Alain Coralie FINAL FINAL FINALb
Alain Coralie FINAL FINAL FINALb
Alain Coralie FINAL FINAL FINALb
Author:
Coralie, Alain
Title:
Understanding Adventist Worship
A Liturgical Theology
General rights
Access to the thesis is subject to the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International Public License. A
copy of this may be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode This license sets out your rights and the
restrictions that apply to your access to the thesis so it is important you read this before proceeding.
Take down policy
Some pages of this thesis may have been removed for copyright restrictions prior to having it been deposited in Explore Bristol Research.
However, if you have discovered material within the thesis that you consider to be unlawful e.g. breaches of copyright (either yours or that of
a third party) or any other law, including but not limited to those relating to patent, trademark, confidentiality, data protection, obscenity,
defamation, libel, then please contact collections-metadata@bristol.ac.uk and include the following information in your message:
Your claim will be investigated and, where appropriate, the item in question will be removed from public view as soon as possible.
Understanding Adventist Worship: A Liturgical Theology
Alain G. Coralie
in accordance with the requirements for award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
August 2018
ALAIN G. CORALIE
ABSTRACT
explored Adventist worship through the lenses of liturgical theology. Although largely
rooted in a denominational and Free Church context, this study engages into critical
conversation with influential Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant liturgical scholars. This
worship. It then traces the history of Seventh-day Adventist corporate worship before
addressing its liturgical practices in detail. This diachronic and synchronic study of
Adventist liturgical practices is then examined theologically. The study concludes with a
reflection on the core organizing principle of this whole, the seventh-day Sabbath.
Although written with a particular religious confession in mind, this study aims at
ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................ II
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................ X
1 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 1
v
3.1.2.3 Singing. ........................................................................... 54
3.1.2.4 Baptism and Communion. ............................................... 56
3.1.3 Towards Separation ...................................................................... 57
3.1.4 Conferences .................................................................................. 57
3.1.5 Camp Meetings ............................................................................ 58
3.1.6 Crisis over Worship ...................................................................... 60
3.1.7 Final Separation............................................................................ 62
3.1.8 The Sabbath among Millerites ..................................................... 63
3.1.9 Seventh Day Baptist Influence ..................................................... 64
3.2 Adventist Worship Transition (1844-1863) .......................................... 67
3.2.1 Emergence of Sabbatarian Adventism ......................................... 68
3.2.2 Joseph Bates, the Sabbath Messenger .......................................... 69
3.2.3 Homes as Worship Centres .......................................................... 72
3.2.3.1 Bible Conferences. .......................................................... 72
3.2.3.2 Social Meetings. .............................................................. 74
3.2.4 Vocal and Bodily Responses ........................................................ 75
3.2.4.1 Shouts. ............................................................................. 75
3.2.4.2 Prostrations. ..................................................................... 76
3.3 Adventist Worship Formalization (1863-Current Period) .................... 78
3.3.1 Contributing Factors..................................................................... 79
3.3.1.1 Fanaticism among Believers. .......................................... 79
3.3.1.2 Self-Appointed Preachers. ............................................... 80
3.3.1.3 Legal Holding of Secure Church Properties. .................. 81
3.3.2 Free-Flow Worship ...................................................................... 82
3.3.2.1 Social Meetings. .............................................................. 82
3.3.2.2 Quarterly Meetings. ......................................................... 88
3.3.2.3 Camp Meetings. .............................................................. 89
3.3.3 A Major Turning Point: The Indiana Worship Experiment ......... 93
3.3.4 The Emergence of an Order of Service ........................................ 97
3.3.4.1 Church Order, H. M. J. Richards..................................... 99
3.3.4.2 Church Manual. ............................................................. 104
3.3.4.3 An Illustration: The Battle Creek Church. .................... 109
3.3.5 Revisiting Adventist Worship .................................................... 112
3.3.5.1 Celebration Services. ..................................................... 112
3.3.5.2 Blended Services. .......................................................... 118
3.4 Conclusion: The Patterning of Worship .............................................. 122
vi
4.2.2.2 The 1941 Hymnal: Transition Point. ............................. 151
4.2.2.3 The Latest Adventist Hymnal. ...................................... 152
4.2.2.4 The Practice of Singing. ................................................ 153
4.2.2.5 Theology in Hymnals. ................................................... 157
4.2.2.6 Spiritual and Liturgical Values. .................................... 160
4.2.3 Prayer ......................................................................................... 165
4.2.3.1 Invocation. ..................................................................... 166
4.2.3.2 Pastoral Prayer............................................................... 168
4.2.3.3 Offertory Prayer. ........................................................... 171
4.2.3.4 Benediction.................................................................... 172
4.2.3.5 Spiritual and Liturgical Values of Public Prayer. ......... 173
4.2.4 Offerings..................................................................................... 177
4.2.4.1 Incentive. ....................................................................... 180
4.2.4.2 Purpose. ......................................................................... 182
4.2.4.3 Theology........................................................................ 184
4.2.5 Ordinances .................................................................................. 186
4.2.5.1 Baptism.......................................................................... 187
4.2.5.2 The Communion Service. .............................................. 197
4.3 Conclusion .......................................................................................... 215
vii
5.5.1.1 The Kind of Music in Worship. .................................... 265
5.5.1.2 Quality of Music............................................................ 266
5.5.1.3 Use of Instruments. ....................................................... 267
5.5.1.4 Singing with Understanding .......................................... 268
5.5.2 Public Prayer .............................................................................. 270
5.5.2.1 Nature and Purpose of Public Prayer. ........................... 271
5.5.2.2 Characteristics of Public Prayer. ................................... 275
5.5.3 The Sermon ................................................................................ 277
5.5.3.1 The Word of God. ......................................................... 278
5.5.3.2 The Preacher. ................................................................. 280
5.5.3.3 The Delivery of the Sermon. ......................................... 282
5.5.3.4 The Congregation. ......................................................... 285
5.5.4 Giving ......................................................................................... 288
5.5.4.1 The Purpose. .................................................................. 291
5.5.4.2 The Result. .................................................................... 292
5.6 Conclusion .......................................................................................... 295
viii
Books 360
Articles 363
Letters, Sermons and Manuscripts ........................................................... 375
Official Documents .................................................................................. 379
Secondary Sources ............................................................................................... 381
Books 381
Articles 387
Dissertations ............................................................................................. 391
Online Materials....................................................................................... 393
Non - Adventist Literature ................................................................................... 394
Books 394
Articles 401
ix
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study would not have been possible had it not been for the expert assistance
and friendly encouragement which I have received from Rev Dr. Paul Roberts, my
supervisor. His profound academic competence and strong support have been a
My gratitude is also extended to my examiners, Rev Dr. Chris Ellis and Rev Dr.
Helen Collins whose insightful comments and constructive criticism have enhanced the
quality of my dissertation.
Trim, Frank Hardy, Tom Ogal and Melak Alemanyehu. These friends and colleagues in
the ministry have been a great source of encouragement as I undertook this study. I am
also grateful to Janet Oyende for her assistance with the formatting of this dissertation.
Audrey-Joy. Their love, support, and sacrifice have significantly contributed to the
x
CHAPTER ONE
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND
congregations around the world.1 As one of the fastest growing Christian bodies,
Adventists now total over 21 million, having added over 5 million in the last ten years.2 A
embrace the Protestant tenets of sola scriptura, sola gratia, sola fide, and solus Christus.4
Yet, it remains that Seventh-day Adventists have their own particularities. This is
observance of the Sabbath on the seventh day of the week (Saturday) as their principal
1 General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 2018 Annual Statistical Report 154th Report of
the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists for 2016 and 2017, last accessed May 6, 2019,
http://documents.adventistarchives.org/Statistics/ASR/ASR2018.pdf.
2Official figures may be accessed online at the General Conference Office of Archives, Statistics
and Research on www.adventiststatistics.org.
4 One of their cardinal beliefs states that “[i]n Christ’s life of perfect obedience to God’s will, His
suffering, death, and resurrection, God provided the only means of atonement for human sin, so that those
who by faith accept this atonement may have eternal life.” Seventh-day Adventist Church Manual
(Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2015), 164-165.
1
day of worship. In addition, the term Adventist expresses their hope in the imminent
Historically, the Adventist Church largely grew out of the early and mid-
nineteenth century revival and the Second Advent movement among many Churches in
Generally, Adventist worship has been classified under the Free Church category.5
Like many other denominations influenced by the practices of 19th century American
format in which the sermon is the dominant element. This traditional approach has been
large extent by a text that speaks of worship, Revelation 14:6-12. Adventists have
And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel
to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and
tongue, and people, saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for
the hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth,
and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
5 Erwin Fahlbusch, Geoffrey William Bromiley, David B Barret, eds., The Encyclopedia of
Christianity (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2008), 5:799. In this study, Free Church should be
understood as referring to the North American context.
2
From their early beginning, Adventists have appropriated this text as their premier
text for mission,7 motivating church members to invite others to follow and worship the
Creator.
written a complete history of their worship, nor have they comprehensively developed its
theology. Although there are a number of reflections on the place and shape of worship in
This lack of studies may be attributed to the fact that worship has not been treated
as a major subject in Adventist history and theology. The paucity of scholarly works has
prevented a closer interaction between Adventist theology and current corporate worship
This lacuna was addressed half a century ago by Norval Pease. He was the first
introduction of his book, And Worship Him, he wrote: “I give my students at the
7Gerard Damsteegt, Foundations of the Seventh-day Adventist Message and Mission (Grand
Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 1977).
3
Seminary nearly one hundred titles of books on worship, but I have not found one
Adventist book to include in that list.”9 He further noted that Adventists have published
hundreds of books on the day of worship but none on the way of worship.10 This might
seem to suggest that ‘a way of worship’ can be hard to find when worship history and its
theology receives scant attention. As a matter of fact, except for Pease’s own attempt and
Raymond Holmes’, Sing a New Song!,11 no other Adventist books have endeavoured to
worrying at worst. Worship is the ultimate purpose of the Church, the supreme reason for
its existence, the highest end of its calling. It is in worship that God reveals Himself to
His Church in a distinct way thereby shaping its spirituality, theology and mission.
Moreover, it is in worship that the Church finds the ground of its being and the core of its
identity as an ecclesia called by God. Within the Adventist tradition, studies on worship
have, for the most part, been insufficient and inadequate. As a result, the nature of the
relationship between liturgical practices and theology has not been fully examined or
its history, practice and theology. As the paramount activity of the Church, worship
deserves serious attention and careful analysis. Therefore, the time is ripe for an
10 Ibid.
4
denominational history and theology and provide for the wider academic community the
case study of a denomination that has not yet fully apprehended its worship history and its
theology.
The present study is significant in at least three ways. First, it highlights the
because it reflects denominational liturgical practices. This serves to fill the void left by
previous studies on Adventist worship that have been mostly driven by biblical or
systematic reflections that did not fully consider concrete Adventist liturgical practices.
This partially explains the lack of a clearer rapport and closer interconnectedness between
although written with a particular religious persuasion in mind, this study aims at
In his study of Free Church worship, Christopher Ellis observes that “Christians
tend to have a home base from which they understand “various theological and
12Christopher Ellis, Gathering: A Theology of Worship and Spirituality in Free Church Tradition,
(London, SCM Press, 2004), p. 249
5
Adventist minister who has been involved in pastoral, mission, and administrative roles
congregation while training for the ministry at Andrews University in Michigan, USA. In
worship services as a means to worship renewal within the denomination. Yet, worship
and liturgy only became for me an area of serious academic focus in my years of studies
worship13 while maintaining an active preaching ministry in the United Kingdom. From
there, I accepted the call to the mission field where I have served as a church
of participating in fairly typical Adventist worship services. It has also exposed me to its
more diverse expressions in Adventist communities with Amish, Maasai, Jewish, and
Muslim backgrounds. This life journey and ministry have made me appreciate the
This means that my study of Adventist worship is done with the full awareness
that my thinking and writing has been shaped by participation and ministry in Adventism.
With my home base in Adventist life and worship, I have experienced this liturgical
13
Alain G. Coralie, Nike Culture and Worship: The Impact of the Postcultural Economy on
Contemporary Expressions of Worship, MTh Dissertation (Oxford University, 2004).
6
looking at the subject with some critical distance to add focus and enrichment to my
study.
and theology that is explored in this study of Adventist corporate worship. A key theme
that will sustain this theological reflection is that the church at worship is the lived
meaning. This implies that a good understanding of Adventist worship needs to explore
and reciprocity. This study examines American Adventist worship from its history,
practices and theology and show how each are interrelated and cannot be separated from
the other. Two chapters explore the practice of Adventist worship and its implicit
will argue that Adventist worship can best be understood by adopting principles from
borrow Leanne Van Dyk words, the research objective is to uncover ‘the theological
currents that run deep beneath their practices and assumptions.’14 Although largely rooted
14Leanne Van Dyk, ed., A More Profound Alleluia: Theology and Worship in Harmony (Grand
Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2005), xvi.
7
in a denominational and Free Church context, its analysis will engage in critical
Chapter One introduces the background to the study, outlining its purpose,
worship of a ‘non-liturgical’ Church. It tries to answer a basic question– How can we best
understand Adventist worship through the correct use of liturgical theology? This chapter
The main value of this chapter lies in providing a rationale for using liturgical
theology to delineate and understand Adventist worship. Important elements that will be
noticed in this section are the connections between liturgy and theology.
Chapter Three deals with the history of Adventist worship. It traces the origins
development, and finally turns to its current expressions. It is subdivided into three
periods (i) Early Period with Millerite Adventism: 1831-1844, (ii) The Transition Period
with Sabbatarian Adventism: 1844-1863, and (iii) the Formalizing Period with Seventh-
concentrates on the essentials of the weekly worship service by giving special attention to
the basic components that work together to make up Adventist worship, namely, prayer,
singing, preaching and giving. Baptism and Lord’s Supper will receive relatively less
attention since those two ordinances do not form part of the regular Sabbath worship
service.
8
Chapters Five and Six move from the theology embedded in liturgical practices
charismatic ministry (1844-1915) and prodigious literary output (100,000 pages) have
significantly shaped the way Adventists view and practice corporate worship even unto
this day. In this chapter, I will examine her views on the practice and theology of
Adventist worship, paying attention also to her understanding of the Sabbath and how this
Chapter Seven gives the summary and conclusion of the whole study.
Despite its broad and encompassing nature, this study is not an exhaustive
treatment of Adventist worship. For the purpose of my study, I will limit my scope of
investigation to American Adventist corporate worship by examining its (1) history, (2)
elements and (3) theology. Still, this study represents the liturgical understanding of the
underlying theology.15 This study is grounded in the principles and methods of liturgical
theology.
15 Kenneth B. Stout, “Seventh Day Adventist Worship,” in Paul F Bradshaw, ed., The New SCM
Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship (London: SCM Press, 2002), 431.
9
1.9 REVIEW OF LITERATURE
Adventist Church. For the sake of clarity, I will classify the reviewed literature in books,
dissertations and Adventist publications. As much as possible, I will present the literary
contributions.
1.10.1 Books
As I mentioned earlier, the theology of worship has received scant attention from
Adventist scholars. Only two major works can be cited in regard to the development of an
Adventist theology of worship. The first book, published in 1967, is And Worship Him,16
Andrews University in Michigan, USA. The second book, Sing a New Song! Worship
Renewal for Adventists Today,17 published in 1984, was written by Raymond Holmes, a
Christian worship.
10
Pease’s contribution to the development of an Adventist theology of worship is
significant in several ways. First, Pease emphasises the critical role of the entire Biblical
God’s character as revealed in His initial and continuous movement toward humanity that
constitutes the ground for true worship.18 Accordingly, worship, for Pease, must be seen
experience.19
insistence that Christian worship had reached its climax in the New Testament. In his
discussion on the form and content of Adventist worship service, Pease regularly appeals
to the apostolic Church, but more importantly to the Christ event. Throughout his study,
worship practices and their fulfilment in Christ as well as NT worship patterns and their
Most crucial to my dissertation is Pease’s assertion that worship cannot take place
without liturgy and that liturgy should reflect theological beliefs. Pease argues that the
further argues that Adventist congregations have often been guilty of liturgical ambiguity.
This has been a disservice to the denomination, according to Pease, because liturgical
ambiguity does not illustrate correctly what the Church believes. This dissertation will
18 Pease, 13.
19 Ibid., 66.
20 Pease, 51.
11
explore this area because there seems to be evidence that Adventist worship has not fully
Raymond Holmes’s Sing a New Song, builds on the foundations laid by Norval
Pease.21 As the full title suggests, his book is about the necessity for liturgical renewal in
the Adventist Church. Holmes’ work is equally divided into two sections. The first
section is a biblical-theological section that probes the theological grounds for Adventist
worship. The second section looks more closely at how Adventist corporate worship can
on Adventist worship. Holmes begins his study by placing Adventist worship in the
decades. After underlining what Adventists share in common with other Christians,
denomination’s beliefs have had minimal impact on its liturgy. This is what motivates
Holmes to plead for a greater integration of theology and liturgical practices.22 Holmes’
should be reflected in its worship. He singled out the Sabbath, the heavenly ministry of
Christ following His ascension, and the Second Advent as key doctrines that need to be
21 Holmes, xi.
22 Holmes, 10-17.
23 Holmes, 27-59.
12
to creation by worshipping on the Sabbath day, the Church exercises its historical
continuing priesthood on our behalf. By looking forward to the Second Advent, the
Church fixes its hope on God’s climactic intervention in human history. Within such an
understanding, past, present, and future dimensions of human existence are taken into
account. The aim is to give worshippers a sense of meaning, identity, purpose, and
destiny.
My research shares Pease’s and Holmes’s convictions. However, their studies are
worship. The liturgical history and actual worship practices of Adventists receive
1.10.2 Dissertations
On the doctoral study level, several studies have investigated various elements of
contextual in focus and practical in nature.25 However, there are four dissertations that
24 See for instance, Higashide, 2010; Jeryl Lee Cunningham-Fleming, We Sang Alleluia, Praise
the Lord!: African-American Identity and the Use and Reception of Music Within a Seventh-day Adventist
Church in New York City, 1970 – 2010, PhD Dissertation (Lexington, KY: University Of Kentucky, 2013);
Wayne Frederick Antonio Bucknor, The Changing Role of Music in the Liturgy of the African American
Seventh-day Adventist Church, PhD Dissertation (Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama, 2008); John
Harold Hobart Mathews, Towards Understanding Distinctive Seventh-day Adventist Preaching, DMin
Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1991).
25 See for instance, Gerald Hansel Jones, A Model for Multicultural Worship Developed at the
Fallbrook Seventh-day Adventist Church, DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University,
2014); Thomas Masimba, Application of Biblical Worship Principles in the New Life Seventh-day Adventist
Church in Nairobi, DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2011); Robles F.
Demetrio, Developing a Cross-Generational Life-Transforming Worship Service: An Approach to Involving
and Empowering Youth and Young Adults at the San Diego Filipino-American Seventh-day Adventist
Church, DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2010); Kenneth Roy Campbell,
Building A Place of Worship: The Journey of the Downsview Seventh-day Adventist Church in Toronto,
13
were especially helpful to my research. From a historical point of view, James Wilson’s
characterized early Adventist worship. However, because of the limited nature of his
research and the increasing access to primary sources, I have attempted to go much
worship. One of the critical findings of Haenni’s study has been “a timely need for
Adventism to recount its own history, apply to worship its holistic approach to reality,
DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2005); Nelson Fernando de Oliveira, An
Integration of Quality Assurance and Existing Worship Components: A Model to Improve Worship in the
Small Seventh-day Adventist Church, DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2002;
Jaime Cruz, Worship Attitudes of Seventh-day Adventist Churchgoers at Montemorelos, Mexico, DMin
Project Report (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1978); John S. Nixon, Towards a Theology of
Worship: An Application at the Oakwood College Seventh-day Adventist Church, DMin Dissertation
(Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2003); James T. Bingham, Liturgy and Ritual as Religious
Education: Implications for the Seventh-day Adventist Church, PhD Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI:
Andrews University, 1984); Ivan C. Blake, A Proposed Model Worship Service Incorporating a Biblical
View of the Holiness of God for the Urbandale, Michigan Seventh-day Adventist Church, DMin
Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1996). James Doggette, Emotion and Rationality in
African American Seventh-day Adventist Worship, DMin Dissertation (Claremont, CA: Claremont School
of Theology, 1992).
27Viviane Haenni, The Colton Celebration Congregation: A Case Study in American Adventist
Worship Renewal, 1986–1991, PhD dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1996).
14
brief,29 was helpful because it outlined Adventist worship into three distinct periods. I
have followed her historical outline but have examined each period more closely.
Another dissertation which I found helpful was Daniel Oscar Plenc’s, “Hacia Un
liturgical parameters that would guide Adventist worship. His research was conducted in
soteriology, ecclesiology and eschatology. Plenc’s analysis of those doctrines lead him to
suggest that Adventist worship should reflect God’s character, maintain a balance
between the rational and emotional elements, be Christocentric and Spirit led, be
communal and evangelistic, and look towards God’s final victory over evil.
I found the last section especially relevant to my research because of its emphasis
that an eschatological orientation means that worship (a) is not limited to the present time
but projects itself towards eternity, (b) is located in the context of the great controversy
between good and evil, and (c) involves whole-hearted obedience, not simply rituals.31
Despite its wide approach, Plenc’s dissertation provides an important background study
for my research.
29 Haenni, 38-59.
30Daniel Oscar Plenc, Hacia Un Criterio Teológico Par La Adoración Adventista: Elementos
Para Su Evaliación Liturgica, PhD Dissertation (Entre Rios, Argentina: Universidad Adventista del Plata,
2002).
31 Plenc, 405-406.
15
Finally, the newly released dissertation by David A. Williams (April 2018),32
employed liturgical history, ritual studies, musicology, and liturgical theology to study
four Adventist congregations. The purpose of his research was to understand how Black
and White Adventists derive their spiritual identity from their experience of music during
The historical section33 on Adventist worship and music from 1840 to 1894 was
very relevant in the sense that Williams’s research went further than any previous studies
within the context of American revivalism. Adventists borrowed from that tradition for its
early liturgical practice, merging their own distinctive beliefs to shape their own worship
instilling the faith experientially, thus forming Adventist liturgical identity.34 More
conclude that early Adventist worship practices were quite diverse and “the shape of
Adventist liturgy, as seen through the well of time, appears murky at best.” 35 For this
reason, he argues that “[w]e cannot fully articulate with absolute certainty what Adventist
33 Williams, 242-388.
34 Williams, 386-388.
35 Williams, 386-387.
16
liturgy always looked like.”36 From a historical point of view, Williams’s study proves to
be a goldmine. However, despite its voluminous size (998 pages), it sparsely explores the
1.10.3 Publications
books, reports, manuscripts, letters, Church bulletins, periodicals, magazines and journals.
Periodicals such as Signs of the Times and Adventist Review37 were excellent sources to
perspective.38
looking at its biblical, historical, and theological foundations. From those articles, I
balance between fervor and reverence, informality and order, joyfulness and solemnity.
Church official documents like Statement of Beliefs, Church Manual, and Minister’s
In 1999, the Biblical Research Institute of the General Conference of the Seventh-
36 Williams, 387.
37First published as “Present Truth” and subsequently as "The Adventist Review" and "Second
Advent Review and Sabbath Herald."
38 Published since 1928, Ministry is directed towards religious professionals. It has a wide
readership of 18,000 Adventist pastors and 62,000 pastors of other denominations, accessed May 22, 2018,
http://www.ministrymagazine.org/about.
17
Worship,”39 written by George W. Reid, one of its former directors. This paper covers a
wide range of issues regarding worship (its definition, its Trinitarian focus, its divine and
human elements, its biblical manifestations, as well as its contemporary expressions) and
then highlights three basic principles: “(1) Worship is theocentric (2) Worship must
concur with sound theology, and (3) Worship must be patterned on biblical norms.”40
development, but much remains to be done.”41 Almost twenty years later, an Adventist
corporate worship emphasises both the transcendence and the immanence of God. It is
motivated by God’s intention and action towards the human race. Within such an
understanding, rites should not be empty ceremonies but serve as powerful reminders of
that Adventist systematic theologians have not yet developed guiding worship principles.
40 Reid, 9.
41 Ibid., 10.
43 Fernando Canale, “Principles of Worship and Liturgy,” Journal of the Adventist Theological
Society, 20/1-2 (2009): 89-111.
18
He identifies six guiding principles for Adventist congregational worship: (1) authentic
worship can only exist when God manifests Himself in the midst of His people (principle
of existence); (2) the resurrected Christ, not preaching, music or rituals, is to be the centre
and lead to full daily commitment to Christ (principle of creativity); (4) liturgy is to
reflect God’s holiness (principle of content); (5) because of sin, human reasoning and
Scripture (principle of suspicion), and lastly, (6) liturgical forms should impact the spirit
significant because of his attempt at systematizing what has been a general Adventist
worship. They have cleared the way so that others like me could build on their invaluable
many ways by those previous studies, I understand that they have not gone far enough in
describing Adventist worship. Rather they project an ideal of what Adventist worship
should be like. Generally, little attention has been given to its history and practice. Its
worked with primary sources in an effort to elucidate the history, practice, and theology
of Adventist worship.
This dissertation covers quite a large subject. It includes the historical and the
doctrinal, the systematic as well as the liturgical. It spans both the theoretical and the
applied. For that reason, this research runs the risk of over-simplification. Issues need to
19
be analysed critically and due importance must be given to details. And yet we could also
run the risk of focusing so narrowly on details that we fail to notice broader principles.
Careful observation, proper evaluation and a balanced approach are utmost requirements.
This is where liturgical theology can help in exploring the concrete liturgical practices of
a church tradition and subsequently probe the theological grounding of those same
liturgical practices.
20
CHAPTER TWO
Who are Adventists and how do they worship? What is their history and how did
their worship practices change over time? What do those changes signify? What does
their worship tell about their understanding of God and of themselves? Such questions are
theological method.
that we to take a closer look at this theological discipline and see how it can inform our
since theologians approach it from varied perspectives because they view the relationship
between Scripture and tradition, liturgical acts and theology differently. This explains
Teresa Berger’s admission that “recent discussions concerning the relationship of liturgy
1 Teresa Berger, “Liturgy: A Forgotten Subject Matter of Theology,” Studia Liturgica 17 (1987),
16.
21
As a relatively recent academic discipline, liturgical theology is still a work in
progress in search of a precise method. To situate our discussion and see how liturgical
theology can help us in investigating Adventist worship, I want to look briefly at the
reciprocity between theology and worship under five integrated headings: (i) the
importance of worship to the task of theology, (ii) liturgical theology: its meaning; (iii)
“reflection upon the God whom Christians worship and adore.”2 Theology and worship
are inextricably linked. Unfortunately, Adventist theologians have not vigorously pursued
this link between theological reflection and worship. Yet, ideally, theology begins and
ends in worship3 because it finds both its source and its goal in God. This explains why
‘exploring worship is a way into some of the richest veins of theology’. 4 As Vanhoozer
puts it:
The way we pray affects what we believe and what we do. There is a mutually
edifying relationship between worship and theology: worship is ritualized
theology; theology is reflective worship. The quality of our worship is therefore
2
Alister E. McGrath, Historical Theology: An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought
(Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1998), 1.
3As Barth reminds us: It is imperative to recognise the essence of theology as lying in the
liturgical action of adoration, thanksgiving and petition. The old saying lex orandi lex credendi, far from
being a pious statement, is one of the most profound descriptions of theological methods. Barth’s
theological reasoning renders theology as an offering of ourselves to God where theological reflection on
God is never divorced from prayer to God. See Karl Barth, The Humanity of God (Richmond, VA: John
Knox, 1960), 90.
4 David Ford, Theology: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 54.
22
an index of the quality of our theology (and vice versa). The priority, however,
lies with worship.5
understanding its worship. Worship is the place where the Church discovers and
rediscovers itself. As the Reformed theologian Jean-Jacques von Allmen explains, “by its
worship the Church becomes itself, becomes conscious of itself, and confesses itself as a
distinct entity. Worship thus allows the Church to emerge in its true nature.”6 This also
implies that a crucial task of theology is to analyse, understand, evaluate and inform the
Third, worship is important to the task of theology because theology and worship
share one thing in common: the relentless pursuit of God. Seeking God for who God is
remains the complementary task of both worship and theology.7 As Catherine LaCugna
puts it, “theology, like liturgy, relies on the language of participation and involvement.”8
6 Jean-Jacques von Allmen, Worship: Its Theology and Practice (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1965), 42.
8 LaCugna, Catherine Mowry, "Can Liturgy Ever Again Become a Source for Theology?" Studia
Liturgica 19.1 (1989), 12.
23
This participation and involvement means that the pursuit of God in thought and praise
goes beyond the informational. It embraces the relational and the transformational.
Fourth, worship is important to the task of theology because theology and worship
need each other. Properly understood, theology and worship nourish each other because
they are interrelated and inseparable. Each is incomplete without the other. This
discourse.9 An increasing number of voices argue that theology embraces worship and
vice versa. John Witvliet, for instance, insists that “worship both shapes and reflects the
of liturgical theology makes this observation: “In its practice of enacting the liturgy the
9 See for example, Geoffrey Wainwright, The Praise of God in Worship: Doctrine and Life: A
Systematic Theology (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980); Don E. Saliers, Worship as Theology:
Foretaste of Glory Divine (Nashville, TN: Abington, 1994); Gordon Lathrop’s trilogy, Holy Things: A
Liturgical Theology; Holy People: A Liturgical Ecclesiology; and Holy Ground: A Liturgical Cosmology
(Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993,1999 and 2003, respectively); Leanne Van Dyk, ed., A More
Profound Alleluia, 2005); David G. Peterson, Engaging with God: A Biblical Theology of Worship
(Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1992); Simon Chan, Liturgical Theology: The Church as a Worshiping
Community (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006); Maxwell E. Johnson, Praying and Believing in
Early Christianity: The Interplay between Christian Worship and Doctrine (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, 2013).
10 John Witvliet, Worship Seeking Understanding: Windows into Christian Practice (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2003), 17. In other words, we worship as we understand God and understand
God through our worship. Crucially, this suggests that sound theological thinking enhances worship
whereas distorted theology has the adverse effect. Equally, this also implies that our worship practices can
either enhance or blur our understanding of God.
24
different tools, methods and emphasis. Dwight Vogel enumerates a number of them:
because liturgy (doxological theology), and theology and life.12 All these methodologies
fall into basically two camps: (1) those who use a set of doctrines or beliefs which are
then applied in a systematic fashion to speak about worship; (2) others observe the actual
liturgical practices of a community to draw theological insights and meaning from those
practices. Liturgical theology falls into the second category. Although this study also
examines what Adventist theologians have said about worship to provide a background
context, it adopts the principles of liturgical theology in its organising principle: the
Sabbath.
“Explicitly, liturgical theology seeks to speak about who God is as this God is
knowledge about God. The content and juxtaposition of hymns, prayers, liturgical texts,
preaching, Church ordinances, etc. are rich conveyors of theology and to a large extent
However, this reflection cannot be limited to abstract notions. It must also engage the
emphasize one point: theology is done every time worship takes place. They argue that
25
worshippers are, in a way, theologians whether they know it or not. The reason is that
each time a believer comes before God to offer praise and thanksgiving, petition and
confession, she does it with either a clear or a vague idea of who God is.14
If the foregoing is true on an individual level, it is also true when the Church
gathers for worship. The corporate public worship of the Church can be a great source for
theological reflection because theology and worship necessarily come into interaction
whenever there is a worshipping assembly. Every worship service, in one way or another,
reflects an understanding of God and a core system of beliefs. This suggests that every
worship service offers a privileged view on what a community believes about God and
about themselves. It tells about their beliefs, their theological convictions, their values as
well as their understanding of their role in God’s plan of redemption for the world.
The exploration of this interplay between worship and theology is one of the
surveys the method and theological understanding behind liturgical theology15 before
proposing that the liturgy is the very basis for doing theology. For Fagerberg, the task of
Instead, he sees the liturgical act as a primary resource for doing theology. According to
Fagerberg, the liturgy per se should be viewed as a 'theological act' experienced and
14 Or to use the words of Evagrius of Pontus: ‘If you are a theologian, you will truly pray; and if
you truly pray, you are a theologian.’ To put it in more modern words: To ‘know God is to worship Him’
and to worship God is to ‘know Him.’ Liturgical theologians do not study the history and practice of
Church traditions for the sake of understanding rituals alone. They argue that liturgy is primarily an act of
theology. They understand the liturgy as both a source and subject of theology. They are not satisfied with
describing liturgical acts only. They are interested in the theological meaning of liturgical acts.
26
engaged by the worshipping community itself.16 He then makes a case that Christians do
not learn the grammar of their faith primarily through Sunday school, catechism classes,
grammar in the people of God who live through the encounter with the paschal
theology, not the other way round. Yet, the question remains: if our response to God
become our basis for understanding, are we not engaging into circular reasoning?
in whatever Christian idiom, is the dynamic condition within which theological reflection
is done, within which the Word of God is appropriately understood.”18 Put differently, the
Church in worship, is the primary arena for theological engagement and spiritual
nourishment. The foundations of theology are found in the enactment of the liturgy itself
where “worship and belief of Christians converge, meet, entwine, and meld in the
17 Ibid., 154.
18 Aidan Kavanagh, On Liturgical Theology (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2017), 7-8.
19 Accordingly, it is the liturgy that shapes our theological understanding. To prove his point,
Kavanagh argues that Judaism and Christianity have expressed their belief for thousands of years ‘not in
books but by participation in assemblies that have met regularly, at least once a week, for worship of the
living God (Kavanagh, p 55-56). In addition, Kavanagh argues that it is God’s presence, not faith, that drew
Moses to the burning bush, and that creeds did not produce baptism; rather, baptism gave rise to Trinitarian
creeds (Kavanagh, 92). For Kavanagh, the Church at worship is a theological community, or better, a
community of theologians who come to know God in the act of worship. Worship, Kavanagh argues,
triggers a life-changing encounter with the living God. Because of God’s active involvement in the worship
of His people, it becomes ‘an act of believing, an act of faith in the One who both summons the Church and
enables its worship’ (Kavanagh, 89).
27
‘theologia itself’,20 “a theological act of the most all-encompassing, integral, and
Primary theology is what the Church does in its worship; secondary theology is the
subsequent act of reflection upon the experience. It is this initial experience that gives
way to a second order of theological reflection.22 Hence, what we find here is a primacy
given to the liturgical act, dislodging Scripture, doctrines or creeds as the primary basis
This idea, although ancient, found one of its clearest expression in the Orthodox
worship.”24 The theological task involves an effort “to explain how the Church expresses
20 Kavanagh, 75.
21 Kavanagh, 89. Kavanagh argues that it is this living engagement with God that shapes the
worshipping community. The worship experience does not leave the worshippers as it finds them at the
beginning. Rather, liturgical acts impact the assembly so deeply that it requires a constant “modulating,
self-critical, and reflective adjustment to God-wrought change in the assembly’s life of faith which
constitutes the condition for doing all forms of theology and of understanding the Word of God”
(Kavanagh, 89). It is this encounter and adjustment that constitutes the theologia prima, the ‘primary
theology of the Church itself.’ (Kavanagh in Dwight W. Vogel, ed., Primary Sources of Liturgical
Theology: A Reader (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000), 95. Liturgy becomes the ground for the
people’s understanding of God. It is a sacred space in which the Church undertakes its theologia prima.
This actual experience of worship is a divine encounter in which God manifest His presence through the
whole liturgical process. It is in the Scripture read, word proclaimed, prayers offered, hymns sung and most
importantly in the Eucharist celebrated that God is perceived and understood to be present and available to
His people. According to Kavanagh, this is the foundational and fundamental platform on which all
theological discourse and discovery must develop.
22 Commenting on Kavanagh, Lutheran Gordon Lathrop asserts that “the communal meaning of
the liturgy is exercised by the gathering itself.” He further adds that the role of secondary liturgical theology
is to ‘discern the form and articulate the crucial meanings of the assembly.’ Lathrop, Holy Things, 5, 7.
23
Alexander Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s
Seminary Press, 1966).
24 Ibid., 14.
28
and fulfills herself in this act [of worship].”25 Schmemann considers the task of liturgical
the language of worship-its structures, its ceremonies, its text and its whole ‘spirit’- into
the liturgical act takes place in the experience itself. For Schmemann the lex orandi is
(est) the Church’s lex credendi, and the theological task is ultimately an interpretative and
descriptive process that attempts “to grasp the ‘theology’ as revealed in and through
liturgy.”28 According to Schmemann, the task of liturgical theology is “to consider the
Church’s everlasting ‘rule of prayer’ and to hear and understand in it the ‘rule of faith.’”29
Accordingly, liturgy becomes the ontological condition of theology; the source and
foundation of theology and “one of the life-giving sources of the knowledge of God.”30
theology concerns his emphasis on the relationship between worship and theology.
Whereas most theologians use theology to understand worship (what Schmemann terms
the study of worship practices of his Christian tradition to uncover its theological
meaning. In other words, he prioritises liturgy over theology based on the premise that the
25 Ibid.
26 Schmemann., 18.
27 Ibid., 19.
29 Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology, 25. Actually, Schmemann paraphrases the old
Latin tag by adding an est to the original phrase emphasises (the rule of praying is the rule of belief) which
he interprets as underscoring the priority of liturgy in defining belief.
29
liturgy already contains the substance of theology. Schmemann traces his approach to
what he considers to be the traditional (Patristic) and authentic (versus Scholastic) way of
studying worship.
For Schmemann, the most critical element in doing liturgical theology is to find
the elusive ordo. He writes: “To find the ordo behind the ‘rubrics,’ regulations and rules –
to find the unchanging principle, the living form or ‘logos’ of worship as a whole, within
Yet, one still has to ask the question: Is the study of the liturgical act, not
primarily a study about the worshippers’ religious experiences than a study in theology?
Does this not prioritise humanity’s acts over God’s revelation? Does it make sense as a
whole and can it be taken seriously? We now turn to the criticism of this discipline.
Appreciative of the fact that there is an organic link between worship and theology, they
nevertheless argue that tracing the pure essence of theology to the Church fathers or
On the historical front, Michael Aune puts it bluntly that “the sort of unity and
synthesis in theology, worship, and life that Schmemann believed to be exemplified in the
30
patristic period simply did not exist.”33 Instead, for Aune and others, historical research
increasingly points to the diversity of practice that highlights the fact that finding a pure
ordo is simply impossible. For instance, Maxwell Johnson points out that “that there is
probably no such thing as a pure ordo existing anywhere in some idealized form apart
from its very concrete, cultural, ecclesial, and ritual linguistic expressions.”34 Johnson
considers this ordo to be “a logical construct, an abstraction made on the basis of very
minimal descriptions of the patterns of Christian liturgy in the early period.”35 Similarly,
Paul Bradshaw observes that “there are very few things that Christians have consistently
done in worship at all times and in all places.”36 He also points out that “the ‘deep
structures’ running through the liturgy are very few indeed if we apply the test of
universal observance to them.”37 As for Bryan Spinks, his basic concern about liturgical
theology is “the sometimes narrow and esoteric concerns that that method has
spawned.”38
On the theological front, the attacks are also many. Edward Kilmartin synthesises
The authentic liturgical traditions are not simply one among many sources of
knowledge of faith, but the source and the central witness of the life of faith and
so of all theology. As a consequence, this one-sided stress on the value of
33 Michael B. Aune, “Liturgy and Theology: Rethinking the Relationship,” Worship 81.1 (2007),
51.
34
Maxwell E. Johnson, “Can we Avoid Relativism in Worship? Liturgical Norms in the Light of
Contemporary Liturgical Scholarship,” Worship 74.2 (2000), 145.
35 Ibid.,109.
36 Bradshaw, 184.
37 Ibid., 185.
31
liturgical-practice grounding of theological knowledge, Scripture and other
sources of theology are placed in the background of his theological reflection.39
In essence, the fundamental point being made here is that giving too much weight
enterprise, especially for those who believe in the sola Scriptura principle. This explains
liturgical practices and doctrinal formulations, in lex orandi lex credendi40 stresses the
fact that there needs to be a “critical primacy of doctrine in relation to liturgy” which he
further in saying that doctrinal control over liturgy is not only a Protestant idea but can be
traced back to the early Church and even in Roman Catholic history.42 The Church over
the centuries, maintains Wainwright, has always provided “corrective guidelines for
liturgical practice.”43
39 Edward Kilmartin, “Theology as Theology of the Liturgy” in Vogel, ed., Primary Sources of
Liturgical Theology, 107.
41 Wainwright, 219.
42 Ibid., 251-274.
43 According to Wainwright, this reversal of the liturgy-theology relation from doctrine to liturgy
to liturgy to doctrine is defective and that “worship requires certain practical, and ultimately doctrinal,
norms” (Ibid., 161).
32
Although it is true that liturgical actions are significant to our understanding of
theology, it remains that theology still needs to act as a safeguard against the danger that
the best-intended liturgical practices can still end up falling drastically short of Scriptural
ideals. To use Wainwright’s word, there is always the danger that “worship may get out
advocacy of primary theology over secondary theology, he writes: “This suggests that
worship has the upper hand over theology. But what happens if liturgical development
More importantly in relation to the Free Church tradition in general, and Adventist
against the Medieval Church sprang from their conviction that Christian worship had lost
its bearings. The Reformers were committed to have worship that was conformed to the
Scripture because of human nature’s tendency to miss what God considers acceptable. As
John Calvin observed, the human heart “is a perpetual factory of idols.”46 Because of this,
Protestants insist that lex credendi should establish and govern lex orandi.
number of liturgical theologians insist that Christians can in no way engage in pure
44 Wainwright, 121.
46 Jean Calvin, Ford Lewis Battles and John T McNeill, Calvin: Institutes of the Christian
Religion, eds., 2 vols., (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster, 1960), 1.11.18 (1:108).
33
experience of God in the liturgical act can give us total direct access to the deepest wells
of theology. Paul Bradshaw calls it “a highly romantic”47 vision. As he succinctly puts it:
When Christians gather on a Sunday morning to worship, they do not come with
their minds a tabula rasa. On the contrary, they come with their religious attitudes
and expectations already formed by secondary theology, as a result of that
catechesis that their particular ecclesiastical tradition has given them over the
years.48
beliefs/doctrines but also by the beliefs/doctrines already implicit in the liturgical act
itself.49
Maxwell E. Johnson also advocates that we need to ask ourselves “whether there
is not something else which is even more primary than this liturgical act, some kind of lex
credendi perhaps which comes to expression in, is continually nourished by, but,
nevertheless, in some fundamental primordial way 'constitutes' the lex orandi?”50 This
means that we cannot claim to express theology through worship unless there is theology
prior to worship.
Adventists can identify well with those concerns because, like other Christians
associated with the Free Church, they do not see church tradition as a rule of faith.51 In
47
Bradshaw, “Difficulties in Doing Liturgical Theology,” Pacifica 11(1998) quoted in Melanie C.
Ross, Evangelical versus Liturgical: Defying a Dichotomy (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans,
2014), 86.
49 Ibid., 196.
50
Maxwell E. Johnson, in Paul Bradshaw and Bryan Spinks, eds., "Liturgy and Theology,"
Liturgy in Dialogue: Essays in Memory of Ronald Jasper (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1993), 224.
51
It is quite a challenge to define the term “Free Church” since it represents a variety of Protestant
persuasions, ranging from Baptists to Mennonites, from Nazarenes to Pentecostals. Free Churches have
been referred to as “Believers Churches,” their adherents as “Nonconformists,” their system of belief and
praxis “the old dissent.” James F. White traces Free Church worship varieties to their historical roots-
Anabaptists, Separatist and the Puritan tradition, as well as the Frontier tradition. James F. White,
Protestant Worship: Traditions in Transition (Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 1989),
34
her review of Free Church worship, Evelyn Underhill identifies “its Biblical emphasis, its
revolt from ecclesiasticism and reassertion of simplicity, its passion for personal
freedom.”52 Free Church worship, according to James F. White, has two distinctive
the basis of scripture without any compulsion to dilute the purity of reformation by
compromise with human traditions. Second, the ordering of worship is determined locally
limit an entire understanding of worship to church tradition, no matter how rich and
valuable it can be. A more adequate liturgical theology is required to understand their
worship.54 Hence my question: How can a liturgical theology be developed that makes
Traditionally, liturgical theology has been used to express, clarify and defend the
approach raises immediate concerns for those in the Free Church tradition. Melanie Ross
expresses those concerns as follows: “Free Church congregations are wary of any claims
attempting to define “the” tradition of the ancients, “the” order of the Church, and “the”
liturgical list which offers the world meaning.”55 Given their Restorationist agenda,
79-93, 117-134, 171-191. See also Christopher J. Ellis, Gathering: A Theology and Spirituality of Worship
in Free Church Tradition (London: SCM Press, 2004), 25-27; Graydon F. Snyder and Doreen M.
McFarlane, The People are Holy: The History and Theology of Free Church Worship (Macon, GA: Mercer
University Press, 2005), 3-5.
52
Evelyn Underhill, Worship (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1937), 298.
35
Adventists, like other members of the Free Church tradition, also look beyond the Church
Fathers to what they perceive to be core liturgical features of New Testament faith. They
believe in the restoring and reviving of beliefs and practices, which are more akin to
primitive Christianity.
Given some of the important questions raised here, we are left with a dilemma:
How can we best engage with liturgical theology, which has traditionally been used to
explain and defend liturgical traditions, to examine the worship of a denomination that
Or better, how can we understand the script of Adventist worship using liturgical
theology lenses and to what extent? Like many before me, I am indebted to the
theology has been rightly criticized, it remains that his foundational method of
practices. He outlined three critical steps in what he considered to be the basic approach
of these facts; 3) the synthesis of the liturgical facts and their theological analysis.
Generally, liturgical theologians have followed those basic steps set out by Schmemann,
The first step is to establish the liturgical facts. James White concurs with
Schmemann when he declares that “[o]ne of the best ways to determine what we mean by
56 As early as 1847, James White stated that the Bible is “a perfect and complete revelation” and
“our only rule of faith and practice.” James White, A Word to the “Little Flock” (Brunswick, ME: n.p.,
1847), 13.
36
Christian worship is to describe the outward and visible forms of worship by
Christians.”58 The key element here is to thoroughly assess the concrete reality of any
liturgical practice to understand correctly what is really taking place. Margaret Kelleher
suggests that a foundational task of liturgical theologians is akin to that of the historians.
“They must go first through a process of gathering data on liturgical data and then engage
need to approach “historical research much more seriously in order to have a clearer
Important questions that can be asked at this stage are: Who are they that
worship? Lathrop puts it simply: “[i] n order “to have Church” a group of people must
first gather.’61 We need to start with the people. “Liturgy is not just texts but what
individuals and communities actually do.”62 People themselves are primary in our
understanding of any worship tradition. This is particularly true for denominations in the
Free Church tradition that do not rely primarily on liturgical texts, a common lectionary
So, in our understanding of Adventist worship, the people need to be our main
focus. This means knowing their history, their self-perception, their identity formation as
a distinct denomination. Among the fundamental questions that can also be asked at this
58 James F. White, Introduction to Christian Worship (Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 1980), 23.
59 Kelleher, “Liturgical Theology: A Task and a Method” in Paul F. Bradshaw, and John Allyn
Melloh, eds., Foundations in Ritual Studies: A Reader for Students of Christian Worship (Grand Rapids,
MI: Baker Academic, 2007), 209.
