Gwallard
Puritan Board Freshman
I operate upon the distinction that there are official church events, and unofficial church events. Official church events are those things which pertain especially to Lord's day worship, because official church events are those things which the officers have been given a charge to serve the church in enabling (circumstances) and doing (elements) by God's command.
Unofficial events are those things which could be made by an elder or any other member, but which do not have to do with Sunday worship directly - they have to do with the life of the church commonly. Even such events as the ever present Wednesday night study would not therefore be official, as it is not Lord's day worship, and therefore cannot be instituted by the elder's power as "official."
As you can tell, I am coming from the Regulative Principle of Worship for this view. However, I have gotten some pushback from people I trust.
Some have claimed there are perhaps these two categories (I would hold only the two), but that there might be Official-unofficial and Unofficial-official middle categories as well. The former being Wednesday night studies which are encouraged by the session, and the latter being something like an exclusivly church person made-up get together which is never announced on Sunday, etc.
I do not agree with those two added categories, as I think it would overstep the bounds of elder power to call anything other than Sunday Worship "official." However, perhaps a prayer meeting - as a necessary preparation for Sunday - could be understood as a so close to elemental thing, that it could hold a middle place. I would argue that would create perhaps a sliding scale in the "unofficial" category that - because of its holy nature - could push men and women by its nature to attend, but was not in a different category.
Why I bring this up is: if the idea that Wednesday or other day event attendance are either mandatory or like a "little Sunday" is unscriptural, then those things ought not be announced as if the righteous will attend them, and the unrighteous will not, as it is perhaps assumed by our culture. Let the believer feel the rightful pressure to attend Sunday night service (official), but I worry of the unscriptural weight these other middle-type services place upon others. I also worry these other "official-unofficial" services take away - by addition - from the weight of the Sunday service.
Thoughts?
Unofficial events are those things which could be made by an elder or any other member, but which do not have to do with Sunday worship directly - they have to do with the life of the church commonly. Even such events as the ever present Wednesday night study would not therefore be official, as it is not Lord's day worship, and therefore cannot be instituted by the elder's power as "official."
As you can tell, I am coming from the Regulative Principle of Worship for this view. However, I have gotten some pushback from people I trust.
Some have claimed there are perhaps these two categories (I would hold only the two), but that there might be Official-unofficial and Unofficial-official middle categories as well. The former being Wednesday night studies which are encouraged by the session, and the latter being something like an exclusivly church person made-up get together which is never announced on Sunday, etc.
I do not agree with those two added categories, as I think it would overstep the bounds of elder power to call anything other than Sunday Worship "official." However, perhaps a prayer meeting - as a necessary preparation for Sunday - could be understood as a so close to elemental thing, that it could hold a middle place. I would argue that would create perhaps a sliding scale in the "unofficial" category that - because of its holy nature - could push men and women by its nature to attend, but was not in a different category.
Why I bring this up is: if the idea that Wednesday or other day event attendance are either mandatory or like a "little Sunday" is unscriptural, then those things ought not be announced as if the righteous will attend them, and the unrighteous will not, as it is perhaps assumed by our culture. Let the believer feel the rightful pressure to attend Sunday night service (official), but I worry of the unscriptural weight these other middle-type services place upon others. I also worry these other "official-unofficial" services take away - by addition - from the weight of the Sunday service.
Thoughts?