Should we use the Regulative Principle of Worship (RPW) or
the Normative Principle of Worship (NPW)?
The Classical Anglican Church, that prior to Laud and Charles I, was most certainly recognised and self-identified as a Reformed Protestant Church with close ties to the Reformed Churches of Switzerland and the Netherlands. But anyone sat at the Council of Dort would have noticed that Anglicans were, well, different. Only one chair in the room had a canopy over it, it was not the person leading and organising the event and discussions but the bishop from the Anglican delegation. The other churches did not have bishops, Anglicans did, interestingly though this was no barrier to recognition on either side and indeed much respect was given the Anglican delegation. So why the difference? Why did Anglicans have bishops and the Continental Reformed not? For that matter, why did the Anglican ministers wear robes when their continental brothers did not? It all comes down to what has been known as the battle between the Regulative Principle of Worship (RPW) and the Normative Principle of Worship (NPW) - Anglicans followed the latter, the Continental Reformed the former. But why, and what really is the difference - if any?
Usually the
difference is put this way: RPW's
believe that all we do in worship must be regulated by Scripture and thus to do
anything not commanded in the Scriptures is wrong and potentially actually
sin. NPW's believe that worship must
follow the norms set down by Scripture but so long as it is not explicitly
condemned in Scripture it is potentially permissible if it promotes the common good. Now, it is important to recognise
the nuance there - the NPW is not the 'negative principle of worship' where
worship is a complete free for all and you can do whatever you like so long as
Scripture doesn't say you can't do it.
No, that is not the NORMative Principle at all. Something that is 'normative' means that it
sticks to a prescribed standard and 'normal' way of doing something, for
something to be 'normative' it must
follow the principles and value judgements of something which says that that is
how things should be done.
"anyone sat at the Council of Dort would have noticed that Anglicans were, well, different."
There are a
number of issues with the RPW, two of which are that if taken literally it
amounts to absurdity and is utterly unsustainable and, secondly, the separation
of worship into only a church setting as oppose to the rest of our lives. Let us look at both of these in turn.
If one were
to hold literally and solidly to the RPW it would be near impossible to run a
church - those who claim they do are almost certainly hypocritical in some
areas. Giving out notices in Church?
That isn't commanded in Scripture.
Preaching from a pulpit? That isn't commanded in Scripture. Using PowerPoint presentations or media systems
and microphones? Not in Scripture. Sitting down in services? That isn't commanded
in Scripture. Singing only the Psalms?
What about the 'New Songs' we are supposed to sing (Psalm 33.3; 40.3;
144.9; 149.1; Isaiah 42.10; Revelation 5/9; 14.3)? In fact if we can only sing
what is explicit in Scripture in its exactness why are we not singing in Hebrew
and Greek - I don't recall a command to translate the Psalms into English
anywhere? Expository style
preaching? That isn't found in
Scripture. Reciting Creeds or manmade confession of faith? Not commanded in Scripture. Not using cymbals and harps and such
instruments in worship? Well you should
be as that is commanded in Scripture over and over again in the Psalms. Not
raising your hands and not clapping during worship or shouting 'Amen!'? You should be (Psalm 63.4; 134.2; 47.1; 97.8;
1 Corinthians 14.16 1 Timothy 2.8) Not evidencing speaking in tongues and
giving prophecy? You should be because Paul
tells people they should be.
The problem
is that Scripture just simply doesn't tell us, explicitly, enough to run a
viable service and many of the things it does we often don't do. A literal taking of the RPW is
unworkable. Instead what more
sophisticated RPW proponents say is that certain things are 'implied' in
Scripture as being present in NT Church worship and that their use is thus
right and proper. Preaching expository
sermons is implied from the fact that all of Scripture is God breathed and
useful for teaching. Giving notices is
implied by Paul asking and notifying things in his letters. Essentially these RPW followers pencil in
alongside Scripture interpretations that make it workable in the modern world
to run a church given the paucity of NT evidence and the massive changes in
society since then. But everything done
in the service must be Biblical and have a Biblical foundation and be rooted in
God's commands. In other words
everything must be regulated by the norms of Scripture... which doesn't sound
so unlike the NPW. The reality is that
sensible and conservative use of the NPW and reasonable use of RPW looks almost
exactly the same.
"the NPW is not the 'negative principle of worship' where worship is a complete free for all and you can do whatever you like so long as Scripture doesn't say you can't do it."
From the
start of RPW theories the more sophisticated and realistic proponents recognised
that there are two areas in the question of how to worship - elements and
circumstances. The elements of worship
must be commanded in Scripture but given how the world changes the
circumstances in which the elements are lived out and portrayed is naturally
subject to change. Elements are the
basic building blocks of Biblical worship, the circumstances are the paint on
the blocks and how they fit together. It
is along these lines that it is possible to visit two RPW churches and see that
they are very different and see Scripture and regulating different things. When we stop seeing RPW as a monolithic
ultra-legalistic method and recognise it as the more nuanced and complex
principle that it is the difference between conservative NPW and sensible RPW
begins to look less black and white and less clear.
