of the First Head of Doctrine states:
By preaching of the evangel, we understand not only
the scriptures of the New Testament, but also of the Old: to wit, the law,
prophets, and histories, in which Christ Jesus is no less contained in figure,
than we have him now expressed in verity. And, therefore, with the apostle, 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
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.[15]
With this concern for purity of worship,
it is no wonder that the Scottish Reformation was the most thorough among any
of the Protestant nations. Knox lauds this fact: "in how great purity God
did establish amongst us his true religion, as well in doctrine as in ceremonies!"
Knox extols God's work among the Scots:
For as touching the doctrine taught by our
ministers, and as touching the admini stration of sacraments used in our
churches, we are bold to affirm that there is no realm this day upon the face
of the earth that has them in greater purity; yea (we must speak the truth
whomsoever we offend), there is none (no realm, we mean) that has them in the
like purity. For all others (how sincere ever the doctrine be, that by some is
taught) retain in their churches, and the ministers thereof, some footsteps of
Antichrist, and some dregs of Papistry. But we (all praise to God alone) have
nothing within our churches that ever flowed from that man of sin.[16]
In these last comments, Knox points out an
extremely important concept in the work of Reformation. It is not simply a
Reformed doctrinal statement that constitutes a Reformed church. Rather, the
litmus test is whether these Reformed principles are applied in the
practices of the church. The
corporate worship of a church is a decisive indicator of its spiritual
condition.
The example of Knox stands as a sharp
rebuke to Christians in the present day. It illustrates the need to think about
our worship.
The church needs to reaffirm the regulative
principle of worship. Nothing should be admitted into the worship of
God, unless it possesses clear scriptural warrant. This principle is merely an
extension of the sola scriptura
rule of Protestant theology, as applied in the realm of worship. If we wish to
worship God "in spirit," then we must worship him "in
truth:" that is, in conformity to the truths contained in his word. And it
is a fundamental principle of scripture that the Lord is rightly approached in
worship only in accordance with his directions for exercises of devotion.
It follows from this principle that the
church has some serious housecleaning to do. Protestant churches are presently
full of unscriptural devices. Some corruptions have their origin in the
practices of Popery: graven images (including those "pictures of
Jesus" in educational literature), ecclesiastical holidays, ornate
clerical attire, and a growing fascination with elaborate liturgies.
In addition to the corruptions from Rome,
Protestants have added a few novelties of their own: altar calls, hymns of
dubious origin, grandiose musical concerts and solo performances (plus other
forms of entertainment) even puppet
shows have been known to find a place in worship services! And these are simply
some of the more obvious violations of the scriptural law of worship.
In addition to purging the church of
false worship, there is a need to promote the ordinary elements of true
worship which will glorify God and edify the congregation. The Westminster Confession (21:5) mentions these
elements: prayer, the reading of the scriptures, sound preaching, singing of
psalms, and the proper administration of the sacraments. In contemporary
churches, prayer meetings have become mere social gatherings; the reading of
the scriptures and preaching are often performed in a sullen and drab manner;
scriptural psalms, in praise of God, have virtually disappeared; and the
sacraments are sometimes treated as a mere afterthought to the "regular"
service. How tragic! The church has spurned the precious ordinances of God. It
is time to rebuild the walls of Zion.
Typically, a fascination with religious
ceremonies is an indication of a decline in gospel preaching. Conversely, sound
preaching is a powerful instrument in the cause of Reformation. Pastors need to
confront their congregations with lively preaching; and church members need to
approach the services in a prepared and attentive manner.
Finally, it is important to realize the
primacy of pure worship. On an
individual level, there is nothing more important. Knox saw that human
innovation in worship is the very seed of idolatry. He took it very seriously
because idolatry "separates man altogether from God."[17]
In the modern pluralistic age, the church
has lost a sense of the immorality of false worship. False religious beliefs
and practices are not simply academic differences; they are moral corruptions
which destroy the souls of men. This truth should pro vide the church with a
sense of urgency to confront men, and call them to repent from their false
worship.
The primacy of worship has tremendous
ramifications on the corporate level as well. In America today, from diverse
places, we hear cries for revival, church renewal, a new Reformation, and the
Christian reconstruction of society. What is often overlooked, amidst these
various desires, is an appropriate regard for the primacy of pure worship.
