Rob Hewell

Worship Beyond Nationalism


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the perspective of the reign of God. It was clear that by God’s presence in Christ, God’s reign was breaking into the world, yet it was not of the world. Jesus’ responses were rarely intended to confuse, yet they continually confounded the world’s ways. His answers constantly challenged the assumptions of the inquisitors. He also challenged their presumptions about their prerogative in deciding what was right and what was true.

      These high-minded experts in the law were unaccustomed to such testing. Jesus’ statement likening the love of people to the love of God transcended their long-held traditionalism. Their devotion to the Decalogue and the practice of their own well-established rules were legendary. Respect for another person and that person’s possessions, family, and life was far from a strange notion. Yet the notion of esteeming another person on the same level as oneself made for an interesting juxtaposition with Jewish and even Roman social customs that maintained distinctions between persons of privilege and those outcast by virtue of economic, gender, health, or ethnic status.

      Jesus’ contemporaries were confused regarding his refusal to participate in their grand schemes for gaining worldly sovereignty. That same temptation has confronted Christ’s followers in every moment of the church’s history. The challenge for Christ’s followers is that participating in the in-breaking of this new kingdom not only seeks different meaning and ends to those of the world but also requires discernment regarding ways and means to those ends. As evidenced by Jesus Christ himself, the ways of the kingdom of heaven will at times conflict with the ways of the world’s established practices.

      Liturgy and Kingdomness

      Liturgy is certainly the work of the people of God in worship. Described in that phrase, liturgy exists as a functional characteristic of communal worship. It is service rendered to God by all participants through various acts and elements of worship in a communal setting. Yet the term has lost much of its patina within many free-church traditions. A resistance to the use of any traditional liturgy has itself become a de facto liturgy, with deeply entrenched patterns of various acts and elements. Even further, the exclusive use of the term in reference to corporate worship settings has limited its meaning among many faith communities, representing a formalistic approach to worship largely devoid of worth or vitality.

      There is, then, an incarnational liturgical vibrancy for followers of Christ as agents of God’s kingdom in the world. Without this liturgical agency on behalf of the world, liturgical expression in communal gathering for worship is incomplete. The two do not diverge one from the other; the liturgy lived in the world for the sake of Christ is a fulfillment of the liturgical celebration of God’s supreme worth and eternal redemptive activity.

      Practicing the Reign

      The