61 Lathrop, Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993), 87.
62 J. Frank Anderson, “Liturgy as Real Prayer for Real People” in Vogel Primary Sources of
Liturgical Theology: A Reader, 76.
37
stage are: What do they actually do when they worship? Why do they worship in a
particular way? Why do they worship on a particular day? What are the distinguishing
characteristics of their liturgical assembly? What are the objects, symbols and gestures
used to represent and enact their relationships among themselves and with God?
As Christopher Ellis explains, “[t]his is the step that takes worship seriously by
respecting its specific and concrete reality, both in its historical development and in the
contemporary life of the Church.”63 In other words, what is needed here is to consider the
essential role of worshippers, and finding significance in their actual practice of worship.
The aim here is to resist the impulse of rushing with idealistic notions of what
Adventist worship should be like. As noted earlier, one of the weaknesses of Adventist
theology has been its tendency to focus solely on how Adventist worship should be rather
than looking at its past and current expressions in order to grasp its essence. Rather, the
goal is to have a realistic look at what it is in its concrete expressions. Constant effort
must be made to examine reality as it is. This approach helps us to appreciate more its
distinct character.
The second step is to do the theological analysis of these facts. Dwight Vogel puts
it this way: “Liturgical theology must deal with the liturgy and it must be theological in
Wolterstorff and Chan call making the implicit explicit.65 In other words, secondary
63 Ellis, 23.
65Wolterstorff, The God We Worship, 12-18; Simon Chan, Liturgical Theology: The Church as
Worshiping Community (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2006), 51.
38
worship. This is compatible with Kelleher’s concept of the liturgical task “as a series of
questions designed to transform an unknown into a known.”66 Johnson calls this method
categories to interpret the whole event without spending enough time understanding the
event itself.68 James F. White asserts that the motivations and the ethos lying behind the
act of worship must be explored.69 What is needed here is to uncover the theological
meaning of the worship experience(s), to understand how people express their faith and
beliefs through their liturgical acts. We move here from the pure description of liturgical
Our main concern here is to reflect theologically on the liturgical data. At this
stage, we want to focus on the theological meaning of the liturgical praxis and pay special
attention to the pattern and shape in which the people gather to worship. Basic questions
that we may ask at this stage are: When do people worship? What is the place and role of
the singing, the sermon, the prayers, the Lord’s Supper (and its frequency) in the worship
service? What is the weight given to each element of the service and how is the whole
service organised sequentially? Can we detect liturgical variations or changes over time?
68 Chan warns against missing this crucial step. Reflecting on work of Kavanagh and the need for
proper liturgical theology methods, he writes: Making primary theology explicit is the task of liturgical
theology. We should therefore not draw too sharp a distinction between primary and secondary theology.
What the Church should guard against is a secondary theology that is done outside of the worshipping
community, a theology that abstracts from and generalizes about the liturgy based on some “neutral”
criteria. Chan, 51.
39
What can those variations and changes tell us about the denomination’s evolving
theological convictions or commitments? Basically, the main question is: What does the
liturgical act tell us about the people’s understanding of God and of themselves as the
body of Christ in the world? Here we are looking at what Schmemann calls getting at the
The third step for Schmemann is the notion of “a theological synthesis.”70 At this
stage, we contemplate how the whole thing (liturgy and theology) fit together. It is this
synthesis of the liturgy and its theological reflection that bring to the fore the essential
meaning of worship. It reveals the reality of the Church in the expression of its liturgical,
theological and confessional dimension. Here is what Schmemann describes as the deep
recesses of the Church’s faith and beliefs where Bible and tradition “become a living
reality.”71 Reflecting on Schmemann, Christopher Ellis explains that the objective here is
theology as revealed in and through the liturgy. The task of the liturgical theologian is not
only to describe and interpret the leitourgia but also to defend the liturgically received
vision and experience. Hence, the liturgy becomes in a way the final word on the Church
and its theology. As noted earlier, this claim of liturgy’s finality and dominance on
theology as the source of theological reflection poses a challenge for those who do not
40
contribution with his three step approach to understanding worship, I agree with
Christopher Ellis that a fourth step is needed, “a stage in which we place the exposition of
the faith of the worshipping community under broader theological scrutiny”73 through
other sources “such as creeds, confession of faith, analytical theology and especially,
position to have a clearer picture and a better platform to understand and evaluate
worship.
Those four steps [step 1: establishing the liturgical facts; step 2: the theological
analysis of those facts, step 3: synthesis of steps 1 and 2; step 4: broader theological
analysis of steps 1-3] will constitute my basic method for understanding Adventist
worship because it conveys central aspects of the Christian faith. In his introduction to
Christian worship, James F. White observes that “[t]here is no better place to begin our
investigation of the basic structures of Christian worship than with an introduction to the
way Christians use their time as a language through which to express their worship.” 75 As
74 He further explains that “[t]radition does not carry for the Free Churches the burden of authority
which it would carry in Roman Catholic or Orthodox Churches. Authority is found elsewhere — in
Scripture, the missionary imperative, pastoral need and common-sense rationalism. Thus the ordo, or
underlying principles, of evolving worship cannot carry the lex credendi. . . because the patterning of
worship is subservient to other theological authorities.” Ellis, 24.
75 James F. White, Introduction to Christian Worship (Nashville, TN: Abingdon, 1980), 52.
41
a response to God’s redeeming action in Christ, Christian worship celebrates salvation
history through the sanctification of time. “The observance of the week,” according to
Gordon W. Lathrop, “provides a patterning for Christian ritual, and at the same time it
bears the deepest faith of the church and forms us in that faith.”76
Contrary to other Christians who celebrate Sunday as their day for worship, in
day Sabbath, as a day of rest and worship. As we shall see in more detail later, the
Saturday assembly and cycle of the week form their basic Christian ordo. It informs the
The Sabbath expresses the meaning and experience of sacred time as a celebration
of divine creatorship and redemptive love. As such, the Sabbath provides an essential
foundation for understanding how Adventists understand, approach and practice Christian
worship and giving attention to the experience and theological meaning of the Sabbath
With this in mind, we are now ready to turn to our first major section on Adventist
76 Gordon W. Lathrop, Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press,
1998), 40
42
CHAPTER THREE
The liturgical question before us in this chapter is: what is our understanding of
Adventist worship implicit in its liturgical acts? To answer that question, we will examine
the historical development of Adventist worship. In so doing, we will also interpret those
liturgical facts to uncover their theological meanings. We will pay special attention to the
pattern and shape in which Adventists gather to worship because the way people worship
reveals their understanding of God. Our aim will be to identify a number of general
principles and values that control Adventist worship to orient us in developing a theology
of worship.
understand the liturgical stance of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the historical
development of its worship must be considered. This section covers the historical
centuries, we will identify key factors, with Sabbath-keeping at the centre that shaped
hoped that this chapter will demonstrate how Adventist liturgical expressions were
43
shaped by internal and external processes as Adventism moved from being a movement
to become a denomination.
greatest religious revival, known as the Second Great Awakening.1 William Miller (1782-
1849),2 a lay-Baptist preacher, became convinced of the imminent return of Christ after
years of diligent study of Bible prophecies. On the basis of his historicist interpretation of
the 2,300 days prophecy of Daniel 8:14, Miller started preaching from 1831 that Christ
drawing principally from Methodists, Baptists and the Christian Connection, members
and ministers alike.3 Although each brought with them their theological particularities,
they were all united in one unique doctrine- the imminent coming of Jesus Christ in glory.
1 George Knight, A Brief History of Seventh-day Adventists (Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 1999); Idem, A Search for Identity: The Development of the Seventh-day Adventist Beliefs
(Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2000); Edwin Scott Gaustad, ed., The Rise of Adventism: Religion
and Society in Mid-Nineteenth Century America (New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1974); Gerard
Damsteegt, Foundations of the Seventh-day Adventist Message and Mission (Grand Rapids, MI: William B.
Eerdmans, 1977).
2 On Miller's background, see David L. Rowe, Thunder and Trumpets: Millerites and Dissenting
Religion in Upstate New York, 1800-1850, American Academy of Religion Studies in Religion, no. 38
(Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 1985), chapters 1 and 2; George Knight, Millennial Fever and the End of the
World: A Study of Millerite Adventism (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 1993); Jonathan M. Butler, "The Making
of a New Order: Millerism and the Origins of Seventh-day Adventism," in Numbers and Butler, eds., The
Disappointed, 190. See also “From Millerism to Seventh-day Adventism: 'Boundlessness to
Consolidation,” Church History, 55 (1986): 50-64.
3 Everett Dick’s study of the denominational affiliations of Millerite preachers reveals from a
sample of 174 lecturers (whom he was able to identify denominationally) 44% were Methodist, 27%
Baptist, 9% Congregational, 8% Christian Connection (Restorationist stream), 7% Presbyterian and several
other denominations were represented by one or two lecturers as well. “William Miller and the Advent
Crisis, 1831-1844” (an unpublished manuscript, 1932, an extension of a 1930 PhD dissertation at the
University of Wisconsin. Quoted by George Knight, Millennial Fever, 114. Since then published by
Andrews University Press, 1994.
44
Their fellowship and mission originated from their understanding of what they viewed to
shall see later, a small number of Millerite believers started adopting a new liturgical
keeping.
America, more often than not characterized by a series of radical revisions of liturgical
mentioned here.4 First, he emphasised freedom and innovation over tradition, arguing that
the Bible does not prescribe any particular styles. Second, he held that without
innovations, the church would be impotent in a fast-changing age. This led him to
‘unnecessary’ barriers to the audience. Third, and perhaps most importantly, he reversed
the relationship between worship and evangelism. Christians, traditionally, had viewed
Millerites were also part of those liturgical revisions. More specifically, they
45
revivalistic zeal that characterized their times. Those three factors, among others largely
shaped their worship practices. We will briefly consider those three foundational factors
William Miller and his followers were products of their times. In the full-fledged
democracy of the Jacksonian era, democratic ideals permeated American politics and
religion as well. In those days, many had started adopting a "populist hermeneutics" that
gave individuals the right to interpret the plain language of Scripture as it made sense to
them.5 For many preachers, claims to expertise did not have to come necessarily through
formal training. Hence, one did not need to be an expert in theology to preach radical new
ideas. Faith, common sense and a good concordance were enough to discover unexposed
Scriptural truths.6 Truth, however obscure, could be reached by the diligent use of reason.
Traditions, formal theology, creeds and institutional control had no place of choice. Since
Scripture was its own expositor, full understanding of its teachings and doctrines could be
reached through attentive and prayerful study. This also meant that orthodoxy and
5
See for instance, Paul K. Conkin, American Originals: Homemade Varieties of Christianity
(Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1997).
6 Thus, William Miller could write: “I determined to lay aside all my prepossessions, to
thoroughly compare Scripture with Scripture, and to pursue its study in a regular and methodical manner. I
commenced with Genesis, and read verse by verse, proceeding no faster than the meaning of the several
passages should be so unfolded as to leave me free from embarrassment respecting any mysticisms or
contradictions. Whenever I found anything obscure, my practice was to compare it with all collateral
passages; and, by the help of Cruden, I examined all the texts of Scripture in which were found any of the
prominent words contained in any obscure portion. Then, by letting every word have its proper bearing on
the subject of the text, if my view of it harmonized with every collateral passage in the Bible, it ceased to be
a difficulty.” Sylvester Bliss, Memoirs of William Miller (Boston, MA: Joshua V. Himes, 1853), 69.
7 Ibid., 70-71. For a detailed analysis, see Jeff Crocombe, ‘A Feast of Reason’: The Roots of
William Miller’s Biblical Interpretation and its influence on the Seventh-day Adventist Church, PhD
Dissertation (St Lucia, Australia: University of Queensland, 2011).
46
By following the commonly held understanding of Numbers 14:34 and Ezekiel
4:5, 6, Miller’s study of Daniel 8:14 (“Unto two thousand and three hundred days, then
shall the sanctuary be cleansed”) led him to the conclusion that the last judgment would
come and the earth be purified with fire at the Lord’s coming around 1843. Miller’s
apocalyptic-eschatological vision fuelled his passion for working toward the conversion
of souls, enabling individuals and communities “to meet their God in peace.”8 Miller’s
millennialism on American consciousness to the point that historians Ernest Sandeen and
George Knight compare it to a “drinking stupor”9 and a “fever.”10 There was a growing
millennial expectation especially among Evangelicals, many of whom thought that the
blessed millennium could be hastened and would be ushered in by the propagating of the
gospel and the values of Christian civilization. Charles Finney, for instance, proclaimed
in 1830 that if Christians united, the millennium could come within three months. 11 In
sharply with the prevalent postmillennial optimism. For Miller, Christ’s Second Coming
meant the imminent annihilation of the wicked and the catastrophic end of human
9 Ernest R. Sandeen, The Roots of Fundamentalism: British and American Millennialism, 1800-
1930 (Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press, 1970), 50.
10 George R. Knight, Millennial Fever and the End of the World: A Study of Millerite Adventism
(Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1993).
47
caused a major stir, especially that he dared to even fix an approximate date, 1843. The
only hope for Christians, he claimed, laid in being revived; as for unbelievers, conversion
was their only way out. This premillenial vision asked for a higher standard of spirituality
3.1.1.3 Revivalism.
suggests that Christianity, especially the Evangelical strand of it, was being revived. Yet,
the use of those alternative terms indicates a nuanced interpretation of those religious
experiences, hence the attempts to distinguish between "revival” and “revivalism.” The
former, it is argued should refer to the unplanned outbreak of religious fervor brought by
the sovereign grace of God, the latter to a deliberately humanly-led way of securing the
Miller and his associates began their ministry at a time when evangelical religion
and its agent, revivalism, already dominated the American religious landscape. As
Timothy Smith, aptly puts it, “Miller appeared at the point when revival fires were
bringing hopes for the Second Advent to feverish intensity.”13 As America was reaching
the mid nineteenth century, the shift from Calvinist to Arminian theologies was putting
the individual at the centre in the conversion process, dislodging God's unilateral
responsibility in salvation. Revivals and mass conversions were no longer seen as the
surprising and sovereign work of God but as a matter of individual choice. Also, “new-
12 See for instance, Ian Murray’s Revival and Revivalism, the Making and Marring of American
Evangelicalism (Edinburg: The Banner of Trust, 1994); Kathryn Teresa Long, The Revival of 1857-58:
Interpreting an American Religious Awakening (Oxford University Press: New York, 1998); Irving H.
Bartlett, The American Mind in the Mid-Nineteenth Century (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1967).
13.
Timothy L. Smith, Revivalism and Social Reform in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America (New
York: Abingdon Press, 1957), 228.
48
measure revivalism” assured that revival could be initiated and secured using the right
techniques in contrast to the Calvinist understanding that emphasised God's exclusive role
in fostering revival.
shaped the way Adventist believers viewed and practiced their faith. This undoubtedly
their worship services. Most reports focus on their preaching or lectures and the general
atmosphere of their meetings but fall short of giving a detailed description of whole
service events. Also, another important point needs to be remembered: Millerism was a
movement among different denominations. Worship practices could vary from one
denomination to another, even from one church to another. Moreover, Millerite preachers
visited those churches according to invitation and had no control on church services,
except for the sermon. Yet, we can still identify important elements of worship such as
Millerite Adventism originated from the study of the Bible. It was Miller’s intense
Bible studies that led him to preach that the Second Advent was near. It never occurred to
him and all his associates that there could be any authority for doctrine and behaviour
other than the Bible. Miller’s conviction about the place of Scripture in preaching and
Christian living is clear in a letter he wrote to one of his associates: “you must preach
Bible; you must prove all things by Bible; you must talk Bible; you must exhort Bible;
49
you must pray Bible, and love Bible; and do all in your power to make others love Bible,
too.”14
Millerites relied on the Bible with that firm conviction that the Bible could
interpret itself. The general consensus was that preaching was not the sole prerogative of
an educated clergy but the mandate of all those who felt called to herald the Second
Advent. Scripture could be appropriated, interpreted and preached through the guidance
of the Holy Spirit. That kind of exegetical and kerygmatic optimism gave significant
Although, Miller was not known for his charisma, "people flocked to hear his
undramatic but logical lectures or sermons.”15 For instance, after visiting a number of
Miller’s lectures, the editor of The Fountain, a temperance paper, mentions how “almost
breathless silence . . . reigned throughout the immense throng for two or three hours at a
time”16 as Miller presented his message. Another witness to Miller's preaching described
him as “a serious, earnest man with a wonderful power of holding the attention of his
audience and of bringing them round to his belief. He did not shout or rant the way so
many revivalists do; he made his impression by his earnest manner and his serious way of
Silas Hawley, a Congregational minister, wrote from Groton, on the 10th of April
1840:
15
Paul K. Conkin, American Originals: Homemade Varieties of Christianity (Chapel Hill, NC:
University of North Carolina Press, 1997), 119.
16
Isaac Wellcome, History of the Second Advent Message and Mission, Doctrine and People
(Yarmouth, ME: I. C. Wellcome, 1874), 248.
17Cited in Stephen D. O'Leary, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of Millennial Rhetoric (New
York, Oxford University Press, 1998), 107, from a quote in Clara Endicott Sears, Days of Delusion: A
Strange Bit of History (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 1924), 117.
50
Mr. Miller has lectured in this and adjoining towns with marked success. His
lectures have been succeeded by precious revivals of religion in all those places.
No one can hear him five minutes without being convinced of his sincerity, and
instructed by his reasoning, and information. All acknowledge his lectures to be
replete with useful and interesting matter. His knowledge of Scripture is very
extensive and minute; that of the prophecies, especially, surprisingly familiar. His
application of the prophecies to the great events which have taken place in the
natural and moral world is such, generally, as to produce conviction of their truth,
and gain the ready assent of his hearers. We have reason to believe that the
preaching or lecturing of Mr. Miller has been productive of great and extensive
good. Revivals have followed in his train. He has been heard' with attention
wherever he has been. . . . His Scripture explanations and illustrations are
strikingly simple, natural, and forcible; and the great eagerness of the people to
bear him has been manifested wherever he has preached.18
Several elements can be noticed here: Miller’s preaching was (i) biblically-based,
sincere, mainly directed to the intellect - people are “instructed” by Miller’s “reasoning
and information,” (ii) effectively illustrated - “illustrations are strikingly simple, natural,
and forcible”, and (iii) applied to the contextual reality of his hearers, (iv) his exposition
on prophecy was not for information but for transformation; (v) as a result, people
experienced revival.
to secure conversion and revival as a preparation for the Second Advent. For instance, it
was also not unusual for Millerites to open the floor for questions and clarifications after
they had preached.19 This emphasis on rational proof distinguished Millerites from
18Lynn Record, quoted in Sylvester Bliss, Memoirs of William Miller, 137, and in Isaac
Wellcome, History of the Second Advent Message, 74-75.
19 See for instance, Signs of the Times, February 1, 1841, 161; Signs of the Times, December 15,
1841, 141; Signs of the Times, July 27, 1842, 132; Signs of the Times, October 19, 1842, 38; Signs of the
Times, September 14, 1842, 191.
20
Stephen D. O'Leary, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of Millennial Rhetoric (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1998), 112.
51
On another level, Millerite preachers also interpreted the display of emotions as
an indication of a salvific divine encounter. Miller and his associates frequently measured
the success of their preaching by the visible impact it had on their hearers. Reports
repeatedly focused on the number of individuals who would come forward for prayer21,
or on how “some old, hardened rebels have been brought to plead for mercy”22, the
excitement . . . a great breaking down, and much weeping,”24 of “young converts, with
tearful eyes, rejoicing in their first love”25 Since evangelization was a driving ambition,
was expected that those religious experiences be manifested tangibly, hence the
Despite their peculiar eschatological emphasis, and their use of charts and other
visual aids to illustrate their preaching, Millerites were staunch Evangelicals when it
came to matters of salvation.27 Urgent appeals would normally end their presentations
22 Ibid., 64.
23 Ibid., 84.
24 Ibid., 73.
27 See for instance James White’s sermon appeals in Life Incidents in Connection with the Great
Advent Movement (Battle Creek, MI: Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association,
1868), 1:78.
52
“warning men with all earnestness, and prayer, and entreaty, to turn unto the Lord, and
In some cases, the “anxious seats,” one of Finney’s “new measures” were
introduced.29 Convicted of their spiritual condition, “the weeping penitents” would fill
those seats “amidst the songs and exhortations of the saints and converts” to find spiritual
Within the Millerite understanding, preaching was meant to inform the mind and
stir the heart toward the convictions of sin. Their preaching had revival and conversion as
an ultimate object.
3.1.2.2 Prayer.
Prayer also played an important role in Millerite meetings. Their preachers prayed
and fasted to receive divine understanding, guidance and personal assurance. For
instance, this is what Charles Fitch, a leader in the Millerite movement, wrote in 1840:
I beseech every minister of Jesus Christ, whose eye may rest on this page, to set
his face, as did Daniel, to seek the Lord God by prayer and supplication, with
fasting, and sackcloth, and ashes, until the Holy Ghost shall be sent to give him
skill and understanding in the word of God; so that he no longer flatter the world
with the cry of “peace and safety,” while sudden destruction is just upon them, “as
travail upon a woman with child, and they shall not escape.”30
Publications, like Signs of the Times, were released to “to promote revivals of
29 Signs of the Times, February 1, 1842, 168; Signs of the Times, July 13, 1842, 117; Signs of the
Times, July 20, 1842, 125; Signs of the Times, October 19, 1842, 38; Signs of the Times, November 23,
1842, p.78; Signs of the Times, November 30, 1842, 87.
30
Charles Fitch, “Letter to the Presbytery of Newark” in The Glory of God in the Earth (Boston,
MA: Joshua V. Himes, 1842), 34. See also, Signs of the Times, April 1, 1841, 5.
53
body.”31 They rejoiced when they found “about 30 or 40 men of different denominations,
engaged with one accord in prayer, at about 11 o'clock in the day-time!”32 They exhorted
neighborhoods.”33 They felt the obligation “to the most strenuous efforts, and the most
fervent, importunate prayer for the universal establishment of the kingdom of Christ in
this world.”34
Millerites rejected the use of written prayers, opting instead for extempore
prayers, more conducive to their earnest display of religious affections. Hence, this
comment regarding some prayer meetings held in October 1842: “The prayer meetings
morning and evening were well attended. The prayers of the brethren and sisters were
fervent and feeling. Exhortations [were] warm and energetic; and brotherly love
abounded.”35
3.1.2.3 Singing.
Millerites gave full expression to their beliefs, longings and feelings through
singing of dominantly Second Advent hymns.36 As James White, recalls “in those days
singing was our delight.”37 Since originally the Millerite movement was
54
interdenominational, it is likely that they sang from the hymnals of their various
denominations. But as time passed, they began holding their own meetings because of the
separation of the Millerites from their original churches prompted the Millerite leaders to
There was a very democratic process in the compilation of hymns and spiritual
songs, especially designed for their prayer meetings and conferences. Every believer had
the opportunity to submit “appropriate hymns,”38 on the condition that those were “soul-
religion, and considered “old-fashioned” hymns to be the best.41 Second Advent hymns
had a place of choice in those new hymnals. Here is a typical stanza from one of the
hymns:
The reading and the singing of hymns was common practice in Millerite circles.
Usually, no musical instruments accompanied their meetings but their singing produced
42From the Millennial Harp, qouoted in Francis D. Nichol, The Midnight Cry: A Defense of
William Miller and the Millerites (Takoma Park, WA: Review and Herald, 1945), 121.
55
strong effects. Recollecting his introduction of a meeting in Litchfield, Maine, James
White writes about marching down the centre aisle beating time on his Bible and holding
“nearly a thousand persons in almost breathless silence” by singing “You Will See Your
Lord a-Coming.” He continues: “It seemed to me that not a hand or foot moved in all the
crowd before me till I had finished all the words of this lengthy melody. Many wept and
the state of feeling was most favorable for the introduction of the grave subject for the
evening.”43
For the Millerites, the nearness of the Second Coming seemed so palpable that it
exercised their deepest emotions. Bursts of joyful noise, animated singing could
paradoxically lead to silence and tears. Singing especially expressed the certainty of their
Baptismal ceremonies were public and were most of the times conducted at nearby
rivers.45 Those were emotional moments since many felt that they were lingering on the
shores of eternity. Again, with typical evangelical fervor, there are accounts that “many
56
Alongside baptism, Millerites also practiced open communion which were held
periodically.47 All who had committed themselves to Christ could partake of the Lord’s
presided by ordained ministers, was experienced with the notion of commitment and
service.48 For Millerites, the communion service was a celebration and called forth their
highest praise and devotion. Singing and spontaneous vocal outbursts would sometimes
As the time of Christ’s expected return approached, more and more churches shut
their doors to Millerite preachers. In consequence, Miller and his colleagues turned to
new ways to gather Adventist believers and communicate their hope to those who wanted
3.1.4 Conferences
According to Signs of The Times of 20th April 1842, conferences were designed
“for the purpose of assembling Christians together to worship God . . . the principal
object of the meeting is to awake sinners and purify Christians.”50 They clearly had a
renewal and restorationist agenda as indicated in one of the reports of their session: “Our
object in assembling at this time . . . is to revive and restore this ancient faith, to renew
47 Charles Fitch, Letters by Charles Fitch from the Midnight Cry, March 14, 1844.
48 See for instance, a report in Signs of the Times, December 14, 1842, 103.
57
ancient landmarks, to “stand in the ways, and see and ask for the old paths where is the
good way in which our fathers walked and the martyrs found rest for their souls.”51
There are indications that the following pattern was generally followed:
This order of worship was not inflexible.55 Because of its anti-creedal and anti-
liturgical posture, the Millerite movement gave priority to free-flow worship where
To cater to the increasing larger crowds, Miller and his associates turned to camp
meetings, a common method used by other Christians.56 Camp meetings differed from the
regular church services in many ways. Instead of the typical church service, organised for
51 The First Report of the General Conference of Christians Expecting the Advent of our Lord
Jesus Christ; “Proceedings of the General Conference,” 12, Quoted in Francis D. Nichol, The Midnight
Cry, 88-89.
53 Ibid., 1:106.
54 Signs of the Times, December 1, 1841, 129; Signs of the Times, November 1, 1840, 115.
58
event, held in open spaces that attracted large groups of people. Camp meetings normally
attendees came from various confessional backgrounds. In 1843 and 1844, 130 camp
meetings were conducted all over New England, with attendance ranging sometimes
between four thousand and ten thousand.57 It is estimated that attendance at camp
meetings between 1842 and 1844 exceeded half a million, i.e, approximately one out of
every 35 Americans.58
The objective of the camp meetings was “to wake up the slumbering in the
churches and the careless sinner”59 by the announcement of the imminent return of Christ
and the soon coming judgment.60 This emphasis on revival and evangelism in the context
of imminent Parousia was typical of Millerite piety.61 The reports of the camp meetings
in East Kingston62 and other places are quite revealing of how Millerites worshipped.
Christians of all denominations assembled to meet God “in a thousand prayers and songs
of praise . . . to worship him in the Spirit”63 and participate in the Lord’s Supper.
59 Signs of the Times, July 13, 1842, 116. Quoted in Froom, The Prophetic Faith of our Fathers
4:645.
63 Ibid., 114.
59
According to the same report, “the meeting was conducted with great regularity and good
camp meeting exercises- preaching, exhorting, praying, singing, the communion service,
The preaching was dynamic and persuasive, and reached the hearts of people. The
singing made the camp ring with its fervor, and enforced the oral message. The
offerings of gold, silver, and other valuables amounted to one thousand dollars—a
large sum for that time, when an average day's work netted only seventy-five
cents. And the parting scene of these camps was unforgettable. United by the
bonds of a common faith, and drawn together by a common hope in the soon
coming of Christ, they formed a giant circle, hand clasping hand, in solemn leave-
taking.65
that expressed itself in different ways- from the weeping penitents coming to the altar for
prayer to others falling on their knees seeking for prayer66 and finding deliverance
Millerite leaders wanted their meetings to be earnest but orderly. Yet, the notion
of ‘solemnity’ was severely disrupted as the expected time for Christ’s coming
approached. Unbounded enthusiasm started causing disruptions to the point that “the
64 Ibid.
65 Leroy Froom, The Prophetic Faith of our Fathers, 4:646. See also 4:644-655. For a primary
source, see Signs of the Times, October 26, 1842, 44.
60
movement's leaders published a list of regulations to keep their camp meetings orderly. 68
To the leaders’ dismay, people were rolling on the floor with the struggles, exhibiting
convulsions and kicking and screaming fits,69 reminiscent of early Methodist camp
meetings.70 For some, the Bible became secondary as it was superseded by visions,
Finney, the renowned revivalist, held the opinion that it was Miller’s teaching71 that was
responsible for the “intense excitement, involving much that was wild and irrational.” 72 In
Miller and his associates tried to walk the fine line between fervent restraint and
69
Richard Connors and Andrew Colin Gow, eds., Anglo-American Millennialism, from Milton to
the Millerites (Boston, MA: Brill, 2004), 188.
70 See for instance, W. Strickland, ed., The Autobiography of Peter Cartwright: The Backwoods
Preacher (New York: Carlton and Porter, 1856), excerpts, 5, 9-10.
71 People’s reactions to his preaching, were far from measured as reported in a New York
newspaper: “The mourners or converts, of whom there was a very large number, threw themselves in the
dust and dirt around the pulpit, and for nearly an hour, men and women were praying, singing, shouting,
groaning, and weeping bitterly.” Evening Post for the Country (New York), Oct 22, 1844, cited in Nichol,
Midnight Cry, 219.
72 Charles Finney, Memoirs of Rev. Charles G. Finney (New York: A. S. Barnes, 1876), 370.
73 William Miller, “Letter to Brethren,” December 3, 1844, quoted in Sylvester Bliss, Memoirs of
William Miller, 282. Italics in the original.
61
curb those intense religious excitements.74 To the dismay of the organisers, this display of
emotional feverishness became the main attraction of the camp meeting as it drew
sympathizers, curious and onlookers. For the camp leaders, such exhibitions bore the
As the expected date approached and some Millerites set a precise date, October
22, 1844,76 Millerites’ zeal to argue their case brought new converts but also signaled an
increasing negative reaction from other denominations and the public in general. Many
were forced to choose between their church membership and Millerism. Those who opted
to remain in their Millerite beliefs were barred from membership in their churches.
In this context, Charles Fitch, a Millerite leader, preached in July 1843 a defining sermon,
"Come out of Babylon,”77 based on Revelation 18:1-5 and 14:8 and pushed the Millerite
75 James White, Life Incidents, 1:156-160; James White recollects Elder Plummer’s exhortation at
one camp meeting: “He stated, in the most solemn manner, that he had no objections to shouts of praise to
God, over victories won in his name. But when persons had shouted “Glory to God” nine hundred and
ninety-nine times, with no evidence of one victory gained, and had blistered their hands in striking them
together with violence, he thought it was time for them to stop. But if they would not change their course, it
was time for all who wished to be consistent Christians to withdraw their sympathy from them, and show
their disapproval of their course by keeping entirely away from them” (158).
76 This date was not set by William Miller but by Samuel Snow, a Millerite preacher, who through
extensive study of Jewish festivals linked the day of atonement, Yom Kippur, and the exact date of Christ’s
return with his conclusion that the 2300 days of Daniel 8:14 would come on the tenth day of the second
month (see Lev. 23:37) of the present year. That day, according to the Karaite Jewish reckoning was
October 22, 1844. For a detailed explanation of Samuel Snow’s calculation, see Damsteegt, Foundations of
the Seventh-day Adventist Message and Mission, 84-100.
77 Charles Fitch, “Come Out of Her, My People: A Sermon” (Rochester, NY: Joshua V. Himes,
1843).
62
as a community of the last days.”78 This understanding was later intensified with the non-
consider an important element that will later shape Adventist liturgical practices—the
Acceptance of the seventh day Sabbath among the Millerites originated from their
contacts with Seventh Day Baptists. A Communion service held in a Christian Brethren
meetinghouse was one of the surprising ways in which the Sabbath doctrine made its way
into Millerites circle. It happened in the early months of 1844 in Washington, New
Hampshire, where Frederick Wheeler was presiding over the service.79 An ordained
minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Wheeler had joined the ranks of itinerant
Millerite preachers in 1842. In his sermon preceding the Lord’s Supper, Wheeler pointed
out that “all persons confessing communion with Christ in such a service should be ready
to follow Him, and obey God and keep His commandments in all things.”80
Seated in the assembly was Rachel Oaks, a Seventh Day Baptist. Oaks later
reminded Wheeler of his sermon and urged him to put his own words into practice by
keeping the fourth commandment. Oaks further revealed to Wheeler that she almost
interrupted his sermon: “I wanted to tell you that you would better set that communion
78Stephen D. O'Leary, Arguing the Apocalypse: A Theory of Millennial Rhetoric (New York,
Oxford University Press, 1998), 108.
79 Review & Herald, Oct. 4, 1906; Review & Herald, Feb. 21, 1918.
80 F.A. Bartle to William Spicer (undated letter) in William A. Spicer, “Our First Minister,”
Review and Herald, February 15, 1940. 8 and William A. Spicer, Pioneer Days of the Advent Movement
with Notes on Pioneer Workers and Early Experiences (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald), 122-123.
63
table back and put the cloth over it, until you begin to keep the commandments of God.”81
As later reported, that conversation made a strong impact on the Millerite preacher. F. A
Bartle, a neighbour of Wheeler, remembered: “Elder Wheeler told me that these words
cut him deeper than anything that he had ever had spoken to him.”82 After giving much
thought to the subject, Wheeler began to keep the Sabbath. Subsequently, other members
of his congregation joined Wheeler in observing Saturday as their day of worship. The
Sabbath doctrine had now united to the Advent message. The meetinghouse later became
“the location of earliest Sabbathkeeping Millerite church that continues to this day as a
This episode illustrates the growing influence of Seventh Day Baptist Sabbath
the Millerites in the early 1840s. The zeal with which Seventh Day Baptists shared their
Sabbath teachings was greatly responsible for that situation. Seventh Day Baptists had
until then been generally passive in sharing their convictions concerning the Sabbath.
However, things took a dramatic turn following their 1841 General Conference session
that concluded that God “required” them to vigorously promote their views.84 As a result,
81 Ibid.
82 Ibid.
83Merlin D. Burt, Adventist Pioneer Places: New York and New England (Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 2011), 92.
84 For primary sources and analysis, see Merlin D. Burt, “The Historical Background,
Interconnected Development, and Integration of the Doctrines of the Sanctuary, the Sabbath, and Ellen G.
White’s Role in Sabbatarian Adventism from 1844 to 1849,” PhD Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI:
Andrews University, 2002), 25-55. See also, Michael W. Campbell, “Developments in the Relationship
64
the denomination’s tract society began publishing and massively distributing Sabbath
literature.
The aggressive promoting of the Sabbath by Seventh Day Baptists took different
forms. For instance, in April 1842, B. Clark, a Seventh Day Baptist minister, tried
introducing the Sabbath to Millerites through the columns of the Signs of the Times. The
editors refused to publish the article, noting that “[w]e wish to have no controversy with
“Seventh Day Baptists on the subject of the Sabbath.”85 This editorial note most
probably reflected the opinion of the majority. Millerite leaders, especially, were
unwilling to let any subject distract their flock from their main focus, the imminent return
of Christ.
Miller. For instance, the Sabbath Recorder, a Seventh Day Baptist publication, reported
in June 1844 “that considerable numbers of those who are looking for the speedy
appearance of Christ have embraced the seventh day, and commencing observing it as the
Sabbath.”86 Millerite leaders did not share the same passion for the Sabbath. They
considered it as “an unimportant side issue,”87 a distraction on the eve of the Second
Coming.
Two series of articles published in September 1844 in The Midnight Cry seem to
indicate the growing frustration of Millerite leaders in regard to the inflitration of Seventh
between Seventh Day Baptists and Seventh-Day Adventists, 1844–1884,” Andrews University Seminary
Studies, Vol. 55, No. 2, 2017, 195–212.
86 Geoge B. Utter, “The Second Advent and the Sabbath,” Sabbath Recorder, June 13, 1844, 2.
87 “The Sabbath in the New World” in The Sabbath in Scripture and History, 247.
65
Day Baptist teachings within their movement. In its 5 September issue, the editors of The
Midnight Cry deplore that “many persons have their minds deeply exercised respecting
the supposed obligation to observe the seventh day.”88 “As believers in the speedy
coming of Christ to introduce a perfect Sabbath” the editors insist that Adventists should
have “no peculiar creed in relation to the observance of days.”89 Then, in discussing the
particular portion of time which Christians are required by law to set apart as holy
time.”90
Sabbath controversy: “We love the seventh-day brethren and sisters, but we think they are
trying to mend the old broken Jewish yoke, and put it on their necks, instead of standing
fast in the liberty wherewith Christ makes free.”91 The editors of The Midnight Cry
erroneous understanding of the Christian message. However, some Millerites did not
share that interpretation and would prove it by their acceptance and observance of the
seventh-day Sabbath.
From what has been presented in the preceding paragraphs, it can be noted that
Millerites were a diverse group, united in one doctrine: the imminent return of Christ in
glory. The main reason why people came to Millerite meetings was to hear teachings on
the Second Coming. Religious meetings centred on preaching. Other elements were
89 Ibid., 68.
66
conversion. They were principally orientated to reaching other Christians as well as
approach to religion. They validated their beliefs not only by rational arguments but also
by the sense of “God's influence and inspiration within the movement itself”92 by
recourse to tangible evidences. God’s closeness was not only interpreted in term of the
nearness of the Parousia but also through the outward spiritual indications that
Distress and confusion ensued when Jesus did not come on October 22, 1844. The
return but revised the particulars of their calculations in various ways. One radical fringe
group, the Spiritualizers, moved away from Miller’s literal principles of interpretation
and claimed that Jesus had come spiritually on October 22, 1844, and that the millennial
reign had started. Another splinter group held to the validity and eschatological
significance of the chronology of the 1844 movement but gave a different meaning to the
nature of the event, claiming that Christ had entered a new phase of His heavenly high
priestly ministry.93 That particular group subsequently became Sabbath keepers and years
92 O'Leary, 107.
93 Day Star Extra, February 7, 1846, 37- 44. For primary sources and analysis, see Alberto Timm,
The Sanctuary and the Three Angels’ Messages, 1844-1863: Integrating Factors in the Development of
Seventh-day Adventist Doctrines (Berrien Springs, MI: Adventist Theological Society, 1995); Merlin D.
Burt, “The Historical Background, Interconnected Development, and Integration of the Doctrines of the
67
The doctrine of the Sabbath did not find substantial supporters among this group
Adventism, “the Sabbath cause did not advance with us but little up to 1849.”94 But
slowly, Sabbath-keeping gained ground in various places. Let us first note the
instrumental in influencing the small group of Adventists who believed that Christ had
entered a new phase of as High Priest in the heavenly sanctuary to accept the seventh-day
Sabbath. The publication of his article about the Sabbath in the Hope of Israel, a
Millerite periodical, on Feb. 28 1845 swayed the opinion of the Millerite group. Preble’s
article was republished a month later as a pamphlet entitled A Tract, Showing that the
Seventh Day should be Observed as the Sabbath, Instead of the First Day.95 Preble’s
argument can be summarized as follows: (1) the seventh-day sabbath is a perpetual sign
between God and his people (refs.: Ex. 31:17, Ezek. 20:12); (2) the Sabbath maintains its
continuing validity in the New Testament (refs.: Matthew 24:20; Mark 2:27, 28; Luke
23:56; Acts 13:42; Acts 14:13; Acts 17:2; Heb. 4:4); (3) there is a distinction between
Colossians 2:14-17 ; (4) the change to Sunday was ecclesiastically not scripturally,
Sanctuary, the Sabbath, and Ellen G. White’s Role in Sabbatarian Adventism from 1844 to 1849,” PhD
Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2002).
94 Review and Herald, Aug. 11 1853, 53. Quoted in The Sabbath in Scripture and History, 248.
95 Thomas Preble, A Tract, Showing That the Seventh Day should Be Observed as the Sabbath,
Instead of the First Day; “According to the Commandment” (Nasha, New Hampshire: Murray & Kimball,
1845).
68
motivated (Daniel 7:25 as predicting this change by the Papacy); (5) the Sabbath should
of Saturday observance but with an important difference. He now couches the Sabbath in
Sabbaths and Great Jubilee (Miller was never a Sabbath-keeper) and urges its observance
on fellow Millerites “believing it important for us to have the truth on all subjects, and
publish a defense of Sabbath observance, but also because he brings into unison what will
become two most essential components of Seventh-day Adventist identity, Sabbath and
the Second Coming. His writings had a determining effect on Joseph Bates, one of the co-
Sabbath-keeping and in enriching its theology within early Adventism. Arthur L. White
calls him “the apostle of the Sabbath truth.” LeRoy E. Froom labels him “the Sabbath
herald” and C. Mervyn Maxwell calls him “the father of the Sabbath truth among
Seventh-day Adventists.”97 It was after discovering Preble’s article and tract and
96 Thomas Preble, 3.
97Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White, vol. 1, The Early Years, 1827-1862 (Washington, D. C.:
Review and Herald, 1985), 284, 30; LeRoy E. Froom, Movement of Destiny, (Washington, D. C.: Review
and Herald, 1971), 81; C. Mervyn Maxwell, Tell it to the World: the Story of Seventh-day Adventism,
(Mountain View, Calif.: Pacific Press, 1982), 76. Quoted in Sergio Becerra, “The Eschatological Elements
of the Adventist Doctrine Of The Sabbath,” unpublished paper presented at the 4 th International Bible
Conference of Adventists, Rome, June 11-21, 2018.
69
comparing them with the Bible that his “mind was made up to begin the fourth
commandment.”98 He was so captivated by the Sabbath truth that “the old believers never
forgot how he would sit in the prayer and testimony meetings, and, clapping his hands
joyfully, exclaim, “Oh, how I do love this Sabbath!”99 For Bates, Sabbath was more than
Bates published a series of booklets in which he argued that the Sabbath was
instituted at creation and ratified at Sinai. Further, he maintained that the Ten
Commandments are a moral guide and rule for all mankind, and emphasised that God’s
Law required the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath. Basically, Bates rehearsed the
what made Bates’s contribution significant to the nascent Sabbatarian Advent movement
was that he saw a connection between the Sanctuary, the Sabbath and eschatology,
especially in the Book of Revelation. His study of Revelation 11:19 (“the temple of God
was opened in heaven, and there was seen in his temple the Ark of the Covenant”)
convinced him that the Decalogue, including the seventh-day Sabbath, had not been
abolished and still required obedience. Texts like Revelation 14:12 (where the saints keep
“the commandments of God and hold fast to the faith of Jesus”) and Revelation 12:17
(where God’s people “keep the commandments of God and have the testimony of Jesus”)
further persuaded him that the Decalogue and by extension the seventh-day Sabbath were
a perpetual sign for God’s true followers.100 In Bates’ understanding, the seventh-day
99 Spicer, William A. Pioneer Days of the Advent Movement with Notes on Pioneer Workers and
Early Experiences. Review & Herald Publ. Assn., 1941.
100
Joseph Bates, The Seventh-day Sabbath, A Perpetual Sign..., 2nd rev. ed. and enl. (Bedford,
MA: Benjamin Lindsey, 1847), iii, quoted in, Doctrine of the Sanctuary: A Historical Survey (1845-1863)
70
Sabbath was a scriptural command still binding on all Christians as taught in the Ten
Another key contribution from Bates was that he framed his understanding of the
Sabbath in the context of the three angels’ message of Revelation 14.102 He viewed those
messages as sequential. The first two (the hour of God’s judgment and the fall of
Babylon, he argued, had been preached by the Millerites. He also argued that verse 12
(“Here is the patience of the saints, here are they that keep the commandments of God
and have the faith of Jesus”) was now being fulfilled by Sabbath-keeping Adventists.
and the Sabbath became the cornerstone upon which early Adventists built their
theological structure and identity. Arguably, the Sabbath could be seen as the organising
principle because it was the Sabbath gatherings, through the liturgical acts of singing,
praying or preaching, that gave expression to their beliefs in the heavenly sancturary and
the Second Coming. It was the Sabbath that regulated their liturgical time and shaped
their weekly worship experience. But how did they worship? We now turn to this subject.
by Frank B. Holbrook, ed. (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute, General conference of Seventh-
day Adventists, 1989), 43-45.
101 Sabbath-keeping Adventists forged their identity from such biblical texts. For instance, James
White argued that “if the Ten Commandments are preserved in heaven, certainly they are not abolished on
earth” James White, “The Third Angel’s Message,” Present Truth, April 1850, 68, quoted in Doctrine of
the Sanctuary: A Historical Survey (1845-1863), 45, and that “a change in dispensations has not broken,
nor altered it.” James White, “The Law of God, or the Ten Commandments,” Present Truth, 4, quoted in
Doctrine of the Sanctuary, 45. Thus, Sabbath-keeping Adventists saw themselves as the end-time remnant
of Bible prophecy. Because of their literal adherence to the fourth commandment, they viewed themselves
as God’s representatives “who keep the commandments of God and have the faith of Jesus.”
102George Knight, Millennial Fever, 304-319; A Search for Identity, 64-81; Froom, Prophetic
Faith, 953-961.
71
3.2.3 Homes as Worship Centres
Literary sources on early Sabbatarian Adventist worship are scanty. Since they did
not own church buildings and were few in number, Adventist worshippers customarily
met in homes. Accounts of their worship experiences are at best anecdotal. Yet it seems
clear that the shift from the large Millerite meetings to the intimate setting of the home
affected the way they worshipped. Two kinds of worship experiences can be highlighted
here. These were (1) the early Bible Conferences, and (2) Social Meetings.
Most Sabbatarian believers lived far apart and did not have regular worship
together. One of the first traces of corporate worship was the ‘Sabbath Conferences’, a
series of meetings that took place between 1848 and 1850. Those meetings followed
had already devoted a lot of time to Bible study and prayer in an effort to ground and
harmonize their distinctive beliefs, especially the Second Advent, Sabbath and Sanctuary
doctrines.103
The Bible Conferences were intended to reach former Millerites with those newly
discovered teachings. The first Bible Conference took place at Rocky Hill, Connecticut,
Friday morning the brethren came in until we numbered about fifty. They were
not all fully in the truth. Our meeting that day was very interesting. Brother Bates
presented the commandments in a clear light, and their importance was urged
home by powerful testimonies. The word had effect to establish those already in
the truth, and to awaken those who were not fully decided.104
103 Cited in Jerry Moon, “Sabbatarian Bible Conferences,” in Ellen G. White Encyclopedia, eds.
Denis Fortin and Jerry Moon (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2014), 1111-1115.
104 Ellen White, Life Sketches of Ellen G. White (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1915), 108.
72
All Adventists, whether Sabbath-keeping or other former Millerites, did not share
the same view on what was considered to be Bible truth. For instance, at the second
conference in Volney, New York, there were thirty-five participants. According to Ellen
White: “There were hardly two (who) agreed. Each was strenuous for his views,
declaring that they were according to the Bible. All were anxious for an opportunity to
service during that meeting and yet even there they could not agree on how it should be
practiced. In her recollection of that event, Ellen White writes: “And as we had the
emblem of our dying Lord before us, and was about to commemorate his sufferings, Bro.