Contemporary social reformers frequently
join hands with Papists, Pelagians, Charismatics, Mormons, and other infidels,
in an attempt to save the nation. Yet, God's blessings should not be sought by
forging a "conservative" political coalition composed of an
assortment of idolaters. Says Knox, "But vain it is to crave reformation
in manners where the religion is corrupted. For like as a man cannot do the
office of a man, except first he have a being or a life, so to work works
pleasant in the sight of God the Father can no man do without the Spirit of the
Lord Jesus, which does not abide in the hearts of idolaters."[18]
In closing, let us hear the words of John Knox,
calling us to the preeminent concern for true worship:
The matter is not of so small importance, as some
suppose. The question is, whether God or man ought to be obeyed in matters of
religion? In mouth, all do confess that only God is worthy of sovereignty. But
after many by the instigation of the
devil, and by the presumptuous arrogance of carnal wisdom and worldly policy have defaced God's holy ordinance, men fear not to
follow what laws and common consent (mother of all mischief) have established
and commanded. But thus continually I can do nothing but hold, and affirm all
things polluted, yea, execrable and accursed, which God by his word has not
sanctified in his religion. God grant you his Holy Spirit rightly to judge.[19]
Notes
1. John Knox,
The History of the Reformation in Scotland, in The Works of John Knox (Ed. by David Laing; Edinburgh: James Thin, 1895),
1:194.
2. Knox,
Works, 1:195-96.
3. Knox,
Works, 1:196-97. Cf. Calvin, The True Method of Giving Peace to
Christendom and Reforming the Church,
in Selected Works of John Calvin: Tracts and Letters (Ed. by Henry Beveridge and Jules Bonnet; rpt. Grand
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983), 3:262-63.
4. Knox,
Works, 1:199. Cf. Calvin, The Necessity of Reforming the Church, in Tracts, 1:128-29.
5. Knox,
Works, 1:34; see pp. 2-16 below.
6. Knox,
Works, 3:52; see pp. 17-32 below. Cf. Calvin, The Necessity of
Reforming the Church, in Tracts, 1:167-69.
7. Knox, Marginal notation to the second edition of A
Godly Letter of Warning or Admonition to the Faithful in London, Newcastle, and
Berwick (1554), in Works, 3:183.
8. Knox, An Answer to a Letter Written by James
Tyrie, A Scottish Jesuit (1572),
in Works, 6:488; cf. 6:498.
9. Knox,
Works, 3:86-87. For an excellent treatment of Knox's role in the
English Reformation, consult Peter Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of
England: His Work in Her Pulpit and His Influence upon Her Liturgy, Articles,
and Parties (London: Henry S.
King, 1875).
10. A Narrative of the Proceedings and Troubles of
the English Congregation at Frankfurt on the Maine (1554-55), in Knox, Works, 4:32-33; cf. 4:161.
11. Knox,
History, in Works,
1:348.
12. Knox,
History, in Works,
1:348-50; "Letter to Mrs. Anna Locke" (1559), Works, 6:25.
13. Knox,
History, in Works,
1:256-57.
14. Knox, Letter to Mrs. Anna Locke (1559), Works, 6:23, 26.
15. Knox,
History, in Works,
2:185-86. [The present publisher has produced a new edition of the First and
Second Books of Discipline (a
loose-leaf publication; Dallas, 1993).] The Scottish Reformation brought a
rejection of all ecclesiastical holidays (other than the Lord's day). In Book 5
of The History of the
Reformation in Scotland, Knox's
continuator wrote: "in the keeping of some festival days our church
assented not; for only the sabbath-day was kept in Scotland." (Works, 2:534). In another place, Knox refered to
"that day which men call Good Friday," thereby indicating his
disapproval of the significance attached to the day (Works, 6:140).
16. Knox,
History, in Works,
2:263-64.
17. Knox, An Epistle to the Inhabitants of
Newcastle and Berwick (1558), in Works, 5:487.
18. Knox, A Letter to the Queen Dowager, Regent of
Scotland (1556), in Works, 4:81.
19. Knox, "Letter to Mrs. Anna Locke"
(1559), in Works, 6:14.
Go to "Knox's
Call to the Ministry and First Public Debate"
Go to "A
Vindication of the Doctrine that
the Sacrifice of the Mass is Idolatry"
by John Knox
Copyright © 1988, 1994 by Kevin Reed
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The Works of John Knox 6 Volume Set - Reformed Worship, The Regulative Principle, etc. - Scottish Presbyterianism - John Knox