It is
because of this similarity that someone like Richard Hooker one of the most
celebrated Anglican Theologians could defend the BCP and Church Practices
against the more extreme RPW Puritans by saying rather frankly "For our
constant persuasion in this point, is as theirs, that we have no where altered the laws of Christ
further then in such particularities only as have the nature of things
changeable according to the difference of times, places, persons, and other the
like circumstances."
So to conclude this first point - a literal attempt at the
RPW is utterly untenable and those who claim to follow it almost always differ
from each other and indeed in ignoring some commands end up being somewhat
rather hypocritical.
"When we stop seeing RPW as a monolithic ultra-legalistic method and recognise it as the more nuanced and complex principle that it is the difference between conservative NPW and sensible RPW begins to look less black and white and less clear."
Secondly, it is worth asking if the RPW makes too big a
dichotomy between worship in Church and worship in the Christian life. One of the unique things about Christianity is
that it teaches that God is not just in a Temple but everywhere and we worship
the Father not in Samaria or Jerusalem but in Spirit and Truth where ever we
are. Our worship is not to be sacrifices
in particular places but rather our whole lives are to be spiritual sacrifices
to God in all places at all times. We
are not only to pray in Church but to pray without ceasing. All that we do in life, not just in Church,
is to be to the glory of God and the praise of His name. Yes, Scripture clearly and irrefutably
emphasises the importance and imperative nature of gathering together as an assembly before the
Lord but it doesn't make that the be all and end all of worship.
Yet in our everyday lives Christians do not follow the
Regulative Principle and say they can only do what Scripture explicitly
commands they do, rather they follow the Normative Principle and try to govern
their lives by the norms laid down in Scripture and apply them to all kinds of
situations. Should you take the job as a
banker in Santander or HSBC? Good luck
finding an explicit command for that in Scripture. Should you buy a Mercedes SLK or a more
practical family estate car? Should you
buy violets or roses for your wife? Scripture won't explicitly tell you. But Scripture does impose on us general moral
norms and general ways in which we most glorify God and general ways in which
we don't. By reading Scripture, not just
legal commands but the stories, the parables, the histories, the poetry, the
letters, the prophecies, we learn the heart of God and follow that heart in our
lives.
If we worship God in our daily lives 24/7 by the Normative
Principle then why would we change so radically to the Regulative Principle
when we gather together?
Nonetheless, RPW theologians often try to point to parts of
Scripture to prove their point - that the RPW itself is commanded in
Scripture. Let us look at some of these
and see if they hold water.
The first one chronologically is the story of Abel and Cain
- God rejected Cain's sacrifice not just because he was morally corrupt but
because it was, being grain, not an acceptable offering. Abel's sacrifice of an animal, pre-figuring
Christ and the fundamental importance of spilling blood, was acceptable. Yet the odd thing is - Scripture nowhere
tells us that Cain and Abel were ever commanded or expected to offer sacrifices
in the first place, they were not acting on God's explicit command but what they
felt was an appropriate and natural response to God's love in sparing their
lives. To say that the text 'implies'
that God commanded them to offer things before Him is to again pencil in an
interpretation not actually present in Scripture and thus defeats the very
point of the RPW!
The use of the 2nd commandment, the one against
idolatry and worship of images, to support the RPW is odd because actually this
is a classic example of the NPW of worship in action - this is not a command to
'do' something but one not to do something.
It doesn't in and of itself tell you what worship looks like without
idolatry only what it looks like with it.
The fact that NPW reformers such as the Classical Anglicans were just as
iconoclastic, if not at times even more so, than their continental brethren is
a case in point that this commandment doesn't really change the playing field
for the RPW.
The use of the very detailed almost OCD commands of God in
the Old Testament about how the Temple and Tabernacle should be and how
everything was tightly ordained in terms of ceremonies is on the surface
convincing. The punishment of Korah, Nadab, Abihu, and King Saul are examples
of this. But this is only convincing if we reject the
three-fold division of the Law because Christ abolished all these ceremonial
laws when He brought in the New Covenant and there is nothing in the New
Testament even approaching being a pale shadow of such regulation. Indeed, this very fact means that RPW people
are in reality saying that these laws show us that the normal principle that
God uses to govern worship is very exact and based on His commands - which in
and of itself is an NPW argument not an RPW one. Regardless of this the NT ended the Old
Covenant and there is nothing in the NT replacing such things. The reason why God seemed so OCD in the Law
was not so much to show us under the New Covenant how to worship, rather, all
of these ceremonial laws were primarily not even about worship but about Christ
and His ministry of which these laws were but a shadow in a dark mirror to be
fulfilled. All of these Old Testament Laws teach us
something about God's personality, especially His perfection and remaining with
His elect, but how this seems to be worked out after the coming of the Holy
Spirit into the hearts of all believers look very different in the New Testament
witnesses.