A. arose and said he had no faith in what we were about to do; that the Sacrament was a
keeping Adventists observed the Lord’s Supper, they were still deeply divided over its
theology and practice. It is during that same period of searching for theological
understanding through Bible Conferences that James White compiled and published the
first Sabbatarian hymnal that consisted of 53 hymns.107 His wife, Ellen, alludes to some
We would come together burdened in soul, praying that we might be one in faith
and doctrine. The Scriptures were opened with a sense of awe . . . Often we fasted
. . . After earnest prayer . . . then we would again bow in prayer, and earnest
supplications went up to heaven that God would help us . . . Many tears were shed
. . . we assembled for worship, and presented the truth.108
105 Ellen White, Spiritual Gifts, 2 Vols. (Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist Publishing
Association, 1860), 2:97; see also Life Sketches of Ellen G. White, 110.
106 Ibid.
107 James White, Hymns for Gods Peculiar People that Keep the Commandments of God, and the
Faith of Jesus (Oswego, NY: Richard Oliphant, 1849). Interestingly, the fourth hymn was a theme on foot
washing, indicating its importance and practice in the Communion service for Sabbatarian Adventists.
108 Ellen White, Christian Experience and Teachings of Ellen G White (Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 1922), 192.
73
From those little glimpses of the Bible Conferences and other events, we can
deduce that Bible study, exhortation, prayer, singing and communion were part of early
Sabbatarian worship.
In their early years, Adventists did not own church buildings. They “assembled
for worship, and presented the truth to those who would come to hear, in private houses,
The few Adventists had ministers who had been ordained by their previous
frontiers.110 How then did Adventists worship? In the absence of church buildings and
settled pastors, early Adventists practiced what they called “social meetings,” an informal
worship service, borrowed from Methodist practices,111 where testimonies and words of
believers to encourage each other and express their heartfelt devotion to God. Fellowship
in those occasional social meetings through songs, prayers, and the sharing of personal
life.112 Those occasional social meetings were a key element in sustaining their faith and
spirituality.113
109 Ellen G. White, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 2003), 26.
110 Ibid.
111 Ellen White, Early Writings (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1882), 298.
113 Hoffer J., The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, July 2, 1861.
74
3.2.4 Vocal and Bodily Responses
enthusiastic and emotional nature. They gathered with a sense of God’s presence in their
midst to which they responded with manifest fervor. Two modes of response can be
3.2.4.1 Shouts.
testimonies, prayers and singing. Through shouting, they expressed the intensity of their
religious experience and also exuded an awareness of God’s abiding and validating
presence in their midst. For them, their worship contrasted with the lukewarm “insipid
Ellen White narrates one such experience in a letter written November 7, 1850:
Our conference at Topsham was one of deep interest. Twenty-eight were present;
all took part in the meeting. Sunday the power of God came upon us like a mighty
rushing wind. All arose upon their feet and praised God with a loud voice; it was
something as it was when the foundation of the house of God was laid. The voice
of weeping could not be told from the voice of shouting. It was a triumphant time;
all were strengthened and refreshed. I never witnessed such a powerful time
before.115
Hastings, Ellen White pointed out that “singing to the glory of God often drove the
enemy, and shouting would beat him back and give us the victory.”116 Complaining that
75
“there was too little glorifying God in Israel and too little childlike simplicity,”117 she
went on to write that singing and shouting were effective in spiritual warfare to give
3.2.4.2 Prostrations.
floor, especially during prayers. This is how Ellen White describes one instance where it
Many prayers had been offered to God in my behalf, yet it pleased the Lord to try
our faith. After others had prayed, Brother Henry [Nichols] commenced praying,
and seemed much burdened, and with the power of God resting upon him, rose
from his knees, came across the room, and laid his hands upon my head, saying,
'Sister Ellen, Jesus Christ maketh thee whole,' and fell back prostrated by the
power of God. I believed that the work was of God, and the pain left me. 121
Another early occurrence was in a meeting that took place in 1848 in Connecticut.
Adventist believers were engaged in prayer. Ellen White describes it this way: “The spirit
[sic] came and we had a powerful season. Brother and Sister Ralph were both laid
117 Ibid.
120
G. W. Holt, "From Bro. Holt," Review and Herald, February 5, 1857, 110; James White,
Review and Herald, February 11, 1859.
122 Letter 1, 1848 (“To Brother and Sister Hastings,” May 29, 1848); For another instance of
prostration, see Ellen White, Letter 31, 1850; James White to Ellen White, November 6, 1860.
76
James White considered such manifestations as tangible evidence that Sabbath-
keeping Adventists were a peculiar people living under the principles of another
Kingdom. They are of those “who have been imbued with the spirit of the Advent faith
and hope, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have been partakers of the Holy Ghost,
and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come.”123 Hence,
community where God’s rule, although partial and provisional, was being manifested in a
distinct way.
Instead, they relied heavily on the continuous leading of the Holy Spirit in their decisions
on how to worship each time they meet. That openness to the Holy Spirit would
sometimes result in glossolalia,124 “holy laughter”125 and visions, especially in the case of
Ellen White.126
So far in our discussions, it has been observed that Sabbatarian Adventist worship
retained the evangelical fervor of the Millerites but with the absence of church buildings
124 Ellen White "Beloved Brethren, Scattered Abroad" Present Truth, December 1849. James
White to My Dear Brother, Berlin, Connecticut, July 2, 1848. Review and Herald, August 19, 1851. For
more details see, Arthur White, “Charismatic Experiences in Early Seventh-day Adventist History,” A
Reprint of Twelve Articles Published in the Review and Herald, August 10, 17, 24, 1972; March 15, 22, 29,
April 5, 12, 19, 26, and August 2, 9, 1973, accessed September 15, 2017,
http://www.whiteestate.org/issues/
Charism-ALW.html on; See for instance, Arthur L. White, Ellen G. White, Volume 1: The Early Years,
1827-1862 (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1985), 196,198,199. Adriel Chilson, "Pentecostalism in
Early Adventism," Adventist Review 169 (December 10, 1992), 18-19. William Fagal, "Tongues in Early
Adventism," Adventists Affirm 11 (Spring 1997), 26-34.
125 Ellen G. White, “To Brother and Sister Howland,” August 15, 1850 (Letter 12, 1850).
126 See especially Ellen White’s, A Sketch of the Experiences and Views of Ellen G. White,
Saratoga Springs, NY: James White, 1851.
77
and settled pastors, they experienced a freer flow of worship where the enthusiastic
exercise of charismata remained predominant. They did not follow a fixed pattern but
remained open to the leading of the Holy Spirit in their worship of God.
those elements of worship were not seen as ends in themselves. Their aim was to
experience God's presence in their midst as they waited for Christ’s coming.
identity as a “scattered remnant” waiting for the imminent Parousia and the necessity of
organizing a fast-growing movement.127 Yet, most early Adventists were against formal
organisation. Many of them, including their leaders, had been expelled from their former
they viewed church authority and church organisation with suspicion.128 The only form of
unity they envisaged was the distinctive doctrines they had in common, especially the
imminent return of Christ, Christ’s ministry in the heavenly sanctuary and the seventh-
day Sabbath. However, the Sabbatarian Adventist doctrinal system proved ineffective in
128 See George Knight, ed., 1844 and the Rise of Sabbatarian Adventism (Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 1994), 87-99; George Knight, Millennial Fever and the End of the World: A Study of
Millerite Adventism (Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1993), 141-158; George Knight, Organizing for Mission and
Growth: The Development of Adventist Church Structure (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2006),
28-47; Barry Oliver, SDA Church Organization: Past, Present and Future, PhD Dissertation (Berrien
Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1989).
78
3.3.1 Contributing Factors
Three major issues, all related to worship, threatened the burgeoning movement:
(1) fanaticism among believers; (2) self-appointed preachers; and (3) their inability to
legally hold church properties. Those factors together became a major catalyst in the
process by which the Sabbatarian Adventist movement developed into the Seventh-day
Adventist Church.
Religious enthusiasm is always fertile ground for excesses and it happened very
early with Sabbatarian Adventists. Of particular interest was a worship service held in
Atkinson, Maine in 1845129 where the leader of an Adventist meeting, Israel Dammon,
was arrested for disturbing public peace, following complaints by neighbors. His trial was
widely publicized130 and led to Adventists being branded as fanatics. The transcript of the
trial speaks of an “exceedingly noisy” meeting where people were all “talking at once,
farmer testified of the fanatical excesses this way: “I have been young, and now am old,
and of all the places I ever was in, I never saw such a confusion, not even in a drunken
frolic.”131
129 For more on the trial see: Frederick Hoyt, “We Lifted up Our Voices Like a Trumpet:
Millerites in Portland, Maine,” Spectrum August 1987: 29-36; “Trial of Elder I. Dammon,” Piscataquis
Farmer, March 7, 1845.
130 Daily Eastern Augus, "The Horrors of Millerism: Trial of Israel Dammon," Tri-Weekly Argus,
March 14, 1845, 1. “The Fruits of Millerism,” New York Observer, March 22, 1845, 47; “The Horrors of
Millerism,” Ontario Repository, March 26, 1845, 2.
131James Rowe’s testimony in Frederick Hoyt, ed., “Trial of Elder I. Dammon,” Piscataquis
Farmer, March 7, 1845, reprinted in Spectrum August 1987: 31.
79
James White and Ellen Harmon (White) were both present at that meeting132 but
would later distance themselves from similar types of meetings that occasionally affected
Adventist ranks. Their greatest worry was that some Sabbath-keeping Adventists had
embraced the idea that religion consisted only in great excitement and noise. As a result,
they were making impulse and emotion their guide rather than the Bible.133
However, the greatest danger was self-appointed preachers who went around
Adventist congregations causing havoc among members. Some of them lacked ethical
integrity while others held divergent doctrinal views.134 “Gospel order and perfect union
among the brethren, especially those who preach the Word,”135 became an urgent
Gospel ministers. Some of them lacked experience and wisdom137 while others had great
oratorical skills but lacked sanctification.138 Their work, according to Ellen White could
132 For Ellen White’s account of the same event, see Spiritual Gifts, 2:32-45.
138 Arthur Lacey White, Ellen White: Woman of Vision (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
2000), 74.
80
only result in confusion and disunion.139 At stake was the integrity and sanctity of the
preaching ministry.
The most important factor that forced the move towards denominational status
was the holding of church property—especially church buildings and the Adventist
publishing house.140 Because Sabbatarian Adventists had neither an official name nor
corporate existence, they could not hold property or legally own any asset. Those assets
had been registered in the names of individuals. Yet, their Millerite experience had
warned them that such an arrangement involved great danger, because some former
adherents that had chapels built on their land had legally claimed it as theirs when they
became disenfranchised from the movement.141 Yet, there was strong opposition to the
idea of having a denominational name.142 James White opposed the idea, by pointing to
the fact that as long as “we are stewards of our Lord’s goods here in the hand of the
enemy, it is our duty to conform to the laws of the land to the faithful performance of our
stewardship, as long as human laws do not oppose divine laws.”143 He further used a key
RULE. All means, which according to sound judgment, will advance the cause of truth,
81
and are not forbidden by plain scripture declarations, should be employed.”144 With that
declaration, White placed himself on the same platform as Anglican Richard Hooker who
centuries earlier had argued that the Church is free to order its life to all issues not
organised, as the first conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. On May 21,
1863, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists was formed and the movement
Official organisation did not significantly alter the way in which Adventists
worshipped. They kept gathering in (1) social meetings, to which they later added (2)
quarterly meetings and (3) camp meetings to minister more effectively to their growing
numbers. We now briefly turn our attention to these three forms of worship.
priority.146 For instance, in an article in the Review, parents were urged “to make the
social meeting of the highest interest to the children.”147 Another article in that same
82
publication described the true Adventist believer as someone who regularly attends social
meetings.148
What were the worship elements and the spiritual tone of those social meetings?
Uriah Smith, a longtime editor of the Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, described the
Although not exhaustive in itself, Smith’s description opens a window into the
mutual accountability).
We note here that Smith misses an important component of the social meetings—
prayer. We also note that Smith’s description emphasises the deep emotional component
of those meetings. But most importantly, we note the aim of those meetings: a time where
“faith and love flame up anew,” continuing the Adventist revival agenda.
Social meetings abounded with expressions of gratitude and worship to God. They
- Hymn
148 Review and Herald, June 2, 1891, par. 12; See also Letter 7, 1883; See also Early Writings,
114-118.
83
- Scripture Reading
- Opening Prayer
Meetings were a blend of order and spontaneity. Short testimonies were a distinct
feature of those meetings.151 Brevity was cherished while “old, dry, stale testimonies and
prayers”152 were considered to be a nuisance and out of place.153 The rationale behind this
was that “when one person takes up an undue proportion of the time, he is depriving
someone else of his privilege to speak in meeting, and is giving an entirely wrong mold to
the service.”154 The aim was to allow maximum participation. The basic pattern of the
meeting was simple and focused on glorifying God, expressed particularly in thanks and
praise. Their fundamental movement of response to God in worship was the celebration
Social meetings were often marked by enthusiasm and a deep sense of God’s
presence.155 The success of the meetings was often measured by its visible impact,
indicated by expressions such as, “the good Spirit of the Lord was there,”156 “[t]he Holy
151 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, March 25, 1858, 152; Signs of the Times, October
20, 1890, 522; Testimonies to the Church 4:70; Review and Herald, February 19, 1889; Review and Herald
October 22, 1889; Review and Herald July 21, 1891.
152 Letter 118, 1896, 5. “To Addie and May Walling,” November 17, 1896); 9 Manuscript
Releases 99.
153 Testimonies to the Church, 4:70; see also Review and Herald, October 22, 1889.
155 See for instance, Elias Goodwin, “Monthly Meetings in N.Y.,” Review and Herald, March 6,
1866.
156 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, November 12, 1861, 190.
84
Spirit was copiously poured on the people,”157 “we all felt that the Lord was present in
Spirit and power,”158 “[t]he Spirit of the Lord was manifested in a most marked
manner,”159 “[t]here is deep moving of the Spirit of God.”160 The climactic outcome was
when they had a real melting season161 that would sometimes include rejoicing in the
Lord, tears of gratitude162 and sometimes healing.163 We find those elements mentioned in
a letter written by Ellen White to her sons Willie and Edson in 1872 where she mentions
We have been engaged in earnest prayer before God about two hours . . . The
presence of God seemed to be in our midst . . . We made the case of your father a
special subject of our prayers . . . The blessing and power of God rested upon your
father and mother. We both fell to the floor. Your father, as he rose upon his feet
to praise God, could not stand. The blessing of God rested upon him with such
remarkable power. The angels of God seemed all around us. The awful, glorious
presence of God was in our midst. Elder Loughborough felt the power of God all
through his body. The room seemed holy . . . The praise of God was in our hearts
and upon our lips. We shouted the high praises of God.164
157 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, June 28, 1864, 33.
158 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, February 11, 1862, 85.
161 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, November 12, 1861, 190.
162 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, June 28, 1864, 33.
163 The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, February 11, 1862, 85.
85
Social meetings were also a time of worship where hearts were often touched and
confessions were made to God and to each other.165 Those worship experiences often
Social meetings were so prized that they were sometimes combined with the study
of the Word in Sabbath School,167 and after a “preaching service”168 whenever those
occurred. The sermon did not seem to be the high point of early Seventh-day Adventist
worship. The common understanding was that “the preaching service should generally be
short, so that an opportunity may be given to those who love God to express their
gratitude and adoration.”169 The Lord’s Supper also sometimes followed social
meetings.170
165Manuscript 18, 1889, 5. (Diary, February 23, 1889.); 9 Manuscript Releases 93; Review and
Herald, April 19, 1887.
166 Review and Herald, April 19, 1887; Review and Herald, July 21, 1891.
168 Review and Herald, February 10, 1885; Sign of the Times, March 16, 1882; Manuscript 37,
1892.
169
Sign of the Times June 6, 1895; see also Manuscript 32a, 1894, (Untitled Manuscript, July 30,
1894) 9 Manuscript Releases 96.
170Sign of the Times April 22, 1880, Art. B, par. 1; Letter 21, 1880, 2. (To James White, April 15,
1880.) 9 Manuscript Releases 97; The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, October 28, 1862; The
Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, November 6, 1880; General Conference Bulletin, June 4, 1913;
General Conference Bulletin, May 18, 1909.
86
Those testimony meetings were also conducted in other circumstances: in train
The fact that time was set apart at international meetings like the General
indicative of its importance among early Adventists. The order of the service at those
- Scripture Reading
- Season of Prayer
It seems from the evidence examined that social meetings did not follow a rigid
order but contained some distinguishing features, such as prayer(s), exhortations, song,
and most importantly spontaneous testimonies. The meetings were quite informal and
171 Review and Herald, February 17, 1885; General Conference Daily Bulletin, February 16,
1899.
174 Sign of the Times, May 17, 1883; Letter 1-1875; Manuscript 22-1885.11; Letter 31-1899;
Letter 42-1894.2; Manuscript 9-1895; The Retirement Years (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1990),
37.
175 For instance, at the General Conference session of 1893, we have the following mentions of
social meetings being held: General Conference Daily Bulletin January 31, 1893, 56; General Conference
Daily Bulletin February 24, 1893, 378; General Conference Daily Bulletin February 28, 1893; General
Conference Daily Bulletin March 6, 1893, 488; The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, May 27, 1858,
13.
87
highly participative in nature, as members would rise and speak briefly of their personal
faith and experience in the Lord.177 The main purpose of those testimonies was to provide
an opportunity for members to express freely their praise and thanksgiving, to confess
their sins and to renew their commitment to God and the cause of His Church.
In addition to the social meetings, Adventists in the 1860s began another type of
worship service called the “quarterly meetings,” borrowed from a common Methodist
area178 that convened every three months, a new way for Adventists to mark a sense of
and the celebration of the Lord’s Supper. The meetings normally started on a Friday
afternoon and extended through Sunday. A minister or in his absence an ordained local
Those meetings did not take place haphazardly. Announcements were made in the
Review stating the dates, the time, the venue and the name of the minister in charge of
leading worship. Members were urged to attend for their spiritual benefit.
Hence, in June 1877, the Review reported the General Conference Committee’s
recommendations for quarterly meetings. 179 They were to take place the first Saturday
178 The Signs of the Times, November 15, 1877, 351.20; The Adventist Review, and Sabbath
Herald, February 12, 1884, 102.
88
and Sunday in January, April, July, and October. Strict attendance was to be taken. Those
absent would receive a visit or a letter from the church leaders. A minister or in his
absence an ordained local church elder was to celebrate the ordinances. Sabbath evening
or Sunday morning, members would bring their contribution and give a report on their
Thus, discipleship and accountability were taken very seriously. Like the
Methodist class meeting, the aim was to “watch on one another with love.” Hence, the
quarterly meeting was designed to keep every person connected to the rest of the Church
and ensure that that no one was forgotten or left behind. To be an Adventist was not just a
the church and the support of its mission. Most significantly, those meetings were a time
to express genuine Christian love,181 especially through partaking of the Lord’s Supper.182
Adventist camp meetings were religious gatherings held for a number of days,
usually in a rural setting. Those meetings had a unifying factor and spiritual influence for
the few scattered believers to such an extent that Ellen White called them “a spiritual
feast.”183 Like the Millerite camp meetings, Sabbatarian camp meetings had in view the
180For more examples of Quarterly meetings, see The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald,
February 12, 1884, 102, and The Signs of the Times, January 28, 1889, 58.
181 See for instance a recollection of Adventist hospitality surrounding quarterly meetings in
Luella B. Priddy, “Stories of a Pioneer Church,” The Youth’s Instructor, January 19, 1926.
89
Adventists were at first reluctant to organise camp meetings because of its
potential for disorder. However, they tried their first camp meeting (which they termed a
Reporting on the event, Uriah Smith, the editor of the Review, mentioned that the
convocation started with a social meeting followed by preaching by James White, after
which his wife Ellen gave her testimony “with freedom and power.” The afternoon
followed the same sequence: social meeting, preaching services, and testimony from
Ellen White.
According to Smith, “the meeting in the evening was one of unusual solemnity
and power. Sister White bore her testimony with great freedom. Many were in tears, and
the pent-up emotions of the people found audible utterance in various parts of the
melting spirit,” during which many wept with tears of joy and relief, confessed their
backsliding and had their faith restored. People confessed that they had “no business on
hand during the four days of the meeting but to worship God.”187
The success of those meetings led the General Conference to recommend the
holding of a general camp meeting annually at the time of the church’s administration
186 Ibid.
187 Ibid. Apparently, no communion service was conducted during that first camp meeting.
However, there was an ordination service Saturday afternoon and a baptismal service the next day where
twelve individuals were baptised.
90
organise all future camp meetings. From that time until today, camp meetings have been a
The general pattern for the camp meeting was to have meetings from six in the
morning to ten at night. The daily program was filled with preaching, Bible studies and
lectures on issues like health and temperance.189 However, the social meetings still
meetings, shared his impression of an Adventist camp meeting in the Boston periodical
The Congregationalist.191
In great detail Revd. Quint’s identifies the key elements of a preaching service
during that camp meeting. He mentions the “wild, weird, touching songs of the Advent
prayer by a minister with “fiery earnestness” asking for the power of the Holy Spirit over
the preacher, intensely pleading for the one who “is not much of a preacher . . . only an
earthen vessel, and nothing but poor crockery at that.” Then Revd. Quint mentions the
second song, an old Christian hymn sung by the whole congregation, not in a “boisterous,
but mild” manner. Next follows the sermon, “bold, direct, and plain.” His account does
189 Review and Herald, September 18, 1879; Biography of E. G. White, 3:145.
190Review and Herald, October 1, 1867; Manuscript 158, 1899; Manuscript 191, 1907; Loma
Linda Messages, 121; Manuscript 176, 1905; Letter 31, 1900.
191 A. H. Quint, The Congregationalist September 9, 1867 quoted in Isaac Wellcome, History of
the Second Advent Message (Yarmouth, ME: Advent Christian Publication Society, 1874), 636-637.
91
not also mention the social meetings, or testimony services, a regular feature of
who know the language of the prophecies by heart . . . [holding] the belief that in a few
years, at the farthest, the trumpet shall sound; that most of those now living shall see the
Although convinced that “some of their peculiar views did not seem well judged;
their Scripture not always well applied; their experience not always well regulated,”
Revd. Quint recognises the “intense convictions and zeal” lying under the “Advent
peculiarity.” For him, it is “a genuine faith in the Lord Jesus, an implicit reliance on the
He further notes that those Adventists ignored the creeds but had an excellent
knowledge of the Bible. Again, he observes how one Adventist leader claimed that
Adventists were not Trinitarian or Unitarian yet finds the people expressing Trinitarian
faith in their prayers as they “addressed the Lord Jesus and the Holy Spirit in prayer,
Revd. Quint’s impartial account not only sheds light on how Adventists
worshipped during camp meetings but also opens a window into the soul of Adventist
spirituality and formative beliefs. Their faith was seeking understanding but their fervor
192See for instance, 21 Manuscript Releases 432.1; 3 BIO, 145; Letter 1-1875.44; Letter 25a-
1889.1; Manuscript 22-1885.11; Manuscript 9-1895.1.
92
3.3.3 A Major Turning Point: The Indiana Worship Experiment
One momentous event that has shaped and continues to shape the popular
1900. What happened during those camp meetings has been considered by some to be
“the most divisive episode in the history of our worship practices”194 and by others as
novelties. Basically, it was an Adventist holiness revivalistic movement that got out of
control. Its proponents described it as the “cleansing message” while its opponents
The movement had its origins in the late 1880s when Adventism had been shaken
by a renewed emphasis on the message of justification by faith 197 after years of emphasis
came also a renewed emphasis on victorious Christian living that, according to its main
proponent Albion Ballenger, would come through the baptism of the Holy Spirit. His
194
Andre Reis, “Ellen White and Music, With the Special Attention with the Music on the Indiana
Camp Meetings of 1900,” Paper presented at Andrews University Worship Conference on February 25,
2015.
195
Arthur Patrick (c. 1999), "Later Adventist Worship, Ellen White and the Holy Spirit: Further
Historical Perspectives," Spiritual Discernment Conference, accessed September 19, 2017,
http://www.sdanet.org/atissue/.
196 For the historical background, see Gary Land, “At the Edge of Holiness: Seventh-day
Adventism Receives the Holy Ghost, 1892-1900,” Fides et Historia, vol. XXXIII (Summer/Fall 2001), 13-
30. C.W Edwards and G. Land, A.F Ballenger, Adventism and American Christianity (MI: Andrews
University Press, 2000).
197 George Knight, A.T. Jones: Point Man on Adventism Charismatic Frontier (Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 2011); George R. Knight, Angry Saints: Tensions and Possibilities in the Adventist
Struggle Over Righteousness by Faith (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1989); Whidden Woodrow,
W. E. J. Waggoner: From the Physician of Good News to Agent of Division (Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 2008).
93
teachings were undoubtedly influenced by the writings of Holiness writers at a time when
Beginning in 1897 and continuing for two consecutive years, one message rang
out in local churches and camp meetings: “Receive ye the Holy Ghost.” Ballenger firmly
believed and strongly advocated that a baptism of the Holy Spirit would not only bring
victory over all sin but would also give power for witnessing and “salvation from
sickness.”199
evangelist, S. S. Davis, started teaching in 1899 that Christ attained “holy flesh” like that
of Adam before the Fall as He prayed victoriously in the garden of Gethsemane, the night
he was betrayed. They claimed it was the duty of true believers to go through the same
experience to attain sinless perfection and immortal bodies ready for translation at
Christ’s soon return.200 To enhance the impact of their perfectionistic teachings, they felt
A number of innovations were introduced. The first of these was to change the
songbook “Garden of Spices” replaced the official “The Seventh-day Adventist Hymn
198 See Adventist historian, Gary Land, At the Edge of Holiness, 26-28.
199Albion F. Ballenger, “The Loud Cry, Sermon by A.F Ballenger,” The Daily Bulletin of the
General Conference, February 23, 1899.
200 S. S. Davis, The Two Adams: And their Relation to the Two Covenants (Longansport, ID: L.F.
Elliott, 1898); R. S. Donnell, What I Taught in Indiana (Wagga Wagga, Australia: S. R. Buckley, 1992.
5.25. William H. Grotheer, Collection, “William H. Grotheer Collection,” Box. 5 FLD 18 (Berrien Springs,
MI: Center for Adventist Research, Andrews University).
94
and Tune Book.”201 The second innovation was the instruments they used. Whereas
innovators introduced a wide range of music instruments: “a big drum, two tambourines,
a big bass fiddle, two small fiddles, a flute and two cornets, and an organ,”202 reminiscent
of the Salvation Army. The sheer number and volume of those instruments completely
overpowered congregational and choir singing.203 One witness later recalled how the
instruments . . . until they became really hysterical . . . fairly shaking as though they had
the palsy.”204 Shouts of “Amens” and “Praise the Lord,” “Glory to God” accompanied the
service.205 In essence, the music was a conduit to facilitate the “Garden of Gethsemane”
experience.
Yet, the biggest and most fundamental problem was not the music. It was the
preacher and church leader, points out that they were “a mixture of truth and error with
201 Interestingly, promoters of the “Garden experience” used the denominational hymnal only
when the two senior church leaders in attendance, Stephen Haskell and A.J Breed, would preach, a clear
indication that the shift from the Adventist hymnbook to the Evangelical songbook might have met some
resistance or reticence from the church officials.
202 Hattie Haskell, “Letter to Sara McInterfer,” September 17, 1900. Stephen Haskell gives a
slightly different account: “an organ, one bass viol, three fiddles, two flutes, three tambourines, three horns,
and a big bass drum…” See, “S. N. Haskell to EGW,” September 25, 1900; Biography of E. G. White,
5:102.
204
Burton Wade account to A. L. White, January 12, 1962, accessed September 17, 2017,
http://www.whiteestate.org/issues/music.html#5.
95
This necessitated a third innovation: improvised raucous worship. The wife of
Last Sabbath they (Indiana ministers) took the early meeting also the 11:00
o'clock hour, and called them front to the altar as they call the little fence they
have around the pulpit. The poor sheep came flocking up until they were on the
ground three rows deep. The ministers kept up their shouting and, shall I call it
yelling . . . Finally, they had a season of prayer, then they got up and began
shouting, "Praise the Lord," "Glory" etc., falling on one another's neck and kissing
and shaking hands, keeping their music going with the noise, until many of them
looked almost crazy.207
Liturgical innovation seems to have been the order of the day. Another witness,
The followers of this doctrine would gather in the cleared basement of the church,
and a large number of them would dance in a large circle, shouting and lifting up
their hands. The children would be placed upon boxes or barrels, and they too
would shout and lift up their hands. In their church services, they would preach
and shout and pray until someone from the congregation would fall unconscious
from his seat. One or two men would be walking up and down the aisles watching
for just this demonstration, and would lay hold of the person who had fallen
literally dragging him up the aisle and placing him on the rostrum. Then a
number, perhaps a dozen, would gather about the prostrate form; some shouting,
some singing, and some praying, all at the same time. Finally, the individual
would revive, and he was then counted among the faithful who had passed
through the Garden.208
The problem was serious enough to warrant Ellen White’s return from Australia
to confront the issue head on. Addressing the General Conference in 1901, she plainly
stated that the "holy flesh" teaching was “an error” fueled by presumption and the
Enemy.209 Not only did Ellen White speak and write vigorously against the Holy Flesh
heresy,210 she also denounced the worship style that accompanied it. In White’s view, the
209Ellen G. White, Regarding the Movement in Indiana, General Conference Bulletin, April 23,
1901, 419-422.
210 For Ellen White’s argument against the Holy Flesh, see Selected Messages, 2:31-39.
96
Holy Flesh movement was theologically, liturgically, and also missiologically wrong. She
insisted:
The manner in which the meetings in Indiana have been carried on, with noise and
confusion, does not commend them to thoughtful, intelligent minds. There is
nothing in these demonstrations which will convince the world that we have the
truth. Mere noise and shouting are no evidence of sanctification, or of the descent
of the Holy Spirit. Your wild demonstrations create only disgust in the minds of
unbelievers. The fewer of such demonstrations there are, the better it will be for
the actors and for the people in general.211
No wonder, because of her strong influence and stark condemnation of the high
emotionalism at the Indiana camp meetings, and her warning that the same would happen
restrained form of worship, facing the dilemma of maintaining a revival agenda while
being deeply suspicious of overt emotions. It appears that the aspiration for “healthy
enthusiasm,”213 where both head and heart are engaged, began to slowly favour the
have gradually altered its worship ethos. With the ongoing construction of new church
still kept the social meetings, quarterly meetings and camp meetings but the earlier
97
tolerance for boundless enthusiasm slowly gave way to a more temperate style of
worship. Greater caution started being exercised, especially through the determining
influence of Ellen White who increasingly warned against the harm and danger of man-
induced excitement,214 affirming that God's work appeals to the “senses and reason of
In this stage of our history we must be very careful to guard against everything
that savors-of fanaticism and disorder. We must guard against all peculiar
exercises that would be likely to stir up the minds of unbelievers', and lead them
to think that as a people we are led by impulse, and delight in noise and confusion,
accompanied by eccentricities of action. Such experiences will come to us from
time to time. Let us give no place to strange exercisings, which really take the
mind away from the deep movings of the Holy Spirit. God's work is ever
characterized by calmness and dignity.216
Whereas in 1850, Ellen White was calling for shouting to beat the enemy, 217 more
than half a century later, she was urging restraint, appealing to “calmness and dignity.”218
A more cognitive form of worship steadily displaced the emotional and enthusiastic form
practices has been noted variously.219 Many factors seem to have contributed to such a
214 Manuscript 11, 1850 (Dec. 25); Letter 8,' 1860 (June 11); Letter 14, 1861 (c. 1861), published
in Signs of the Times, May 19, 1890; Review and Herald, July 28, 1896.
215Ellen G. White, "Sermon at Ashfield, Australia camp meeting," Nov. 3, 1894 (Manuscript 49,
1894). See also 1901, 421, published in Selected Messages, 2:35.
216Ellen G. White to Elder S. N. Haskell, Letter 338, 1908 (N&V. 26), published in Selected
Messages, 2:42.
219Murlin Burt, “Ellen G. White and Religious Enthusiasm in Early Adventist Experience,” in
Appendix B, The Ellen G. White Letters and Manuscripts: Volume 1; Theodore N. Levetrov, Early
Adventist Worship, 1845-1900s in Worship; Ronald D. Graybill, “Enthusiasm in Early Adventist Worship,”
Ministry, October 1991, 10-12; James Michael Wilson, “Enthusiasm and Charismatic Manifestations in
Sabbatarian Adventism with applications for Seventh-day Adventist Church of the Late Twentieth Century,
DMin Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1995); Arthur Patrick (c. 1999). "Early
Adventist worship, Ellen White and the Holy Spirit: Preliminary Historical Perspectives.” Spiritual
98
shift, including: (1) a changing American cultural and religious background, (2) a natural
educated, and seeking respectability, (3) doctrinal arguments eclipsing living experience,
(4) an institutionalizing process through the establishment of a denomination, and (5) the
Adventist church historian, Mervyn Maxwell suggests that a typical formal three-
- Hymn
- Pastoral Prayer
- Scriptures
- Hymn
- Sermon
- Hymn
- Benediction
However, the clearest indication on how most Adventists worship at the turn of
the book Church Order221 can be considered as the most reliable source in understanding
220 Mervyn Maxwell, 1962, Center of Adventist Research Center, Andrews University, File DF
2119, No. 23. He argues that this order of worship is inferred from Ellen White’s comment in Testimonies
to the Church, 5:492-494.
221H. M. J. Richards, Church Order and Its Divine Origin and Importance (Denver, CO:
Colorado Tract Society, 1906), accessed at the Center for Adventist Research, Andrews University.
99
Adventist worship in the 1900s. This publication is particularly significant because it
services” that “[t]he Seventh-day Adventist Church has no creed but the Bible. It has no
ritual. Its services are conducted with simplicity.”222 This introductory caveat seems to
indicate at least three things: (1) an Adventist espousal of the Free Church understanding
of worship where the plain reading of the Bible, not creeds, is understood as foundational
to worship; (2) a defense against possible accusations of creeping ritualism into the
church; (3) a strong preference for simplicity in worship, understood as more compatible
The minister enters the pulpit and kneels for a few moments in silent prayer to
God. All the people bow their heads and unite with their minister in silent prayer,
imploring the Divine blessing upon the services of the hour. Then the minister
announces the opening hymn, then all stand and join in the singing. After this the
minister and all the people kneel in prayer, while he leads them in a public
extemporaneous prayer of moderate length and appropriate to the needs of the
people and the subject of the sermon. Usually a second hymn is then sung, and the
sermon follows this. The service is concluded by another hymn sung by the entire
congregation, after which the benediction is pronounced by the minister.223
above description that Adventist worship had an ordered sequence where the minister and
the congregation were expected to behave in a certain way to offer proper worship to
God. The three essential elements of Adventist worship, prayers, sermon and songs, are
222 H. M. J. Richards, Church Order, 64. Note that the words in bold are in the original.
100
mentioned but this time clearly arranged sequentially. Adventist worship had taken this
shape:
- Opening hymn
- Pastoral Prayer
- Hymn
- Sermon
- Closing Hymn
- Benediction
reading from the service order. This change did not mean the cancellation of Bible
reading from Adventist liturgy. The Bible was most probably read before the sermon.
However, the absence of Scripture reading as a rubric in the order of service points to an
ongoing reality of Adventist worship: Scripture reading is not seen as a high point in
Adventist liturgy, the sermon is. Even with the reintroduction of Scripture reading, with
the first publication of the Adventist Church Manual in 1932, M.B Cady, wrote in 1936:
“there seemingly is a listless indifference manifest by many during the time allotted to
this reading.”224 By 1943, Taylor G. Bunch’s was asking the question: “Are Scripture
Readings Out of Date?,” observing: “The chief complaint against Scripture readings is
that they take too much time.”225 More recently, Donald Rhoads, expressed similar
concerns:
225 Taylor G. Bunch, “Are Scripture Readings Out of Date?” Ministry, May 1943, 23.
101
How, then, do Seventh-day Adventists justify our own common practice of
“Scripture reading” consisting of two or three verses that take up perhaps thirty
seconds, and then preaching for up to sixty minutes? How can we be “people of
the Book” while treating Scripture reading as incidental, one of the
“preliminaries” to worship? How is it that we who claim the Bible as “our only
rule of faith and practice” so often use it in worship only in bits and pieces?226
majority of Adventist congregations do not use a lectionary and Scripture reading is not
determined by the church but by the preacher of the day. Scripture reading is not often
seen as a liturgical act in its own right but as a prelude to or a launching pad into the
sermon. It is clear that the Word preached, not the Word read seems to be more central to
Adventist worship.
In his work, Richards also conveys the essence of liturgical freedom. Faithful to
the Free-Church tradition, Richards points out that there was room for flexibility in the
Adventist liturgy:
The order is sometimes varied by the introduction of special music, such as sacred
solos, duets, quartets or anthems; and occasionally by the introduction of a short-
Scripture reading at some time before the sermon; and at times a short prayer is
introduced after the sermon before the service and the benediction at the close are
[sic] never omitted when an ordained minister conducts the service.227
The most obvious change was the addition of special music, such as sacred solos,
duets, quartets or anthems and the addition of musical instruments into corporate worship.
- Opening hymn
- Pastoral Prayer
226 Donald Rhoads, “The Word in Worship: Giving God's Word A Prominent Place in Worship,”
Ministry, January 1998, 18.
102
- Scripture Reading
- Special Music
- Sermon
- Prayer
- Closing Hymn
- Benediction
also interesting to note that the only time Richards becomes slightly prescriptive in tone,
is when he mentions that announcements are to be made either before the sermon or
preferably before the opening prayer.229 Richards also highlights another crucial point:
emerging in Adventist worship with prayer, preaching and singing as the primary
Parameters for who was to do what in worship were also clearly spelled out. This
indicates that the culture of informality and spontaneity, once very present in Adventist
worship, was diminishing. The order in which those elements took place is considered
important, indicating a formalizing process. Another observation that can be made at this
point is that the order of service described by Richards in 1906 is quite similar to most
103
Adventist worship all over the world today, indicating the solidification and
This consistency in worship practices over the years can be traced back to the
introduction of the official and widely used Church Manual, to which we now turn our
attention.
discussions for a while even before they became a denomination. Many had previously
written on the need for “Gospel Order” or church organisation.232 The first serious
attempt at writing a Church Manual was made in 1882233 but was rejected for fear it
would constitute a human attempt to control things, sidelining the leading of the Spirit,
and ultimately replacing the Bible with a creed.234 It would take half a century for those
232James White, “Gospel Order,” Review and Herald, December 20, 1853, 188-189; J. B. Frisbie,
“Church Order,” Review and Herald, January 9, 1855, 153-155; J. H. Waggoner, The Church: Its
Organization, Ordinances, and Discipline (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press, 1886), 15-16; J. N. Loughborough,
The Church: Its Organization, Order, and Discipline (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1907), 66-71.
233 For a brief history of the Church Manual see, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists,
Church Manual (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2015), 15-16; Neufeld, Don F., and Donald Ernest
Mansell, eds. Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 1996), 368-369;
Gilbert Valentine, “The Stop-Start Journey on the Road to a Church Manual, Part I” Ministry Magazine,
April 1999, 14-19.
234 See G. I. Butler article enumerating the delegates’ views in Review and Herald, 60:745,
November 27, 1883. For further analysis see Brendan Pratt, "Functional structures in the local Seventh-day
Adventist Church in Australia and New Zealand: A paradigm for renewal,” M.Th. thesis (Australia:
Avondale College (2004), 83-86; and Gerard Damsteegt, “Have Adventists abandoned the Biblical model
of leadership for the local church?” in Samuel Koranteng–Pipim (ed.), Here We Stand: Evaluating New
Trends in the Church (Berrien Springs, MI: Adventists Affirm, 2005), 654–61.
104
Church Manual in 1932. The rationale for it was that “both the Bible and experience
teach that order and system are necessary in carrying on the work of the church.”235
The Church Manual of 1932 states that the worship “is held for worshiping the
Lord” and that it is “usually and properly the occasion for preaching or Bible study.”236 It
also specifies that an ordained minister in active service is the one to lead worship. In his
absence, the elders or their designee have charge. Interestingly, the social meeting that
had been for many years the main way to conduct worship had now become an option.237
The 1932 Church Manual stresses the need for reverence and decorum in
conducting worship. When pointing to the order of service, it stresses, as did Richards
years before, that “it has never been our custom to prescribe a set form or order for public
worship.”238 The 1932 Church Manual further adds: “A short order of service is usually
better suited to the real spirit of worship. Long preliminaries should be avoided. Thus,
important, the 1932 Church Manual (and all subsequent Church Manuals) implicitly
separates the service between “preliminaries” and the sermon, suggesting that preaching
occupies a dominant role. This is in contrast with what Ellen White, one of the
denomination’s founders, wrote nearly 40 years earlier, i.e., “the preaching service should
generally be short, so that an opportunity may be given to those who love God to express
237 Ibid.
238 Ibid.
239 Ibid.
105
their gratitude and adoration.”240 This indicates that instead of being predominantly a
Word-centred worship, where the focus was mainly on the proclamation of Scripture.
This illustrates a move from the emotional to the cognitive. The worshipper’s encounter
with God was no longer predominantly associated with jubilant praise but with an
Like H. M. J. Richards’ 1906 book, the 1932 Church Manual suggests two orders
In the footnote to the order of service, the Church Manual makes this illuminating
comment about what worshippers should do before and after church service. Quietness
240Signs of the Times, June 6, 1895, par. 3; see also Manuscript 32a, 1894, 2. (Untitled
Manuscript, July 30, 1894.) 9 Manuscript Releases 96.1.
106
After the benediction the congregation resume their seats, and remain for a few
moments of silent prayer, while the organ is played very softly. During this time
the minister walks quietly to the door, where he will be ready to greet the people,
as, at a given signal from the organist, all arise and pass out of the house of
worship. Visiting and talking in the church auditorium is thus avoided.241
Later Church Manuals did not make any change to the prescribed order of service
until 1951242 when two changes are noticed: (1) the disappearance of Scripture reading in
the short service, reducing the amount of Scripture purposely read in worship; and (2) an
alternative concerning post benediction: the congregation could opt to remain standing or
to sit.
Two sentences from their first Church Manual (1932) and from the most recent
one (2015) capture similar attitudes toward the order of Adventist worship. The first
Church Manual simply states that “[i]t has never been our custom to prescribe a set form
or order for public worship.”243 The latest Church Manual points forth the same idea:
“Forms of service vary from country to country and culture to culture.”244 Yet,
Adventists, across the world, have generally maintained liturgical uniformity by adhering
to the suggested orders of the Church Manual. Their church service reflects the threefold
245Church Manual, 2015, 121. The 1951 states “Promptness, reverence, and simplicity should
characterize the whole service.”
107
The greatest change is elsewhere. It is found in a clearer spelling out of an
The Sabbath worship service is the most important of all the meetings of the
church. Here the members gather week by week to hear the Word of God, to unite
in worshiping God in a spirit of praise and thanksgiving, and to gather strength
and grace to fight the battles of life. Promptness, reverence, and simplicity should
characterize the whole service.246
The revised Church Manual of 1951 also expressly emphasises the sacred
character of worship, especially in its corporate manifestation and the necessity of careful
planning.247 Most importantly, the 1951 Manual explains the two main divisions of the
worship service: “1. The congregational response in praise and adoration, expressed in
song, prayer, and gifts. 2. The message of instruction from the Word of God.”248
Concerning those officiating, the Church Manual spells out their duty as follows:
He who brings the message and breaks the bread of life should fully sense the
sacredness of this work. He should be thoroughly prepared. Then, too, the one
leading the worshipers into the presence of God through the medium of the
pastoral prayer is performing perhaps the holiest exercise of the whole service,
and he who is charged with this responsibility must sense its importance. He
should face the congregation, and the congregation in turn should as far as
possible kneel and face the rostrum. The prayer should be brief but should include
the personal needs of the worshipers as well as the great world field.249
choir singing is deemed “appropriate.” The offering is seen as “a vital part of the worship
108
hour.”250 The deepening of the theology of Adventist worship in the 1951 Church Manual
The 2015 edition of the Church Manual reflects an even clearer understanding. It
states:
The purpose of all services and meetings is to worship God for His creative work
and for the benefits of His salvation; to understand His Word, His teachings, and
His purposes; to fellowship in faith and love; to witness about our personal faith
in Christ’s atoning sacrifice at the cross; and to learn how to fulfill the gospel
commission of making disciples in all the world (Matt. 28:19, 20).251
between creation, salvation and worship is highlighted. The church at worship is seen as
the community of creation and salvation, gathered around the Word, united in
Church Manual, has given Adventism a recognizable liturgical identity over the years.
Although openness to local expressions has never been stifled, local congregations have
weekly worship. One of those congregations is the Battle Creek Seventh-day Adventist
Church in Michigan. Built in 1878, the Battle Creek Church was home to James and
Ellen White for many years. A comparison of their Church Bulletins over the years
109
reveals a conservative Free-Church understanding of worship. The following table shows
a comparison of their orders of service, from the dedication service of the church held on
Sunday, the 20th of April 1879 to a later typical service held on September 23, 2017
Battle Creek November June 16, 1962 January 20, 1990 September 23,
(Dedication 8, 1919 2017
Service) 1879
Anthem Musical THE MEDITATION GATHERING Welcome &
Prelude IN HIS Announcements
PRESENCE
Invocation Gloria Organ Prelude of Hymns Praise Sing
Hymn Invocation Focus on God’s Call to
Family Worship
Scripture Reading Hymn THE INVOCATION Call to Worship Opening Hymn
[Brief History of Scripture Pastoral Call to Worship Giving of Gifts Congregational
denominational Reading Prayer
work in Battle
Creek]
[Building Prayer Choral Call to Worship Offertory Lamb’s
Committee Offering
Report]
Hymn Chorus Processional Hymn Hymn of Praise Children’s
Story
Sermon Offertory The Invocation and Lord’s Invocation Giving of Gifts
Prayer
Hymn Sermon Gloria Patri Offertory
Dedicatory [Baptismal CELEBRATING Scripture
Prayer Service] HIS GOODNESS Reading
Anthem THE DEDICATION OF From the Children’s Special Music
GIFTS Perspective
Benediction Presentation of Tithes and Sharing His Sermon
Offerings Goodness
Choral Prayer of Choir Anthem Closing Hymn
Dedication
Offertory Congregational Benediction
Prayer
Proclaiming God’s Postlude
Word
THE PREPARATION
AND DEDICATION OF
HEART
Hymn
Reading of God’s Word COMMITTING
OUR LIVES
Prayer Hymn of Response
Choral Response Choral Commitment
Benediction
THE MINISTRATION Postlude
OF THE WORD
Anthem
Sermon
Hymn
THE BENEDICTION
The Prayer of Blessing
Choral Benediction
Postlude
110
111
Covering a period of more than a century, the Battle Creek SDA Church bulletins
reveal a quite stable order of service with varying degree of explicit theological
awareness. For instance, the 1962 bulletin demonstrates a lot of intentionality in the order
of service where each part of the service is carefully thought through. By contrast, the
2017 order of service, which now includes ‘Praise Sing’ section, indicates a major change
in how the church conducts its worship every week. We now turn to this new
The period of the late 1980s saw a renewed interest among a number of Adventist
worship to be more in tune with the changing times. We will select two main types of
services that reflect worship renewal: (1) Celebration or contemporary services, and (2)
blended-worship.
traditional format of worship. They started experimenting with new ways of glorifying
God by giving renewed prominence to the joyful praise of God. That led to the
Although the roots of this particular form of worship can be traced back to such
112
churches and the Jesus Movement of the 1960s ,252 it is most closely linked to what Peter
Wagner calls the “Third Wave of Charismatic movements”253 that swept across the
movement and its subsequent influence over churches have meant that “charismatic styles
touch of Pentecost, it is accused by others of representing ‘the blowing not of the Spirit of
organ or piano gave way to drum sets, electric guitars and a variety of modern
instruments. Instead of old hymns, congregations started singing newly released Praise
and Worship songs written in contemporary tunes and beats. In place of singing from the
Three main elements comprised the order of service and are still traceable in
today’s contemporary worship services. These are praise, prayer, and preaching. The
252 James F. White, Protestant Worship: Traditions in Transition. (Louisville, KY: Westminster
John Knox Press, 1989), 192-216; Don Williams, Charismatic Worship in Paul A. Basden, ed., Exploring
the Worship Spectrum: Six Views (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004), 139-144; Robb Redman, The
Great Worship Awakening (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2002), 22-27; see also Platinga and
Rozeboom, Discerning the Spirits, 27-38; Basden, Exploring the Worship Spectrum, 75-83.
