In
discussions about worship, I am finding at least two fallacies that are
being floated (and are related). I want to spell them out in order to be
clear about the nature of the problem I want to address.
1. The
reductive fallacy sometimes called the “argument of the beard” is a
failure to properly distinguish degrees of concepts and terms (“degree”
is the key term here).(1) When is a beard a beard? After one day? Two
days? Five days? How exactly do we tell? If we cannot tell with any
certainty, then there must be no difference. If the distinction isn’t
clear, then no distinction is to be made. For example, one might say
that since there is a little good and a little evil in everyone, then
there is no real difference between someone who is good and someone who
is truly evil.
2. The
fallacy of equivocation is one of the most common ones and occurs when
the same term is used in two or more senses, but without recognizing it.
When in the course of an argument a word shifts in meaning, but the
argument proceeds as if the original definition is still in use, then
this fallacy is committed. For example, one might argue that since
evolution means change over time, then evolution (macro) must be true.
“Evolution” is equivocated because the meaning shifted.
It is
important to understand that making distinctions in terminology is not
“verbalism” or “getting hung up on words.” In fact, it is just the
opposite; it avoids “being victimized by words.” As Kreeft says, “The
reason we make distinctions is because we insist on going beyond unclear
words to clear concepts.”(2)
The
issue I am raising is that we hear these kind of fallacies made in some
discussions about biblical worship. Either the lines are blurred in the
terminology or the term is equivocated (worship as sacrifice in general
or worship as specified actions when assembled). Here I am not talking
so much about technical definitions (as if a strict definition of the
Greek terms will settle the issue). I’m talking more about how the term
“worship” is actually used in different contexts (“all of life” or a
particular, purposed assembly).
We have
heard the argument that “all of life is worship,” based on passages like
Romans 12:1 (which uses latreia, service). I won’t quibble over
the question of whether a sacrifice is a form of worship, and so I would
agree that there is a sense in which this point is true. All that we do
is to be to God’s glory, reflecting a self-sacrificial mentality that
seeks God’s praise. Our lives are to be lived in adoration to God as we
proclaim His excellencies (1 Pet 2:9). Worship certainly is not
confined to four walls one day of the week (cf. Jas 5:13). How,
then, are the above fallacies made? Please note the following statements
that express the sentiment of arguments I’ve seen and heard in my
experience:
1.
Since “all of life” is worship, then there is no real difference between
the rest of life and the so-called worship assemblies.
2.
Since “all of life” is worship, then worship is not something for a set
time and place with any kind of pattern attached to it.
The
first example is a form of the “argument of the beard”; the second is
equivocation. Is there a difference between “all of life” in the broad
sense, and specific actions at a certain time and place that are called
worship? Here is where the mistake is made. If all of life is worship,
then, it might be reasoned by some, there is really no difference to be
made in coming together in an assembly for worship other than just being
a part of life. Worship in an assembly, then, is not based on any
patterns, so we can do in our assemblies what we would do in any other
context. There is no real difference. The distinctions are blurred.
There is nothing particularly special about worship in an assembly
context. In fact, it’s not really worship as much as it is encouragement
for each other.
Concepts of “worship” are distinguished in Scripture, which shows that
worship can be a purposeful act aside from “all of life.” Paul went up
to Jerusalem “to worship” (Acts 24:11, which uses proskuneo, to
bow down, show reverence). Abraham went up the mountain to worship
(Gen 22:5). Worship, in this sense, is something that has a starting
and stopping point, a time and place. We can go “to worship” (which is
active). As such, it is distinguished from normal activities of life—the
same activities that are part of our daily self-sacrifice to God. If no
distinction is to be made, then why do the Scriptures make one? Wasn’t
Paul already worshipping with his life when he went up to Jerusalem to
worship?
The
question is, do we, in our assemblies, have specified actions God wants
us to do together that may be called worship? Can we not call singing
praises to God worship (Eph 5:19-20)? Or giving thanks and praise
in prayer together? Even an unbeliever, if convicted in an assembly,
might “fall on his face and worship God, declaring that God is certainly
among you” (1 Cor 14:25). Yes, worship can take place in a
special way, distinguished from the idea that “all of life is worship.”
No, the exact Greek term for “worship” need not be used to recognize
this is what it is (“praise,” for example, would make the same point).
Some of
the talk about worship seems to be a reaction to what many have, through
the years, called “the five acts of worship” in assemblies. I’ve never
been a fan of that terminology, and I feel no need to try to put all of
this in a neat little box just for rhetorical purposes. Some of what we
do in assemblies is meant for edification of each other (preaching,
teaching), and so one might question whether or not such is “worship” in
a strict sense. The question is, what do we see Christians doing
together in the context of a purposefully assembled congregation? 1
Corinthians 14 is sufficient to show that they did worship God together
in song and prayer. They did teach and edify. They did partake of the
Lord’s Supper (cf. 1 Cor 11:18ff). These were purposeful,
specific actions they performed in assemblies as a congregation meeting
for that purpose, and abuses were chastised. Not everything was
acceptable to God in those assemblies.
What’s
the reason of all this? Even if one wants to argue that “all of life is
worship” based on the need to be living sacrifices, such does not negate
the need to assemble with saints on the first day of the week for
purposeful actions of worship and edification together, as authorized by
God and according to His grace. We cannot excuse ourselves from being
part of a group on the basis that “all of life is worship,” nor can we
use our purposed assembly times to just do whatever we wish based on a
failure to distinguish concepts of worship. God is always in charge of
His worship, and we are still responsible for following His will when we
come together in those purposed assemblies.
Make
your life a life of worship, but also make the assemblies with the
saints a special time of worship and edification. Never neglect one for
the other, but strive to keep your life and worship in harmony. If our
lives really are worshipful, then our assemblies together will truly be
special as we raise our voices as one in praise and seek to teach and
edify each other for deeper growth in knowledge and spirituality.
1.
Geisler, Norman, and Ronald M. Books. Come, Let us Reason: An
Introduction to Logical Thinking. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1990.
2.
Kreeft, Peter. Socratic Logic. 3rd ed. South Bend, IN: St. Augustine,
2008.
Other Articles by Doy Moyer
Baptism and the Blood
Was Jesus Literally Forsaken?
The Problem With Creeds
It Is What It Is