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  • Mini-Course Overview

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    Participatory Worship

    by Stephen Atkerson

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    Did Jesus intend church services to be a spectator sport? Have you ever wondered why believers in modern-day church services are so passive? Why they don’t participate in the service? Why church is like going to a show and sitting as a spectator? Why does the laity rarely get to spontaneously exercise their God-given gifts in a meeting in order to edify their brothers and sisters?

    Course Outcomes: 

    When you have completed this course, you will be able to:

    • Understand what a first-century scriptural church meeting looked like

    • Understand why a first-century scriptural church meeting did not consist merely of a sermon soliloquy

    • Understand how first-century Christians mutually edified each other at church

    • Know the purpose of coming together for church

    • Know the things that are not edifying for church meetings

    • Know what you can contribute to your regular church meetings

    • Understand that the order of a first-century scriptural church meeting was not scripted in advance

    Forums:

    Post in 3 Forums. You will get a completion check indicating you have posted reflections. Read and engage with the comments of others. 

    Quiz:

    After you complete viewing the materials and posting your reflections, there is a feedback quiz. The quiz will help evaluate the effectiveness of the mini-course.

    Content Provider:

    This course is provided by NTRF - Small Churches, BIG Impact!

    "For over twenty-five years, we have provided church leaders in the Americas, Asia, Europe, Africa and Oceania with resources and training in how the early church met together in community. The essential tenets of the faith to which we subscribe are identical to those found in the doctrinal statements of any sound evangelical institution. Our favorite statement of faith is the First London Baptist Confession of 1646. In short, we advocate historic, orthodox Christianity poured into the wineskin of New Testament church practice as seen on the pages of Scripture. Our goal is to be Christ honoring and thoroughly biblical in every area concerning our church life."


    See Video → Worship: Original Strategy to Stir Up Love & Good Deeds ntrf.org/worship-service-video

    Read Articlentrf.org/participatory-worship


  • Section 1

    • Please watch this video from the beginning until the timestamp 3:51. 

    • Please watch this video from 3:52 to 9:48. 

    • Make forum posts: 1

      Reflection Questions: 

      Video 1 :

      1. How is a modern-day worship service different from a first-century church meeting?

      2.  In what ways have you been able to participate in a church worship service?  What effect have these opportunities generated in your faith walk?

      3. What benefits (and drawbacks) do you see in attending a worship service in which essentially only one person is allowed to speak?

      4. What spiritual gifts do you have that could contribute to a participatory church meeting if given the opportunity?


      Video 2:

      1.  When your church comes together to worship, is it characterized by “each one” (1 Corinthians 14:26) having the freedom to say something to build up of the church?  If not, why not?  If yes, do you prefer this or “only one” spectator approach? 

      2. The prime directive for anything said in a church meeting is that it must be edifying (1 Corinthians 14:26). What does it mean to edify?

      3. When your church comes together, is the focus on the leaders as star players or as slide-line coaches?  What are we missing if the focus is mostly on the leaders rather than on one another?

      4. How should such situations be handled when brothers or sisters have spoken or done things which have not been appropriate or fitting for edification of the church? 

      5. What duty do church leaders have in participatory church meetings?

      6. What are the benefits of incorporating a principle of participation into our church meetings?

      7. Have you participated in church meetings which were spontaneous, open and fluid, and the order of which were not predestined by church bulletins?  What might we be missing if we don’t allow church members the freedom to speak in a worship service?

      8. Why do you suppose, in most church meetings, that the laity are not unleashed to spontaneously use their spiritual gifts with the purpose of strengthening the church?

      9. Have you ever contemplated that Paul said open and orderly spontaneous church meetings were a “command” (1 Cor 14:37), and not an option? What steps can church leaders take to at least begin to obey this command?


  • Section 2

    • Please watch the video from 9:49 to 22:57. 

    • Please watch this video from 22:58 – 25:59. 

    • View Make forum posts: 1

      Video 3: 

      1. According to Hebrews 10:24-25, what are you supposed to ponder before you ever leave home to participate in a church meeting?

      2. How could church meetings be formatted to better facilitate the one-another process of encouragement (Hebrews 10:24-25)?

      3.  Why do some people feel all alone in large, traditional worship services?

      4. What can you yourself do at your next church meeting to stir up someone else to love and good deeds?

      5. What negative consequences might there be for disobeying Hebrews 10:24-25?

      6. Open, participatory worship does not preclude the teaching of God’s Word by church leaders. What verses can you think of that support the importance of in-depth Bible teaching?


      Video 4: 

      1.  When your church comes together for worship, how can the music be prevented from becoming a performance with a passive audience?

      2.  Paul states in Ephesians 5:19 and Colossians 3:16 that Christians should sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, not only to the Lord but also to “one another.” What benefits do you think might come from purposing to also sing to “one another”?

      3.  If the music in your church’s worship is so loud that the congregation can’t hear itself singing, what deleterious effects do you think might follow from that?

      4.  In what ways do you believe that the psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs sung in your church might edify the brethren in their minds as well as their emotions?


      Video 5: 

      1.  In your assembly meetings, what qualifications are required of those who are assigned the duty of teaching?

      2.  Luke recorded that the early church was devoted to the apostles’ teaching (Acts 2:42). What does this suggest about the role of teaching in “each one has” church meetings?

      3.  How do the assigned teachers in your church prepare for their teaching to the assembly?

      4.  How can the teaching in your church be made relevant and edifying for the life of the brethren?


  • Section 3