253 Wagner suggests that the first wave was the Pentecostal movement of the 1900s, followed by
the charismatic movement of the 1960s. According to him, the third wave which started in the 1970s and
80s is still unfurling. See Peter Wagner, The Third Wave of the Holy Spirit: Encountering Power of Signs
and Wonders Today (Ann Arbour, MI: Servant, 1988).
254 Simon Coleman, The Globalisation of Charismatic Christianity: Spreading the Gospel of
Prosperity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 22.
255Cornelius Platinga Jr. and Sue Rozeboom, Discerning the Spirits: A Guide to Thinking About
Christian Worship Today (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2003), 3.
113
- Welcome and Invocation
- Scripture Reading
- Pastoral Prayer
- The sermon
- Prayer
- Chorus
large screens. Congregational singing follows the typology of the Old Testament
and praise at the gate, (2) repentance and cleansing in the courtyard, (3) proclamation of
God’s Word and action in the Holy Spirit in the holy place, and (4) drawing near into the
intimate relationship with God in the most holy place where one speaks directly to
God.”256
actively seek the presence of God through the sacramental use of contemporary worship
songs.257 From fast-paced praise songs that extol God’s greatness and power to mellow
257 For an analysis of such style of worship, see Lester Ruth, “Praise & Worship Movement” in
Paul F. Bradshaw, ed., The New SCM Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship (London: SCM Press, 2002), 378.
114
In most contemporary services, lyrics are kept simple, current and short and they
stress heartfelt thanks and praise for God’s greatness and goodness. The use of
PowerPoint technology in worship services also favours greater bodily freedom than
hymnals would allow. The raising of hands and clapping in worship are not uncommon.
Another element of the nature of music in those churches is the emphasis of songs
to God rather than songs about God. In his study on contemporary music, Anglican
theologian, Pete Ward, argues that this shift denotes a move from objective to reflexive
“objective” rehearsal of salvation history, contemporary songs tend to stress more our
feelings and emotions toward God. This shift is accompanied by a greater sense of
proximity and expectation because it emphasises God’s present involvement in the midst
The next section after the extended period of singing is the reading of Scripture
sometimes followed by a well-rehearsed drama describing the joys and dilemmas of life.
Usually after the drama come some announcements, the offertory and the pastoral prayer.
The pastoral prayer allows time for a prolonged period of prayer. Worshippers
who feel a special need for God’s intervention in their lives are invited to come forward
while soft music is played. Worshippers come forward and kneel as the pastor prays
audibly and other worship leaders lay hands upon them, while interceding silently.
The next item is a “practical” sermon, delivered in simple language and illustrated
with PowerPoint presentations or video clips. The aim is to be relevant and to meet
worshippers’ needs. The service then ends with a prayer and a simple chorus.
258 Pete Ward, Selling Worship: How What We Sing Has Changed the Church (Milton Keynes,
England: Paternoster, 2005), 207.
115
in worship, contrasting with the more cognitive experience usually presented in
not unplanned. Many of the celebration churches have developed a theology of worship
Celebration Center in California released a statement in 1991 to explain the basis of their
worship practices. It describes worship as a response in spirit and in truth where attitudes
and emotions are involved. Then, it builds a case with Bible references to legitimize
exercises like shouting, the lifting of the hands as well as clapping.259 Regardless of their
quite a storm of criticism from certain corners, especially in the early stage. 260 Some
expressed fear that such worship expressions were introducing Neo-Pentecostalism into
the denomination, repeating the much-feared Holy Flesh movement of the 1900s. Others
raised a concern whether such worship services would not be detrimental to the
denomination in the long run because of their obsession with novelty and the toning down
Adventist theologians, like Raymond Holmes, were quick to point out that
celebration services had introduced unexpected dynamics into Adventist worship, ranging
259R. and D. Shelden, “Celebration Center: Concepts on Church Service,” handout given at the
Lay-Expo, Riverside, CA, 15 February 1991, quoted in Viviane Haenni, 101.
260 For critical views against Celebration churches, see Viviane Haenni, “The Colton Celebration
Congregation,” 247-283. For more recent critics see for instance Adventist Affirm, Summer 2000, vol.4,
no.2; Samuel Koranteng-Pipim, ed., Here We Stand: Evaluating New Trends in the Church (Berrien
Springs, MI: Adventists Affirm, 2005); Harold B. Hannum, “Worship: Sacred and Secular,” Elder’s Digest,
October/December 2007.
116
model and a feel-good mentality.261 According to Holmes, Adventism had become
vulnerable to such styles of worship because of the lack of attention given to worship and
this had created a vacuum that celebration services filled. For Holmes, it was definitely
time for Adventists to begin thinking seriously about an Adventist theology of worship. 262
Yet, celebration services also received affirmation from other corners263 who felt
that Adventist worship was due for urgent renewal if it were to remain meaningful and
relevant to members and visitors alike, making the observation that churches that had
Others expressed the view that celebration services were in a way a reconnecting with the
early Adventist worship tradition that gave more space to spontaneity, praise and the
As time passed, the polarization over worship styles subsided within Adventism.
number of churches that have kept the basic traditional order of service. This does not
mean that churches which embrace contemporary worship do not exercise an influence on
Adventist worship, especially on congregations who are open to liturgical changes but
261 See for instance, Raymond Holmes, “Authentic Adventist Worship” Ministry, October 1991,
13-16.
263J. David Newman and Kenneth Wade, “Is it Safe to Celebrate,” Ministry Magazine, June 1990,
26-29; John Solomon, “Worship and Praise: One Model for Change in the Worship Hour,” Ministry
Magazine, February 2000, 16-19.
264Darryl Comstock, “Selling Change: How to Bring about Change in your Church without
Losing your Members” Ministry Magazine, October 1991, 30.
265 Arthur Patrick, (c. 1999), “Early Adventist Worship, Ellen White and the Holy Spirit:
Preliminary Historical Perspectives," Spiritual Discernment Conference, accessed November 2, 2017,
http://www.sdanet.
org/atissue/.
117
that are not ready to discard the benefits of traditional Adventist worship. Those churches
The point of blended services is to secure the full participation of the whole
church, with elements of Adventist tradition, contemporary praise songs and innovation
The increasing popularity of such types of services can be attributed to the fact that there
are an increasing number of congregations that want to experience an eclectic mix of the
old and new style in their worship of God. According to AdventSource, the official
ministry resource distribution centre for the Adventist Church in North America, it is
projected “that the blended service will be the format that will see the most growth and
In most churches, like Battle Creek SDA Church (see previous chart), however, a
singing at the beginning of the worship in which traditional church hymnals and
contemporary music are both sung. After that moment of congregational singing, the
Other blended services use predominantly new songs throughout the whole
service, but still follow quite closely the traditional order of service as suggested in the
266 Adventist blended services should not be confused with the blended or convergence worship
associated with Robert E. Webber who defines blended worship as “a synthesis of the liturgical and
contemporary worship renewal movements of the twentieth century.” (Robert Webber, Exploring the
Worship Spectrum (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004), 175. Adventists have not included the Catholic
liturgical renewal movement into their liturgy but have moderately added elements of the charismatic
renewal movement to their worship services.
267 Jim Teel, “Worship Styles,” accessed October 29, 2017, https://www.adventsource.org/as30/
plusLine.article.aspx?id=178.
118
Church Manual. Below are two examples of blended services held in 2017 in two
Maryland. They are listed side-by-side with the latest Church Manual’s suggested order
268 Azure Hills SDA Church mission statement is “to continue Christ’s ministry of revealing
God’s character, rejoicing in righteousness by faith and responding to people’s needs.” Church’s website
last accessed on October 29, 2017.
269 Azure Hills Church, Bulletin of October 21, 2017, accessed on October 29, 2017,
http://www.azurehills.org.
270 Restoration Praise Center does not use church bulletins. The order of service shown is
extracted from a longer ‘flow sheet’ used by worship leaders. Sent to me by the senior Pastor, Paul Graham,
on October 29, 2017 covering the 28th October worship.
119
As indicated in the chart above, worshippers who attend Adventist blended
services tend to sing much more than those who attend traditional services. Preaching is
still central to the liturgical assembly but is not as dominant as in a typical traditional
worship service. Blended worship in Adventist congregations tends to put more emphasis
on a relational encounter with God and this is experienced mostly through music. In this
Other churches experience blended services in a more radical way. One of them is
the Church of the Advent Hope in New York City.271 The church started in 1956 and has a
membership of 200. Contrary to most Adventist churches, they have recently (2017)
started following a fourfold pattern of Gather, Word, Response (or Table on communion
the rationale behind that change in those words: “We thought it would help us be more
271 Their statement on worship reflects their commitment to a relationship with God and their
neighbor. “Worshipping God together is an opportunity to meet one another as we meet the God who
welcomes us all. We exist as a Church to live in loving, worshipful relationship with God and in loving
community with all members of the human family. We gather every Saturday morning to practice this way
of being in the world, taking time to be present to God, who is always present to us, and to be present to one
another. We believe that the good news of welcome, reconciliation and healing through Jesus is for
everyone; it changes us and changes the world. So wherever you are in your spiritual journey, you are
welcome here. We value diversity because we are all reflections of God’s image an essential part of a
shared story. Join us as we rehearse this story, pray, give thanks, lament, question and learn to love
together.” Accessed October 31, 2017, https://www.adventhope.org/worship/.
272 Stephen Zork, Advent Hope’s minister of music, interview conducted on November 2, 2017.
120
Their typical worship service273 looks like this:
Prelude
Gathering
Invocation, Confession and Petition (Worship Leader Prays):
Holy God, we gather to worship You, our Creator and Redeemer, believing that
you are present with us. We confess that we have sinned against You in thought,
word, and deed, by what we have done, and by what we have left undone. Forgive
us of our sins, heal and transform us by the Spirit, and raise us to new life in Jesus
Christ our Lord.
Gathering Song
Welcome and Interview with Community Member
Meet and greet
Kid's Feature
Musical Meditation
Word
Song
Scripture Reading
Reader: This is the Word of the Lord
Congregation: Thanks be to God
Sermon
Response
Song of Response
Gospel Reading (congregationally and standing)
Song of Response
Congregational Prayer
Song Reprise
Sending
Community Life (Announcements)
Offertory
Song of Response
Benediction & Dismissal
Dismissal: And now may the God who is present to you be present through you as
you bless one another with the words 'Sabbath Peace.'
Postlude
Stephen Zork further explains the move to a fourfold pattern this way:
273Extracted from the more elaborate template used by worship leaders. Submitted by Stephen
Zork, Advent Hope worship leader, on October 30, 2017 for November 4, 2017 worship service.
121
meet God and one another, to welcome as we are welcomed, to include as we are
included. We encounter the WORD and rehearse the Gospel story. We
RESPOND, ideally at the Table by accepting the gift of Jesus, giving thanks and
sharing that reality with others. And we are SENT—we are transformed by God
through the practices we have rehearsed together in God’s presence. And we live
out the liturgy of life differently, for the sake of world, as a result.274
For churches like Advent Hope, to worship means first of all a way of being
in return.
In addressing the history of Adventist worship, our aim was to elucidate and
clarify its essential nature and characteristics. We did so by establishing the liturgical
facts through an analysis of who Adventists are and how they have been worshipping
over the years. As Schmemann explains, the task of the liturgical theologian is to
“translate what is expressed by the language of worship- its structures, its ceremonies, its
texts and its whole ‘spirit’- into the language of theology.”275 In other words, we have
looked at what he calls the core structure of the liturgy to elucidate its theological
meaning.
However, whereas Schmemann worked with the relatively fixed liturgy of the
122
whose official position states that “there is no set form or order for public worship”276 and
that “forms of service vary from country to country and culture to culture.”277
all, by agreeing with worship historian, James F. White that “[p]eople are the primary
liturgical document.”278 In other words, a worship tradition, especially for those in the
Free Church tradition, can be best understood in terms of the people themselves. We need
to know what they consider important and how those elements are reflected in their act of
worship. For White, it is necessary to know their distinct piety, “the essential equipment
worshippers bring to church,”279 and how they relate to time and space.280 Baptist
theologian, Christopher Ellis, calls all these essentials “liturgical values.” He insists that it
is those liturgical values, and not merely an ordo, that can help us better understand Free
Tradition does not carry for the Free Churches the burden of authority which it
would carry within the Roman Catholic or Orthodox Churches. Authority is found
elsewhere-in Scripture, the missionary imperative, pastoral need and common
sense rationalism. Thus, the ordo, the underlying principles, of evolving worship
cannot carry lex credendi in the way that Schmemann claims for the Orthodox,
because the patterning of worship is subservient to other theological authorities.281
Unless one also understands these dynamics, it would be impossible to detect and
articulate a reliable theology of worship. Our historical survey reveals general shapes or
patterns as well as liturgical values that are operative in Adventist worship. Those
123
findings will now provide the basis for exploring and developing an Adventist theology
Christianity. Adventists do not observe a liturgical year. They have their own ‘church
year’ that is divided into four quarters and they celebrate the Lord’s Supper at the end of
each quarter. Worship on Saturday, rather than Sunday, is the most distinguishing feature
worship. Instead, they observe the seventh day Sabbath in literal obedience to the fourth
commandment and consecrate this day for their public acts of worship. “It is this weekly
celebration that gives Adventists their particular understanding of time, their peculiar
temporal obligations, and their sense of extraordinary future that is projected for the
church.”282 It must be noted that the Adventist interpretation of the Sabbath has been
relatively consistent since the 1840s. Its observance has been supported through the use
of Scriptural and historical data. However, whereas early literature insisted mostly on the
right day of worship, more recent writings have been more theological in nature, insisting
on the right way of worship. Greater emphasis has been laid on the existential and
liturgical dimension of the Sabbath.283 This aspect of the Sabbath will be developed fully
in Chapter Six.
Second, we note that despite the fact that authority for liturgical adaptations is
vested in local congregations, Adventism does not display a wide variety of worship
practices. Its worship has a recognizable shape that can be attributed to the influence of
283 Samuele Bacchiochi, Divine Rest for Human Restlessness: A Theological Study of the Good
News of the Sabbath for Today. Berrien Springs, MI: Biblical Perspectives, 1990; Roy Branson, Festival of
the Sabbath. Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985; Sakae Kubo, God Meets Man: A
Theology of the Sabbath and Second Advent. Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing Association, 1978; Sigve
Tonstad, The Lost Meaning of the Seventh Day. Berrien Springs MI, Andrews University Press, 2009.
124
the Church Manual that has governed Adventist local church polity since 1932. Common
worship is generally restrained and carefully organised, and bears no resemblance to the
arrangement of items in the service ensures that there are both form and freedom in
Adventist worship.
Christ is best expressed by worship that comes from the heart, most clearly expressed
through extemporaneous prayers. As such, “The Lord’s prayer,” for instance, “is not a
Christ.”285 In addition, decorum is not dependent upon elaborate ceremonies but relies
other words, worship is spiritual in the sense that it is heavily dependent on the activity of
the Holy Spirit. This implies the full engagement of the liturgical assembly whether it is
through their praying, praising, giving or preaching. Worshippers may express spiritual
Lord,” or simply by a teary eye. This presupposes an active personal spirituality that finds
its climatic expression in the liturgical assembly. Finally, Adventist worship recognises
284Malcolm Bull and Keith Lockhart, Seeking a Sanctuary: Seventh-day Adventism and the
American Dream, 2nd ed., (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2007), 221.
125
the centrality of preaching. The sermon is the centrepiece of the liturgy. Worshippers
come with the expectation of receiving a word from the Lord delivered by an
inspirational preacher. The assembly’s experience of God is never divorced from the act
of proclamation. The sermon is not for intellectual information only but for spiritual
response on the part of worshippers. On the other hand, Communion is not a regular
feature of Adventist worship. The focus is on the pulpit rather than on the table. God is
principally met through the preaching of the Word rather than in the partaking of
emblems.
With this historical overview of Adventist worship, we are now ready to address
in more detail the central elements that constitute Adventist weekly worship.
126
CHAPTER FOUR
addressed its history, identified the central elements as well as the liturgical values that
have constantly shaped and undergirded its practice. This chapter now examines the
central components of Adventist weekly worship, namely prayer, preaching, singing and
worship, as well as the ordinances of baptism and Communion, will also receive our
attention. However, in order to better interpret Adventist public worship, it is crucial that
underestimated because they shape each other.1 Adventist corporate worship draws on the
vibrancy of private and family worship. Conversely, devotional practices are shaped by
what happens in public worship. Hence, our starting point in this chapter is a brief
1 Tish Harrison, Liturgy of the Ordinary: Sacred Practices in Everyday Life (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 2016); Aidan Kavanagh, Religious Life and Worship; Angela Ashwin, “Spirituality and
Corporate Worship — Separate Worlds or Vitally Connected?” Worship 75 no. 2, March 2, 2001, 106–29;
E. Glenn Hinson, “Private Springs of Public Worship,” Review & Expositor, 1983, 109-117; McKenzie,
Jennifer, “Benedictine Spirituality and Congregational Life: Living Out St. Benedicts's Rule in the Parish,”
Congregations 30 no. 1, Winter 2004, 31–33; James K. A. Smith, Desiring the Kingdom: Worship,
Worldview, and Cultural Formation (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2009); Lee Magness Lee, “You
(All) Are the Temple of God: Spirituality and Worship,” Leaven 12(4), Article 11, 2004; Nancy
Rosenberger Faus, “Spirituality and Worship in the Church of the Brethren,” Brethren Life and Thought 39
(4): 241–250.
127
introduction to Adventist spirituality outlining the vital link that exists between private
that salvation is a free gift of God’s grace-and that’s the end of the story.”2 Instead they
believe that “[s]alvation includes living a sanctified life on the basis of what Christ
accomplished at Calvary.”3 For them, the Christian life, including authentic worship,
flows from a transformed spiritual life.4 This theme was of major importance for Ellen G.
White, one of the co-founders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. For her, conformity
to Christ in character, habits and life is crucial to the Christian life.5 Spiritual renewal and
Christ.6 Crucial to this experience is the person of Jesus Christ for it is in beholding Him
3 Ibid., 135.
4 Ellen White, Christian Experience and Teaching of Ellen G. White (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 1922), 104; Ellen White, Testimonies to the Church, 5:267, 268; Counsels on Health, 568, Early
Writings, 47; Review and Herald March 22, 1887, par. 1.
5 Review and Herald, May 30, 1907; Acts of the Apostles (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1911), 559; Education (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1903), 15-16; Maranatha: The Lord is Coming
(Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1976), 46; MB 141.2; Signs of the Times, December 28, 1891;
Review and Herald, October, 1893; 12 Manuscript Releases 50; Signs of the Times, April 9, 1902; Review
and Herald, August 26, 1890; Signs of the Times August 1, 1892; The Home Missionary, November 1, 1893
12; The Home Missionary, November 1, 1893; Signs of the Times, August 1, 1892; Review and Herald,
June 18, 1889; 20 Manuscript Releases 30; see also, The Southern Watchman, January 29, 1903; The
Upward Look (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1982), 283; Lift Him Up (Hagerstown, MD: Review
and Herald, 1988), 346; 18 Manuscript Releases 158; 15 Manuscript Releases 330; 5 Manuscript Releases
4; 4 Manuscript Releases 172; 1 Manuscript Releases 204; Messages to Young People (Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 1930), 125; Gospel Workers 1892 (Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1892), 106.
6 Testimonies to the Church 5:625; Manuscript 155, 1902; Gospel Workers, 29; 18 Manuscript
Releases 19; 16 Manuscript Releases 47; 10 Manuscript Releases 331; Maranatha: The Lord is Coming,
318, Letter 22, 1887; Ellen White, Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 1896), 43; Signs of the Times, August 17, 1891.
128
that “a divine transformation takes place in the character.”7 Spirituality is understood as a
comprehensive way of life in which devotion and activity, worship and work are
It is this overall vision of the Christian life that sustains Adventist family
spirituality and worship.10 Seventh-day Adventists believe that “the home is a primary
setting for the restoration of the image of God in men and women,”11 a most favourable
setting for the renewal of faith and transmission of religious values. Traditionally, the
singing of hymns, the reading of Scripture and praying have constituted Adventist daily
family worship.12
The aspiration for a deeper Christian walk is also shaped by prayer meetings,
which are typically held in churches every Wednesday. Prayer meetings give ample time
for singing, testimonies, extemporaneous prayers and the study of the Word. In addition,
7 Ellen White, Christ Object Lessons, 250; See also Steps to Christ, 88, 89; Education, 297;
Testimonies to the Church 2:266, 267; Review and Herald, March 24, 1891, Gospel Workers, 36; Desire of
Ages (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1898), 362.
8 Letter 224-1906.
9 Ellen White, 1 Manuscript Releases, 371; Review and Herald, February 22, 1887; Ellen White,
Pastoral Ministry (Silver Spring, MD: General Conference Ministerial Association, 1995), 96; Testimonies
to the Church. 9:119, Review and Herald, August 17, 1886, 5; Review and Herald, October 22, 1914.
10 Ellen White, Gospel Workers, 100. See also Signs of the Times, January 29, 1902. (see James
White, Review and Herald, February 21, 1854, 36; “Drawing Near to God,” Review & Herald, February 21,
1854, 35, Review & Herald, February 24, 1863, 102 (see also, Uriah Smith, Review & Herald April 23,
1857, 193; see also Byington, Review & Herald, February 7, 1856,152; Brother Wheeler, Review & Herald
March 7, 1854, 54; Uriah Smith: Review & Herald April 16, 1857, 185; Joseph Bates, Review & Herald,
September 12, 1854, 38; Waggoner in Signs of the Times, 15, May 13, 1889.
12 For an exploration of the history of Adventist family worship, see L. Edgel Philips, An
Exploratory Study of the Aims and Methods of Family Worship in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, PhD
Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1992), 36-77.
129
it is also not uncommon for Adventists to have regular prayer meetings at designated
church members’ houses. These meetings include the same elements as in church prayer
4.1.3 Sabbath-Keeping
Kenneth A. Strand has observed thus: “the axiom that religious practices are no
better than the theology that informs and undergirds them applies to Sabbathkeeping and
Sabbath theology as well as to all other facets of religious observance.”13 As it has been
alluded in previous sections, Adventist spirituality finds its best expression in Sabbath-
God and informs their response to Him. Adventists consider the Sabbath to be God’s
designated day of rest, worship and ministry.14 The Sabbath can be fully enjoyed through
be scriptural.15 They believe that God rested on the seventh-day as an example for
humanity to follow. The three divine acts of resting, blessing and hallowing (Gen. 2:1-3;
Ex. 20:8-11) indicate the unique importance of the Sabbath. As God’s gift of holy time,
the seventh-day is set aside for God and holy activities. It provides believers with both
13Kenneth A. Strand. “The Sabbath” in Raoul Dederen et al. (eds). Handbook of Seventh-day
Adventist Theology (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2000), 508. Strand has undertaken a deeply
biblical theology of the Sabbath, tracing its concept both in the Old and New Testaments, as well as
highlighting its connection to the doctrine of God, the doctrine of humanity, the doctrine of salvation, the
doctrine of the church, and the doctrine of last things, among others (pp. 493-537).
15 “Sabbath,” in Seventh Day Adventist Encyclopedia (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 1996),
11:505.
130
spiritual and physical rest, so as to take delight in the Lord (Isa. 58:13-14), especially in
corporate worship, as they celebrate God’s creative, redemptive and sanctifying work. 16
For Adventists, Sabbath-keeping finds its source and meaning in Christ, the
Creator and Redeemer, “the Lord of the Sabbath” (Luke 6:5).17 The Adventist position
can be summarised this way: “The basis for both our Sabbath theology and
own example of worshipping, fellowshipping and healing on the Sabbath (Mark 1:21-31;
3:1-5; Luke 4:16-27; 13:10-17; 14:2-4; John 5:1-15; 9:1-14) which provide them the
ultimate justification and example for their Sabbath observance. For these reasons,
believe that, contrary to the Pharasaic way of Sabbath observance, Christ emphasised the
spiritual principles of true Sabbath-keeping.19 They believe that Sabbath sacredness has
not been transferred to Sunday.20 Rather, Sabbath observance, for the faith community, is
considered as an evidence of their loyalty to God and of their fellowship with Him.21
day in a spirit of worship and devotion of heart and not legalistically as a means to divine
16
Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 281.
18 “Sabbath,” 514.
19 Ibid, 505.
20 See for instance the work of Adventist historian Samuel Bacchiochi, From Sabbath to Sunday:
A Historical Investigation of the Rise of Sunday Observance in Early Christianity. Rome: The Pontifical
Gregorian University Press, 1977. For a contrasting view, see Carson, Donald A., ed. From Sabbath to
Lord's Day: A biblical, Historical and Theological Investigation. Wipf and Stock Publishers, 1999.
131
favour.”22 For the Sabbath to be a meaningfully rich spiritual experience, it must be
prepared for in advance (ref. Luke 23:54).23 Whereas it is assumed that preparations take
the whole week, Friday is especially referred to as the “preparation day” (ref. Mark
15:42).24 This means the completion of all household tasks, including the cleaning of the
house, the preparing of Sabbath food and the readying of Sabbath clothes before sundown
Friday.
Adventists follow the biblical model of beginning the Sabbath at sundown Friday
and ending it at sundown Saturday (ref. Lev. 23:32; Luke 4:31, 40). The 24-hour period is
entirely dedicated to God’s service. The desirable vespers practice is to gather in the
family circle at sunset to welcome the Sabbath with prayer, song and Bible reading and to
close it in the same way.25 The whole of the Sabbath is considered as a period of sacred
time.
The Sabbath is a special day for worship in our homes and churches, a day of joy
to ourselves and our children, a day in which we can learn more of God through
the Bible and the great lesson book of nature. It is a time we can visit the sick and
work for the salvation of souls. We should lay aside the ordinary affairs of the six
working days and perform no unnecessary work. We should not let secular media
occupy our time on God’s holy day.26
22 “Sabbath,” 505.
23Adventist Sabbath observance is quite consistent worldwide, see May-Ellen M. Colón, Sabbath-
keeping Practices and Factors Related to These Practices Among Seventh-day Adventists in 51 Countries,”
Ph.D. dissertation, Andrews University, 2003. Ekkehardt Mueller, “How to Keep the Sabbath Holy?,”
https://adventistbiblicalresearch.org/sites/default/files/pdf/SabbathObservance.pdf. Last accessed, May 18,
2019; General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, “Sabbath Observance: Purpose and Perspective,” Jul
09, 1990. https://www.adventist.org/en/information/official-statements/documents/article/go/-/sabbath-
observance-1/. Last accessed, May 18, 2019.
26 Ibid., 144-145.
132
The Sabbath, in Adventist understanding, means stopping anything considered
work or distraction toward giving undivided attention to God and His restorative agenda.
offering believers time for renewal and rededication. Their Sabbath pattern intensifies
their weekday spiritual practice. Adventist Sabbath praxis, at its core, means resting,
denominations, holds a place of key importance for Adventists.28 It has been described as
“the church at study.”29 This is a time when Adventists worldwide meet each Saturday
morning, in connection with the divine worship service, for a time of fellowship and
Bible study. At this study time, the church is divided into small classes, according to age
groups, in order to discuss a uniform course of Bible study, called ‘Sabbath School
28 For most recent detailed studies on Sabbath School, see Laurentiu A. Serban, “Factors Related
to Declining Attendance at the Adult Sabbath School in the North American Division of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church,” PhD. Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2014); Lyndelle Brower
Chiomenti, “A Comparison of the Adult Bible Study Guide of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and a
Prototype Guide Designed to Promote Spiritual Growth,” EdD Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews
University, 2007).
133
lessons.’ These study guides are provided by the Adventist world church organisation on
a quarterly basis.30
theme of the Bible and come to Sabbath School to share in a group discussion. “By
preparing each day for what will be shared at the group gathering, there is the opportunity
for accountability and group support or correction when needed.”31 Adventist spirituality
is hence forged and evaluated in the context of a community united by the study of
Scripture. As believers study and interpret the Word of God with fellow church members,
Ideally, this means that by the time Adventist worshippers participate in corporate
worship, they have nourished themselves through private devotion, engaged in daily
family worship, shared their faith in words and deeds,32 and fellowshipped around the
Word during Sabbath School. Ideally, this is the kind of spirituality that they bring into
What is the basic understanding that Adventists have of their weekly corporate
worship? Their 2015 Church Manual puts it this way: “The Sabbath morning service has
two main divisions: the congregational response in praise and adoration, expressed in
30 For the origin of this practice, see Gary B. Swanson, “The History of Sabbath School,” accessed
August 15, 2018, https://adventistdigitallibrary.org/features/sabbathschool.
31 Heather Ripley Crews, “Spiritual Disciplines of Early Adventists,” DMin Dissertation
(Newberg, OR: George Fox University, 2016), 123.
32Derek Morris, “Lord of Our Service,” in The Spiritual Life: Experiencing Jesus Christ as Lord,
Derek Morris and John M Fowler, eds., (Grantham, UK: Stanborough Press, 2005), 96.
134
song, prayer, and gifts, and the message from the Word of God.”33 According to this
chronologically the sermon comes after the offerings and most of the songs and prayers.
message from the Word of God.” By “the message” is understood the Christian message,
We will start our examination of the elements of Adventist worship with the
sermon.
Preaching holds a central place for Adventists. The sermon is considered to be the
highlight of their weekly worship service. For instance, Adventist Church Manuals from
1932 to 2015 have invariably designated their worship service as a “preaching service” 35
and have regrettably labeled everything that happened before the sermon as
“preliminaries.”36 In contrast, Norval Pease years ago called for “balanced worship,
where Scripture reading, prayer, music, and preaching, blend together in spiritual
worship.”37 Similarly, Raymond Holmes posited that “preaching should be central, yes,
35 See Church Manual, 1932, 158 and Church Manual, 2015, 181.
36 See Church Manual, 1932, 151 and Church Manual, 2015, 122.
38 C. Raymond Holmes, Sing A New Song: Worship Renewal for Adventists Today, 119.
135
As the climax of Adventist worship, the sermon shapes Adventist spirituality in a
way that no other liturgical element does. For this reason, most Adventists would feel
they have not worshipped if there was no sermon in their worship service.
pulpit is customarily placed at the centre of a raised platform opposite the main entrance
door. This common spatial arrangement in Adventist churches, Bull and Lockhart argue,
emphasises “the authority of the preacher, the centrality of the sermon, and the primacy of
the word.”39 An open Bible on the bench pulpit or the Communion table in front of the
platform indicates the centrality of the written Word. In addition, the regular inclusion of
a children’s sermon and appeals before the collection of offerings are indicators of a
sermon culture.
Church’s Millerite heritage. Regarding the task of preaching, James White, one of the co-
founders of the denomination, underlined that “a more solemn charge cannot be found in
the Book of God.”40 No wonder he later complained of Adventist ministers who “excel in
those “good, long” afternoon visits . . . eloquent with the knife and fork” but who failed
to demonstrate the same passion in their preaching.41 Insisting on the priority of the
39Malcolm Bull and Keith Lockhart, Seeking a Sanctuary: Seventh-day Adventism and the
American Dream, 2nd ed., (Bloomington, ID: Indiana University Press, 2007), 222.
40 James White, “Preach the Word,” Review & Herald, December 11, 1855, 85.
136
proclaimed Word, he yearned for consecrated preachers who could “preach the word of
It should be borne in mind that preaching was a rarity in early Adventist worship.
In 1866, Uriah Smith, a leading figure in early Adventism observed “the living preacher
is but occasionally heard by any of them [Adventist believers], and by some never.”43 The
reasons behind are simple: (1) the believers were scattered over wide territories and (2)
many Adventist ministers were itinerant evangelists.44 Still, Adventists considered the
sermon to be “extremely valuable,” so much so that the Review and Herald, their official
published.
How should we consider those written sermons? In his study of the Free Church
tradition, Christopher Ellis makes the keen observation that “we should be cautious in
only using sermon texts for examining the development of preaching in worship.” 45
Indeed, preaching goes beyond the written text of the sermon to include other factors like
published in the Review and Herald and stenographic transcripts of other sermons
delivered in various gatherings proves Ellis’ point. Compared to the polished sermons in
42 Ibid.
44 In the early days of Adventism, ministers had a very heavy preaching schedule. Adventist
ministers preached on average “from two to three hundred discourses” a year. James White, Review and
Herald, June 9, 1859.
137
We will read first from Ephesians 1: 3-6. That takes us to the point where God
began concerning us, and that will be as far back as, we need to go. The third
verse: —
“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us
with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ.” What is it he “hath”
done? [Congregation: “Blessed us.”] Is it so? [Congregation: “Yes.”] Has done it?
[Congregation: “Yes.”] He has blessed us with how many blessings?
[Congregation: "All spiritual blessings."] All the blessings he has? He has given
us all? [Congregation: “Yes.”] How? [Congregation: “In Christ.”] In Christ. Then
in giving Christ, what did God give? [Congregation: “All spiritual blessings.”] All
the spiritual blessings that he had . . .
But the fourth verse is the one particularly that I want to read:- According as he
hath chosen us." Will choose us? [Congregation: " Hath chosen us."] Has he?
[Congregation: “Yes.”] When did he do it ? [Congregation: “ ‘Before the
foundation of the World.' I Thank the Lord ! “Before the foundation of the world “
he chose you and me. [Congregation : “Praise the Lord I “] Now, will you say
“amen” to that every time? [Congregation: “Amen !” ] I do not mean just now.
Will you say it all the time? [Congregation: “Yes.”]46
In the above extract, elements of didache are present along with kerygma.
Teaching and proclamation are fused together through the joint participation of the
preacher and the congregation. Both parties are involved and each contributes to the
sermon. It is not only the preacher but also the gathered community of faith that
articulates and rehearses the Gospel. In this liturgical setting, preaching is dialogical in
nature. This call-response format is still present in many Adventist churches, especially in
African-American communities.47
sermons needs to bear in mind not only the examination of carefully prepared
46 A. T. Jones, “The Third Angel’s Message,” General Conference Bulletin, vol. 5, No. 17,
February 26, 1893.
47 Leslie N. Pollard, “Saga and Song: African American Preaching,” Ministry, 5-9; Calvin B.
Rock, “Black SDA Preaching: Betwixt & Between,” Ministry, September 2000, 5-10; R. Clifford Jones,
Preaching with Power: Black Preachers Share Secrets for Effective Preaching (Silver Spring, MA: General
Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Ministerial Association, 2005).
138
manuscripts, but most importantly a study of actual discourses where the elements of
Coming back to our brief historical survey of Adventist preaching, we notice that
with the passing of time, the number of ministers increased and the nature of their work
changed. From itinerant evangelists and pastors, most ministers became settled pastors,
limited to ministers. As many as 30% of the preaching in North America and 80%
can fairly explain its essence. James White recalls as a young preacher how, at the close
of one of the meetings, “the power of God came upon me to that degree I had to support
myself with both hands hold of [sic] the pulpit. It was a solemn hour. As I viewed the
condition of sinners, lost without Christ, I called on them with weeping, repeating several
James White’s earlier admonition on preaching the Word and this recorded pulpit
experience illustrate and illuminate the core of Adventist preaching. To better understand
Adventist preaching, we will offer the following definition: Adventist preaching is the
Parousia in an effort to bring people to Christ through the agency of the Holy Spirit.
48 According to their “2017 Annual Statistical Report for 2015 and 2016,” accessed August 14,
2018, http://documents.adventistarchives.org/Statistics/ASR/ASR2017.pdf, 30,143 frontline pastors
(evangelistic and pastoral employees) serve 151,461 congregations.
139
Succinctly put, Adventist preaching aims to be (1) Bible-centred, (2) urgent and (3)
Spirit-led.
4.2.1.2.1 Bible-Centred
The fundamental and authoritative nature of the Scriptures forms the basis of
Adventist doctrines50 and accordingly informs their preaching. Adventist preachers use
their personal Bibles in the pulpit and church members bring their own Bibles to church
despite the availability of pew Bibles. This probably illustrates their deep personal
attachment to their own Bible and to its use in corporate worship. In Adventist worship,
God is seen to be present among His people, revealing Himself especially in the reading
and preaching of His Word. The sermon is received with the understanding that it is a
Word that has been divinely given. However, “[t]he preacher is not an oracle. He is a
fellow seeker charged with articulating the questions his people are asking, and with
framing the answers the Bible gives.”51 It is hence the duty of the preacher to make God’s
50 Seventh-day Adventists consider the Holy Scriptures as “the infallible revelation of [God’s] will
… the standard of character, the test of experience, the authoritative revealer of doctrines, and the
trustworthy record of God’s acts in history” (Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 11). As early as 1847, James
White stated that the Bible is “a perfect and complete revelation” and “our only rule of faith and practice.”
James White, A Word to the “Little Flock” (Brunswick, ME: n.p., 1847), 13.
52 This might explain the recent emphasis on expository preaching in Adventist publications. For
instance, Ministry (the international journal for pastors published by the Seventh-day Adventist Church) has
in the last decades regularly dedicated articles that stress that preaching should be fundamentally
expository. Most recent articles include: Ranko Stefanovic, “The Book of Revelation: Guidelines for
Responsible and Meaningful Preaching,” Ministry, September 2017, 9-12; Jud Lake, “Expository
Homiletics,” Ministry, January 2005, 18-20; Grant Swank, Jr. and Floyd Bresee, “Expository Preaching,”
Ministry, January 1994, 7-10; Tom Dombrowski,“’I Will Send a Famine’: An Interview with Dr. Walter C.
Kaiser Jr.,” Ministry, July-August 2010, 30-31; Graeme S. Bradford, “Making Expository Preaching
Relevant and Interesting,” Ministry, September 2000, 26-29; J. Grant Swank Jr., “Excitement About
Expository Preaching,” Ministry, May 2000, 28-29; George R. Knight, “When Persecuted in One Text, Flee
to the Next,” Ministry, May 1998, 7-9; Rex Daniel Edwards, “The Art of Expository Preaching,” Ministry,
December 1994, 5-7; William G. Johnsson, “The Art of Expository Preaching,” Ministry, May 1994, 6-9.
However, articles on expository preaching have been published in this magazine as far as 1948. See for
140
But how do Adventists interpret the Bible? For a typical answer, we may turn to
Ellet J. Waggoner, an influential preacher in the early days of the Adventist Church. In an
interpretation.53 In his article, Waggoner shares three basic rules of interpretation based
on his belief in the full authority and reliability of the Bible as well as its coherence and
harmony: (1) The Bible explains itself and has to be understood in its own terms; (2)
Two observations emerge from this brief summary. Waggoner first finds it
necessary to underline the importance of paying attention to what the Bible actually says.
Second, he approaches the Word of God as a coherent and harmonious system of truth in
which different sections and books explain each other. This search for the inner logic of
Scripture has informed Adventist theology and Adventist preaching from the start. 54
Although Seventh-day Adventists accept human influences on the Bible, such as its
cultural and worldview contexts, they generally do not subscribe to the historico-critical
example Roy Allan Anderson, “What Is Expository Preaching?” Ministry, May 1948, 46, 48. See also D. A.
Delafield, “Wanted: More Expository Sermons,” Ministry, December 1969, 24-27.
53 Ellet J. Waggoner "The Bible, Commentaries, and Tradition," The Signs of the Times, 12
(1886), 13.
54 See for example, Marcos Blanco, "Early Adventists’ Homiletical Principles and the Expository-
vs-Thematic Sermons Discussion,” DavarLogos XVI, 1 (2017): 29-60. Received from author.
http://www.academia.edu/32964563/_Early_Adventists_Homiletical_Principles_and_the_Expository-vs-
Thematic_Sermons_Discussion_DavarLogos_XVI_1_2017_29-60.
55See for instance Richard M. Davidson, “Interpreting Scripture According to the Scriptures:
Toward an Understanding of Seventh-day Adventist Hermeneutics,” Biblical Research Institute General
141
But where is the centre of that inner logic of Scripture? Ellen White states: “In
order to be rightly understood and appreciated, every truth in the word of God, from
Genesis to Revelation, must be studied in the light that streams from the cross of
particular, it follows then that preaching too finds its centre in the crucified Christ. E.J
Waggoner made this clear in a sermon addressed to the leadership of the Adventist
Church in 1903:
You and I may go over all the world, and we may preach, we may preach
earnestly, but if our preaching is not the preaching of the Lord Jesus, literally the
preaching of the Lord Jesus, that is to say, not simply the preaching about Him,
but the Lord Jesus Himself preaching, then either we shall have to go over the
ground again, or somebody else will have to go over it after us. 57
Edward Heppenstall captured a similar idea when he wrote: “No preacher can
preach the Word who does not unlock its treasures with the true and only Key, which is
people.”59 However, the preaching of the gospel does not negate the preaching of the law
since both gospel and law are a reflection of God’s character.60 To preach the gospel
without the law is to preach forgiveness without repentance and salvation without
56 Ellen White, Gospel Workers (Washington DC: Review and Herald, 1915), 315.
57 E. J. Waggoner, “The Gospel of the Kingdom” The General Conference Bulletin 5, March 30,
1903.
59
Mervyn Warren, ‘Christ-Centered pulpits for Christ-Centered People’ (a sermon preached at
Oakwood College), Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 1991, 181-187.
60 Aecio E. Caïrus, “Is the Adventist Faith Legalistic?” Journal of the Adventist Theological
Society, 7/2 (Autumn 1996): 33.
142
obedience. Adventists preach “Christ in the law,”61 because the Gospel includes a call to
ethical obedience. The challenge for Adventist preachers is to preach such messages that
will lead worshippers to stay away from the pitfalls of legalism and licentiousness. 62
In 1904, Ellen White asserted: "Not with tame, lifeless utterances is the message
to be given, but with clear, decided, stirring utterances."63 More than half a century later,
Robert H. Pierson, a senior Adventist Church leader stated: “Our preaching must be
characterized by an urgency in keeping with the lateness of the hour and the solemnity of
our responsibility.”64
It is this sense of urgency that fuels Adventist mission and proclamation. From
their earliest beginnings, Adventists have viewed themselves as carrying God’s last
reading of this apocalyptic passage influences and shapes their preaching. 66 According to
61 See for instance, Ellen White’s article in the Review & Herald, March 11, 1890.
64 Robert H. Pierson, “Never Loose Your sense of Urgency,” Ministry, December 1961, 17.
65 This sense of urgency is reflected in their current Mission Statement: “The mission of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church is to call all people to become disciples of Jesus Christ, to proclaim the
everlasting gospel embraced by the three angels’ messages (Revelation 14:6-12), and to prepare the world
for Christ’s soon return,” accessed February 20, 2018, https://www.adventist.org/en/information/official-
statements/statements/article/go/-/mission-statement-of-the-seventh-day-adventist-church/. For the
historical theological development of the three angels’ messages among early Adventists, see Gerard
Damsteegt, Foundations of the Seventh-day Adventist Message and Mission (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B.
Eerdmans, 1977).
66Judson Lake, “Preaching the Word of God for the People of God: A Proposed Definition of
Seventh-day Adventist Preaching,” in Ron Du Preez, Philip G. Samaan, and Ron E.M. Couzet, eds., The
Word of God for the People of God: A Tribute to the Ministry of Jack J. Blanco (Collegedale, TN: School
143
Charles E. Bradford “in Adventist preaching and theology, all sermons and doctrines
At the heart of Revelation 14:6-12 is an appeal for a return to the basic principles
For Adventists, the design of the sermon is not simply to share biblical
information, important as that might be, but to urge sinners to salvation and believers to
holiness of life. The ultimate aim of Adventist preaching is to enable the congregation to
experience a salvific encounter with the living God in light of the imminent return of
Christ in glory.69
during the worship service. In line with the frontier tradition, worship and evangelism
often coalesce. For instance, members are encouraged to bring visitors to allow them an
opportunity to hear the Word of God.70 In addition, churches regularly set aside special
Sabbaths for visitors where the sermon tends to be even more evangelistic in nature.
The sense of urgency not only shapes the content of the sermon but also
characterizes its delivery. The sermon needs to be spoken in understandable language and
of Religion, Southern Adventist University, 2004), 467-494; Charles E. Bradford, Preaching to the
Times (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1993).
67 Charles E. Bradford, Preaching to the Times: The Preaching Ministry in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church (Silver Springs, MD: Ministerial Association General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists, 1993), 13.
69 See for instance, C. Raymond. Holmes, The Last Word: An Eschatological Theology of
Preaching (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1987).
144
convincing tone so that the congregation can grasp its meaning and be grasped by its
transformation.71 How the preacher initially appropriates the Word affects the way in
which he later communicates it.72 This is why the preacher is encouraged to pray
earnestly and to saturate himself with the Scriptures so that he can proclaim God’s Word
as clearly as possible.73 The preacher must seek God’s presence in his life and in his
sermon preparation. Norval Pease puts it this way: “God does not meet the preacher in
the pulpit. He meets him in his study and accompanies him to the pulpit.”74 The
assumption here is that God continues to speak to His people through consecrated vessels.
In order to be a message from the Lord, the sermon must come from the Bible and
rely on the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit. As such, preaching is differentiated from
ordinary speech because it is molded and delivered through the activity of God’s Spirit.
H. M. S. Richards captured this notion in his 1957 lectures on preaching: “Now, there is
something supernatural about true preaching . . . preaching in which the preacher is filled
with the Word of God, is empowered by the Holy Spirit, and speaks forth from a heart on
71 H. M. S. Richards, Feed My Sheep (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1958), 19.
72 H. Evans, The Preacher and His Preaching (Takoma Park, MD: Review and Herald, 1938).
73 Derek J. Morris, “Preaching from the Overflow: An Interview with Barry Black” in Powerful
Biblical Preaching: Practical Pointers by Master Preachers, Trilogy Scripture Resources, 2012. Originally
published in Ministry, March 2004.