"The fact that NPW reformers such as the Classical Anglicans were just as iconoclastic, if not at times even more so, than their continental brethren is a case in point that this commandment doesn't really change the playing field for the RPW."
Moving to New Testament texts it is alleged that Jesus'
rejection of the 'human traditions' of the Pharisees in Mark 7.6-9 proves that
all worship must be regulated by God's express commands. But is that really what Jesus is saying
(laying aside that this text is still under the Old Covenant)? Another reading
would be that the practices Jesus condemns stem for a works based righteousness
and evil hearts and it is this falsity and hypocrisy that He decries yet it says
nothing about human traditions which are positive and not promoting works based
righteousness. Jesus took part in
Synagogue worship - yet you won't find how Synagogue worship was precisely
regulated by commands from Scripture.
Jesus was concerned about living the law without changed hearts -
Christians are not only set free from the ceremonial regulation of the Law but
we have the true Law written on our hearts that we might worship Jesus in
Spirit and Truth at all times and in all places. The idea that the Great Commission's command
to teach people what Jesus taught His disciples is about regulating
congregational worship is a massive step of eisegesis given the salvific gospel
proclamation context and the fact we have no idea of what Jesus personally
commanded regarding the regulation of Worship besides possibly reciting the
Lord's Prayer, fasting without pride, the two Sacraments, and giving alms.
To take Paul's rejection of celebrating Jewish holy days
and Sabbaths in Galatians 4.9-11 (or Colossians 2) as even more so an explicit
rejection of celebrating any human made days and ceremonies is interesting but
misses the whole point of Paul's argument.
Paul is concerned with the Galatians resubmitting to the Law and falling
back into works based righteousness - no sensible NPW places ceremonies and
practices onto a salvific level but rather says they are helpful for teaching
and order. Of course, if Paul is serious
here as RPW would have it then all Christians had better become like Jehovah's
Witnesses and never, ever, celebrate Christmas or Easter or Birthdays!!
"We are human beings not disembodied souls and we only truly worship with all that we are when we worship not just in our minds but with our whole bodies. "
The use of The Letter to the Hebrews rejection of the Old
Testament Ceremonial Law as a shadow of things to come meaning and implying
Christians are to worship on a higher level in our spirit and in truth is
odd. Yes we are certainly not under the
Ceremonial Law, and yes unlike then we worship more fully in Spirit and Truth,
but to claim that this means and entails a rejection of physical and tactile
worship which involves rituals and representations of truths is bizarre given
that Jesus Himself explicitly commanded only two things definitively for Christian
worship and both of them - baptism and the Lord's Supper - are physical,
tactile, ritual, and representational acts of worship. We are human beings not disembodied souls and
we only truly worship with all that we are when we worship not just in our
minds but with our whole bodies. To separate
out spiritual and physical worship so much and make one out to be holy and one
to be evil is very Gnostic.
Ultimately, the difference between a realistic use of the
RPW and a sensible use of the NPW is rather small and one more of emphasis than
fact. The strict use of the RPW is so
fundamentalist that it is practically impossible to follow and always leads to
hypocrisy somewhere. The sharp division
of Spirit and Body is rather dangerous and promotes an unbiblical view of the
human person. Likewise the sharp division between worshipping God every day and
worshipping Him in a congregation is unhelpful and minimises the radical nature
of the New Covenant and the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. Not only does getting a strict RPW explicitly
from Scripture rely on eisegesis and the finding of questionable 'implications'
there is simply not enough in all of Scripture for us to realistically regulate
all of our congregational time together.
All of the ceremonies and aspects of the BCP, Ordinal, and
Classical Anglicanism were kept or created not to enslave people to rituals but
to bring order and clarity to the church, to use liturgy and praxis as a
powerful teaching tool to bring the truth of Faith Alone to a whole nation lost
in the ignorance and darkness of mediaeval Roman Catholicism. All of them were governed by principles and
norms laid out in the Scriptures or things which teach Scripture by a means
consonant and not opposed to Scripture.
The state of modern Anglican Practices is another matter entirely but I
firmly believe that Classical Anglicanism was on solid ground for all that it
did, though at times it was perhaps too legalistic in enforcing unity.
(Religion Saves and Nine other misconceptions by Mark Driscoll has a good chapter on the Regulative Principle vs Normative Principle and ends up proposing a 'Missional Principle' - it is well worth a read and some of it has informed this article.)
I found this very helpful. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, I'm glad it was helpful.
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