145
fire with the Word of Christ to hungry souls. That is preaching!”75 For Richards, authentic
preaching can only be done “under the inspiration and power of the Holy Spirit.”76
God’s presence is seen as essential to the proclamation of His Word with the
understanding that “it is the efficiency of the Holy Spirit that makes the ministry of the
Word effective.”77 Left to himself, the preacher is unable to bring any transformation to
the congregation. “In order for preaching to be effective, it must be Holy Spirit
actuated.”78 It is the Spirit who uses the preacher, not the other way round.79 Divine
The unction of the Holy Spirit is important for Adventists. Good preaching takes
place where there is an interaction that takes place between the preacher, the
congregation, and the Holy Spirit during the sermon. Only then can the sermon especially
speak to the needs of the congregation through sound instruction and vital edification.
His Word. This sets out the idea of worship as a response to God’s revelation, laying
special emphasis upon our response to the Gospel.80 The primary function of “the
76 Ibid., 412.
77 Ellen G. White, Gospel Workers (Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1915), 155.
78 Derek J. Morris, “Called to Preach.” An interview with E. E. Cleveland and Benjamin Reaves,
Trilogy Scripture Resources, 2012, 28. Originally published in Ministry, December 2006.
79 Derek J. Morris, “Preaching from the Overflow: An Interview with Barry Black.”
146
message” or the preaching of the Word of God is to transmit the Good News, ultimately
One might naturally think of the “message from the Word of God” as primarily
divine while the response in praise and adoration as primarily human. However, the
reality is not as straightforward. Although not explicitly stated in the Church Manual,
God is understood to be involved in both Word and response through the agency of the
Holy Spirit.81 The Word cannot be proclaimed and the response cannot be made unless
God is involved.
In a special way, the sermon represents the voice of God in Adventist worship.
The sermon helps the congregation to understand that God is still present and active in its
midst as Christ is lifted up in the power of the Spirit. A common plea in the pastoral
prayer is to ask God to bless the preacher in such a way that he can be used as an
on behalf of God.82 Through the faithful preaching and submissive hearing and personal
4.2.2 Singing
81 Ibid., 119.
147
While a band of music,
Those are the words of the popular Millerite hymn that James White sang, “to call
the people to order” in Litchfield in 1842 as he made his way to the pulpit.83 Reflecting
years later on the meeting, he wrote: “The reader certainly cannot see poetic merit in the
repetition of these simple lines . . . But it is a fact that there was in those days a power in
what was called Advent singing, such as was felt in no other.”84 James White and the
Millerites did not see the Lord come in 1844 as they had expected. Yet, Adventists over
the years have kept expressing their faith and hope through singing.85
theological meaning, we will now explore hymn singing. Hymns represent an important
section of the liturgical and theological tradition of any denomination. They open for us a
window through which we can explore both liturgical practice and theological meaning.
As with preaching, there is a need to go beyond the printed words and pay special
83 For a thorough analysis of this hymn from a liturgical theology perspective, see David Williams,
A Methodology for the Meaning of Worship Music with a Case Study of an Early Adventist Hymn, “You
Will See Your Lord A-Coming,” (Paper presented at Andrews University, November 2011). Accessed at
Center of Adventist Research Center, James White Library, Andrews University.
85 Michael W. Campbell, “A Holy Spell: Worshipping with Early Adventists,” Adventist Review,
October 22, 2009, 26–28.
148
attention to actual congregational singing86 in an effort to better interpret the meaning of
Adventist worship.
“It may be said that the Seventh-day Adventist faith was born to music.”87 All its
founders loved to sing. Even before their official organisation in 1863, Adventists, despite
their small numbers, had already published a plethora of hymnals between 1849 and
1862.88 The early Adventist hymnological output was not the work of a worship
committee but of one man, James White, who edited five hymnals and four supplements
The first hymnal, Hymns for God’s Peculiar People that Keep the Commandments
of God and the Faith of Jesus, a clear reference to Revelation 14:12 comprised of 53
hymns. The hymnbook consisted only of words without music, an indication of their
familiarity to Adventist believers. The hymnbook did not include the name of the authors
or composers of the various hymns, a common practice at that time. As the title indicates,
the hymnal reveals much of the liturgical and theological impulses and principles of early
86 See for instance, Mary E. McGann, “Exploring Music as Worship and Theology,” ed., Edward
Foley, American Essays in Liturgy (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 2002), 13-36. Christopher Ellis,
Gathering, 150-151.
87Arthur Whitefield Spalding, Origin and History of Seventh-Day Adventists (Washington, DC:
The Review and Herald, 1962), 2:135.
88 For an historical overview of early Adventist singing, see James R. Nix, Early Advent Singing:
A Collection of 52 Early Adventist Hymns with Illustrating Stories (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
1994); Ronald D. Graybill, “Singing and Society: The Hymns of the Saturday-keeping Adventists, 1849-
1863,” Paper written for the Department of History, Johns Hopkins University, 1974; Ronald D. Graybill,
“A Hymn of Joy: Enthusiasm and Celebration in Early Adventist Hymnody,” Adventist Heritage 14 (Fall
1991), 28-33. Arthur W. Spalding, “Hymns of the Advent” in Origin and History of the Seventh-day
Adventists, Vol. 2. (Washington DC: Review and Herald, 1962), 2:129-139; Raimo Jaakko Lehtinen, “An
Organizational Model for a Coordinated Program of Music Ministry for the Seventh-day Adventist Church
in North America and Europe,” PhD Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MIL Andrews University, 1992), 42-62;
Michael Campbell, “A Holy Spell: Worshipping with early Adventists,” Adventist Review, October 22,
2009, 26–28.
149
Adventism with a strong emphasis on its distinctiveness in comparison to other
denominations. In essence, hymns were chosen to champion the Adventist faith and
The first hymnal with music was published in 1855 and was entitled Hymns for
Those Who keep the Commandments of God and the Faith of Jesus, once again a
reference to Revelation 14:12. It contained 435 hymns and 76 tunes and “was designed to
promote not only public worship, but also social and family devotion.”89 The addition of
new hymns and the inclusion of musical notes aimed to “promote uniformity and
White solicited readers of the Review and Herald to send him “good hymns, original and
select.”92 Although compiled by one man, the hymnal was in reality the work of the
The year 1869 marks the release of the first official hymnal compiled by the
newly organised Seventh-day Adventist Church (1863). It was entitled Hymns and Tunes
for Those Who Keep the Commandments of God and the Faith of Jesus. It contained 536
hymns and 125 tunes. In contrast to previous hymnals, the work of compiling the hymnal
was not done by James White but by a duly appointed committee. The preface states:
“Our object has been to select and prepare hymns of worth and poetic merit, which
express the faith and hope of the church, as set forth in the Scriptures of truth, and which
90 Ibid.
91 See for instance, “A Hymn Book,” Review & Herald, 2, November 25, 1851, 56; Review &
Herald, January 22, 1861, 80; Review & Herald, April 13, 1876.
92“The New Hymn Book,” Review & Herald 5, 1854, 176. See also “The New Hymn Book,
Review & Herald 6, February 20, 1855, 183.
150
are free from the prevailing errors of the age.” The hymnbook drew heavily from a
number of stalwart hymns of the Methodist and Baptist traditions from which many
Adventists came.93 Over the years, hymns written by Adventists have been relatively
few.94
hymnody. It contained 703 hymns.95 Lowell Mason was represented with 45 hymns,
Charles Wesley had 27 and Fanny Crosby 23. The only Adventist with a substantial
number of hymns was Frank Belden with 24 hymns.96 Bach, Haydn, Beethoven,
Mendelssohn, Handel, Mozart, amongst other famous composers, made their entrance
into the Adventist hymnal, bringing a new musical culture in the Adventist Church. This
shift reflected the adoption of a wider liturgical culture but probably also an aspiration for
polarized into two distinct camps. On the one hand, some did not like the new hymnal
because it had too many “high church” English hymns. On the other hand, others
94
Charles Pierce, A History of Music and Music Education of the Seventh-day Adventist Church,
D.M.A Dissertation (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America), 128.
95
For a brief analysis of every hymn in the 1941 hymnal, see Edward E. White, Singing with
Understanding (Warburton, Australia: Signs Publishing, 1981).
151
complained that the hymnal contained too many “cheap” gospel songs,98 an indication of
an inner struggle between staying close to denominational roots and the desire to embrace
a wider spectrum of Christian hymnody. Even in 1967, Norval Pease noted that some still
held “that only the finest in church music, as evaluated by professional musicians, should
ever be used in the church service” while most congregations would choose “the gospel
hymn and the more rhythmic, sentimental type of music.”99 Accordingly, Pease advocated
that pastors should never lose the ability to identity with the musical culture of the
majority of church members in their aspiration at reaching high aesthetics standards. 100
Despite its initial unpopularity, the 1941 hymnal was used for over forty years
until the call for a new hymnal started echoing in Adventist circles. Those sentiments
were reflected in an article, in which Wayne Hooper and Bernard E. Seton expressed a
need for a new hymnal where Adventism’s distinctive doctrines would be reflected more
adequately. Hooper and Seton wrote: “The Sabbath, Second Coming, judgment,
sanctuary, and the priesthood of Christ are some of the subjects we need to sing more
about.”101
This need was addressed in the latest denominational hymnal published in 1985,
The Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal. It retained 330 items from the 1941 hymnal and
introduced “new” hymns drawn from Protestant hymnody. Adventists wrote 85 out of the
101 Wayne Hooper and Bernard E Seton, “Is it Time for a New Hymnal?” in Ministry 54, April
1981, 11.
152
695 hymns.102 The hymnal also includes a selection of 225 responsive readings and
Faithful to the Adventist tradition, the collections of hymns followed a survey that
was sent to more than 3,000 active pastors, asking them to mark which hymns they would
like to retain from the old hymnal, and to list any new songs and hymns they would like
included. Some of the criteria used included familiarity, theological soundness, doctrinal
their church’s liturgical and theological impulses and principles. Yet, they reveal only one
face of Adventist singing. The act of singing also needs to be taken into consideration.
Early Adventists loved to sing. It gave expression to their faith in Christ and their
hope in His soon return. They sang everywhere and often, usually unaccompanied by
musical instruments.104 Such singing found its best expression in the family setting where
Scripture reading, prayer and singing were the main ingredients. This is how Ellen G.
White describes the family worship in her home: “We read a chapter in the Bible, sing a
few verses, then everyone prays. Then we have a half-hour for singing again.”105 As such,
102 Wayne W. Hooper and E. E. White, Companion to Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal, 671.
103 Wayne W. Hooper and E. E. White, Companion to Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal, 41.
104 James White, “Music,” Review & Herald, June 17, 1880.
153
Singing also played a very important role in corporate worship, especially because
of the rarity of preaching. Hymnals were published regularly “to promote order and
harmony in singing.”106 Yet, public worship through hymns often meant loud singing that
challenge for enthusiastic but musically uneducated church members. Joseph Clarke, an
[W]hen we sang; one prolonged a quarter note, until it consumed the time of a
whole note, with a hold and swell besides. Some were singing one verse, until
others had progressed pretty well into the next; and the ending word of each verse
echoed and reechoed, each according to the different notions of propriety, which
each locality administered for itself, with the evident idea that such notions were
standard.109
keys, Joseph Clarke again reiterated his complaint in 1862 in another letter to the Review
and Herald in which he observed that often “good lungs, and uncultivated ears go
worshippers pay attention to the song leader, listen to the singing of others and seek to
blend their voices with the general harmony.111 For him, congregational singing meant
practicing attentiveness to others rather than being absorbed in one’s own musical
performance.
107 Review & Herald, July 10, 1855, 4; Review & Herald, November 25, 1858, 1.
109 Joseph Clarke, “Music,” Review & Herald, November 10, 1859.
110 Joseph Clarke, “Congregational Singing,” Review & Herald, June 24, 1862, 29.
154
While lacking in music elegance, some observed that Adventist singing,
“effectually engages the hearts of the congregation.”112 James White was quick to point
out that those who questioned such enthusiastic singing did so because they were
Since many of the believers were uneducated farmers who could not read, the
hymns used were normally simple and the song leader would normally line out the
hymns.114 Ministers would also sometimes read the whole hymns before the congregation
would join in singing. This was considered an important element of worship, so much so
that minsters were expected to prepare themselves seriously so that they could use proper
voice projection while guarding “against didactic style, gestures and theatrics in the
reading of hymns.”115
below in italics are the elements that require music for both the regular order of worship
Organ Prelude
Announcements
Choir and Ministers Enter
Doxology
Invocation
Scripture Reading
Hymn of Praise
113 James White, “The Immediate Coming of Christ,” Review & Herald, January 20, 1853, 141.
114 James White, Life Incidents vol.1, Chapter 5; Review & Herald, 31 1868, 198-199.
155
Prayer
Anthem or Special Music
Offering
Hymn of Consecration
Sermon
Hymn
Benediction
Congregation Standing or Seated for a Few Moments of Silent Prayer
Organ Postlude
Announcements
Hymn
Prayer
Offering
Hymn or Special Music
Sermon
Hymn
Benediction
Congregation Standing or Seated for Silent Prayer
The 2015 Church Manual urges worshippers to sing with spirit and
“thoroughly consecrated and provide appropriate music for all church worship services
and meetings,” working closely with the pastor or elder in ensuring that the music
harmonizes with the sermon.118 Recognizing the sacred nature of church music, churches
are not to use “secular music or that of a questionable nature.”119 Choir members are to be
156
church members who are biblically principled, spiritually minded and exemplary in
hymns and structures outlined in the Church Manual, more and more churches are
moving to blended services where traditional hymns and contemporary choruses coexist.
Very few churches have chosen to do away totally with the Adventist Hymnal.
Nicholas P. Wolstertorff has observed that hymns express more concretely the
more abstract ideas that define both Christian belief and Christian community. 121 Richard
Mouw describes church’s music and songs as “compacted theology.”122 Hymns express
the faith of a worshipping community. For Paul Westermeyer, a hymnal “is a synthetic
theological manual.”123 Elsewhere, he writes that “in music, the faith and life of a people
take flesh.”124
Apparently, some of those hymns sung in Adventist churches did not square well
with their theology. For example, in an article written in 1882, N. J. Bowers, aware of
music’s heuristic values, warned of the habit of Adventists getting attached to popular
121 NicholasWolstertorff, "Thinking about Church Music," in Music in Christian Worship: At the
Service of the Liturgy, ed. Charlotte Kroeker (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2005), 5.
122 Richard J. Mouw, Introduction to Wonderful Words of Life: Hymns in American History and
Theology, eds., Richard Mouw and Mark Noll (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004), xiii-xiv.
123 Paul Westermeyer, “A Hymnal’s Theological Significance,” in Dialog, 48, December 2009,
313.
124 Paul Westermeyer, Te Deum: The Church and Music (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 1998), 5.
157
hymns instead of first weighing their lyrics.125 He admonished that “[o]ne can no more
This problem was not unique to Bowers’ time. Years earlier, young Adventist
hymn writer, Annie R. Smith, had emphasised that any text sung in Adventist worship
recommended that “a pure theology should be sustained by pure hymns.”127 Both Bowers
and Smith recognised that there was always the danger that the lyrics sung could distort
or contradict the message preached if they were not carefully evaluated. Some Adventists
One area that illustrates the tension between the theology and practice of singing
is related with the doctrine of the Trinity. Seventh-day Adventists have not always been
Trinitarian.129 In fact, two of their founders, Joseph Bates and James White, were
originally members of the Christian Connection Church, a denomination known for its
126 Ibid.
127 Review & Herald, May 1854, or Review & Herald, April 25, 1854.
128 For instance, Liliane Doukhan, stresses that “sacred music conveys a theology” (p. 52) and that
“it must tell about the values and beliefs of a group” (p. 53). She also emphasises the necessity of lyrics that
not only have “theological correctness, but [also] depth, meaningfulness, directness, and poetic quality.” In
Tune with God (Hagerstown, MD: Autumn House Publishing, 2010), 227.
129 For an analysis of early Adventist anti-Trinitarianism, see Merlin D. Burt, “History of Seventh-
day Adventist Views on the Trinity,” Journal of Adventist Theological Society 17.1 (2006): 125–139; Jerry
Moon, “The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 1: Historical Overview,” Andrews University Seminary Studies
41:1 (2003): 113–129; idem, “The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 2: The Role of E. G. White,” Andrews
University Seminary Studies 41:2 (2003): 275–292. Gilbert M. Valentine, Learning and Unlearning: A
Context for Important Developments in the Seventh-day Adventist Understanding of the Trinity, 1888–
1898, Andrews University Seminary Studies, Vol. 55, No. 2, 213–236. Jerry Moon, “Trinity and Anti-
Trinitarianism in Seventh-day Adventist History,” in Woodrow Whidden, Jerry Moon, and John W. Reeve,
The Trinity: Understanding God’s Love, His Plan of Salvation, and Christian Relationships (Hagerstown,
MD: Review and Herald, 2002), 190-203; Gerhard Pfandl, The Doctrine of the Trinity Among Seventh-day
Adventists, Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 17/1 (Spring 2006): 160–179.
158
staunch opposition to the doctrine of the Trinity. Having converted to Adventism, both
Bates and White maintained their anti-Trinitarian views.130 For instance, in an article
written in 1855, White considered the Trinity as a fable.131 Yet, his anti-Trinitarianism did
not prevent him from including the Doxology, “Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,” in
officiating in a baptismal service in 1857, White wrote “He led you down into the water,
and there baptized you in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.”133 Clearly, his
leading in worship did not always line up with his declared theology.
This dichotomy between lex credendi and lex orandi could be explained by the
fact that James White could not see the theological implications of his worship practices.
It is good to remember that Adventism was not solely shaped by Christian Connection
views. The bulk of their adherents and ministers were Methodists and Baptists who
brought their own worship beliefs and practices into the Adventist movement. One of
them, Ellen White, James’ wife, who grew up Methodist, is credited to have been the
130
Joseph Bates, The Autobiography of Elder Joseph Bates, Battle Creek: Steam Press of the
Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, 1868, 205.
132James White, comp., Hymns for God’s Peculiar People, That Keep the Commandments of God,
and the Faith of Jesus, Oswego, NY: Richard Oliphant, 1849, 47.
134See for instance, Jerry Moon, “The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 2: The Role of E. G. White,”
Andrews University Seminary Studies 41:2, 2003, 275–292; Jerry Moon, “Ellen White’s Role in the Trinity
Debate” in The Trinity: Understanding God’s Love, pp. 204-220; Gerhard Pfandl, The Doctrine of the
Trinity Among Seventh-day Adventists, Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 17/1 (Spring 2006):
160–179; Merlin Burt, 128-129. Ellen White’s book on the life of Christ, The Desire of Ages, published in
1898, consolidated this move by clearly declaring the eternal deity of Christ and of the Holy Spirit. See for
159
Yet, the ambivalence concerning the doctrine of the Trinity persisted. Despite the
official statement in 1931 that “the Godhead, or Trinity, consists of the Eternal Father, a
love,”135 the 1941 Church Hymnal did not include the last stanza of the familiar hymn
“Holy, Holy, Holy,” which ends with “God in three persons, blessed Trinity.”136 A
number of other hymns were also adjusted to exclude Trinitarian language.137 Others
however maintained them.138 For instance, hymn number 9 of the 1941 Church Hymnal
ends with the words “Praise ye the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, Praise the Eternal
Three.” In contrast to the previous hymnals, the latest Adventist hymnal, published in
What are the spiritual and liturgical values that undergird the practice of Adventist
instance, pp. 19, 530, 671, 785 as listed by Denis Fortin in “God, The Trinity and Adventism: An
Introduction to the Issues,” p. 9. Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 17:1, 2006, 9.
135 Yearbook of the Seventh-day Adventist Denomination, 1931 (H.E Rogers, Washington, Review
& Herald, 1931), 377.
136 The Church Hymnal, Washington D.C, Review & Herald, 1941, 49.
160
4.2.2.6.1 Hope
The theme of the blessed hope dominates the hymnals, especially the early
editions.139 More than half the hymns in the 1849 hymnal refer to the Christian life as a
pilgrimage. The world is seen as a wilderness and believers as sojourners who, like the
Israel of old, have left the land of captivity and are now on their way to their true home in
heaven. Thus, the practice of singing is often a rehearsal of the anticipated future.140
In his research on the 1849-1863 Adventist hymnals, Ron Graybill explains that it
appreciating the circumstances in which the hymns were sung.141 Adventists suffered
from a keen sense of alienation and of social rejection as a result of their religious beliefs.
Their sense of alienation was geographical: the small Adventist membership was
disseminated over the vast American territory. It was also religious: their connection to
the Millerite movement and subsequent adoption of the Sabbath as their day of worship
distanced them from other Christians. And social: they felt ostracized by the larger
society because their apocalyptic eschatology differed with the culture at large.
Adventists compensated for their sense of alienation every time they came together for
meetings through the vigorous singing of Advent hymns that pointed to a better future.
139 James White, Hymns for God’s Peculiar People, 1849, (hymns 7, 15, 16, 19, 21-23, 24, 31, 36,
38, 39, 46, 50, 52).
140 An analysis of their first hymnal (1849) reveals their sense of maladjustment. For instance,
hymn 9, The Better Land speaks of Adventists as a “lonely pilgrim band, and weary, and worn, and sad”;
hymn 22 mentions the journey to heaven as a warfare which will culminate in a place where “thy foes come
no more”; hymn 25 declares “Here o'er the earth as a stranger I roam, Here is no rest—is no rest; Here as a
pilgrim I wander alone, Yet I am blest—I am blest.” The same theme of pilgrimage and alienation is found
again in Hymn 36, A Pilgrim and a Stranger whereas Hymn 52 aspires to the heavenly Jerusalem asking
the question: Are we almost there? This longing for heaven is even more intense because of the proximity
of Christ’s Second Coming, which is also well represented in the first hymnal.
141Ronald D. Graybill, “Singing and Society: The Hymns of the Saturday-Keeping Adventists,
1849-1863” (Paper, Johns Hopkins University, 1974), accessed at Center of Adventist Research Center,
James White Library, Andrews University.
161
Today, Adventists may not suffer the same sense of alienation but they continue to
sing their hope in the soon coming of their Lord Jesus Christ. “Jesus is Coming Again”
1
Lift up the trumpet, and loud let it ring:
Jesus is coming again!
Cheer up, ye pilgrims, be joyful and sing:
Jesus is coming again!
Refrain
Coming again, coming again,
Jesus is coming again!
2
Echo it, hilltops; proclaim it, ye plains:
Jesus is coming again!
Coming in glory, the Lamb that was slain;
Jesus is coming again!
3
Heavings of earth, tell the vast, wondering throng:
Jesus is coming again!
Tempests and whirlwinds, the anthem prolong;
Jesus is coming again!
4
Nations are angry–by this we do know
Jesus is coming again!
Knowledge increases; men run to and fro;
Jesus is coming again!
people waiting for God’s kingdom to manifest itself in its fullness at Christ’s return in
glory.
4.2.2.6.2 Simplicity
Church music is for the glory of God and the edification of the body of Christ. As
such, Adventists believe that simplicity is an important spiritual and liturgical value in the
music that is offered in church. Ellen White believed for instance that the poorest
congregation, without any musical instrument or superficialities could still offer the best
162
singing because of the joy of Christ in their souls.142 For Adventists, the most important
When people are humble, hymns are a solemn experience of faith rendered with
pathos. When they have departed from their first love, no spiritual power attends
song. If Satan cannot introduce positive corruption into the form of sacred song,
he will seek to render it so elaborate and complicated and it’s rendering so
soulless, that it will fail as a medium of the Holy Spirit in the work of Grace.144
For Adventists, church music is first and foremost an offering of the heart, not the
instruments from their worship, not because they considered instruments to be evil, but
because the purchase of such instruments was perceived to be an extravagance in the face
of the most urgent need of financing the mission work of the church.
An instance illustrating this fact was Ellen White’s opposition to the purchase of a
pipe organ in the Battle Creek Church on the ground that it was more essential “to help
our brethren in foreign countries to erect churches” than buying “a costly organ, nothing
for mere display.”145 The value of simplicity was also behind White’s apprehension
concerning those who viewed worship music as a performance rather than an offering to
142 Ellen G. White, Evangelism (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1946), 508.
143 Liliane Doukhan, In Tune with God (Hagerstown, MD: Autumn House, 2010).
144 Review & Herald, January 30, 1883, 67. George Butler, an early Adventist leader, expressed
the same concerns when he highlighted the fact that congregational singing is a reflection of the church’s
spirituality. As the spirituality goes, so goes the music. George I. Butler, “Instrumental Music,” Review and
Herald, 1883, 329.
145 Ellen G. White, General Conference Daily Bulletin, January 28, 1893, 13.
163
God.146 Far from condemning choirs or soloists, she nevertheless expressed her concern
when she wrote that “[i]n some of our churches I have heard solos that were altogether
unsuitable for the service of the Lord's house.”147 She deplored “the long-drawn-out notes
and the peculiar sounds common in operatic singing.” Instead, she encouraged for
“simple songs of praise sung in a natural tone”148 in which every word is uttered clearly.
Those same values are presented in the current Church Manual.149 Songs are to be
offered in wondrous simplicity with a grateful heart to glorify God and edify the
worshipper. This does not mean that Adventists enjoy simplistic or artless music.
According to their Church Manual (quoting Ellen White), music should have “beauty,
pathos and power.”150 The fundamental issue is a matter of emphasis. For Adventists, the
every aspect of the Christian life, including the music offered in worship. 151
4.2.2.6.3 Community
Church music expresses the faith of the community. Through singing, each
worshipper engages with others to offer praises to God. This corporate offering to God
the worshippers’ faith in God and their fellowship with one another.
164
Adventists emphasize congregational singing. Although church services may have
Similarly, the Church Manual encourages, “The singing is not always to be done by a
few. As much as possible, let the entire congregation join.”153 As such, each and every
member is called to active engagement rather than spectator passivity. “When we come
together to worship the Lord, music should be rendered in the best possible way. All
The practice of singing together fuses the congregation into one community
singing one song to express one faith and one hope. The ecclesial dimension of singing is
Through singing, they are reminded who they are, who their Lord is and where they are
4.2.3 Prayer
prayer. In public prayer, the worship leader speaks directly to God on behalf of the
congregation.
165
In January 1932, Taylor Bunch, wrote an article in Ministry where he complained
that it was not at all unusual to have from six to ten prayers being offered during the
Sabbath school and church service. He asked the question: “Has not the time come for a
reformation in regard to public prayer? Should we not greatly simplify our services, and
reduce the number and length of our public petitions?”155 The 1932 Church Manual,
published a few months later, seems to have come as an answer to Bunch’s questions. It
mentioned four kinds of prayers that should be present in corporate worship: (1) The
Invocation; (2) The Pastoral Prayer; (3) Offertory Prayer; (4) The Benediction.156 We
4.2.3.1 Invocation.
Praying to God at the beginning of the worship service has always been an
Adventist practice. Rather than using the term “invocation,” early Adventists most often
used the expression “opening prayer.”157 An extract from the General Conference
156 Church Manual, 1932, 151-152. Compare with E. J. Waggoner, Sign of the Times, June 8,
1888, 342.
157Manuscript 29, 1892, 26; Letter 109, 1903, 11; General Conference Bulletin, vol. 7, 1913, 2.
General Conference Bulletin, May 18, 1913, 32.
166
This excerpt might not have recorded the totality of the prayer and yet it reflects
the way in which Adventists offered the invocation with a plea for divine intervention.
The above prayer, like the vast majority of Adventist prayers, was probably not written.
Also, like many opening prayers in those days, it also served as a pastoral prayer. 159
Things changed over time and in 1967, Norval Pease was adamant that the invocation “is
According to the Adventist Minister’s Handbook, the invocation has two aims: it
is to recognise and invite the presence of God.161 Implicit in this statement is that in every
act of worship, it is the church that comes into God’s presence when it assembles to give
glory and praise to Him. God's presence is not “invoked,” in the sense of calling God to
be where He is not. God is the One who invites us into His presence. By gathering
God is the Subject as well as the Object of our worship. As Subject, He invites
and initiates our worship; as Object, He graciously receives our response through our
praise and adoration. Yet, the assembly never takes God’s presence for granted. The God
who invites us asks us to invite Him into our midst. We deal here with a seeming
contradiction, what Reformed theologian, Von Allmen calls “the problem of the
159 See for instance, E. J. Waggoner, Signs of the Times, March 3, 1887, 135; General Conference
Bulletin May 16, 1913, 2.
162 Jean-Jacques Von Allmen, Worship: Its Theology and Practice (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1965), 28.
163 Ibid., 29-31. See also Nicholas Wolterstorff, The God We Worship: An Exploration of
Liturgical Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2015), 63.
167
4.2.3.2 Pastoral Prayer.
The pastoral prayer is the time when the church becomes even more aware than
ever that corporate worship is essentially an act of prayer. In most Adventist churches,
How is the pastoral prayer offered in an Adventist setting? On May 15, 1913,
Adventists met under a large tent in Takoma Park, Washington D.C to celebrate the 50th
who had been a delegate at the organisation of the Adventist Church fifty years
O Lord, our Heavenly Father, we thank thee that so many who have been adopted
into thy family are permitted to assemble . . . We have abundant reasons for
thanksgiving and praise to thee, as we have sung. Help us to realise that it is
because of thy goodness and mercy that we are still here. We thank thee, Lord, for
what thou hast done in gathering out a people . . .
We remember our faithlessness, our lack of energy, and that we might have been
farther advanced if there had been that consecration that thou didst require . . .
. . . O Lord, we thank thee that thou hast forgiven the mistakes, and that thou art
granting abundant blessings . . . Thou art here by thy Spirit to help in this
meeting. O Lord, if ever we needed thy help and blessing and divine guidance, . . .
O Lord, thou art ready to counsel, . . . So, Lord, we pray for divine guidance . . .
Grant it, O Lord, to Brother Daniells, as president of the General Conference;
grant it to the brethren of the different committees . . . O Lord, grant wisdom, we
pray . . . Lord, we want the strength which thou has given us still to be used to thy
glory . . . And, Lord, may it be the happy lot of each one of us to be so
consecrated to thee . . . We ask it in Jesus’ name.164
168
Praise – The very essence of the pastoral prayer is praise. In gathering for
worship, God’s people gather first of all to declare the glorious worthiness of God. Giving
glory to God constitutes the main reason for the existence of the church and the essence
of its worship. In acknowledging God for who He is, “prayer begins with adoration and a
reverence for God and His holy name . . . It is at this point that real, effective prayer
begins!”165 This central element of praise is foundational to the act of pastoral prayer.
a sharp distinction between praise and thanksgiving, Adventists tend to see praise as
giving glory to God for who He is and thanksgiving for what He has done.167 In giving
thanks, the church acknowledges that “every good gift comes from God” (James 1:16).
The pastoral prayer is also the time to thank God for His unspeakable gift in Jesus Christ
(2 Cor. 9:15).
John Loughborough, S. N. Haskell offered another prayer and closed it with the following
words: “We now commit ourselves to thee. Forgive us of our sins, we pray thee. Cover
our backslidings, O God. Finally, when the work is over, and thou dost gather thy people,
save us with them, we ask through Christ, our Redeemer. Amen.”168 At least two
fundamental theological truths are affirmed here. First, the act of confession recognises
the sad reality of sin in the church and the necessity of being forgiven in order to enjoy
165 C. M. Mellor, “The Content of the Pastoral Prayer (Concluded),” Ministry, April 1970, 21.
167 C. M. Mellor, “The Content of the Pastoral Prayer,” Ministry, April 1970, 22.
169
the full benefits of salvation. Second, the act of confession takes seriously both the grace
of God and the need for repentance. By faith, the church clings to the assurance of
repentance and commitment to do God’s will. The whole process relies on God’s grace
that leads the heart to genuine repentance.169 Once again, it is God who initiates our
thanksgiving.
difficult to distinguish between intercession and requests. In the pastoral prayer, petition
is offered for people outside the church (intercession) as well as for those within the
“intercession in the affairs of the church, the community, and the nation,”170 expressing
the selfless nature of the church. Here the church clearly recognises that the function of
worship surpasses the immediate setting of the assembly and includes the whole world.
The church does not exist only for itself. It exists also for the sake of the world for
In calling God our Father, we recognise all His children as our brethren. We are
all a part of the great web of humanity, all members of one family. In our petitions
we are to include our neighbors as well as ourselves. No one prays aright who
seeks a blessing for himself alone.171
170
Although distinct from the world, the church still stands in solidarity with the
world. Intercession is offered on the assumption that God hears the prayer of His children
service. “The proper climax of prayer is for us to commit and dedicate ourselves to the
service and keeping of God.”172 Neither exuberant praise and thanksgiving, nor sorrowful
confession and petition can replace the Christian’s duty. Dedication implies that the
church lives under the lordship of Christ to whom it has been set aside to declare His
glory. Closing the pastoral prayer “in Jesus’ name” implies the church’s dependence on
Christ to do God’s will in conformity with the values of His eternal Kingdom.
Praying over the offering is another regular feature of public prayer in Adventist
churches. This prayer occurs either prior to the giving of the offering or after collection. If
initiated before the offering, the assembly usually remains seated while the worship
leader prays standing. If the prayer follows the offering, some congregations stand and
sing the doxology as the offering is brought forward, followed by the prayer of
thanksgiving.173 The prayer is generally short. As mentioned here, the prayer over the
offering is a prayer of thanksgiving to God for his favors and blessings. 174
church testifies that it does not take the spiritual or material blessings of God for granted.
It is the grace of God that pours out the blessings and it is again the grace of God that
172 C. M Mellor, “The Content of Pastoral Prayer (concluded),” Ministry, April 1970, 22.
174 Ibid.
171
motivates the thanksgiving. By giving thanks, the church recognises that giving is not
4.2.3.4 Benediction.
concluding meetings which they conduct do so either by offering a short prayer to God . .
. or by calling upon some other brother to pray such a prayer.”175 Church Manuals from
1932 up to now have never made this distinction of roles. Yet, this has been the practice
this prayer could most appropriately be called a closing prayer, the reason being simple. It
is quite common for the minister to close the service by offering a prayer of dedication
and then pronouncing the benediction, ritually raising his hands over the standing
congregation.
In either case, the idea is that God’s favour and continuous presence is necessary
to the worshipping community for it to live out the Gospel in God’s name during the
week. The service of worship holds out a vision that the whole life is a life of worship
(Rom. 12:1, 2) which needs to be lived for the glory of God and the blessing of
humanity.177 The act of blessing recognises God’s presence in the church as in the world
172
Indeed, it reinforces the idea that God is the One who empowers His people for
faithful service in the world. The service of worship is meant to glorify God, bless His
How do the core values of Adventist worship interact as the congregation prays?
What spiritual and liturgical values are we able to ascribe to praying in Adventist
corporate worship? We can identify four essential values: (i) sincerity; (ii) simplicity; (iii)
4.2.3.5.1 Sincerity
In 1860, Uriah Smith, one of the early leaders in Adventism, wrote an article178 in
which he rhetorically asks a simple question: “What is prayer? Is it the rehearsal on the
bended knee of a set form of solemn words, learned by rote from the Bible, from the
liturgy, or from the traditions of the elders?” He answers in the negative, arguing that
such praying should be regarded as “prayerless prayers” [italics in the original].” Then
he gives his definition of prayer. “True prayer,” he argues “is the direct and earnest
converse of a soul with God.” Although Adventists today may not share Smith’s
vehemence that reading prayers from a book is cold formalism, most would basically
agree that prayer is a genuine heart conversation that comes from the inner depth of one’s
spiritual experience.
necessarily mean unplanned. Extemporaneous prayer requires preparation though for “the
178 Uriah Smith, “Prayerless Prayers,” Review & Herald, October 23, 1860.
173
one who prays should have some idea as to what he is going to say before he opens his
mouth.”179 For sure, Adventist worship does not depend on a precise liturgy, well-read
written prayers, or strict ceremony.180 Instead, it relies mostly on the spiritual condition of
the heart, especially of those who lead in worship. E. J. Waggoner made it absolutely
clear in 1888 when he wrote: “The man who does not pray in secret, cannot offer an
acceptable prayer in public.”181 To neglect private prayer is a sure sign of one’s inability
Orley Berg echoed the same ideas almost a century later: “There must be passion in our
The goal of worship is to draw people near to God and to have fellowship with
Him and a pastoral prayer that fails in this respect is a great disfavour to the congregation.
Adventists would question the genuineness of prayer that does not come from the heart.
4.2.3.5.2 Simplicity
procedural and ceremonial complexity because Adventist worship does not rely so much
180 Denis Fortin, “A Seventh-day Adventist Perspective on Worship” in Thomas F. Best, Worship
Today: Understanding Practice, Ecumenical Implications (Geneva: World Council of Churches
Publications, 2004), 166-167.
174
factor, because the warmhearted prayer brings results.”183 They are to “avoid clichés and
continually heard phrases, and pray for something current and typical of the concerns and
needs of [their] congregation.”184 Unfortunately, this ideal is not always met in reality. In
1967, O. B. Kuhn decried that “sometimes the pastoral prayer is tedious, prosy, and
superficial; it is unorganised, tame, and lifeless; it is dry, stale, and formal.”185 What is
needed is the congregation’s ability to understand the language used in prayer in order to
4.2.3.5.3 Reverence
spirit of reverence does not so much come from the magnificence of a church building or
the elaborate nature of the liturgy. Rather, it comes from a clear understanding of the
nature of God and His presence among His people.187 Reverence toward God in public
Uriah Smith encourages church members to let their “mind be filled with
reverence and godly fear” by reflecting on God’s purity, holiness, and justice contrasting
it with our lack thereof.189 In another article, Smith also argues that “our words should
184 Robert S. Joyce, “Our Conduct in the Pulpit,” Ministry 1939 April, n.d.
186 Carlyle B. Haynes, “Long Public Prayers Out of Place,” Ministry, April 1936, 2.
187 Ángel Manuel RodrÍguez, “Prayer: A Theological Reflection,” Ministry, December 2006, 5-7.
188 Paul Omar Campbell, “Public Prayer,” Ministry July 1957, 22-25.
189 Uriah Smith, Advent Review & Sabbath Herald, April 16, 1857.
175
ever be reverent toward God,” avoiding the superabundant mechanical repetition of
expressions such as “Good Lord” or “O Lord!” in our prayers. While cautioning against
an artificial or sanctimonious manner, he urges “we always ought to hallow his name.”190
For James White, we are to come “boldly before the throne of grace . . . but this does not
mean that we are to come without deep reverence and humility.”191 Irreverence has no
4.2.3.5.4 Communal
nature communal, not individualistic. Although offered to God, it also bears in mind the
by God that they ignore the rest of the congregation. Ellen G. White urges ministers “not
to preach a long sermon to the Lord in your long prayers.”193 She believes that public
prayers should be “short and to the point” and that “long, prosy talks and prayers are out
of place,” going as far as saying that “[t]hey weary the angels as well as the people who
listen to them.”194 The necessary brevity of public prayer is addressed in the Church
Manual.195 It quotes Ellen White who earlier wrote: “One or two minutes is long enough
190 Uriah Smith, Adventist Review & Sabbath Herald, May 14, 1861.
191 James White, “Come to Jesus in the Boldness of Prayer,” Review & Herald, July 15, 1862, 54.
192 C. M. Mellor, “The Content of the Pastoral Prayer (Concluded),” Ministry April 1970, 21.
176
for any ordinary prayer.”196 Because of the communal nature of public prayer, worship
leaders are also advised to use the correct pronoun (“we”, “our” and “us” instead of “I” or
“they”) in addressing God on behalf of the congregation. This indicates that the pastoral
prayer is public and communal instead of private or individual in nature.197 Even though
pedantic.198 Also, although addressed to God, the prayer should be heard clearly, so that
pastoral prayer highlights the vertical and horizontal aspects of Adventist worship.
4.2.4 Offerings
only in song and prayer but also in gifts. As such, Adventist worship is expressed not only
through speaking, singing and praying but through tangible giving as well.
The offering was not always a regular element of Adventist worship services. 200
Early Adventists met to sing, to pray, to testify and to exhort each other but stopped short
of expressing their love for God through giving. As a result, Adventist ministers worked
under serious financial hardship as they labored in their itinerant preaching ministries. 201
197 Taylor G. Bunch, “Prayer in the Public Service,” Ministry, October 1946.
198 Rex D. Edwards, “The Pastoral Prayer in Worship,” Ministry, 1988, 17.
199 Ibid.
200 For an historical background to offerings in Adventist worship, see Bert B. Holoviak and F.
Donald Yost, A Report on the Use of Tithe in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Office of Archives and
Statistics (Washington, DC: General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists September, 1976).
201 In April 1848, James White confided to his friends, the Hastings that “All we have including
clothes, bedding, and household furniture we have with us in a three-foot trunk, and that is but half full. We
have nothing else to do but to serve God and go where God opens the way for us (James White, letter to
177
In 1859, a plan called “systematic benevolence” was recommended to encourage weekly
giving.202 In 1876, after extensive Bible studies, Adventists officially adopted the tithe
system through which members were “to devote one-tenth of all their income from
whatever source, to the cause of God.”203 By returning one tenth of their income,
Adventists provided a better financial basis to support the gospel ministry and mission. In
1878, a 76-page booklet entitled Systematic Benevolence was issued by the General
through tithes and offerings based on Old and New Testament principles.204 It included
themes such as liberality, stewardship and trust in God, which continue to inform the
As a basic part of worship, the offering time is normally preceded by a brief and
pointed appeal on the importance of giving, based on A Tithe and Offerings Readings
booklet, published annually by the General Conference.206 These readings emphasize the
spiritual motivation for giving while also highlighting the need for providing financial
support for the church. Regrettably, in some instances, these appeals are sometimes
Brother and Sister Hastings, April 1848, written from Middletown, Connecticut). See also, James White,
General Conference, “Report of General Conference held at Battle Creek, Michigan, June 3-6, 1859,”13-14.
204 General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Systematic Benevolence or the Bible Plan for
Supporting the Ministry (Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, 1878).
205For instance, compare outline of Systematic Benevolence with Sabbath School Lesson, July-
October 1889 (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press, February 19, 1889) and Sabbath School Lesson, January-March
2018: Stewardship: Motives of the Heart, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 2016.
178
Depending on local church practice, prayer is offered either before or after the
collection. The worship leader thanks God for the gifts received and beseeches His
What do Adventists express through their gifts? Their statement of belief teaches
that as God’s stewards, “we acknowledge God’s ownership by faithful service to Him and
our fellow men, and by returning tithes and giving offerings for the proclamation of His
Gospel and the support and growth of His church.”207 Tithing, as the minimum baseline
for giving, is expressed in the Church Manual: “In recognition of the biblical plan and the
solemn privilege and responsibility . . . all are encouraged to faithfully return a tithe, one
tenth of their increase or personal income, into the denomination’s treasury.”208 Adventist
Minister’s Handbook clearly points out that “through the tithe and offerings the
congregation acknowledges God’s blessings during the week that He is Lord, and all we
have belongs to Him. These gifts indicate that our love for Him flows freely from a
grateful heart.”209 Succinctly put, through the act of giving, worshippers respond with
Based on this understanding, we now look briefly at the incentive, purpose and
179
4.2.4.1 Incentive.
it about their relationship with God that makes them bring their monetary gifts to Him
every week?
First, by giving, Adventists acknowledge God as the source of their being and the
source of the money they give.210 By worshipping God with their money, they confess
that God is the Creator and Owner of everything that exists. 211 By returning tithes and
sense.”212 In doing so, they also recognise the bestowal of His grace upon their hearts.213
Although the Adventist Church encourages members to give money during the
worship service, their Minister’s Handbook teaches the following: “Rather than a fund-
raising event, the offering provides a tangible opportunity for the congregation to express
praise to God by returning to Him a tithe of His blessings and offerings of appreciation
for His sustaining grace.”214 Hence, Christian giving is not merely a response to the
financial needs of the church but an expression of worship to the Creator for His
providential care. The offering of our money “is a response of the entire congregation to
God’s goodness.”215 Through their gifts, Adventists recognise that whatever they earn or
211 Tithing Principles and Guidelines (Silver Spring, MD: General Conference of SDA, 1990), 6-
7.
215 S. Joseph Kidder, Majesty: Experiencing Authentic Worship (Hagerstown, MD: Review &
Herald, 2009), 97.
180
own is a result of God’s grace. As such, their gifts concretely express their belief in the
According to Adventist theologian, Àngel Rodrìguez, “God and Christ are described in
the New Testament as the Great Givers who enrich humans out of their loving grace.” 217
God, is the Author of every good and perfect gift . . . who gives to all men generously
and without reproaching” (James 1:17, 5). He is our model of giving. 218 When God gives,
He gives generously. To declare God as a Giver is to consider His Supreme Gift, Jesus
Christ who in turn challenges his followers to give freely because they received freely
(Matt. 10:8).
God is also the Forgiver. In Christ, God provides humanity with its only source of
forgiveness and reconciliation. Christ the Giver and the Forgiver compels faith and
gratitude in His people. “People give as they are motivated by the grace of God and the
gift of salvation.”219 This means that giving cannot be seen as a way of manipulating God
through which we can exchange money for God’s blessings. The act of giving, like any
other part of Adventist worship, is prompted by God’s own self-giving. The offering time
simply expresses the covenant relationship that exists between God and His people.220
The offerings are the visible expression of their faith and commitment to God.
217Àngel M. Rodrìguez, Stewardship Roots (Silver Spring, MA: General Conference of Seventh-
day Adventists Stewardship Ministries Department, 2013), 81.
181
Third, giving is a response to God’s blessings.221 Giving is an effective witness
that God is the Source of all blessings. The tithe and the offerings are given during the
church service as an authoritative affirmation that God has been continually blessing His
people. Therefore, the act of giving is a form of recognition, a symbol of gratitude for
4.2.4.2 Purpose.
To what end do worshippers give during the worship service? What are the
reasons behind the act of giving? It can be noted that worshippers give because of the
following reasons: (1) It is an act of worship; (2) It assists the mission of the church; (3) it
is good stewardship.
tithe and offerings, or some other means, giving is the heart’s joyful response to the
goodness of God.224 It is the ritual returning of a portion of what God has initially given.
221S. Joseph Kidder, Majesty: Experiencing Authentic Worship (Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 2009), 99.
222Àngel M. Rodrìguez, “Elements of Adventist Worship” in Worship, Ministry and the Authority
of the Church, 141.
224 Ellen White expresses it this way: “And what more appropriate time could be chosen for
setting aside the tithe and presenting our offerings to God? On the Sabbath we have thought upon His
goodness. We have beheld His work in creation as an evidence of His power in redemption. Our hearts are
filled with thankfulness for His great love. And now, before the toil of a week begins, we return to Him His
own, and with it an offering to testify our gratitude. Thus, our practice will be a weekly sermon, declaring
that God is the possessor of all our property, and that He has made us stewards to use it to His glory. Every
acknowledgment of our obligation to God will strengthen the sense of obligation. Gratitude deepens as we
give it expression, and the joy it brings is life to soul and body.” Ellen G. White, The Review and Herald,
February 4, 1902.
182
Second, God’s people give “to support the work of God,”225 especially “to sustain
the gospel laborers in their work.”226 Adventists share the view that “God has made the
proclamation of the gospel dependent upon the labors and the gifts of His people.”227
Each time the members give, they do so with the firm belief that they are concretely
supporting the proclamation of the Gospel and advancing of the church’s mission to the
world. However, in Adventist thinking, giving is not to the church but to God. This
implies that Church leaders are accountable to God and to Christ’s body on how they use
God’s money.228
Third, Adventists give during corporate worship because they believe in Christian
stewardship.229 They understand that God made the world for the enjoyment and care of
people whom He created and redeemed. They acknowledge that, as God’s stewards, they
are responsible to God for the use of the varied grace with which He has entrusted them.
Recognizing God’s full ownership of their lives, they dedicate all they have to Him
worship. In giving, they affirm that all of life is to be lived under the lordship of Christ.
Such giving is an expression of their full commitment to God “based on faith and trust in
183
Him, a decision of the heart and not a formality.”231 Hence, giving is a weekly
Adventists recognise the tithe as “‘holy to the Lord’ symbolising God’s ownership
of everything (Lev. 27: 30, 32). It is returned to Him as His own.”232 They see their
offerings as an opportunity to express gratitude and love for having God prospering
them.233 The returning of tithes and giving of offerings are not an afterthought within the
context of Adventist worship. Worshippers often prepare their offerings at home and
employed in this sacred act of commitment.”234 God is not so much concerned about the
amount of money offered. Rather, He is more interested in the motives of the heart. Ellen
White notes: “Entire devotion and benevolence, prompted by grateful love, will impart to
the smallest offering, the willing sacrifice, a divine fragrance, making the gift of priceless
value.”235
4.2.4.3 Theology.
Explicit acknowledgement of God’s love and care permeates the act of giving. A
fundamental assumption of that liturgical action is that God, the Creator, Redeemer and
Sustainer of His people, deserves total worship. The basic reason for the offering, apart
234 Elder’s Handbook (Silver Spring, MD: General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 1997),
53.
184
from the routine funding of the church’s personnel, activities and mission, is to respond to
Faithfulness in giving reflects the nature of our Heavenly Father. God is faithful in
providing for His people and He manifested this supremely by fulfilling His promise in
sending the Messiah. His faithfulness covers the entire realm of Christian life. By giving,
the church acknowledges that God is a faithful Provider for it is His nature to give. 236 He
“Jesus is Lord” is a statement at the heart of Christian worship. Indeed, the act of
giving flows from this central affirmation. Both creation and new creation in Christ are
God’s gift. Christ offered Himself as a Sacrifice and invites His redeemed to offer
themselves as living sacrifices (Rom. 12:1, 2). His claim of God’s reign now is
liturgically expressed in the offering where the church recognises the vital connection that
This crucial role of Jesus Christ’s in our act of giving is highlighted by Ellen
White:
All blessings must come through a Mediator. Now every member of the human
family is given wholly into the hands of Christ, and whatever we possess–whether
it is the gift of money, of houses, of lands, of reasoning powers, of physical
strength, of intellectual talents–in this present life, and the blessings of the future
life, are placed in our possession as God’s treasures to be faithfully expended for
the benefit of man. Every gift is stamped with the cross and bears the image and
superscription of Jesus Christ. All things come of God. From the smallest benefits
up to the largest blessing, all flow through the one Channel–a superhuman
mediation sprinkled with the blood that is of value beyond estimate because it was
the life of God in His Son.237
Within this perspective, God is involved from beginning to end. The offering is
not a one-sided movement from the church to God. Rather, God always moves first
237 Ellen G. White, Faith and Works (Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing, 1979), 22.
185
before the church responds in worship through giving. Giving is a stewardship of divine
grace. “If the stewardship motif says anything, it is that we are held accountable as
individuals for doing the best we can with what we have, to give glory to God and to the
Implicit in returning the tithe and giving the offerings during the worship service
is that God actually receives those gifts. Yet it is the church that uses the gifts to advance
God’s Kingdom. If it is God who receives and the church that uses the offerings, then
there is an intimate connection between divine and human action in God’s salvific
purpose for humanity. The church is the instrument for the extension of God’s kingdom
on earth. The faithful and generous giving of tithe and offerings facilitate the
proclamation and actualization of the kingdom of God set against the horizon of Christ’s
4.2.5 Ordinances
Adventist worship also includes the ordinances of baptism, foot washing and the Lord’s
Supper. Even though these rites do not form part of the regular worship service,
meaning in the fact that Christ instituted and participated in them while on earth. These
ordinances highlight divine grace and availability, particularly manifested in the person of
Christ.
186
4.2.5.1 Baptism.
In the Review and Herald of February 24, 1859, F. B. Frisbie, reported a quite
Despite its extreme nature, this baptism illustrates a number of important elements
already present in early Adventist baptisms: (i) preaching preceding baptism;240 (ii)
baptism by immersion;241 (iii) baptism associated to the work of the Holy Spirit;242 (iv)
Church Manual states: “In the absence of an ordained pastor, it is always customary,
whenever possible, for the elder to arrange with the president of the conference or the
superintendent of the mission field for the administration of the rite of baptism to those
desiring to unite with his church.”244 Adventists hold to the same practice today.245
239 J. B. Frisbie, “Meetings in Wright, Mich.,” Review & Herald, February, 24,1859, 112
240 Review & Herald, May 19, 1851; Review & Herald, May 29, 1855
241 Review & Herald, September 1850; Review & Herald, November 22, 1854; Review & Herald,
January 24, 1854; Review & Herald, June 28, 1855; Review & Herald, March 13, 1856,187; Review &
Herald, May 16, 1854; Review & Herald April 2, 1857.
242 Review & Herald, July 4, 1854; Review & Herald March 13, 1856, 187.
243 For instance, Review & Herald, November 1, 1853 mentions: “It was easy singing, praying and
shouting. Glory to God! How refreshing to the spirit to look back upon such sacred seasons” whereas
Review & Herald, October 24, 1854 mentions: “four willing and happy souls were baptized;” Review &
Herald, July 3, 1856: “those baptized went on their way rejoicing.”
187
The significance and importance of baptism is clearly expressed in the Seventh-
day Adventist Minister’s Handbook.246 The Minister’s Handbook outlines three steps in
which the church is at work as it participates in the liturgy. We may summarize these as
they are referring to believers’ baptism, i.e. of those who are capable of making a
personal profession of faith expressed through the baptismal vows.248 Millerism recruited
heavily from Baptists and restorationist Christians who practiced baptism by immersion.
From their earliest days, Seventh-day Adventists believed that baptism is vitally linked to
the believer’s experience with Christ, expressing his or her repentance and conversion.
Ellen White asserts, “Repentance, faith, and baptism are the requisite steps in
Christ as Lord and of their commitment to follow Him as faithful disciples. While
baptism is a personal experience between the baptised individual and God, it is not an
individualized experience; the act of baptism involves the church by incorporating the
248 Baptismal vow is an early practice in Adventism. For instance, in 1876, James White wrote,
"Those parents who brought their children to the (Camp) meeting and saw them converted, and take the
baptismal vow, are now glad that they brought them." Sign of the Times, June 8, 1876.
188
Preparation is primordial. The baptismal candidate is usually prepared through an
extended series of Bible studies to review all the major elements of the Christian faith and
life.250 On the day of baptism, care and support is provided through the provision of
baptismal robes, towels and facilities for changing and procedures of baptism are
rehearsed with the pastor to allay the baptismal candidates’ fears or concerns. 251
baptismal candidates are examined in the presence of the congregation, to determine their
readiness for baptism. The examination of candidates entails the minister putting them
through a set of doctrinal statements. The candidates indicate assent either by raising their
hands or by responding “I believe.”252 As such, the act of openly confessing one’s faith
through baptismal questions and answers is integral to baptism itself. The church then
votes the baptismal candidates into membership, subject to baptism, by the raising of
hands,
Baptism involves the community. As the candidate enters the baptistery, the
officiating pastor frequently invites family and friends who have been instrumental in the
baptismal candidates’ life to stand in honour of the occasion. A few words are said about
the candidate’s spiritual walk just before immersion into the baptismal waters, 253
following a brief statement such as: “Because of your profession of faith in Christ as your
189
Savior, and your desire to live a new life in Him, I now baptize you in the name of the
Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.”254 Plunging the believer into the baptismal water “is
a dramatic liturgical symbol of death and burial”255 as well as resurrection to a new life.
“What is at issue is the relationship between the symbolic action in baptism, and
Adventist baptisms were regularly conducted in the name of the three persons of the
name of the triune God leads believers into the Trinitarian and ecclesial communion.
After baptism, the officiating pastor can make a Gospel appeal and invite those
who would like to join in the next baptismal ceremony. The baptismal ceremony is closed
A Baptismal Certificate together with suitable gifts are normally presented during
the worship service. After the worship service, a special celebration ceremony may be
held to welcome the newly baptised member into church fellowship, stressing the
membership are highlighted. The community of faith, especially through seasoned church
members, gives its Christian encouragement and affirmation while elders are assigned the
257 Jerry Moon, "The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 1: Historical Overview," Andrews University
Seminary Studies, 41(1): 113-129; Merlin D. Burt, “History of Seventh-day Adventist Views on the
Trinity,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 17/1 (Spring 2006), 125–139.
258Review & Herald, July 1889, Review & Herald, April 10, 1894, 232; Review & Herald,
December 3, 1895.
190
task of being spiritual mentors to the new church member. Implicit in this practice is an
affirmation that the believer may participate in the life of the church and the church will
participate in the life of the believer as a loving and caring community of faith.
Baptism brings into focus many theological and soteriological themes, such as the
doctrines of God, Church and salvation. Here is the official position of Seventh-day
Adventists on baptism:
By baptism, we confess our faith in the death and the resurrection of Jesus Christ
and testify our death to sin and our purpose to walk in newness of life. Thus, we
acknowledge Christ as Lord and Savior, become His people, and are received as
members by His church. Baptism is a symbol of our union with Christ, the
forgiveness of our sins, and our reception of the Holy Spirit. It is by immersion in
water and is contingent on an affirmation of faith in Jesus and evidence of
repentance of sin. It follows instruction in the Holy Scriptures and acceptance of
their teachings. (Rom. 6:1-6; Col. 2:12, 13; Acts 16:30-33; 22:16; 2:38; Matt. 28:
19, 20.)259
The text is quite explicit about the symbolic nature of baptism. Baptism should not
be separated from conversion. Since the believer who is baptised has already experienced
the miracle of the new birth through saving faith in Christ, it is clear that Adventists do
not regard baptism as effecting salvation or regeneration.260 Adventists do not see baptism
as a sacrament through which grace flows into the believer’s life in and out of itself. 261
Baptism in itself does not guarantee newness of life.262 As early as 1854, James White
260
Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances: Baptism, Foot Washing, and Lord’s Supper,” in Handbook
of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, ed., Raoul Dederen (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2000), 591.
261 Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopedia, rev. ed., (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 1996),
10:166.
191
was adamant that there is no sacramental power in the water as such.263 An Adventist
They view it as symbolic of cleansing from sin and moral defilement. 265 Belief as well as
is ruled out. Public baptism proclaims the new birth but does not cause it.
Baptism is God’s gift to us in Christ and our response to Him in Christ. Although
administered in the name of the triune God, it remains a Christ-centred event. Admittedly,
the reality of being baptised into Christ involves entering spiritually into “the passion
experience of our Lord.”266 It takes up the history of the passion and locates the believer
within it. Baptism means participating in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus on a
spiritual level.267 This is brought out in Paul’s reference to baptism in Romans 6 and
Colossians 2 where the symbolic dimensions of death, burial and resurrection are
highlighted.
264 A Declaration of The Fundamental Principles Taught and Practiced by the Seventh-day
Adventists (Battle Creek, MI: Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, 1872).
265 Herbert Keisler, “The Ordinances” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 588.
192
Baptism identifies the baptised with the dying and the rising of Christ. Through
identification with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection in baptism, three great
realities are memorialized and celebrated. First, when the baptised identify with Christ in
His death, they declare their helplessness and lostness outside of Christ, and demonstrate
publicly their faith in Christ and death to sin. As such, “[b]aptism symbolizes the
crucifixion of the old life.”268 Second, when the baptised identifies with Christ in His
burial, he or she declares not only a death to sin but also a renouncement of the world and
Baptism is a most solemn renunciation of the world. Those who are baptized in
the threefold name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, at the very entrance
of their Christian life declare publicly that they have forsaken the service of Satan
and have become members of the royal family, children of the heavenly King.270
Third, the most unique aspect of baptism results from the believers’ identity with
Christ in his resurrection. The rising out of the water symbolizes the believers’ new life in
Christ. The same power that raised Christ from the dead is now operative as they walk in
newness of life in Him. This involves a new order of existence, a reorientation of the
mind and a dedication of the life to Christ. The struggle against sin continues but can now
The practice of baptism is an integral part of God’s plan to bring believers into
salvific communion with Him, and to gather them into his kingdom as sons and
193
“[w]hen we become obedient believers and have put on Christ by baptism, then the Lord
It is through baptism that the Lord adds new disciples to the church (Acts 2:41, 7;
1 Corinthians 12:13). For Adventists, “[o]ne cannot be baptized and not join the church
family.”272 Baptism, in making us one with Christ, makes us one with the church since “it
involves membership in the body of Christ.”273 It incorporates the baptised person into the
Baptism is a public declaration that the offer of the Gospel, embedded in the gift
of Christ, has been accepted. The baptismal rite is conducted in and by the church
because the church is a baptised and baptismal community. As such, the Christian
normally follows a sermon, expressing the idea that baptism like other elements in
reconciliation.
Baptism is a liturgical act that incorporates believers into the body of Christ. Ellen
G. White presents it this way: “Very close and sacred is the relation between Christ and
His church—He is the bridegroom, and the church is the bride; He is the head, and the
church is the body. Connection with Christ, then, involves connection with His
church.”274 By being united to Christ, the head of the body, the Christian is automatically
connected to the other members of the body through baptism and the bond of the Holy
Spirit.
271 F. B. Friesbie, “Church Order,” Review & Herald, December 26, 1854, 147.
273 Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 586.
194
For Adventists, baptism is a sign of entrance into the Kingdom. Ellen White puts
it this way:
Christ has made baptism the sign of entrance to His spiritual kingdom. He has
made this a positive condition with which all must comply who wish to be
acknowledged as under the authority of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Before man can find a home in the church, before passing the threshold of God's
spiritual kingdom, he is to receive the impress of the divine name, “The Lord our
righteousness.” Jeremiah 23:6.275
Baptism is a most solemn renunciation of the world. Those who are baptized in
the threefold name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, at the very entrance
of their Christian life declare publicly that they have forsaken the service of Satan,
and have become members of the royal family, children of the heavenly King.
They have obeyed the command, “Come out from among them, and be ye
separate . . . and touch not the unclean thing.” And to them is fulfilled the
promise, “I will receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My
sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty” 2 Corinthians 6:17, 18.276
Christ. Since baptism is the means of initiation into the church, Adventists only baptise
those who show signs of regeneration and make a public declaration of faith.277 Baptism
inward, it is not an individual experience since the church provides the context for
hearing the Gospel and is the body that incorporates the new believer into its fellowship.
Within this understanding of baptism, the church comprises those who have responded
276 Ibid.
195
wholeheartedly to the Gospel.278 Baptism signals that one has become God’s new creation
This distinctive understanding of baptism rests upon the supposition that the
church is a covenant community which exists to do the will of Christ.279 Baptism refers to
the divine action that initiates and establishes the covenant with an individual and the
human response in accepting that covenant. Both divine initiative and personal faith
As a sign of the believer’s commitment to the divine covenant, baptism has ethical
implications. Through baptism, Christians declare that they have heard God’s call to holy
living.281 Every baptism is a reminder to the community of faith that it has declared its
loyalty to God. The baptismal ceremony celebrates the covenant by which God has bound
Bound in this covenant of grace, the church confesses Jesus as Lord. It pledges
itself not only to be pure and holy in life but also to be an agent of reconciliation to the
world, bearing witness to the power of the Gospel to transform lives. Baptism, and, by
278
Raoul Dederen, ed., “The Church” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology,
Commentary Reference Series (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 2000), 556.
279
Norman R. Gulley, “Ordinances of the Church: Baptism, Foot Washing, and Lord’s Supper,”
in Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, ed., Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church Studies, Adventist
Ecclesiology 3 (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute, 2016),187-188.
196
extension, worship, is not tied to the four walls of a building but permeates the whole of
Adventists consider foot-washing and the Lord’s Supper as integral parts of the
Communion Service.283 This is how they have viewed it from their beginnings. For
instance, one of the earliest detailed reports on foot-washing is a Review and Herald
In the evening we repaired again to the house of worship, where we had the
Lord’s supper, and all the ordinances of the church of God. And though quite a
number had to start for home, yet forty-five joyful brethren and sisters remained,
and sat together in a heavenly place, while God’s Spirit was poured upon us, and
his banner over us was love. It seemed to me that I never before had such a
glorious time. For many a dreary month previous, I had concluded that the sweet
communications of the Spirit were not to be enjoyed in this mortal state. But let
me say to any such desponding souls, that peace, love and joy inexpressible, yes,
and a hope too, as an anchor to the soul, both sure and steadfast, can be obtained
while in this tabernacle, by keeping the commandments of God, the faith of Jesus,
and all the ordinances of the Lord’s house.284
282 Adventists do not normally use the term ‘Eucharist’ to refer to the Communion Service.
However, they use the terms ‘Communion’ and ‘Lord’s Supper’ interchangeably. For instance, their
Fundamental Statement of Belief uses the term ‘Lord’s Supper’ (Seventh-day Adventists Believe, p.225)
while their Church Manual, p.123 and their Minister’s Handbook, p.168 prefer the term ‘Communion
Service’. In this section, I will use the term ‘Communion Service’ when referring to the combined practice
of foot-washing and the Lord’s Supper, which are inseparable whenever practiced in Adventist worship.
283 For an historical overview of the Lord’s Supper among Seventh-day Adventists, see Michael
W. Campbell, “’A Holy Spell’: The Development of the Communion Service among Seventh-day
Adventists,” Term Paper, Andrews University, 2004. Accessed at The Center for Adventist Research,
James White Library, Andrews University.
197
Such an experience was not unusual for early Adventists, who saw great special
spiritual benefits in the Communion Service.285 “Through this service, “salvation became
1. Hymn;
2. Prayer for the Lord's blessing upon the service;
3. Hymn;
4. Exhortation regarding the importance of the meeting;
5. Roll call of members;
6. Read John 13:2-17 to introduce the foot-washing service;
7. Separate (according to gender), and attend the ordinance of foot-washing;
8. Come together again for Communion Service while singing another Hymn;
9. Read 1 Corinthians 11:23-29; 10: 16; and exhort on partaking of the emblems;
10. After the blessing and breaking of the bread and passing it to the
communicants, all eat at the same time after the minister pronounces, “Jesus said,
‘This is my body, which is broken for you.’
11. In like manner, when the wine in the cups has been passed, all drink together
after the minister says, Jesus said, ‘This is my blood of the New Testament, which
is shed for many.’
12. After gathering up the cups, meeting is close by singing a hymn;
13. What remains of the consecrated bread and the wine after the service is later
mingled by the deacons and burned discreetly.
Communion services nowadays typically follow the same pattern, except that
there are no longer roll calls of members. These days, the unused wine is respectfully
poured out on the ground rather than mixed to the bread before burning.287
285 Ellen G. White, diary, January 1, 1859, Selected Messages, vol. 5, 1859; March 19, 1859,
Manuscript 2, 1859; H. C. Winslow, “From Bro. Winslow,” Review & Herald, December 11, 1866, 10;
Joseph Bates, “Labors in Michigan,” Review & Herald, December 1, 1863; S.B Whitney, “From Bro.
Whitney,” Review & Herald, August 15, 1865, 87; A. S. Hutchins, “Report from Bro. Hutchins,” Review &
Herald, 20, 1864, 132; Mary F. Maxson, “From Sis. Maxson,” Review & Herald, February 16, 1864, 95;
Mary F. Maxson, “The Fast,” Review & Herald, September 20, 1864, 133-134;
198
It seems that by the 1930s, the Communion Service was not valued as before. The
1932 Church Manual mentions the “decidedly wrong” practice of some members to stay
away from the service.”288 This seems to be the case even now.289
The Lord's Supper is a participation in the emblems of the body and blood of
Jesus as an expression of faith in Him, our Lord and Savior. In this experience of
communion Christ is present to meet and strengthen His people. As we partake,
we joyfully proclaim the Lord's death until He comes again. Preparation for the
Supper includes self-examination, repentance, and confession. The Master
ordained the service of foot washing to signify renewed cleansing, to express a
willingness to serve one another in Christlike humility, and to unite our hearts in
love. The communion service is open to all believing Christians.290
We now look at both rites separately, looking briefly at the development of their
4.2.5.2.1 Foot-washing
from the beginning.291 The first instance of foot-washing among Adventists took place
after the Lord’s Supper at the close of a meeting in Vermont in 1844.292 A July 1845
289 James A. Ditties, Communion and Community, Adventist Review, 2003, accessed February 22,
2018, http://archives.adventistreview.org/2003-1529/story1.html.
292 For an historical overview of foot washing in Adventism, see Roger H. Ferris, "The Ordinance
of Foot Washing and the Lord’s Supper in the Seventh-day Adventist Denomination." Unpublished term
paper, Andrews University, 1957; Harold E. Fagal. "An Investigation into the Ordinance of Foot Washing
among Early Adventists from 1844 to 1867." Unpublished term paper, Andrews University, 1964. For a
detailed analysis from a biblical, historical and Adventist perspective, see Cène et Ablution des Pieds;
199
article in The Day–Star, a Millerite journal, written by J. B. Cook, among the most
“influential Millerite leaders” and one of the first to adopt seventh–day Sabbatarianism,293
affirms not only the importance of the ordinances but also that a third ordinance was
binding on believers.
Baptism and the Lord's Supper embody in the impressive action which they
involve, the great doctrines of Christianity—the death and resurrection of Jesus.
They call to mind His second coming and our resurrection. The Saviour's example
and command, which are employed to enforce these ordinances, enjoins another
ordinance or appointment, which embody the great Gospel doctrine of love and
subjection one to another in the Lord. Now, as the practical duties of Christianity
are no less essential than the doctrines . . . it would seem that the ordinance which
bodies forth the doctrine of mutual affection and submission, is no less binding
than others. If I, your LORD AND MASTER, have WASHED YOUR FEET, ye
also aught to wash one another's feet.294
humility”295 and stressed the importance of observing “all the commandments of Jesus,
even to washing one another’s feet.”296 Its detractors associated it with fanaticism.297
Foot-washing became a general practice for Adventists over time. For instance, the fourth
Comité de Recherche Biblique de la Conférence Générale des Adventistes du Septième Jour, Dammarie-
lès-Lys: Vie et Santé, 1991.
293 George Knight, William Miller and the Rise of Adventism (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 2010),
111.
294 J. B. Cook, “To be Christians, we must do the works of Christ,” Day–Star, 6 (July 1, 1845): 31
(emphasis in original).
296 Day-Star, 7:8, October 18, 1845; see also, Joseph Bates, The Seventh-Day Sabbath: A
Perpetual Sign, 2nd rev. and enl. ed., (New Bedford, MA: Benjamin Lindsey, 1847), 59.
297Advent Herald, March 26, 1845, 56; Advent Herald, May 14, 1845, 107. See also, Graybill,
Ron. "Foot Washing and Fanatics." Insight. January, 1973, 9-13.
200
hymn in the first hymnal they published was a hymn about foot-washing.298 The first
the Free-Church tradition.299 They hold the firm conviction that they are following the
example and obey the command of Christ in John 13:1-17 when they practice foot
washing. Crucially, they insist that verses 14 and 15 (“If I then, your Lord and Teacher,
have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I have given you
an example that you should do as I have done to you.”) must be interpreted literally. They
believe that Christ’s promise attached to the practice of foot washing (John 13:17) is still
valid.
298 James White, Hymns for Gods Peculiar People that Keep the Commandments of God, and the
Faith of Jesus (Oswego, NY: Richard Oliphant, 1849).
299See for instance, John D. Roth Practices: Mennonite Worship and Witness (Scottdale, PA:
Herald Press), 2009, 114-115; Graydon F. Snyder and Dorren McFarlane: The People Are Holy, 79-81;
Paul F. Bradshaw: New SCM Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship, 212.
201
Accordingly, and early in their history, Adventists have insisted that foot washing
assurance, and solidarity, primarily from Christ to the believer, but also between the
horizontal dimension.
Jesus, the King of glory, took the position of a servant in fulfillment of His
vocation of humble service. “Foot-washing manifested His willingness to serve and was
202
the preamble to His service on the cross.”305 In His life as in His death, Christ was an
example of self-giving love. He came down, lived and died in service to God and
humanity. He devoted Himself to His disciples in radical servanthood and “loved them to
the end” by washing their feet in the Upper room [John 13:1] before pouring His blood on
Calvary.
Suffering Servant (Isa. 53) who abandoned all the privileges of divinity and reduced
Himself to the level of a servant in order to save us (Phil. 2:5-8). In practising foot
By washing the feet of His disciples, Jesus acted out His teaching of humility and
humility.”306 Believers who wash each other’s feet demonstrate their willingness to serve
Normally, the ceremony takes place outside the main sanctuary. Men and women
acceptable, separate areas can be organised for husband and wife, parents and baptised
children to perform the rite of foot-washing.307 Deacons and deaconesses provide basins
of water and towels for the service. The participants pair into two and wash each other’s
feet. Customarily, after foot-washing, both participants offer a prayer for each other. After
305 Norman G. Gulley, “Ordinances of the Church: Baptism, Foot Washing, and the Lord’s
Supper,” 189.
203
emptying the basin, they wash their hands and return to the sanctuary, meditating quietly
This ceremony translates in practice liturgical and theological values into practice
in ways that shape Adventism. First, Adventists link the rite of foot-washing to Christ’s
Second, and closely related, foot-washing reminds the believers of their own
baptism.310 Though they have been baptised into Christ and are part of His body, they still
need forgiveness because they are far from perfect. Foot-washing symbolizes the regular
acceptance between believers.312 It is a time when differences can be settled and enmities
erased in preparation for taking the Lord’s Supper. Many times, this can be a moving and
liberating experience as pride and selfishness are set aside and estranged members
reconcile. Foot-washing is about Christ’s vision for the mending of all relationships,
whether with God or one another. “Its intimacy serves as a reminder of the strong sense
310 Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances: Baptism, Foot Washing, and Lord’s Supper,” in Handbook
of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, ed., Raoul Dederen, Hagerstown: Review and Herald, 2000), 603 (cf
John 13:10).
311 Raoul Dederen, ed. “The Church” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 558.
204
Fourth, through foot-washing, church members liturgically express their love and
rite, foot-washing actualizes the deep Christian fellowship and solidarity that ought to
exist and can exist among God’s people. In washing each other’s feet, the church is
reminded of Christ’s loving service that should characterize our relationships with each
other as well.
Christian. This liturgical practice shapes them and translates the deep core of their
theology into practice. By contemplating Christ’s humility in action and by reenacting his
loving service for the disciples through foot-washing, Adventists grasp and articulate the
important fact that the Gospel needs to be lived in humble, loving service. Through this
rite, they understand that communion with Christ implies communion with fellow
Christians and that service to Christ involves practical service to fellow believers.
Conversely, they also understand that unless the horizontal relationships within the
church are secure, the vertical relationship with God is at risk. Through foot-washing,
Supper.316
315Norman G. Gulley, “Ordinances of the Church” in Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the
Church, 191.
316 Church Manual, 2015, 123-124 quoting Ellen G. White in Desire of Ages, 650; See also
Review and Herald, November 4, 1902; Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances,” in Handbook of Seventh-day
Adventist Theology, 594.
205
4.2.5.2.2 The Lord’s Supper
comprises both foot-washing and the Lord’s Supper. As in the case of foot-washing, the
significance of the Lord’s Supper to Adventists can be traced back to the early days of
their movement. As early as 1848, while they were still forging their identity and
doctrines, Adventists were already celebrating the Communion Service. This was due to
the fact that most Adventists came from the Methodist, Baptist and the Christian
However, the Lord’s Supper was not done without controversy since some
believed that it should be done once a year, viewing it as a type of the Passover.317 After
agreeing not to entertain that novel idea, they integrated the Lord’s Supper into what was
called the “quarterly meeting,” a practice borrowed from the Methodists. The
Communion service was such a highpoint of those quarterly meetings that they became
Adventists still attach great importance to the Lord’s Supper. They celebrate this
ordinance four times a year, following the pattern set by their pioneers. The service is led
unfermented wine and unleavened bread are used to represent the spotless body and pure
blood of Christ.319 Whereas early Adventists seem to have used a common cup,320 later
318 J. H. Waggoner, “In Ohio,” Review & Herald, December 29, 1863, 38-39.
319 Ellen White, Colporteur Ministry (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 2015), 1, 24; (cf.
Ex.12:15, 19; 13:7; 1 Cor. 5:7,8; 1 Pet. 1:19)
320 Grace Amadon, “George W. Amadon,” Review & Herald, July 6, 1944, 9-10.
206
generations used individual Communion cups, probably as a protection against
Adventist Communion service. The rationale behind this is as follows: “[A] full
commitment to Christ and faith in His sacrifice, not membership in any particular church”
In contrast, partaking the Lord’s Supper “in an unworthy manner” brings about
I. Practice
and Minister’s Handbook 324 offer more detail. Here is a typical order of service for the
1. Introit: Music played or hymn sung while the minister and elders move behind
2. The officiating minister uncovers the bread and reads an appropriate text such
as 1 Corinthians 11:23, 24. The congregation remains seated with bowed heads while
those officiating kneel. An elder offers a prayer of blessing for the bread. Rising from
their knees, the ministers (and elders) symbolically break a portion of the bread, most of
321 Ellen White, Homeward Bound (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 2015), 172.
207
3. The deacons who are seated on the front pew, come forward to the table, take
the trays of bread, and pass them down the pews while music is played and appropriate
Bible passages are read. When the deacons return to the table after serving the bread, the
minister and elders serve the deacons and one another. A text like 1 Corinthians 11:24 is
read and the minister leads the congregation in eating the bread;
4. The leader then covers the bread and uncovers the wine, and reads a text like 1
Corinthians 11:25, 26. An elder offers a prayer of blessing for the wine, and the
distribution process is repeated. A text such as 1 Corinthians 11:25 is read and the
5. The Communion cups are placed in cup racks normally provided in the pews. In
their absence, deacons return to the congregation and collect the cups, placing the trays on
6. Deaconesses cover the whole Communion table. The minster gives a final
7. In many churches, deacons stand at the door as people leave to collect a special
offering for the poor, suggesting the ethical implications in participating in the Lord’s
Supper.325
II. Theology
the Lord’s Supper. (1) What purpose is served by celebrating this ordinance? (2) In what
sense is Christ present? The Adventist reply to the first question is that the Lord’s Supper
points to a past event with a present effect and a future hope. To the second question, they
325 This suggests that the Lord’s Supper is not only for the sake of the church but also for the sake
of the world. Lutheran theologian, Gordon Lathrop writes about the “economy of the Eucharist being in
critical dialogue with other means of distributing food. (see Gordon Lathrop, Holy People: A Liturgical
Ecclesiology (Minneapolis, MN: Press, 1999), 165.
208
answer that Christ is present in a dynamic way through the Holy Spirit as He presides at
the table amongst the gathered assembly. We now consider briefly those questions,
looking at the Adventist understanding of the Lord’s Supper and of Christ’s presence.
The act of reception of bread and wine during the Lord’s Supper is loaded with
theological meanings. For Adventists, the Lord’s Supper orients us to Christ’s sacrifice,
our present communion with Him, to a past event with a present effect and a future hope.
This understanding is illustrated in Thy Broken Body, Dear Lord, a hymn for the
1
Thy broken body, gracious Lord,
Is shadowed by this broken bread;
The wine which in this cup is poured,
Points to the blood which Thou hast shed.
2
And while we meet together thus,
We show that we are one in Thee;
Thy precious blood was shed for us,
Thy death, O Lord, hast set us free!
3
We have one hope that Thou wilt come,
Thee in the air we wait to see;
When Thou wilt give Thy saints a home,
And we shall ever reign with Thee.
209
i. Orientation to a past event, Christ’s death—The Lord’s Supper is a
“Do this in remembrance of me” (1 Cor. 11:24). It celebrates Christ, the ultimate
Passover, who brought deliverance from sin through His body which was broken for
humanity and His blood of the new covenant that was shed for the remission of sins. 327
The Lord’s Supper commemorates the meal that points to Jesus’ sacrifice. 328 In
sharing the bread and the wine, each believer remembers the death of Jesus. They give
thanks for God’s act of deliverance through this sublime sacrifice. In doing so, they see
Christ confirming God’s promise of salvation and giving the assurance of the forgiveness
of sins that He secured at Calvary (Matthew 26:28). The theme of a perfect and sufficient
sacrifice permeates the whole service. As such, the Lord’s Supper is a proclamation of the
Gospel.329 Its primary function is to praise God for His gracious gift in Christ.
Lord’s Supper is not just a memorial of the divine gift of salvation offered in the person
of Christ. This ordinance also offers an opportunity for communion with Christ. Ellen G.
As we receive the bread and wine symbolizing Christ’s broken body and spilled
blood, we in imagination join in the scene of Communion in the upper chamber.
We seem to be passing through the garden consecrated by the agony of Him who
bore the sins of the world. We witness the struggle by which our reconciliation
with God was obtained. Christ is set forth crucified among us. 330
In other words, by partaking of the bread and wine, the believer enters into the
story of Jesus. The final scenes of His earthly life are grasped by the imagination to
210
construct a vivid image of Christ’s sacrifice. This act of beholding is not merely a mental
act of recollection. The Lord’s Supper represents the presence of the risen Christ amongst
His gathered people. By participating in the Lord’s Supper, believers become partakers in
Christ’s life, ingesting in their own lives the benefits of His sacrifice that remain available
Participants at the Lord’s Table do not only commune with the Lord, they also
commune with one another, providing a strong basis for Christian unity. 331 As Adventists
officially declare, “[w]e experience the strongest and deepest sense of community at the
Lord’s table.”332 The emphasis is on relationships amongst God’s people. “The fellowship
with Jesus produces fellowship with those who belong to Him. Because we partake of one
bread, we become one body. The Lord’s Supper contributes to the unity of the church.” 333
Far from being a mere ceremony, the Lord’s Supper manifests what it means to be
members of the body of Christ. The issue is one of congruence, where the act of worship
fully expresses the quality of Christian love toward God and toward brothers and sisters.
Adventists not only remember what happened (anamnesis) and participate in it by faith
(koinonia), but also look forward eschatologically to “the marriage supper of the Lamb”
(Rev. 19:9) in the kingdom of God. From a perspective shaped by soteriology, they move
331Dederen, “The Church,” in Handbook of SDA Theology, 557; C. Raymond Holmes, Sing A
New Song, 72-73.
333 Ekkehardt Mueller, “Seventh-day Adventists and the Lord’s Supper,” Ministry, April 2004, 12.
211
For Adventists, the Lord’s Supper not only points back to Calvary but also points
forward to the New Jerusalem when redeemed humanity will sit at Christ’s banquet table
in God’s eternal kingdom. For this reason, “Jesus wished to be remembered in the
celebration of the Lord’s Supper until He returned.”334 Accordingly, the Lord’s Supper
reminds the church to live in a healthy tension between Calvary and the New Jerusalem.
The body of Christ finds its identity and security between the memory of an accomplished
sacrifice and the hope of a glorious future. The church is still a pilgrim people, living
between the already and the not yet. The Lord’s Supper is “designed to keep this hope
vivid in the minds of the disciples.”335 Ultimately, the Lord’s Supper discloses a vision of
God’s rule that will be fully revealed at the end of time when the whole of creation will
be totally renewed and fully reconciled with its Creator. With this eschatological vision,
the church looks forward in joy and hope to the heavenly banquet in the world to come. 336
Lord’s Supper.337 How do Adventists understand this hotly debated matter? Consistently
throughout Adventist history, the bread and the wine have been seen as symbols of the
334
Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances,” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 596 (cf.
Matt 26:9; cf. Mark 14:25; Luke 22:16-18; 1 Cor. 11:26).
336 Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 598.
337
See Russell D. Moore, Understanding Four Views of the Lord’s Supper (Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan 2007); Horton Davies, Bread of Life and Cup of Joy: New Ecumenical Perspectives on the
Eucharist (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1997); Gordon T. Smith, The Lord’s Supper: Five Views
(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008).
212
body and blood of Christ commemorating Christ’s passion and death. 338 For them, the
emblems do not work ex opere operato but pointed forward then and back now to
Christ’s body that was broken and His blood that was shed.
However, the Lord’s Supper is more than a memorial meal for Adventists. They
do not share the Catholic view of a ‘real presence’ of Christ in the elements. In contrast,
“the real presence of Christ is not identified with the elements, but with the gathered body
of believers.”339 Their official position is clear: “In this experience of Communion, Christ
By eating and drinking, human beings take nourishment into their bodies. By food
and drink they are physically strengthened as what they take becomes part of their
very cells. By drinking the cup and eating the bread, Christ’s disciples become
partakers of Christ’s life. Not only do they eat with Him in fellowship, they
appropriate His qualities into their lives.341
Although Adventists insist that believers do not literally partake of the flesh and
blood of Christ, they also resist a purely ‘memorialistic’ definition of the Lord’s Supper,
devoid of Christ’s actual presence.342 Ellen G. White made it clear in an article on the
Lord’s Supper and foot washing: “It is on these, his own appointments, that he meets with
338 For instance, compare Signs of the Times March 25, 1880 and Gulley, 204-205; Joel Musvosvi,
“This Is My Body.” Adventist Review, May 15, 2007.
341 Herbert Kiesler, “The Ordinances” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 597.
213
them and energizes his people by his personal presence.”343 The Adventist Church
Manual echoes the same idea, “The service of the Lord’s Supper is just as holy today as it
was when instituted by Jesus Christ. Jesus is still present when this sacred ordinance is
revealed awareness of God’s purpose in creation, redemption, and ultimate fulfilment.” 345
thanksgiving) on the bread and the wine. Yet, the bread and the wine do not bestow any
grace of themselves. To be fully effective, the blessings of the Lord’s Supper must be
received by faith.
The key notion here is the role played by the Holy Spirit in the Lord’s Supper.
The emblems are tokens of salvation and in no way replace the role of the Spirit in His
sanctifying ministry. In the Lord’s Supper, Christ meets with His people and is received
by them. “Here the focus is on Christ, rather than on the sacraments.”347 Divine life is
communicated by the presence of the resurrected Christ through the presence of the Holy
Spirit, who is ever present to draw the worshippers closer to their Lord.
As a result, worship is given to God above, in and with Christ through the Holy
Spirit, reflecting both aspects of transcendence and immanence. This sense of being in the
343Ellen G. White, “The Lord’s Supper and the Ordinance of Feet-Washing,” Review and Herald,
May 31, 1898.
214
presence of God during the Lord’s Supper is to be lived as “a most sacred and joyous
occasion.”348
Christ’s presence with exact precision. This is reflected in the extemporaneous prayers
offered by the ministers and elders as they lead in the Lord’s Supper. The prayers might
living reality of the resurrected Christ who sovereignly manifests His presence in their
midst. 349
4.3 CONCLUSION
In this chapter, we have examined the central elements of Adventist worship. Our
study did not focus solely on the practice of Adventist worship. We also looked at how
day Sabbath, as a day of rest and worship. The Sabbath gathering and cycle of the week
form their basic Christian ordo. It informs the way they interpret and organise their
corporate worship.
We have also highlighted that Adventist worship acknowledges God as the central
and defining reality in their gatherings. Their worship aims to be Christ-centred, Spirit-led
and participatory in nature. Adventist worship is centred on the preaching and hearing of
215
After examining the different elements of Adventist worship, we are now ready to
start exploring more deeply its theology. In the following chapter, we will look at the
works of one of the co-founders of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Ellen G. White,
whose writings continue to influence the way in which Adventists approach the subject of
worship.
216
CHAPTER FIVE
the denomination’s understanding and practice of worship. The first among them, Joseph
Bates, through his contacts with Seventh Day Baptists, steered the Advent believers from
Adventist hymnody through the constant publication of hymnals for the fledgling Advent
movement. However, it was his wife, Ellen Gould White, the third co-founder of
Seventh-day Adventism, who made the greatest and most enduring contribution to
understand Adventist worship without paying close attention to her writings on the
subject.
Ellen White (nee Harmon) was born November 26, 1827, in Gorham, Maine to
devout Methodist parents.1 At the age of nine, she suffered a serious accident when a
stone was thrown at her face, stopping her from continuing formal schooling and
1 For more comprehensive biographies of Ellen White's life, see Ellen White, A Sketch of the
Christian Experience and Views of Ellen G. White (Saratoga Springs, NY: James White, 1851); idem,
Spiritual Gifts (Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association, 1860); idem, Testimonies
for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1948), 1:9-112; idem, Life Sketches of Ellen G. White
(Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1915); A. L. White, Ellen G. White; George R. Knight, Meeting Ellen
White: A Fresh Look at Her Life, Writings, and Major Themes (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
1996); idem, Walking With Ellen White: The Human Interest Story (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
1999).
217
weakening her physically for the rest of her life. Following her conversion to William
Miller’s teachings on Christ’s imminent Second Coming, Ellen White joined the Millerite
her seventy years of ministry in the Seventh-day Adventist movement, she significantly
shaped the denomination’s spirituality and organisation through her voluminous literary
subordinate to the Bible, were divinely given.2 As a result, Ellen White’s theological
Adventist worship. Her writings help us to better understand the practice and theology of
Adventist worship.
theology of worship. Adventist theologian, Fritz Guy, puts it this way: “to the extent that
her thinking was theological, it was intuitive rather than deliberate, informal rather than
2 Fundamental Beliefs; Ellen G. White herself continually emphasised that "the Bible, and the
Bible only, is the rule of faith and duty" (Ellen White, Great Controversy (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 1911), 204, 205), “the only rule of faith and doctrine" (Review and Herald, July 17, 1888). She held
that all Christian writings, including her own, need to be tested by the teachings of the Bible itself (Great
Controversy, vii). Here is her basic understanding of her ministry: “Others have called me a prophetess, but
I have never assumed that title. I have not felt it was my duty thus to designate myself. Those who boldly
assume that they are prophets in this our day are often a reproach to the cause of Christ. …My work
includes much more than this name signifies. I regard myself as a messenger, entrusted by the Lord by
messages for His people… In regard to infallibility, I never claimed it; God alone is infallible. His Word is
true, and in Him there is no variableness, or shadow of turning.” (Selected Messages (Washington, D.C.:
Review and Herald, 1958), 1:35-37).
3
Fritz Guy, “Theology,” in Terrie Dopp Aamodt, Gary Land, Ronald L. Numbers, eds., Ellen
Harmon White: American Prophet (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), 144.
218
Ellen White was a layperson writing to simple fellow believers regarding common
church issues. A large portion of her writings on worship emerged from her engagement
in addressing local concerns about failing worship practices in the nascent Adventist
movement. Her commitment was to a practical, pastoral vision that was concerned with
renewing and nurturing Adventist believers into a more authentic Christian experience
with God. Hence, Ellen White’s reflections on worship did not develop in a vacuum. She
reacted and reflected with what was before and around her; she compared it with past
denominational history and processed everything through her understanding of who God
is, from her experiences, and most importantly in the light of the Scriptures. In short, she
engaged in some form of primary and secondary theology in a Free Church context. By so
doing, she sought to make explicit what is implicit in Adventist worship by integrating a
worship4 through the examination of her letters, magazine articles, pamphlets and brief
that she predominantly wrote to fellow believers with the Saturday gatherings in mind.
Her understanding of the Sabbath illuminated and informed her vision of corporate
worship. So, before exploring her understanding of corporate worship, we will briefly
consider her understanding of the Sabbath. This consideration is critical in view of the
4 The best attempt yet at discovering Ellen White’s understanding of worship is Denis Fortin’s
article Ellen G. White’s Theology of Worship and Liturgy. Last accessed on 31st August, 2017 at
https://www.andrews.edu/sem/inministry/uploads/2015summersyllabi/chmn523_worship-
word_and_music_fall13-cu-david_williams-fortin_article-egw-theology-of-worship-and-liturgy.pdf. It was
later modified and reproduced in chapter 4 (pp. 81-101) of Angel Manuel Rodriguez’s, ed., Worship,
Ministry, and the Authority of the Church (Silver Spring, MD: The Biblical Research Institute, General
Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 2016).
219
fact that an understanding of Adventist worship pivots around the Sabbath.
The first possible contact Ellen G. White had with the seventh-day Sabbath
question happened in the summer of 1846 during the course of a visit to Joseph Bates in
New Bedford, Massachusetts. When Bates urged his views of the Sabbath upon White,
she did not subscribe to his position. She thought that the Sabbath was unimportant and
that Bates “erred in dwelling upon the fourth commandment more than the other nine.”5
The same month she married James White. Soon after, they studied Bates’ 48-page
pamphlet entitled The Sabbath, A Perpetual Sign6 and became convinced that Bates’
views were scriptural. As a result, they “began to observe the Bible Sabbath, and to teach
Ellen White understood that the Sabbath was “given for the benefit of man and for
the honour of God.”8 This attention to the doxological and experiential meaning of the
Sabbath as a divine gift guided her thinking throughout her ministry. We now look at
Ellen White emphasises certain theological motifs and themes in her treatment of
5 Ellen White, Life Sketches of Ellen G. White (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1915), 95.
6Joseph Bates, The Seventh-Day Sabbath: A Perpetual Sign, 2nd rev. and enl. ed. (New Bedford,
MA: Benjamin Lindsey, 1847).
7 Ellen White, Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1868), 1:75.
8 Ellen White, The Story of Redemption (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1947), 141.
220
the Sabbath.9 They function like a theological summary of God’s activities in favour of
the Sabbath is the creation story. Creation finds its culmination in the Sabbath (Genesis
story, she writes that God “placed His sanctity upon this day and blessed it and hallowed
it as a day of rest,”11 thus highlighting its uniqueness.12 What was God’s ultimate purpose
in giving the Sabbath at creation? White answers that “it was designed to keep the living
God ever before the minds of men as the source of being and the object of reverence and
worship.”13 From that perspective, the Sabbath serves as “the witness to His [God’s]
claim upon man's reverence and homage.”14 In essence, the Sabbath, not only reveals the
extreme worthiness of God as Creator but also reveals our theocentric and doxological
9 Further reading: “Doctrine of the Sabbath,” in The Ellen G. White Encyclopedia, eds. Denis
Fortin and Jerry Moon (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2013), 1115-1118; Kenneth Strand, “The
Sabbath.” In Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, ed., Raoul Dederen (Hagerstown, MD: Review
and Herald, 2000), 529-535; Anna Galeniece, “The Purpose and Significance of the Biblical Sabbath in
Ellen White’s Writings,” The Bible and Sabbath (Nairobi, Kenya: Adventist Theological Society, Adventist
University of Africa Chapter, 2017), 102-113.
10 Ellen White, Evangelism (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1946), 239; Spiritual Gifts
(Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventists Publishing Association, 1864), 3:90.
11 Ellen White, Sons and Daughters of God (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1955), 59.
12 Ellen White, Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1901), 6:349;
Patriarchs and Prophets (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1890), 48.
13 Ellen White, The Great Controversy (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1911), 53.
14 Ibid., 446.
221
identity as His creatures.
creation (John 1:1-3). White points out: “Since He [Christ] made all things, He made the
Sabbath. By Him it was set as a memorial of the work of creation. It points to Him as
both the Creator and Sanctifier.”15 Ultimately, the Sabbath “is a token of the love and
Christocentric. This becomes even more distinct in her consideration of salvation history.
Sabbath and Christ’s redeeming ministry are intimately linked in the writings of
Ellen White. For her, the concept of rest and the theme of redemption are interconnected.
To all who receive the Sabbath as a sign of Christ's creative and redeeming power,
it will be a delight. Seeing Christ in it, they delight themselves in Him. The
Sabbath points them to the works of creation as an evidence of His mighty power
in redemption. While it calls to mind the lost peace of Eden, it tells of peace
restored through the Saviour. And every object in nature repeats His invitation,
“Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.”
Matthew 11:28.17
who made the Sabbath did not abolish it, nailing it to the cross.”18 Moreover, the
Decalogue, of which the Sabbath forms a part, was given by Christ for the benefit of the
human race.19 Interestingly, Ellen White sees significance in the fact that, just as Christ
15 Ellen White, The Desire of Ages (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1898), 288.
16 Ibid., 281.
17 Ibid., 289.
18 Ibid., 630.
222
rested on the Sabbath upon the completion of creation, He also rested upon His work of
redemption.20
Saviour was never against the institution “He Himself had given.”21 Rather, she insists
that Christ was against its Pharisaic and rabbinic interpretation. By challenging their
views, Christ rescued the Sabbath from legalism, keeping it in its divine perspective while
deepening its intended meaning.22 White claims that “the miracles He performed on
the Sabbath were all for the relief of the afflicted,” testifying to God’s merciful
character.23
“To remember the Sabbath, to keep it holy” (Exodus 20:8) implies understanding
its sacred importance.24 Regarding the Sabbath, White insists that “every moment is
consecrated, holy time.”25 In other words, the entire day, not only the worship hour is to
be consecrated to God. This puts the worship hour within a greater framework of holy
21 Prophets and Kings (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1917), 183.
24 Ellen White, Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1901), 6:353.
25 Ibid., 356.
223
For Ellen White, the God of creation and of salvation is also the God of
sanctification. The Sabbath calls attention to God’s creative and re-creative activity.
follows: “The Sabbath is a sign of creative and redeeming power; it points to God as the
source of life and knowledge; it recalls man's primeval glory, and thus witnesses to God's
purpose to re-create us in His own image.”26 This means that the Sabbath involves the
sanctification of the life that God gives in Christ. On the basis of Ezekiel 20:12, Ellen
White declares that “the Sabbath is a sign of Christ's power to make us holy.”27 She
places the sanctification of the Sabbath into the bigger picture of sanctification by faith.
The essential point here is that Sabbath-keeping has to do with communion with
God. It is a celebratory symbol of our relationship with God that is manifested through
obedience. This makes Sabbath-keeping not only a spiritual but also a moral issue.
only through Christ. White concedes that “[t]he best efforts that man in his own strength
can make are valueless . . . The one who is trying to reach heaven by his own works in
keeping the law is attempting an impossibility.”29 She further insists that “[i]n order to
26 Ellen White, Education (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1903), 250.
29 Ellen White, Faith and Works (Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing, 1979), 93-94.
224
keep the Sabbath holy, men must themselves be holy.” How is that possible? She
explains: “Through faith they must become partakers of the righteousness of Christ.” 30
The Sabbath symbolizes this new identity and status that the believer receives through
faith in Christ. Ellen White puts it this way: “As a sign of His sanctifying power, the
Sabbath is given to all who through Christ become a part of the Israel of God.”31
Up to this point, we have explored the theological meaning of the Sabbath in Ellen
Sabbath-keeping practices within early Adventism. She expressed concern about youth
who had lost respect for the Sabbath, going where and doing what they please, having no
pleasure for religious meetings or for sacred and eternal things to the indifference of their
parents.32 She also protested against the sentiment held by some who considered the
worship hour as a “drudgery.”33 She traces the problem to a lack of spirituality and proper
instructions.34 She exhorts believers to make the Sabbath “the sweetest, the most blessed
32 Ellen White, Child Guidance (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1954), 527-533.
33 Ibid., 529-531.
34 Ibid., 531.
35 Ibid., 532.
225
communion with God, nature, and one another.36 Her fundamental claim is that the
Sabbath is the high day of the week. Ellen White variously describes it as the most joyful
day of the week,37 the sweetest and most blessed,38 a day of blessing,39 a day of delight,40
and a day of joy.41 Because of its sacred character, the Sabbath requires material and
the high day of the week.44 The whole week must be dedicated to its preparation to gain
the maximum benefit from its observance. However, Sabbath preparation, according to
36 Ellen White, Education (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1903), 251.
39 Ibid., 529.
40 Ibid., 531.
42 Further reading: Jo Ann Davidson, “Sabbath Observance of,” in The Ellen G. White
Encyclopedia, eds. Denis Fortin and Jerry Moon (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2013, 1118-1120;
Emery John Lorntz, Ellen G. White's Concept of Spirituality in Relation to Contemporary Christian
Theology, PhD Dissertation, New York University, 2000, 168-175; Yoshio Murakami, Ellen G. White's
Views of the Sabbath in the Historical, Religious, and Social Context of Nineteenth-Century America, PhD
dissertation, Drew University, 1994, 77-95.
44 Ibid., 349.
45 Ibid., 353.
226
family setting. She highlights the importance of daily family worship as a preparation for
the Sabbath corporate service.46 In harmony with Luke 23:54, she regards Friday as “the
special preparation day”47 when things are to be completed early enough to allow
maximum time for communion with God. The preparation is both practical and spiritual.
Practical preparation includes cooking, readying clothes and shoes, and bathing.48 The
members.49 Sabbath starts with sundown worship on Friday evening “to read God's word,
On Saturday morning, members of the family must get ready to attend church
early while making sure “no unholy feelings come into the home.”51 Attending Sabbath
School and church service occupy only a part of the Sabbath. For Ellen White, “[t]he
portion remaining to the family may be made the most sacred and precious season of all
the Sabbath hours.”52 The essence of White’s argument is that holiness is not limited to
the corporate act of worship but to the entire lawful use of the day. Hence, all activities
that distract from communion with God are discouraged.53 Secular labour and thoughts
47 Testimonies, 6:354.
48 Ibid., 355.
49 Ibid., 356.
50 Ibid.
51 Ibid., 357.
52 Ibid., 358.
53 Ibid., 357.
227
are not to intrude Sabbath-keeping.54 Conversations on common or worldly topics are to
be avoided.55 The mind must be focused on God and on spiritual matters during the
sacred hours.
Afternoon idleness is also discouraged. The Sabbath is a day of rest, not a day of
indolence to be spent in useless inactivity.56 Ellen White encourages parents to take walks
with their children where nature in its beauty bear witness to its Creator and testify to His
forbearance and love.57 Such occasions can be an opportunity to share “the way of
salvation.” This theme of nature as God’s textbook is recurrent in White’s writings. For
her, “nature and revelation alike testify of God's love,”58 and “the Sabbath bids us behold
in His created works the glory of the Creator.”59 For this reason, Sabbath-keepers should
nature.60 White comments that the day of rest finds its fitting climax in prayer and song. 61
Hence, for Ellen White, seventh-day Sabbath keeping is much more than going to
church on Saturday. It involves a 24-hour holy time period designed to bring us closer to
54 Ellen White, op.cit., 355, 360. See also Ellen White, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel
Workers (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1923), 136; Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 1871), 2:583; Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1881), 4:249,
249; Patriarchs and Prophets (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1890), 296.
56 See for instance, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 1923),136-137; Desire of Ages, 207.
59 Christ Object Lessons (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1900), 25.
60 Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1871), 2:583.
228
God, to nature and to one another. This kind of Sabbath observance has a “spiritual
bearing upon all the transactions of life.”62 Thus, weekly Sabbath-keeping cannot be
dissociated from daily life. Their interconnectedness means that the way we keep the
Sabbath impacts the way we live; inversely, our daily experience with God affects the
The Sabbath also has an ethical dimension and social implications. Devotion to
God involves helping those in need.64 Acts of kindness and necessity are to be performed,
people’s needs are to be met, the sick are to be cared for, the sorrowing are to be
appreciated in her response to critics who once questioned a fellow believer’s Sabbath
observance:
We told our friends that in the matter of keeping the Sabbath, we studied the
example and teachings of Christ whose Sabbaths were often spent in earnest effort
to heal and to teach; that we believed that one of our sisters who was nursing a
sick family was keeping the Sabbath as much as the one who was leading a
division in the Sabbath school.66
It is important to note that Ellen White does not see Sabbath observance as
experience of liberation from the pressures of this world to enjoy weekly restoration
through a deepening of our relationship with God, nature, and one another.
65 See for instance, Ellen White, Patriarchs and Prophets (Washington, DC: Review and Herald,
1890), 307-308; Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1871), 2:702-703;
Testimonies for the Church, 6:360; Desire of Ages, 207; My Life Today (Washington, DC: Review and
Herald, 1952), 231.
66 Ellen White, Selected Messages (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1980), 3:259.
229
Ellen White observes that those who gather “together to worship the Lord on the
day which He has blessed and made holy, have a right to claim the rich blessings of
Jehovah.”67 The Sabbath hence offers a major theological and experiential motivation to
White’s understanding of the Sabbath, we are now ready to explore her understanding of
corporate worship.
Ellen White wrestled with practical issues surrounding Adventist worship. One
clear example is the article she wrote in 1889 at a time when it seemed that Adventist
spirituality had made a turn for the worse. Here is what she wrote:
There has been a great change, not for the better, but for the worse, in the habits
and customs of the people in reference to religious worship. The precious, the
sacred, things which connect us with God are fast losing their hold upon our
minds and hearts, and are being brought down to the level of common things . . .
Reverence for the house of God has become almost extinct. Sacred things and
places are not discerned; the holy and exalted are not appreciated.68
The basic idea that Ellen White develops here is that worship belongs to a sacred
sphere and should be approached with discernment and reverence. Worship becomes
highly problematic whenever the distinction between the sacred and the ordinary becomes
blurred.69
To the humble, believing soul, the house of God on earth is the gate of heaven.
The song of praise, the prayer, the words spoken by Christ’s representatives, are
67 Ellen White, Manuscript Releases (Washington, DC: Ellen G. White Estate), 347.
69 Manuscript 5, 1912.
230
God’s appointed agencies to prepare a people for the church above, for that loftier
worship into which there can enter nothing that defileth.70
The foregoing statements lay the foundation for an exploration of Ellen White’s
view of corporate worship. Her view is based on an awareness of God’s active presence
that embraces heaven and earth, individual piety and the corporate body, the gathering
and perfecting of the saints, the present and the future. It is this broad understanding of
worship that I want to explore in more detail as I look into the bulk of Ellen White’s
In this section, I have regrouped her views on corporate worship under two
categories. First, I will explore her views on God’s participation in our worship. Second, I
will study her views on our participation in the worship of God. Under the rubric of
worship, i.e. a worship that is offered to God the Father, through the Son, and in the Holy
Spirit. Under our participation, I will address her emphasis on the congregation’s
response in reverence and joy through songs, sermon, prayer, and giving.
Ellen White was acutely aware that without God’s initiative, presence and
Instead of flowing from divine grace, it becomes humanity’s effort trying to please God.
231
5.3.1.1 Worship Begins with God.
Central to Ellen White’s insight on corporate worship is the idea that nothing
other than God can help us ascribe glory to Him. Before continuing further, it is important
to note that her reference to the house of God as the gate of heaven (a clear reference to
Jacob’s experience in Genesis 28) suggests a connection between heaven and earth and
that this connection is God Himself. Ellen White considers the house of worship as “the
corporate worship happens in a “sacred spot” on a “sacred day.” However, the totality of
Ellen White’s writings in no way suggests that she believed God appears only at certain
consecrated places or at certain times. Rather, it simply implies that the church at worship
comes into contact with God in a distinct and unparalleled way. It is an initiative from
Ellen White constantly highlights the fact that it is God’s nature, actions and
initiatives that make Him exclusively worthy of worship and that no person or object
should occupy that place and receive the honour and glory that is due solely to Him.
“Jehovah, the eternal, self-existent, uncreated One, Himself the source and sustainer of
all, is alone entitled to supreme reverence and worship.”73 Hence, worship starts with the
here is on the theocentric nature of worship. Essentially, worship exists because God is
who He is. His nature and attributes elicit reverential awe and our highest praise. He is
71 Ellen White, Selected Messages (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1958), 2:475.
73 Ellen White, Patriarchs and Prophets (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1890), 305.
232
“the only true and living God, to whom our worship and reverence are due.”74
true worship. The comprehension of God’s character has profound implications for the
way we worship Him. “The more just and lively views we have of God’s character,
presence and glory, the more we shall seek to honour him.”75 To know God as He is, is to
love and worship Him, and to worship Him is to love Him and know Him more. Rightly
and worship.
5.3.1.1.1 Creator
Ellen White insists that since everything in the universe belongs to the category of
the created, it is reprehensible to allow any object to occupy the true centre of worship.
“God is to be the subject of thought, the object of worship; and anything that attracts the
mind from the solemn, sacred service is an offense to Him.”76 As such, she also cautions
Clearly, worship begins with God, not only because of who He is but also because
of what He has done: He is the Creator. “The duty to worship God is based upon the fact
74 The Youth’s Instructor, July 7, 1898; Evangelism (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald,
1946), 133.
77 Ellen White, Patriarchs and Prophets, 306: “The second commandment forbids the worship of
the true God by images or similitudes. Many heathen nations claimed that their images were mere figures or
symbols by which the Deity was worshipped, but God has declared such worship to be sin. The attempt to
represent the Eternal One by material objects would lower man's conception of God. The mind, turned away
from the infinite perfection of Jehovah, would be attracted to the creature rather than to the Creator. And as
his conceptions of God were lowered, so would man become degraded.”
233
that He is the Creator and that to Him all other beings owe their existence.”78 He is “the
source of (our) being and” hence “the object of reverence and worship.”79 Ellen White
succinctly summarizes that biblical truth with these words: “The true ground of divine
worship, not of that on the seventh day merely, but of all worship, is found in the
distinction between the Creator and his creatures. This great fact can never become
obsolete, and must never be forgotten.”80 Surely, “God’s claim to reverence and worship
above the gods of the heathen is based on the fact that He is the Creator.”81
The absolute distinction, the transcendence of God the Creator, is what makes
Him “the only object of worship.”82 The vast gulf separating God from His creation
means that God’s will is the ultimate cause of everything that exists. He is the ground of
our being, the source of our existence. We are “to render homage to no object save God,
the maker of the heavens and the earth, to whom alone reverence and honour are due.”83
For those who understand this central fact of creation, worship becomes an obligation.
Clearly, in worship, we declare the reason for our existence and proclaim our duty as
rational beings. Our ultimate purpose is to give supreme honour and glory to the Creator.
“This living God is worthy of our thought, our praise, our adoration, as the Creator of the
world, as the Creator of man. We are to praise God, for we are fearfully and wonderfully
79 Ibid., 438.
80 The Great Controversy, 437-438. Quoting John Nevins Andrews, History of the Sabbath, 1873,
510.
82 Ellen White, The Spirit of Prophecy (Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist Publishing
Association, 1878), 3:364.
234
made.”84
To speak of worshipping God is at once to raise the question of the nature and
character of the God we worship. A correct understanding of who God is, according to
Ellen White, is foundational to true worship. The implication is that in order to worship
the true God, we need to do so in the way He has revealed Himself to us. Reflecting on
Moses’ experience with God, Ellen White writes: “When we are able to comprehend the
character of God, as did Moses, we, too, shall make haste to bow in adoration and
praise.”85
has to do with God’s revelation of Himself. “We can never by searching find out God . . .
No mortal mind can penetrate the secrecy in which the Mighty One dwells and works. We
can comprehend no more of his dealings with us and the motives that actuate him than he
sees fit to reveal.”86 For Christians, the full revelation of God happened supremely in the
Christ event as reported in Scripture. According to Ellen White, Christ’s most unique
He taught man to address the supreme Ruler by the new name “Our Father.” This
name represents our true relation to him, and when spoken sincerely by human
lips, it is music in the ears of God. Christ leads us to the throne of God by a new
and living way.87
84 Ellen White, Manuscript Releases (Silver Spring, MD: Ellen G. White Estate, 1990), 7:373.
87 Ellen White, Atlantic Union Gleaner, June 9, 1909. Reflecting on our response to the Father in
worship, Ellen White writes: “Our God should be regarded as a tender, merciful father. The service of God
235
Father is who God is and for Ellen White “when from the heart we say, ‘Our
Father,’ we worship God in truth. This petition carries the suppliant away from earth and
human beings to the One who is unerring in judgment, compassionate, merciful, pure, and
holy.”88 The One who is “so much more exalted, so holy, so pure”89 avails Himself to us
and welcomes us into His presence as a loving Father. Hence, worship is not a mere duty
imposed upon us;90 it is also a privilege.91 Ellen White holds that when we realise that
God is the One seeking us as a loving Father, our attitude becomes one of gratitude.92
The basic idea that Ellen White develops here is that worship is done in the sphere
of grace. She states this point succinctly: “The throne of grace is itself the highest
attraction because it is occupied by One who permits us to call Him Father.”93 Ellen
White emphasises that it is this understanding that allows genuine worship. The Father’s
grace precedes worship and it is that same grace that elicits and accompanies worship.
Belief in the Father means belief in a loving and compassionate God. This relational
component comprises the key to our understanding and enacting of worship. For Ellen
should not be looked upon as a heart-saddening, distressing exercise. It should be a pleasure to worship the
Lord and to take part in his work . . . He is their best friend, and when they worship him, he expects to be
with them to bless and comfort them, and fill their hearts with joy and love... The Lord desires that those
who come to worship him shall carry away with them precious thoughts of his care and love that they may
be cheered in all the employments of daily life, that they may have grace to deal honestly and faithfully in
all things.” (The Review and Herald, January 14, 1890).
88 The Signs of the Times, Review and Herald, March 29, 1905.
89 Ellen White, Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1871), 2:564.
93 Ellen White, Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1901), 6:363.
236
White, worship is not predominantly based on what we do but on how we relate to God.
Yet, the question remains: If worship is so crucial and so beneficial, why is it that
people fail to perceive the Father’s love and as a result view worship as “a heart-
humanity is at the centre of a great controversy between God and Satan. A rival kingdom,
led by God’s enemy, is working ferociously to denigrate God’s character, thus keeping us
from obeying and worshipping Him. “In all ages Satan has tried continually to
misrepresent the character of God, to lead people to cling to a false concept of the
Creator, and then to regard Him with fear and hate rather than with love.”95 Ellen White
argues that one of the most effective ways Satan endeavours to do this is through false
worship:
It is Satan's constant effort to misrepresent the character of God, the nature of sin,
and the real issues at stake in the great controversy. His sophistry lessens the
obligation of the divine law and gives men license to sin. At the same time he
causes them to cherish false conceptions of God so that they regard Him with fear
and hate rather than with love. The cruelty inherent in his own character is
attributed to the Creator; it is embodied in systems of religion and expressed in
modes of worship. Thus the minds of men are blinded, and Satan secures them as
his agents to war against God. By perverted conceptions of the divine attributes,
heathen nations were led to believe human sacrifices necessary to secure the favor
of Deity; and horrible cruelties have been perpetrated under the various forms of
idolatry.96
The basic idea that Ellen White develops here is that wrong theology (“false
237
manifests itself in corrupt liturgy (“expressed in modes of worship . . . embodied in false
systems of religion”). To put this differently, the way we worship reflects our theological
understanding and convictions. Ellen White asserts that an erroneous belief system
ultimately leads to false worship and that false worship distorts our perception of God. In
a sense, that evil system becomes self-perpetuating. This explains why she insists that
God be worshipped on His own terms, not through “proud believers in human theories,
and exponents of false systems of worship.”97 The basic point here is that worship not
Sadly, one of the most profound effects of the great controversy is that men have
become idolaters. “Man has revolted from God and has endeavored to supply the place of
God with other objects of worship.”98 Even among Christians the temptation to idolatry is
selfish pride, money, sensuality or base passion.99 Idolatry dislodges God from the centre
of our affection and allegiance. “Anything that is made the subject of undue thought and
admiration, absorbing the mind, is a god chosen before the Lord.”100 “Anything that
diverts the mind from God assumes the form of an idol.”101 “Anything which tends to
abate our love for God, or to interfere with the service due Him, becomes thereby an
97 The Acts of the Apostles (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1911), 272.
98 That I May Know Him (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1964), 206.
99 For more details on Ellen White’s understanding of idolatry, see Manuscript Releases, 7:372-
373; Manuscript 62, 1886, 28, 29; Manuscript 17, 1898; Manuscript 126, 1901; The Signs of the Times,
January 26, 1882; The Great Controversy, 167; Steps to Christ (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1892),
104; Patriarchs and Prophets, 306; Review and Herald, May 25, 1886;
101 Ellen White, Sons and Daughters of God (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1955) 57.
238
idol.”102
In harmony with traditional Christian views, Ellen White firmly believes that “the
Father came in vital connection with the world through his well-beloved Son, and the
revelation of divine truth through the Son was designed to draw men to the Father.”103
Christ came to reveal the truth about God’s character. “Christ’s mission on the earth was
to reveal to men that God was not a despot but a heavenly Father, full of love and mercy
for His children.”104 Ellen White argues that in the time of Christ’s earthly ministry, the
Jewish people were worshipping without true understanding.105 They did not appreciate
the fact that the entire sacrificial system pointed to Christ.106 Ellen White asserts that as
“the foundation of the whole Jewish economy,”107 Jesus came to earth “that he might
meet humanity where it was, and show men what constituted true worship.”108 “Jesus had
102 In Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 305, Ellen White writes: “Man is forbidden to give to any other
object the first place in his affections or his service. Whatever we cherish that tends to lessen our love for
God or to interfere with the service due Him, of that do we make a god.” The Signs of the Times, January
26, 1882.
105 The Desire of Ages (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1898), 157.
106Signs of the Times, January 2, 1893. The Signs of the Times, July 29, 1886; Special Testimonies
on Education. unpublished work, 173. See also Testimonies for the Church, 2:580; The Review and Herald,
October 24, 1899.
108 The Signs of the Times, September 16, 1897; See also The Desire of Ages, 157.
239
5.3.2.1 Christ and the Cross.
The climax of Christ’s earthly ministry was the cross, where he gave the clearest
revelation of the Father’s character. It is “in the light of the cross, [that] many who had
never before known of the true God, [have begun] to comprehend the greatness of the
Father's love.”110 The relationship between salvation and worship is particularly focused
in Ellen White’s treatment of Christ’s sacrifice. For her, the cross must be central to
worship. “Where the people assemble to worship God let not a word be spoken that shall
divert the mind from the great central interest—Jesus Christ, and Him crucified.”111
Calvary for Ellen White was not a historical accident, but the crowning demonstration of
We must gather about the cross. Christ and Him crucified must be the theme of
contemplation, of conversation, and of our most joyful emotion. We should have
special praise services for the purpose of keeping fresh in our thoughts everything
that we receive from God, and of expressing our gratitude for His great love, and
our willingness to trust everything to the hand that was nailed to the cross for
us.112
Authentic worship cannot be separated from the cross. It is the cross that brings us
into God’s presence. Again, “we must gather about the cross. Christ and him crucified
must be the theme of contemplation, of conversation, and of our most joyful emotion. We
should have special praise services for the purpose of keeping fresh in our thoughts
everything that we receive from God, and of expressing our gratitude for his great love,
111 Ellen White, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers (Mountain View, CA: Pacific
Press, 1923), 331.
112 The Southern Watchman, March 7, 1905; see also The Signs of the Times, May 8, 1893; The
Signs of the Times, December 4, 1884; Evangelism, 502. On Ellen White’s treatment of the cross and
worship, see also Manuscript Releases, 18:80; Manuscript Releases, 18:112; Manuscript 4, 1893; The
Southern Watchman, March 7, 1905; Evangelism, 350.
240
and our willingness to trust everything to the Hand that was nailed to the cross for us.”113
The cross is thus a symbol of salvation that needs to be celebrated in joyful worship.114
Christ does not only make the worship of the Father possible; He Himself is also
worthy of worship. As “one with the eternal Father—one in nature, in character, and in
purpose”115 and who gave His life that is “original, unborrowed, underived,”116 Christ
also deserves our worship. Since the Father and the Son are united in the Godhead, they
Ellen White appeals to her fellow believers this way: “(A)s you meet from
Sabbath to Sabbath, sing praises to Him who has called you out of darkness into His
marvelous light. ‘Unto Him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in His own blood’
her emphasis on Christ as “our Mediator and officiating High Priest in the presence of the
worship.119 As a matter of fact, worship is focused on Him because He brings us into the
114“Two Kinds of Service,” Review and Herald, March 25, 1909, Sermon preached February 6, in
Oakland, California.
118 Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1881), 4:395.
241
Father’s presence: “Jesus became a man that He might mediate between man and God.
He clothed His divinity with humanity, He associated with the human race, that with His
long human arm He might encircle humanity, and with His divine arm grasp the throne of
Through the life, death, resurrection and intercession of Christ, God leads us to the
throne of mercy. This is why, the Gospel, or “the science of salvation,” as Ellen White
puts it, “is to be the burden of every sermon, the theme of every song.”122 The priesthood
of the risen Christ in the heavenly sanctuary is the key then, not only to our reconcilation
with God but also to our worship. The church on earth becomes the gate to heaven only
because Christ, our High Priest, ministers within the true tabernacle of which every house
Essentially, for Ellen White, Jesus is our all-sufficient Saviour and unique
Mediator who enables us to approach the throne of grace in worship because of His
reconciling ministry. Worship becomes possible only because of Jesus. Without Him, our
120 Letter 121, 1897, cited in The Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, 7A:487.
121 On Christ’s mediatorial role, Ellen White’s reflection is worth noting: “By His spotless life,
His obedience, His death on the cross of Calvary, Christ interceded for the lost race. And now not as a mere
petitioner does the Captain of our salvation intercede for us, but as a conqueror claiming His victory. His
offering is complete, and as our intercessor He executes His self-appointed work, holding before God the
censer containing His own spotless merits and the prayers, confessions, and thanksgiving of His people.
Perfumed with the fragrance of His righteousness, the incense ascends to God as a sweet savor. The
offering is wholly acceptable, and pardon covers all transgression. To the true believer Christ is indeed the
minister of the sanctuary, officiating for him in the sanctuary, and speaking through God's appointed
agencies.” Manuscript 142, 1899; The Signs of the Times, February 14, 1900; See also Patriarchs and
Prophets, 353; Testimonies for the Church, 6:363; Testimonies for the Church, (Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 1904), 8:177; Testimonies for the Church, 4:395; Manuscript 28, 1901.
242
5.3.3 Worship in the Holy Spirit
The key notion that worship begins with God is not only found in the unique role
of Christ. It is also found in the vital ministry of the Holy Spirit. Perhaps the best way to
conversation with the Samaritan woman (John 4), where she shares further insight into
Not by seeking a holy mountain or a sacred temple are men brought into
communion with heaven. Religion is not to be confined to external forms and
ceremonies. The religion that comes from God is the only religion that will lead to
God. In order to serve Him aright, we must be born of the divine Spirit. This will
purify the heart and renew the mind, giving us a new capacity for knowing and
loving God. It will give us a willing obedience to all His requirements. This is true
worship. It is the fruit of the working of the Holy Spirit. By the Spirit every
sincere prayer is indited, and such prayer is acceptable to God. Wherever a soul
reaches out after God, there the Spirit's working is manifest, and God will reveal
Himself to that soul. For such worshipers He is seeking. He waits to receive them,
and to make them His sons and daughters.124
1. Worship is a two-fold movement. It begins with God and goes back to God. It is
God who takes the initiative of revealing Himself to us through His Holy Spirit
and we respond to Him by the same Spirit. What motivates us to worship God is
God’s action towards us. Worship, as such, does not view God only as the Object
of worship, but also as its Subject. It is He who enables our worship. True worship
comes to us as a gift from God. As such, it is filled with promise because of the
2. Worship is spiritual. The most elaborate forms of worship cannot substitute for
God’s presence and action within the worshipping community. True worship can
124The Desire of Ages, 189. Ellen White shared the same idea in Testimonies for the Church
(Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1909), 9:153-156.
243
only be done in the presence of God. Only then can the house of God become the
gateway to heaven. In worship, we cannot come to God with our human works.
“True worship is the fruit of the working of the Holy Spirit.”125 Were it not for the
without His leading. Worship is the outworking of the Holy Spirit's working
3. Worship is relational. It is not a cold transaction between a distant deity and his
subjects. Rather it is a loving interaction between God and His children through
the ministry of the Holy Spirit. God the Spirit is the one who presides over the
gathered assembly. In worship, the church gathers in the presence and under the
lordship of the Spirit, who draws the worshipping community into communion
with God.
Hence for Ellen White, it is impossible to address the issue of corporate worship
unless we factor in the role of the Holy Spirit. Any understanding of worship must be
closely linked to the presence and activity of the Spirit within the worshipping
White argues that “the God of heaven is not, like the gods of the heathen, confined to
temples made with hands; yet He would meet with His people by His Spirit when they
126 Prophets and Kings (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1917), 48. Ellen White continues:
“Although God dwells not in temples made with hands, yet He honours with His presence the assemblies of
His people. He has promised that when they come together to seek Him, to acknowledge their sins, and to
pray for one another, He will meet with them by His Spirit. But those who assemble to worship Him should
put away every evil thing. Unless they worship Him in spirit and truth and in the beauty of holiness, their
coming together will be of no avail. Of such the Lord declares, ‘This people draweth nigh unto Me with
their mouth, and honoureth Me with their lips; but their heart is far from Me.’ Matthew 15:8, 9. Those who
244
Elsewhere, Ellen White asserts that “the success of the meeting depends on the
presence and power of the Holy Spirit.”127 The truth is that spiritual life comes from the
Holy Spirit. Where the Spirit does not manifest Himself, we can expect only lethargy at
best and death at worst. This is why Ellen White insists that “the Sabbath meetings, the
morning and evening worship in the home, the services held in the chapel—all should be
Ellen White, and cannot be overlooked because of the nature of worship itself. Worship
goes beyond the ritualistic and the ceremonial to firmly locate itself in the spiritual. She
firmly believes that “everything pertaining to his worship is placed under the
The Holy Spirit’s presence is a necessity because we cannot worship God without
Him. God has to be present and active for us to worship Him. The best of our intentions
and abilities as well as the highest heights of our religiosity are of no avail without God’s
Spirit. “It is the Spirit of God that quickens the lifeless faculties of the soul to appreciate
heavenly things, and attracts the affections toward God and the truth. Without the
presence of Jesus in the heart, religious service is only dead, cold formalism.” 130 “A God
worship God must worship Him ‘in spirit and in truth: for the Father seeketh such to worship Him.’ John
4:23.” Prophets and Kings, 50.
245
of infinite holiness does not accept a spiritless offering. Those who worship him must
It is the Holy Spirit who initiates, activates and animates our worship. This kind of
worship requires full surrender: “The religion of Christ means much more than
forgiveness of sins. It means taking away our sins, and filling the vacuum with the Holy
Spirit. It means divine illumination, rejoicing in God.”132 Clearly, there is a close link,
according to Ellen White, between spiritual transformation, holy living and the divine
service.133 The work of the Spirit is not essentially to make the worshippers do but to
make the worshippers be. The radical transformation that the Spirit brings is what makes
true worship a reality. The crucial role of the Holy Spirit in corporate worship must be
the writings of Ellen White, we have focused on worship as beginning with God, that is,
having its source, foundation and raison d'être in God. It is now necessary to analyse
analyze how she views the congregation’s response in worship. My aim is to explore her
view of the church as the assembly of the faithful who worship God in the company of
angels. The church does this with reverence and praise through four main elements of
corporate worship—music, prayer, preaching, and giving. I have left out the Lord’s
246
Supper because it is celebrated on a quarterly basis in Adventist worship. Again, I have
We have noted earlier that the coming together of God’s people in worship begins
with God. The initiative belongs entirely to Him. It is He who invites; it is He who
provides access to Himself; it is He who empowers us so that we can glorify Him. On its
own, humanity cannot approach God or worship Him in spirit and in truth. God can be
truly worshipped only if He is the Initiator, the Mediator and the One who empowers. As
such, He is both the Subject and the Object of worship. Viewed from this perspective,
worship affirms a crucial understanding of the church as the people whom God has called
The church is God's appointed agency for the salvation of men. It was organised
for service, and its mission is to carry the gospel to the world. From the beginning
it has been God's plan that through His church shall be reflected to the world His
fullness and His sufficiency. The members of the church, those whom He has
called out of darkness into His marvelous light, are to show forth His glory. The
church is the repository of the riches of the grace of Christ; and through the
church will eventually be made manifest, even to “the principalities and powers in
heavenly places,” the final and full display of the love of God.134
Accordingly, the church is the community composed of the faithful who have
been called out of the world into a new and living relationship with God. Ellen White
God has a church. It is not the great cathedral, neither is it the national
establishment, neither is it the various denominations; it is the people who love
God and keep His commandments. “Where two or three are gathered together in
My name, there am I in the midst of them.” Where Christ is, even among the
247
humble few, this is Christ's church, for the presence of the High and Holy One
who inhabiteth eternity can alone constitute a church.135
The presence of Christ among His saved people creates the church. In the hour of
worship, the ekklesia is a true manifestation of the church on earth. It is the gathering of
God’s people, the recipients of God’s actions in history, now inhabited by Christ’s
presence. When the church gathers, she does so in the presence of God in the name of
Christ.136 The house of God itself is a “place marked by God’s special presence,”137 “a
sacred spot,”138 “the audience chamber of the Most-High.”139 It is the place where the
church can have an engagement with God in worship that is active and participative. This
communion with Christ transcends time and space and involves communion with the
whole of heaven.
5.4.2 Angels
Regarding the role of angels in corporate worship, Ellen White posits that,
From the beginning, faithful souls have constituted the church on earth. In every
age the Lord has had His watchmen, who have borne a faithful testimony to the
generation in which they lived . . . God brought these witnesses into covenant
relation with Himself, uniting the church on earth with the church in heaven. He
has sent forth His angels to minister to His church, and the gates of hell have not
been able to prevail against His people.140
135 Manuscript Releases, 17:81. Elsewhere she writes: “The church on earth, composed of those
who are faithful and loyal to God, is the “true tabernacle,” whereof the Redeemer is the minister. God, and
not man, pitched this tabernacle on a high, elevated platform. This tabernacle is Christ's body, and from
north, south, east, and west, He gathers those who shall help to compose it.” The Signs of the Times,
February 14, 1900.
137 Ellen White, God’s Amazing Grace (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1973), 93.
138 Manuscript 23, 1886.15; see also Testimonies for the Church, 5:493-497.
248
The above description conveys the idea that the church is an ever-existing
community of all those who belong to God. It includes earthly and heavenly beings that
are integrally connected because of their relationship to God. The starting point of the
church is “from the beginning” and goes into including the righteous of “every age,”
brought into a covenanted relationship with the Lord. Although earthly dwellers and
celestial beings belong to two distinct categories, they constitute one communion of saints
belonging to one Lord.141 “The church of God below is one with the church of God
above. Believers on the earth and the beings in heaven who have never fallen constitute
one church.”142
White. The worship offered by the church on earth is closely linked to the worship that is
offered in heaven. Commenting on the dedication of the temple of Solomon, she affirms:
The house of God may be very humble in comparison with the temple of
Solomon, but it is no less acknowledged by God. To those who worship there it is
the gate of heaven, if they worship God in spirit and in truth, and in the beauty of
holiness. As songs of praise are sung, as earnest, fervent prayers arise to heaven,
as lessons are repeated of the wondrous works of God, as the heart's gratitude is
expressed in prayer and song, angels from heaven take up the strain and unite in
praise and thanksgiving to God.143
between heaven and earth that has God as its centre. The church worships in the presence
142 Testimonies for the Church, 6:366. To my knowledge, this dimension of ecclesiology has not
been explored by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. For more reference in Ellen White’s writings on the
relationship between the militant church here on earth and the triumphant church in heaven, see The Ellen
White 1888 Materials, 27; Letter 37, 1887; The Youth's Instructor, October 8, 1896; Manuscript 153, April,
1901; Letter 15, April 4, 1894; Manuscript 141, June 19, 1907; The Review and Herald, June 11, 1895;
Australasian Union Conference Record October 7, 1907; Letter 75, December 9, 1890; God’s Amazing
Grace, 95; The Signs of the Times, February 14, 1900.
143Christ Triumphant (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1999), 244; see also In Heavenly
Places (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1967), 288.
249
of holy angels. “They assemble in his house, which is as the audience chamber of the
Most High, where heavenly angels are in attendance.”144 Unseen to human eyes, angels
nevertheless are around us145 being “brought very near”146 as attentive listeners,147 keen
The church on earth and the church in heaven are understood as possessing an
organic unity. Worship on earth echoes into the worship of heaven and vice versa.
experience that transcends the confine of their local assembly. As they worship God in
spirit and in truth, they stand at the gate of heaven, on holy ground, catching a glimpse by
faith of the worship that continually takes place before God’s throne. The worship offered
here on earth is then echoed in heaven as Ellen White explains this using sanctuary
imagery:
144 The Review and Herald, January 30, 1900, Art. B, par. 1
147Christ Object Lessons (Washington, D.C., Review and Herald, 1900), 176; Gospel Workers
(Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1915), 171.
153 Christian Education (Battle Creek, MI: International Tract Society, 1894), 131; The EGW 1888
Materials, 1716.
250
In the inner court of heaven, they listen to the testimony of the witnesses for
Christ in the outer court on earth, and the praise and thanksgiving from the
worshipers below is taken up in the heavenly anthem, and praise and rejoicing
sound through the heavenly courts because Christ has not died in vain for the
fallen sons of Adam. While angels drink from the fountainhead, the saints on earth
drink of the pure streams flowing from the throne, the streams that make glad the
city of our God . . . Oh, that we could all realise the nearness of heaven to earth! . .
. In every assembly of the saints below are angels of God, listening to the
testimonies, songs, and prayers. Let us remember that our praises are
supplemented by the choirs of the angelic host above.154
To grasp such a view of worship is to understand that the veil has been removed
and that we now have free access to the heavenly places. Hence, Ellen White admonishes:
“We must carry to every religious gathering a quickened spiritual consciousness that God
and His angels are there, co-operating with all true worshipers.”155
This notion of God and angels being participants in our worship has profound
implications. The essence of angelic activities in worship points again that worship is
bound to be relational. Houses of worship are Peniels, places where people can embrace
the face-to-face reality of God’s presence. “Our meetings,” declares Ellen White, “should
At the heart of worship is God himself who wants us to engage with him, and
angels are there to complement us in that process. God’s presence amongst his people is
what makes worship possible. Consequently, linking the notion of divine participation to
worship on earth brings us back to the original meaning of corporate worship, which, as
the term denotes, is by nature communal, not individualistic. True worship is a dialogue
and a communion along vertical and horizontal axes as it unites us both with God and
251
How does the church respond to God’s participation in its corporate worship? For
Ellen White, the basic way to respond to God’s activity and continued presence is through
5.4.3 Reverence
Because of her lofty concept of God, Ellen White believes that the fundamental
way to respond to the Lord is reverence.157 For Ellen White, “we are to approach God’s
throne with reverential awe,158 recognizing that it is by grace that we are allowed to enter
into His awesome presence. To Ellen White, showing reverence for God does not mean
engaging in complex liturgies.159 Rather, it is the fruit of faith and the outworking of the
Echoing the Puritans, Ellen White believes that “outward splendor, pomp, and
ceremony” are in no way the proof of genuine reverence for God.161 These can be
church depends on parade, ceremonies, and display, be sure that inward holiness is
wanting. To make up for the absence of the Spirit of God, to conceal spiritual poverty and
157Ellen White makes the connection between reverence and Sabbath as follows: “Had the
Sabbath always been kept, man's thoughts and affections would have been led to his Maker as the object of
reverence and worship, and there would never have been an idolater, an atheist, or an infidel.” The Story of
Redemption, 382.
252
apostasy, the outside is made attractive.”162 “In the light shining from the cross,” Ellen
White affirms, “true Christianity appears so pure and lovely that no external decorations
can enhance its true worth. It is the beauty of holiness, a meek and quiet spirit, which is of
value with God.”163 Since reverence is the product of faith and of the Holy Spirit, it
Lord.”167 “True reverence for God is inspired by a sense of His infinite greatness and a
transcendence and immanence. The practice of worship is done with this dual concept in
reverenced; all who truly realise His presence will bow in humility before Him.”169 Ellen
White puts it this way: “Closely connected with this reverence will be deep self-
abasement. We may always observe this, when God’s servants have had near approaches
162 Letter 90, 1897, 5-8, “To Brother and Sister Lindsay,” August 18, 1897; Manuscript Releases,
12:220.
164 Education (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1903); 242; See also Prophets and Kings, 236.
253
to him, or a true view of his glory, they have been greatly humbled in the sense of their
own sinfulness.”170 Only an understanding of God’s exalted character can produce such a
are to approach our Maker “with humility and awe, through faith in a divine Mediator . . .
as a subject of grace, a suppliant at the footstool of mercy.”171 “In the name of Jesus we
may come before Him with confidence, but we must not approach Him with the boldness
of presumption.”172
Yet, Ellen White finds herself frequently writing about irreverence because of its
“reverence for the house of God has become almost extinct. Sacred things and places are
not discerned; the holy and exalted are not appreciated.”174 “There is a growing lack of
reverence for our maker, a growing disregard of His greatness and His majesty.” 175 The
constant lack of reverence had made Adventist congregations social clubs rather than
houses of worship. Ellen White painfully witnesses children running about the house of
God, playing, talking, manifesting their evil tempers, being light and trifling, whispering
and laughing, being careless176 and young people as well as adults being indifferent,
170 Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, July 22, 1858, 77.
176Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1889), 5:496-497; Messages to
Young People (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1930), 265.
254
inattentive,177 communicating with one another during the sermon,178 reading the
coarsely in the house of God.181 She traces irreverence back to the failure of parents in
raising the level of spirituality at home, and the failure of ministers in offering proper
The situation was so prevalent in Ellen White’s time of ministry that she was
adamant that “nearly all need to be taught how to conduct themselves in the house of
God.”183 To correct that trend was a matter of greatest importance and utmost urgency.
For Ellen White, the stakes are high because she believed the lack of godly fear “is
enough to bring God's displeasure and shut His presence from our assemblies.”184 Hence,
she admonishes: “Christ’s followers today should guard against the tendency to lose the
spirit of reverence and godly fear.”185 “The house erected for the worship of God should
181 The Health Reformer, February 1, 1872, par. 7; Review and Herald May 30, 1871.
184 The Review and Herald, September 19, 1854; Child Guidance (Washington, D.C.: Review and
Herald, 1954), 540.
255
Yet, reverence can sometimes be manifested in different ways. How should one
show reverence in worship? For Ellen White, reverence cannot be a simulated posture.
Reverence for God is an inner disposition, which then is manifested “in attitude and
honouring God’s holy day,188 bowing or kneeling before God during prayer,189
refraining from using the name of God lightly or thoughtlessly, 190 revering the “sacred
name of Christ,”191 handling God’s Word most respectfully and preaching it accurately, 192
solemnly administering the ordinances,193 respecting the hour and time of worship,194 and
She broadly articulates her view of reverence in the house of God on His holy day
187 God’s Amazing Grace, 93; see also The Youth Instructor, July 12, 1904; Testimonies for the
Church, 5:491.
192 Education, 244. See also The Review and Herald, May 10, 1898.
256
5.4.3.1 Before the Service.
Worshippers are to enter the place of worship with awe and reverence, having
their hearts fixed upon God.”196 “[T]hey should do so with decorum, passing quietly to
their seats . . . Ardent, active piety should characterize the worshipers.”197 “[T]hey should
leave behind all common worldly thoughts . . . pride and passion, dissension and self-
esteem, selfishness, and covetousness, which God pronounces idolatry.”198 “If some have
to wait a few minutes before the meeting begins, they should maintain a true spirit of
devotion by silent meditation, keeping the heart uplifted to God in prayer that the service
may be of special benefit to their own hearts and lead to the conviction and conversion of
other souls.”199 “If when the people come into the house of worship, they have genuine
reverence for the Lord and bear in mind that they are in His presence, there will be a
Worshippers are to come into. God’s presence with pure thoughts and holy
motives because He is present in His house. On how the worshipper should approach
God is here; this is His house. I must have pure thoughts and the holiest motives. I
must have no pride, envy, jealousy, evil surmising, hatred, or deception in my
heart; for I am coming into the presence of the holy God. This is the place where
God meets with and blesses His people. The high and holy One who inhabiteth
196 Adventist Review and Sabbath Herald, December 13, 1864, 18.
197 My Life Today (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1952), 286.
200 Testimony Treasures (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1949), 2:194.
257
eternity looks upon me, searches my heart, and reads the most secret thoughts and
acts of my life.201
“When the minister enters, it should be with dignified, solemn mien. He should
bow down in silent prayer as soon as he steps into the pulpit, and earnestly ask help of
God . . . Every one of the congregation, also, who fears God should with bowed head
unite in silent prayer with him that God may grace the meeting with His presence and
give power to His truth proclaimed from human lips.”202 “When the meeting is opened by
prayer, every knee should bow in the presence of the Holy One, and every heart should
ascend to God in silent devotion . . . All the service should be conducted with solemnity
and awe, as if in the visible presence of the Master of assemblies.”203 “Nothing that is
sacred, nothing that pertains to the worship of God, should be treated with carelessness
and indifference. When the word of life is spoken, you should remember that you are
203 Ibid.
258
What seems to be emerging in Ellen White writings (contrary to early Sabbatarian
social action. In public worship, as Reformed theologian, Gerrit Immink, puts it: “[t]he
collective character does not emerge spontaneously, but is coordinated. The liturgy
follows a script, a liturgical agenda.”206 Nevertheless, worship, for Ellen White, is still
essentially a matter of the heart. It is inwardly defined through our spiritual connection
with God. In worship, we acknowledge God’s infinite greatness and yet total
Yet, the picture is not complete. A worship that emphasises only reverential awe
would fail to maintain liturgical integrity. Another element needs to be present: praise.
“There would be an attendance in the sanctuary where God meets with His people, a
reverence for all the ordinances of His worship, and grateful praise and thanksgiving
would be offered for all the gifts of His providence.”207 This leads us to our next section:
5.4.4 Praise
As much as Ellen White links worship with reverence, she also connects the praise
of God with joy and thanksgiving.208 “To praise God in fullness and sincerity of heart is
206Gerrit Immink, The Touch of the Sacred: The Practice, Theology, and Tradition of Christian
Worship (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2014), viii.
259
as much a duty as is prayer.”209 Being reverent in worship does not mean being miserable.
Worship is about celebration and rejoicing. Worship should not be considered drudgery210
expression of a loving relationship with God and orients the worshipper towards heaven.
Although reverence and joy may at first glance appear contradictory, authentic
worship keeps them both in balance. Ellen White occasionally synthesises both terms by
using the term “reverent joy”214 when describing the right way God’s people should come
into God’s presence. Joyful praise, in her understanding, should not be confused with
worshippers should never forget that they are still in the presence of a holy God. 218
Hence, she exhorts: “Do not allow levity to come into your experience, but cultivate
213 Ellen White writes: “God calls upon His people to arise and come out of the chilling, frosty
atmosphere in which they have been living, to shake off the impressions and ideas that have frozen up the
impulses of love and held them in selfish inactivity. He bids them come up from their low, earthly level and
breathe in the clear, sunny atmosphere of heaven” Testimonies, 5:607.
214
The Signs of the Times, 26, 1882; The Review and Herald, May 30, 1882; Counsels for the
Church (Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 1991), 164; Patriarchs and Prophets, 707; Steps to Christ, 104.
260
cheerfulness; for this is an excellent grace. We cannot afford to be unmindful of our
Ellen White holds that “much of the public worship of God consists of praise and
prayer”220 and that “worship should be so filled with praise and thanksgiving.”221 She
admonishes Adventist believers to “let the praise of God be in [their] heart and soul and
To praise God is to express our gratitude to God for the blessings that are received
from Him. “The hour which we meet for Sabbath worship should be a time when the
tongue can testify of the grace and love of God.”224 To praise is also to acknowledge
God’s generosity. The God who creates is the One who gives in abundance. “We are
grateful for the mercies and favors bestowed on us, and that the whole soul is awakened
to a realization of God's glory.”225 Consequently, the praise of God is not an option for the
worshipper. “To praise God in fullness and sincerity of heart is as much a duty as is
prayer.”226 It is “our whole duty to our God in the line of raising joyful thanksgiving and
220The Signs of the Times, June 24, 1886; Pastoral Ministry (Silver Spring, MD: General
Conference Ministerial Association, 1995), 177.
221 Letter 279, 1905, 2, 3. (To Clarence Santee, October 4, 1905.) Manuscript Releases, 9:97.
261
praise for his constant care and love.”227 But more than a duty, the praise of God is also a
privilege. Being created, redeemed and sanctified for God’s glory, “it is our privilege to
honoured by the expression of praise and thanksgiving.230 Being acutely aware of God’s
generosity toward the human race in general and the church in particular, Ellen White
expresses surprise at “how sparing we are at giving thanks . . . and how little gratitude we
express, how little we praise Him for what He has done for us.”231
A major theme found in Ellen White’s writings is that of God as the source of true
joy.232 Holy exultation is a gift from above, not something that is humanly manufactured.
It cannot be the result of splendid ceremonial. Our joy is in the Lord. It is rooted in God’s
love and in His redemptive action towards us. Those who experience the love of God and
229General Conference Bulletin, April 23, 1901; Manuscript 108, 1904; The Signs of the Times,
August 11, 1909;
230 Christ's Object Lessons, 298, 299. Hence, she notes: “God desires His obedient children to
claim His blessing and to come before Him with praise and thanksgiving. God is the Fountain of life and
power . . . He has done for His chosen people that which should inspire every heart with thanksgiving, and
it grieves Him that so little praise is offered. He desires to have a stronger expression from His people,
showing that they know they have reason for joy and gladness.” God’s Amazing Grace, 75.
231 Again, just like in the case of irreverence, the lack of joyful praise and thanksgiving in
common worship is the direct consequence of a defective personal and family spirituality. See Steps to
Christ, 102; Testimonies for the Church, 5:493; The Review and Herald, Jan 1, 1880; Manuscript Releases,
14:106. The Review and Herald, January 27, 1903; Testimonies for the Church, 5:318.
232 In Christ Object Lessons, 298, Ellen White writes “A congregation may be the poorest in the
land. It may be without the attraction of any outward show; but if the members possess the principles of the
character of Christ, they will have His joy in their souls. Angels will unite with them in their worship. The
praise and thanksgiving from grateful hearts will ascend to God as a sweet oblation.”
262
His salvation respond to Him with gladness as they daily live out their faith.233 The praise
of God is Christocentric because Jesus is the reason for our worship. Addressing the staff
The Sabbath meetings, the morning and evening worship in the home, the services
held in the chapel—all should be vitalized by the Spirit of Christ. Each member of
the sanitarium family should confess Christ openly and with gladness, expressing
the joy and comfort and hope that are written in the soul. Christ is to be set forth
as the Chiefest among ten thousand, the One altogether lovely. He is to be set
forth as the Giver of every good and perfect gift, the One in whom our hopes of
eternal life are centred. If we would do this, all narrowness must be set aside, and
we must call into exercise the love of Christ. The joy we experience in this love
will be a blessing to others. I am bidden to say to the sanitarium family, Let your
social meetings, and all your religious exercises, be characterized by a deep
earnestness and a joy that expresses the love of God in the soul.234
and thanksgiving.235 For her, the experience of joy in worship is always connected to our
remembering of the life and death of Jesus Christ. “The thought that Christ died to obtain
for us the gift of everlasting life is enough to call forth from our hearts the most sincere
and fervent gratitude, and from our lips the most enthusiastic praise.”236 The cross is to be
The implication of this emphasis for worship is clear; our joy and thanksgiving are
our response to God’s self-revelation in the crucified Christ. Our encounter with the
crucified and living Christ is transformative. To know God through the cross is to be
changed by the God of the cross. This leads to joyful praise and thanksgiving, as believers
233 Steps to Christ, 104; See also Testimonies for the Church, 6:365-367.
235 The Signs of the Times, January 2, 1893; Sons and Daughters, 344; General Conference Daily
Bulletin, January 28, 1893; The Review and Herald, November 20, 1913; The Signs of the Times, December
4, 1884.
263
are caught up in recounting God’s love for them. The cross is the basis of our joyful
Golgotha, no thanksgiving without the blood Christ shed on the cross. Worship is the
rehearsal and celebration of our release from captivity and of our reconciliation to God. 238
To praise God is to draw near heaven’s worship. “And as we thus express our
gratitude, we are approximating to the worship of the heavenly hosts.” 239 To praise God is
also the best way to defeat the Enemy. “As lessons of the wondrous works of God are
repeated, and as the heart's gratitude is expressed in prayer and song, angels from heaven
take up the strain, and unite in praise and thanksgiving to God. These exercises drive back
the power of Satan. They expel murmurings and complainings [sic], and Satan loses
ground.”240 As we worship God with joy and thanksgiving, we affirm that the Christ who
theology. The worship practices of those in the Adventist tradition, like those in any
tradition, contain within them many of the root convictions of what it means to be
Christian and leads us into the business of ‘thinking of God’. The purpose of this section
is to consider Ellen White’s understanding of the four main elements of Adventist weekly
worship, namely: music, the sermon, public prayer, and the offertory.
239 The Signs of the Times; January 26, 1882; see also Steps to Christ, 103-104.
264
5.5.1 Music
in the soul devotion and gratitude to God.”241 Through music, reminders of God’s power
and grace, affirmations of faith, expressions of praise and thanksgiving become imbedded
in our very being, so that these words and feelings become part of who we are. 242
enters in the very atmosphere of heaven. “The melody of praise is the atmosphere of
heaven when heaven comes in touch with the earth, there is music and song.”244 Because
of its sacred character, singing should not be done haphazardly. We are to offer our best
to God.
deplored “the loud singing . . . with harshness and shrillness that offend the ear.”245 She
was often “pained to hear untrained voices, pitched to the highest key, literally shrieking
the sacred words of some hymn of praise” to such a point that she would “rejoice when
the painful exercise [was] ended.”246 She complained that “some think that the louder
241Patriarchs and Prophets, 594; Manuscript 5, 1874; Education, 162, 167; Evangelism, 498;
Letter 5, 1850; Letter 53, 1896.
242
Evangelism, 496, 499, 504; Ministry of Healing (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1905),
254; Testimonies for the Church, 5:493.
265
they sing the more music they make,” oblivious to the fact that “noise is not music.”247
Some impatient singers refused choir discipline and wanted “to do things after their own
point it shocked and confused the senses of the worshippers.249 Worse yet, others added
Ellen White has some definite ideas on the qualities of the performance of music
that was part of the worship of God. According to her, music in worship should possess
three qualities: "beauty, pathos, and power.”251 She believes that “we should endeavor in
our songs of praise to approach as nearly as possible to the harmony of the heavenly
choirs.”252 The nearer the people of God can approximate harmonious heavenly singing,
the more is God glorified, the church benefited, and unbelievers favourably affected.253
What is her picture of angelic singing? She describes the singing of angels as
being “soft and melodious”254 pouring out of perfect love, “the keynote of which is
254 Ellen White, The Voice in Speech and Song (Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1988), 423; See also
Testimonies for the Church, 1:146. Testimonies for the Church, 2:266.
266
thanksgiving.”255 Since the church on earth is to pattern its singing after the church in
heaven, Ellen White believes that the congregation should sing with the voice modulated,
softened, and subdued,256 poured forth “in clear, distinct utterance”257 with the right
“intonation, correct pronunciation . . . so that God's praise can be sung in clear, soft tones,
not with harshness and shrillness that offend the ear.”258 Singing must be with pathos and
Ellen White advocated the use of instruments in church worship. She explicitly
stated, “we are not to oppose the use of instrumental music in our work. This part of the
service is to be carefully conducted; for it is the praise of God in song.” “Call to your aid,
if practicable, instrumental music, and let the glorious harmony ascend to God, an
acceptable offering.”261 In supporting the use of instruments, Ellen White often referred to
the practice in Bible times: “Let the talent of singing be brought into the work. The use of
musical instruments is not at all objectionable. These were used in religious services in
ancient times. The worshippers praised God upon the harp and cymbal, and music should
have its place in our services. It will add to the interest.” In one of her talks at the 1905
256Evangelism, 508.
258 Testimonies for the Church, 9:143-144; see also The Review and Herald, August 27, 1903.
267
General Conference session of Seventh-day Adventists, she remarked approvingly of
musical instruments thus: “I am glad to hear the musical instruments that you have here.
God wants us to have them. He wants us to praise Him with heart and soul and voice,
magnifying His name before the world.”262 While approving of instrumental music in
Although Ellen White was in full support of skilled vocalists and instrumentalists,
she also believed sacred music was not simply a matter of displaying right technique; it
was most of all a matter of right disposition. She was acutely aware that, like any gift,
musical skills could be used for self-glorification. “Musical talent too often fosters pride
and ambition for display, and singers have but little thought of the worship of God.”264
She was pained when singers and musicians exhibited their talents rather than lifting
Christ. To her, that proved they were singing more for human beings than for God.265 She
cautioned: “Display is not religion nor sanctification. There is nothing more offensive in
God's sight than a display of instrumental music when those taking part are not
consecrated, are not making melody in their hearts to the Lord.”266 Beauty in music is not
everything.267
266 The Review and Herald, November 14, 1899; Evangelism, 510.
267 Evangelism, 508. Voice in Speech and Song, 433.3; see also Evangelism, 511; Gospel Workers,
357; The Review and Herald, July 24, 1883.
268
Ellen White often uses the expression “singing with the spirit and the
acceptable to God, it needs to come from a sanctified heart. “God is glorified by songs of
praise from a pure heart filled with love and devotion to Him.”270 “The heart service is
what God requires; the forms and lip service are as sounding brass and a tinkling
performance for a human audience. This explains why Ellen White opposes the use of
How can those who have no interest in the word of God, who have never read His
word with a sincere desire to understand its truths, be expected to sing with the
spirit and the understanding? How can their hearts be in harmony with the words
of sacred song? How can the heavenly choir join in music that is only a form?272
In contrast, she holds the view that “the singing of simple hymns by the
congregation has a charm that is not possessed by the singing of a choir, however skilled
it may be.”273
participative and that the singing should not be a show for passive listeners. “There
should be in the meetings nothing of a theatrical nature. The singing should not be done
268Testimonies for the Church, 1:146; Testimonies for the Church, 9:143; The Review and Herald,
September 27, 1892; Manuscript 91, 1903; Gospel Workers, 357; Letter 1a. 1890.
269 The Voice in Speech and Song, p.425; Testimonies for the Church, vol. 9, 143-144.
270 Testimonies for the Church, 1:509. See also The Review and Herald, November 14, 1899;
Evangelism, 510.
271 Evangelism, 507; see also Letter 198, 1899; Evangelism, 512; Patriarchs and Prophets, 594.
269
by a few only. All present should be encouraged to join in the song service.”274 This could
be attained by the appropriate selection of familiar hymns.275 She also believes that a
“company of the best singers whose voices can lead” should lead the whole congregation
Repeatedly, Ellen White urges her fellow believers to sing with cheerfulness. She
insists that the singing of dolorous notes of funeral hymns has no place in regular
worship.277 “That which is done for the glory of God should be done with cheerfulness,
with songs of praise and thanksgiving, not with sadness and gloom.”278 And yet again,
Ellen White maintains that worship music should be done with order279 and solemnity.280
Ellen White once remarked that “It is impossible for the soul to flourish while
prayer is not a special exercise of the mind.”281 The same principle applies to the life of
the congregation. Public prayer shapes the spirituality of the church and is therefore a
crucial element of any worship service. Although Ellen White writes more extensively on
private and family prayer than public prayer, her thoughts on prayer, in the context of
274 Testimonies for the Church, 7:115-6; Letter 157, 1902. (Evangelism, 507).
280 The Signs of the Times, June 22, 1882; Testimonies for the Church, 4:71; Testimonies for the
Church, 5:593.
270
public worship, have considerably influenced the way prayers are offered in Adventist
churches.
What were her core convictions about prayer? Ellen White defines prayer as
follows:
Prayer is the breath of the soul. It is the secret of spiritual power. No other means
of grace can be substituted, and the health of the soul be preserved. Prayer brings
the heart into immediate contact with the Well-spring of life, and strengthens the
sinew and muscle of the religious experience.282
Prayer, as a vital element of the Christian experience, also plays a key role when
the church comes together in worship. In public prayer, the worship leader speaks directly
to God on behalf of the congregation. In the typical free-church tradition, the prayer is
extempore with the firm belief that “the opening of our hearts to our heavenly Father, the
acknowledgment of our entire dependence, the expression of our wants, the homage of
It appears that Ellen White’s fundamental argument is that public prayer reveals
the worship leader’s conception of God.284 It exposes his theological grounding and
spiritual sensitivity. This either positively or negatively affects the congregation’s own
approach to God.
What is the nature and purpose of public prayer in Adventist worship? One of the
main purposes of prayer is to lead the assembly consciously into the presence of God.
271
“Prayer, whether offered in the public assembly, at the family altar, or in secret, places
man directly in the presence of God.”285 The fact that public prayer provides corporate
fellowship with God, means that the congregation steps on holy ground286 and must
For Ellen White, reverence in public prayer is best expressed by our posture and
language. Like other Adventists who offered extempore prayer, she held the opinion that
prayers are better said with the eyes shut.288 The act of bending upon our knees before
God demonstrates reverence. “To bow down when in prayer to God is the proper attitude
to occupy.”289 She counsels, “Both in public and in private worship, it is our privilege to
bow on our knees before the Lord when we offer our petitions to Him.” 290 “This act
shows our dependence upon God.”291 For Ellen White, not only is kneeling a sign of
dependence, it is also a sign of our total surrender to the Spirit of God. She writes thus,
“And when you assemble to worship God, be sure and bow your knees before Him. Let
this act testify that the whole soul, body, and spirit are in subjection to the Spirit of
272
truth.”292 Above all, kneeling is an act of worship293 and a sign of “reverence and godly
In addition to the kneeling posture, the language used in prayer also indicates
reverence. The words used in public prayer either enrich or deaden the congregation’s
sense of reverence. It is therefore important to carefully select the words used to address
God. This is especially true in the context of extempore prayers where the search for
suitable words that correspond to the norms of the faith might prove more arduous than in
written liturgy. Ellen White is keenly aware that the language we use, no matter how
limited and imperfect it might be, should best reflect our appreciation for God’s holiness
and glory:
To hallow the name of the Lord requires that the words in which we speak of the
Supreme Being be uttered with reverence. “Holy and reverend is His name.”
Psalm 111:9. We are never in any manner to treat lightly the titles or appellations
of the Deity. In prayer we enter the audience chamber of the Most High; and we
should come before Him with holy awe. The angels veil their faces in His
presence. The cherubim and the bright and holy seraphim approach His throne
with solemn reverence. How much more should we, finite, sinful beings, come in
a reverent manner before the Lord, our Maker!295
bemoans the fact that some leading in prayers were confusing approachability with
common manner, as if talking with a human being. They profane His name by needlessly
and irreverently mingling with their prayers the words, “God Almighty,” awful, sacred
293 Ibid.
273
words, which should never pass the lips except in subdued tones and with a feeling of
awe.296 According to her, such “careless and irreverent expressions [had] grieved the
tender Spirit of the Lord and caused their petitions to be shut out of heaven.”297
Although she never prescribes an exact formula for public prayer, she believes
“that there should be order in praying.”298 To her, the Lord’s Prayer is a model to follow:
“The Lord's Prayer was not intended to be repeated merely as a form, but it is an
illustration of what our prayers should be—simple, earnest, and comprehensive.”299 “This
prayer, for its beautiful simplicity, is without a parallel. It is a perfect prayer for public
and private life; it is dignified and elevated, yet so simple that the child at its mother's
knee can understand it.”300 She believed “none will pray in vain if in their prayers are
Ellen White makes a distinction between the nature of private and public
prayer.302 “A common meeting to worship God is not the place to open the privacies of
the heart.”303 The role of the leader is to speak to God on behalf of the assembly, not to
share his personal angst and concerns. In public prayers, the worship leader represents
God’s people and becomes their mouthpiece. Hence, she admonishes: “Brethren, carry
297 Early Writings (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1882), 70.
302 Thoughts from the Mount of Blessings (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1896), 83.
274
the people with you in your prayers.”304 To do so, a public prayer needs to contain some
definite qualities.
First, public prayer must be brief. Ellen White laments “the frequently long,
“weary the angels as well as the people who listen to them.”309 Instead, she believes “the
A second quality that public prayer should have is simplicity. “Our prayers in
public should be short, and express only the real wants of the soul, asking in simplicity
and simple trusting faith for the very things we need.”311 She further counsels, “High-
flown language is inappropriate in prayer . . . Especially should the one offering public
prayer use simple language, that others may understand what is said and unite with the
petition.”312 Prayers in public should be offered in a natural tone of voice, not “upon a
306The Review and Herald, May 28, 1895, 1; Testimonies for the Church, 2:616-617; Gospel
Workers, 175-176.
308 Christian Service (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1925), 211.
310 Evangelism, 146; The Review and Herald, October 10, 1882.
275
high key, with a forced voice, in an unnatural strain and an unnatural tone.”313 The prayer
should be audible, “for unless those assembled with them can hear what is said, they
A third quality of prayer is its spirituality. Ellen White abhors dried and dull
prayers. She comments that public prayer should be offered with “heaven's vitality”315
and is convinced that “spiritless prayers better not be uttered; for they fail to bless or
edify, and are a mere form without vital power.316 “It is the heart-felt prayer of faith that
is heard in heaven and answered on earth.”317 She is quite explicit on this point:
All the flowery words at our command are not equivalent to one holy desire. The
most eloquent prayers are but vain repetitions if they do not express the true
sentiments of the heart. But the prayer that comes from an earnest heart, when the
simple wants of the soul are expressed just as we would ask an earthly friend for a
favor, expecting that it would be granted—this is the prayer of faith.318
She urges, “We must not only pray in the name of Jesus, but by the inspiration and
kindling of the Holy Spirit.”319 Adventist worship does not depend on a liturgy per se; it
relies much on the spirituality of its worship leaders. As a result, they play a key role in
nurturing the spiritual vitality of the congregation. Private devotion and public prayer, and
large extent depends on the vitality of private prayers and vice versa. Public worship is
276
the result of devotional life, but also its stimulus.320 For Ellen White, worship in general,
and public prayer in particular, are not detached from life outside congregational worship.
The whole life is a life of worship and a life of prayer. There are no dichotomies between
the two spheres, for the whole Christian life is continuously lived in the presence of
God.321
For Ellen White, corporate prayer is a public “conversation with God,”322 led by
the worship leader. Public prayer is made reverently in the hearing of the assembly in the
confidence that God hears and responds. Accordingly, public prayer also has a horizontal
dimension. The role of worship leaders is to articulate the love, faith and hope of the
congregation in their public prayers. As such, public prayer not only reaches God, it also
teaches about God. Hence, the importance of the worshippers’ devotional life that match
Adventist worship. What should one expect of a sermon? What is its purpose? How
should the sermon be proclaimed and received? For Ellen White, understanding the role
and impact of the sermon involves looking at three essential components of Christian
321
Testimonies for the Church, 6:61; See also Bible Echo, December, 1887,178; Testimonies for
the Church, 7:239, 274; The Review and Herald, August 16, 1881.
277
5.5.3.1 The Word of God.
To my ministering brethren I would say, Preach the word. Do not bring to the
foundation wood, hay, and stubble—your own surmisings and speculations, which
can benefit no one. Subjects of vital importance are revealed in the word of God,
and these are worthy of our deepest thought. But we are not to search into matters
on which God has been silent.323
Following the same vein of thought, in the introduction to her book, The Great
Controversy, she asserted, “In His Word, God has committed to men the knowledge
infallible revelation of His will. They are the standard of character, the revealer of
doctrines, and the test of experience.”324 Accordingly, the “solemn, sacred work”325 of
God,”326 “the depositaries of His truth.”327 They have the great task of “handling the
words of life.”328
The assumption here is that God still speaks to people and that He chooses to do
so through the proclamation of His Word. This proclamation can in no way parallel the
324 The Great Controversy, vii, viii; See also Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, 22 September
1910.
278
Incarnation, where God revealed Himself supremely to humanity. Yet, He makes Himself
What should be the content of a sermon? Ellen White contends that every sermon
should exalt Christ. She exhorts, “Put Christ into every sermon. Let the preciousness,
mercy, and glory of Jesus Christ be dwelt upon until Christ is formed within, the hope of
glory.”329 Elsewhere, she encourages that Christ should be the theme of Adventist
preaching:
These are our themes—Christ crucified for our sins, Christ risen from the dead,
Christ our intercessor before God; and closely connected with these is the office
work of the Holy Spirit, the representative of Christ, sent forth with divine power
and gifts for men. His preexistence, His coming the second time in glory and
power, His personal dignity, His holy law uplifted, are the themes that have been
dwelt upon with simplicity and power.330
and emphasize the cross of Christ.332 “No discourse should ever be preached without
presenting Christ and Him crucified as the foundation of the gospel.”333 “Hanging upon
the cross Christ was the gospel . . . This is our message, our argument, our doctrine, our
warning to the impenitent, our encouragement for the sorrowing, the hope for every
331 Gospel Workers, 301; Selected Messages, 1:158; Evangelism, 191; Selected Messages, 1:372;
Testimonies for the Church, 6:19; The Ellen G. White 1888 Materials, 560.
332 Testimonies for the Church, 6:236; Evangelism, 187; Gospel Workers, 158; The Review and
Herald, June 2, 1903.
279
believer.”334 “We are to preach Christ and Him crucified as the sinner’s only hope.”335
The cross was for Ellen White the hermeneutical key that opens the entire Scripture:
The sacrifice of Christ as an atonement for sin is the great truth around which all
other truths cluster. In order to be rightly understood and appreciated, every truth
in the Word of God, from Genesis to Revelation, must be studied in the light that
streams from the cross of Calvary. I present before you the great, grand monument
of mercy and regeneration, salvation and redemption—the Son of God uplifted on
the cross. This is to be the foundation of every discourse given by our ministers. 336
the Gospel, we now turn to the one who has the task of delivering it—the preacher.
The preacher's first task is to know the Word of God.337 White urges preachers to
“earnestly and prayerfully search the Scriptures, and become conversant with them, in
proclaimed in words only; faithful preaching also needs the “vitalizing power of the Holy
Spirit.”339 Ellen White deplores the absence of the Word and of the Spirit from modern
pulpits:
The words of the Bible and the Bible alone, should be heard from the pulpit. But
the Bible has been robbed of its power, and the result is seen in a lowering of the
tone of spiritual life. In many sermons of today there is not that divine
manifestation which awakens the conscience and brings life to the soul. The
hearers cannot say, “Did not our heart burn within us, while He talked with us by
337
The Review and Herald, April 6, 1886; Testimonies for the Church, 4:407, 411-412, 446, 498-
499; Testimonies for the Church, 5:528, 574; Testimonies for the Church, 6:143. See also Mervyn Warren,
Ellen White on Preaching (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2010).
280
the way, and while He opened to us the Scriptures?” Luke 24:32. There are many
who are crying out for the living God, longing for the divine presence. Let the
word of God speak to the heart. Let those who have heard only tradition and
human theories and maxims, hear the voice of Him who can renew the soul unto
eternal life.340
Ellen White sets out the relationship between the Holy Spirit and preaching as
follows:
The preaching of the word is of no avail without the presence and aid of the Holy
Spirit; for this Spirit is the only effectual teacher of divine truth. Only when the
truth is accompanied to the heart by the Spirit, will it quicken the conscience or
transform the life. A minister may be able to present the letter of the word of God;
he may be familiar with all its commands and promises; but his sowing of the
gospel seed will not be successful unless this seed is quickened into life by the
dew of heaven. Without the co-operation of the Spirit of God, no amount of
education, no advantages, however great, can make one a channel of light. 341
Ellen White deplores the fact that some preachers confused their fluency with
God’s anointing, relying on their great talents and eloquence rather than on the Spirit.342
To her, the damage was immense. “No one can tell what is lost by attempting to preach
without the unction of the Holy Spirit.”343 Preaching is a deeply spiritual exercise that
requires a spiritual preacher.344 She warns, “It is a fearful thing to minister in sacred
things when the heart and hands are not holy.”345 Therefore, she counsels that “the
Christian minister should never enter the desk until he has first sought God in his closet
341 The Desires of Ages, 671-672; see also Christ’s Object Lessons, 64.
342 Testimonies for the Church (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1875), 3:31; Testimonies for
the Church, 1:380.
345 Testimonies for the Church, 3:31; See also Testimonies for the Church, 5:536.
281
and has come into close connection with Him.”346 “No man is qualified to stand in the
sacred desk unless he has felt the transforming influence of the truth of God upon his own
soul."347 For Ellen White, concern for preaching reflects an integral concern for the
preacher’s spirituality. The effect of a sermon on the life of the congregation will be in
proportion to the effect it has on the life of the one who delivers it.
The question we now turn our attention to is: how should the sermon be
delivered? Perhaps one of the best ways to answer that question would be to understand
the aim of the sermon. Concerning the goal of the sermon, Ellen White observes:
If they are true men of God, they will know that the object of preaching is not to
entertain. It is not merely to convey information, nor to convince the intellect. The
preaching of the Word should appeal to the intellect and should impart
knowledge, but it should do more than this. The minister’s utterances, to be
effectual, must reach the hearts of his hearers.348
Essentially, God speaks through the preacher’s faithful exposition of the Word so
that there can be a response from the heart.349 However, faithful preaching is not only
about content; it also includes the way it is done.350 She aptly observes that “much of the
effect of discourses is lost because of the manner in which they are delivered.”351 She
further observes: the sermon’s “delivery should be carefully considered that the message
347 Testimonies for the Church, 1:113; Testimonies for the Church, 1:432-434; Testimonies for the
Church, 4:526-527; Testimonies for the Church, 5:179.
282
may be presented in such a manner that it will be to the hearer as the voice of God.”352
With these facts in view, Ellen White believes that the preacher should bear in mind some
basics of homiletics.
First, the preacher should know the Word, but also know the congregation. “The
one whose special work it is to lead the people into the path of truth should be an able
expositor of the Word, capable of adapting his teachings to the wants of the people.”353
Second, the preacher should be well-prepared before stepping into the pulpit, but also
remain open to the Holy Spirit’s leading during the proclamation.354 Third, preachers
should avoid “tame, formal discourses”355 and place fervent conviction over dry theory.356
She complains of preachers “possessing only a cold, nominal faith, presenting the theory
have a “love for souls . . . be intense, and their zeal fervent.”358 Fourth, preachers should
combine the doctrinal and the practical in their sermons.359 Ellen White counsels that
“practical religion should have a place in every discourse.”360 Fifth, the preacher should
355 Ibid.
283
avoid rambling361 in their sermons and know “how to present them in a clear, connected
manner.”362 Sixth, preachers should use simple language “adapted to the minds of the
common people.”363 As such, they should use “an easy style,”364 presenting “the truth in a
clear, simple manner,”365 and “be able to point out the way of salvation through Christ in
language eloquent in its simplicity.”366 Seventh, preachers “must eradicate from their
speech every expression that is cheap or common”367 and have their message “clothed in
characterize the sermon. Eighth, preachers should not rely on outward display, theatrical
style, but depend on the truth of God’s Word.371 Ninth, preachers must avoid
365 Selected Messages, 1:158; see also Testimonies for the Church, 2:337.
367 Evangelism, 211; see also Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers, 142-143, 318;
Testimonies for the Church, 5:582;
371 Gospel Workers, 165, 383; Manuscript Releases, 9:299 Testimonies for the Church, 1:161.
372 Selected Messages, 2:21; Evangelism, 184; The Review and Herald, December 3, 1895;
Testimonies for the Church, 1:647.
284
short sermons that are to the point,373 not jumbling but articulating clearly and distinctly
every word, speaking in the most natural way.374 Above all, Ellen White holds that the
preacher should always seek to emulate his Lord,375 preaching “as one having authority,
We now briefly consider the third element of the sermon event, the congregation.
and the listeners. Ellen White understands the sermon to be a shared experience where the
listeners play an important role. In an article penned in the Review and Herald of April 7,
1885, she addresses the problem of listeners who fail to understand the true nature of the
sermon.
Many do not look upon preaching as Christ's appointed means of instructing his
people, and therefore always to be highly prized. They do not feel that the sermon
is the word of the Lord to them, and estimate it by the value of the truths spoken;
but they judge it as they would the speech of a lawyer at the bar—by the
argumentative skill displayed, and the power and beauty of the language. The
minister is not infallible, but God has honoured him by making him his
messenger. If his hearers listen to him as though he were not commissioned from
above, they will not respect his words, nor receive them as the message of God.
Their souls will not feed upon the heavenly manna; doubts will arise concerning
some things that are not pleasing to the natural heart, and they will sit in judgment
upon the sermon, as they would upon the remarks of a lecturer or a political
speaker. As soon as the meeting closes, they will be ready with some complaint or
sarcastic remark, thus showing that the message, however true and needful, has
not profited them. They esteem it not; they have learned the habit of criticising
373 Testimonies for the Church, 4:261; The Review and Herald, September 2, 1890; The Signs of
the Times, May 17, 1883, Evangelism, 658, Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers, 256; Gospel
Workers,167-168, Testimonies for the Church, 4:261.
375 The Review and Herald, March 5, 1895; The Review and Herald, March 5, 1901; The Desire of
Ages, 254; Evangelism, 56, 175-176, 439, 670; Ministry of Healing, 469, Gospel Workers, 117; The Review
and Herald, May 18, 1897.
285
and finding fault, and they pick and choose, and perhaps reject the very things that
they most need.377
God's plan in nurturing His people. Her concern is that preachers should not be perceived
simply as popular orators.378 As imperfect as they are, they are God's instruments of
divine mediation for His message. They are not a source of authority, but only chosen
instruments. Hence, the failure to acknowledge these basic elements makes the task of
listening impossible.379 Listeners should not suspend their thinking. Instead, the sermon
must be brought to the test of the Bible. Instead of being overly suspicious about the
sermon, listeners should seek for God’s voice in it with a humble spirit. 380 Anything that
The sermon, then, is not just about listeners who hear and a preacher who speaks.
simply human talk. It is divine thoughts in human words. Ellen White’s point here is that
the congregation must recognise God behind the act of preaching and respond
accordingly.
To help congregations in the task of properly hearing the sermon, White provides
worshippers with practical instructions. First, to benefit from the sermon, listeners must
recognise that faith is foundational to the appropriation of God’s Word. “If the hearers
380 Ibid.
286
thus listen in faith, expecting a message from God through his delegated messenger, they
listeners, remembering that a lack of focus might make them lose the very words that are
most needed for their lives.383 As she repeatedly puts it, “God wants attentive hearers.”384
Nothing that is sacred, nothing that pertains to the worship of God, should be
treated with carelessness and indifference. When the word of life is spoken, you
should remember that you are listening to the voice of God through His delegated
servant. Do not lose these words through inattention; if heeded, they may keep
your feet from straying into wrong paths.385
Third, the congregation should comprise active listeners. For instance, with regard
to the role of parents and children during the sermon, she specifically states:
In listening to the sermon, let parents and children note the text and the scriptures
quoted, and as much as possible of the line of thought, to repeat to one another at
home. This will go far toward relieving the weariness with which children so often
listen to a sermon, and it will cultivate in all a habit of attention and of connected
thought.386
In this way, the sermon is not finished once the preacher sits down, but continues
to reverberate in the life of the believers and continues to engage their mental faculties
outside the confine of public worship. Fourth, the congregation should be responsive.
Ellen White deplores the fact that, “There is too much formality in our religious services.
The Lord would have His ministers who preach the Word energized by His Holy Spirit;
and the people who hear should not sit in drowsy indifference, or stare vacantly about,
382 Gospel Workers (Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1892), 285.
383 Testimonies for the Church, 5:493; Messages to Young People, 266.
287
making no responses to what is said.”387 In contrast, she stresses, “where the church is
walking in the light, there will ever be cheerful, hearty responses and words of joyful
praise.”388 Fifth, the congregation should magnify Christ, not the preacher, no matter how
excellent his preaching might be.389 Finally, listeners should apply the truths preached to
their daily lives. She questiones: “What can we expect but deterioration in religious life
when the people listen to sermon after sermon and do not put the instruction into
practice?”390 White asserts that “it is only by living a life in harmony with that of the
Saviour that we meet the requirement of God to be not only hearers but doers of the
Word.”391
5.5.4 Giving
Adventists do not worship God only with their lips through singing, praying and
preaching. They also worship Him through the tangible sharing of their income. Ellen
White puts it this way: “gifts and offerings formed an essential part of God's worship.” 392
Review and Herald, in 1886, she gives a clear explanation on the theological reasons
388 Ibid.
391 Manuscript Releases, 6:182; See also The Review and Herald, March 7, 1893.
393 Testimonies for the Church, 6:386; Prophets and Kings, 707; Testimonies for the Church,
2:576.
288
We belong to God; we are His sons and daughters—His by creation, and His by
the gift of His only-begotten Son for our redemption. “Ye are not your own; for ye
are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit,
which are God’s.” The mind, the heart, the will, and the affections belong to God;
the money that we handle is the Lord’s. Every good that we receive and enjoy is
the result of divine benevolence. God is the bountiful giver of all good, and He
desires that there shall be an acknowledgment, on the part of the receiver, of these
gifts that provide for every necessity of the body and the soul. 394
Succinctly put, giving is rooted in this basic notion that we are not ours. We owe
The first reason to worship in giving is to acknowledge that “God manifested His
love in the work of creation . . . and pronounced it very good.”395 Creation is God’s
gracious act and we owe Him our existence. The “One omnipotent in power, great in
goodness and mercy, has created all things.”396 Hence, “as an acknowledgment that all
things came from him, the Lord directed that a portion of his bounty should be returned to
him, in gifts and offerings.”397 Therefore, our giving is a self-reminder that we belong to
the Creator. For this reason, Ellen White exhorts fellow Adventists: “Come with your
offerings as God has blessed you. Show your gratitude to your Creator, the Giver of all
your benefits, by a freewill offering. Let none who are able come empty-handed.”398
A second reason to give in worship is that God gave us the very best in Jesus
Christ. “The gift of God to man is beyond computation. Nothing was withheld. God
394 The Review and Herald April, December 8, 1896; Christian Service, 72.
289
would not permit it to be said that He could have done more, or revealed to humanity a
greater measure of love. In the gift of Christ, He gave all heaven.”399 The supreme gift of
God is the greatest incentive for us to give. By our giving, we demonstrate tangibly that
we have been gripped by God’s marvelous grace and that we now belong to Him as His
redeemed children.400
of God’s bounties402 and in gratitude for His endless blessings.403 By giving, we recognise
that “the great and infinite God lives not unto Himself, but for the benefit and blessing of
every being and every object of His creation.”404 God constantly gives, so why should we
not give? In an article written in 1881, Ellen White put sthis point across with irony:
“When our Heavenly Benefactor forgets our returning wants; when God forgets to be
gracious, and none of his gifts flow into our barns, our granaries, and our cellars, —then
may we plead an excuse for withholding our offerings.”405 Essentially, we give, not to
receive more from God; we give because we have already received much from Him. 406
400Christ’s Objects Lessons, 299; see also The Review and Herald, January 4, 1881; The Review
and Herald, December 25, 1900.
406 She contrasts two kinds of spirits: “The spirit of liberality is the spirit of Heaven. The spirit of
selfishness is the spirit of Satan. Christ's self-sacrificing love is revealed upon the cross. He gave all that he
had, and then gave himself, that man might be saved. The cross of Christ appeals to the benevolence of
every follower of the blessed Saviour. The principle illustrated there is to give, give. This carried out in
290
By giving, we emulate and portray God’s character to all. “God imparts His gifts
to us that we also may give, and thus make known His character to the world.”407
What is the purpose of giving then? We have already noted that giving expresses
our covenant relationship with God. We are created, redeemed and sustained by His
grace. Basically, giving is an act of worship. For Ellen White, the church has the privilege
to worship God through her tithes and offerings in acknowledgement of His provision and
ownership in Christ.408 “The system of tithes and offerings was intended to impress the
minds of men with a great truth, - that God is the source of every blessing to his creatures,
and that to him man's gratitude is due for the good gifts of his providence.”409
God,”411 “sacred, reserved by God for Himself.”412 To render the tithe of our income is a
recognition of divine sovereignty, “an acknowledgment that all things came from
actual benevolence and good works is the true fruit of the Christian life. The principle of worldlings is to
get, get, and thus they expect to secure happiness; but carried out in all its bearings, the fruit is misery and
death.” The Review and Herald October 17, 1882.
412 Testimonies for the Church, 9:249; Christian Service, 66; see also Testimonies for the Church,
3:395.
291
Him”413 a reminder that He is “the true proprietor” of everything.414 Through the tithe,
God “asks us to acknowledge Him as the Giver of all things.”415 Ellen White affirms that
“the New Testament does not reenact the law of the tithe, as it does not that of the
23:23.
Ellen White also urges believers to give free-will offerings from the remaining
nine-tenth. Whereas the tithe is a recognition of dependence on God and of our duty
towards Him,417 our offerings are a token of gratitude and thanksgiving to God.418 Both
are to be used for the support of the Gospel ministry and the advancement of mission in
the world as proof of our love to God and humanity.419 Hence giving is not only a visible
way of expressing our praise and thanksgiving, it is also a way of signaling tangibly our
Recognizing that we are still pilgrims on this earth, treading the path of
sanctification, Ellen White views generous giving as an antidote against selfishness and
418 The Acts of the Apostles, 75; Testimonies to the Church 5:150.
419The Review and Herald, May 9, 1893, par. 7; See also Counsels on Stewardship (Washington,
D.C.: Review and Herald, 1940), 77; Testimonies for the Church, 9:246, 250; The Review and Herald,
December 17, 1901, par. 13; The Review and Herald, July 14, 1896, par. 1; Testimonies for the Church,
4:464; Christian Service, 52, 114, 215; Manuscript Releases, 29, Testimonies for the Church, 6:447.
292
greed.420 She writes: “The constant practice of God's plan of systematic benevolence
giving.422 In addition, the Christian should consider it a privilege to give.423 “The very act
of giving expands the heart of the giver, and unites him more fully to the Redeemer of the
world.”424 By giving, we draw closer to Christ425 and become more like God;426 we
develop a character for heaven.427 Our gifts are in no way a means of buying God’s
favour.428 Also, God does not put an estimate on us based on the amount we give.429 He
does not require us to give more than we can430 and does not expect us to be coerced into
giving.431 Yet, He marks our motives in giving432 to see whether they are prompted by
420 The Youth Instructor, September 10, 1907; Christian Service, 72; Testimonies for the Church,
3:405; The Review and Herald, December 8, 1896.
431 Testimonies for the Church, 4:474; Christian Service, 203; Testimonies for the Church, 3:413.
432 Testimonies for the Church, 1:177; Testimonies for the Church, 2:519.
293
love.433 As such, giving is purely a test of heavenly fellowship.434 For that reason, we give
faithfully.”439
For Ellen White, giving is a demonstration of our Christianity and true worship of
God. Because we are now reconciled with God, we place a high priority on440 the free and
glad giving of our tithes and offerings.441 As we give with a grateful heart, God blesses us
accordingly.442 Truly, worship is giving and giving is worship. Christ demands our whole
heart and undivided affections.443 Ellen White’s argument is that God cannot accept our
gifts if they do not come from the heart.444 Giving expresses our total allegiance to God,
434 Testimonies for the Church, 3:408; Testimonies for the Church, 4:469.
438 Testimonies for the Church, 5:267, 272; Education, 239; Testimonies for the Church, 1:237;
Christian Service, 81.
440 Testimonies for the Church, 4:477; The Adventist Home (Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 1952), 369; The Review and Herald, January 4, 1881.
441 Manuscript 159, 1899; Counsels on Stewardship, 66; Review and Herald 26 December 1882;
Testimonies for the Church, 1:238;
442 Christian Service, 90, 175; Testimonies for the Church, 5:267-268; Testimonies for the Church,
3:304-305.
294
5.6 CONCLUSION
between Ellen White's understanding of God, the Sabbath, and worship. Her
understanding of the Sabbath reveals God as Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier. All these
elements find their way in her Christian understanding of worship that is offered to God
the Father, through the Son and in the Holy Spirit. The emphasis is on the theme of
participation where God is both the Subject and Object of our worship.
The present chapter however, has not exhaustively discussed every element in the
writings of Ellen White that relates to worship. It has not explored, for example, the areas
of ethics and evangelism, which are of direct relevance to her thoughts on Adventist
worship. A fuller account would include a detailed exploration of the close connection
between Ellen White’s understanding of corporate worship and daily discipleship. Our
worship alongside Christopher Ellis’s study on Baptist and Free Church worship. Ellis
outlines four underlying convictions which are at the heart of Baptist worship and one
overarching theme that governs its practice. The four underlying convictions are: (1)
attention to Scripture; (2) personal devotion and openness to the Spirit; (3) a concern for
the community of the church; and (4) a missiological and eschatological dimension,
focused on the Kingdom.445 The overarching theme, the “presiding conviction,” that
brings Baptist worship into focus is the central Christian affirmation that ‘Jesus is Lord’
(1 Corinthians 12:3).446
295
White’s understanding and Ellis’ ‘underlying convictions’ of worship have clear
by religious convictions. The covenant community is shaped by its total devotion to God
through close adherence to Scripture and openness to the Spirit as it seeks and shares the
Lord Jesus Christ and His Kingdom. Free Church worship emphasises confessing the
lordship of Christ over His Church. This confession of faith in the Free Church
In the next chapter, we reflect on the liturgical theology that has emerged from our
discussion on Adventist corporate worship. I will propose what I believe to be the core of
Sabbath-keeping for Adventist worship and how this worship is a celebration of salvation
history.
447 Miroslav Volf, After Our Likeness: the Church as the Image of the Trinity (Grand Rapids, MI:
William B. Eerdmans, 1998), 146.
296
CHAPTER SIX
This dissertation has used a fourfold structure for establishing the theological core of
analysis of those facts; 3. a synthesis of the liturgical facts and their undergirding theology; 4.
The foregoing chapters have been faithful to this undertaking. We have established
the liturgical facts by outlining the history and highlighting the practice and understanding of
In each chapter, attempt has been made to establish the centrality of the Sabbath to
Adventist worship. Because of its central location in Adventist understanding and practice of
worship, the Sabbath thus becomes a suitable pivot around which we can expound the
This chapter will develop the key idea that worship and the Sabbath are
recapitulations and celebrations of the salvation story. They both highlight God’s crucial
actions of creation, redemption and restoration. In these mighty acts, God reveals Himself as
worthy of praise and adoration. In three major sections below, I will draw, from this core
general.
297
In this chapter, the key idea that we want to develop is that both worship and the
Sabbath are recapitulations and celebrations of the salvation story. They both highlight God’s
crucial actions of creation, redemption and restoration. In these mighty acts, God reveals
Himself as worthy of praise and adoration. In three major sections below, I will draw, from
this core understanding, implications for Adventist worship in particular, and Christian
worship in general.
viewed from the perspective of God’s mighty acts in Jesus Christ. According to Robert
Webber, “worship does God’s story.” By this, he means that, as the church assembles to
worship, it “gathers to sing, tell, and enact God’s story of the world from its beginning to its
end.”1
from Eden to the Earth made new.3 In the divine economy, God reveals Himself, especially
through His saving activity.4 From Genesis to Revelation, God is supremely active in
reconciling humanity to Himself, constantly revealing Himself in the process. 5 God’s plan for
1 Robert Webber, Ancient Future Worship (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2008), 29, 40.
3 Ibid., 275-278.
4 Ibid., 307.
5Daniel Oscar Plenc, ‘Toward an Adventist Theology of Worship’ in Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, ed.,
Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church Studies. Adventist Ecclesiology 3 (Silver Spring, MD:
Biblical Research Institute, 2016), 103-132. In his study, Plenc analyses the biblical data to develop a biblical
298
His creation climaxed in the Christ-event. Through His perfect obedience to the Father’s will
and His sinless life, Jesus accomplished salvation for humanity.6 The ultimate self-revelation
of God took place on the cross where Christ revealed both God’s love and His justice by
available to all who receive it by faith in Christ. Being reconciled with God, the Christian
now lives a life of obedience and victory over sin through the power of the Holy Spirit.8 The
final objective of God’s saving activity is the full restoration of the image of God in
humanity. This involves the end of the cosmic controversy and complete eradication of sin
from the universe as well as the confirmation of God’s love and justice and His eternal reign
over the entire creation.9 As such, the Adventist soteriological understanding is essentially
evangelical in orientation.
Having noted that Adventist soteriology is basically evangelical, the question then
arises: How is this understanding of salvation related to worship? In his classic treatment of
Adventist worship, Raymond Holmes writes: “The church is a people who assemble in
worship to praise the Lord for His deliverance and to anticipate His soon return. Such a
theology of worship and provide a number of concepts and principles, essentially based on the revelation-
response model.
6 Blazen, 307-308.
7 Ibid., 307.
8 Ibid., 307-308.
9 Ibid., 271-300; 307-313; See also, Norman R. Gulley, Systematic Theology: Prolegomenon, 421-453.
299
foundation of worship cannot be underestimated since worship is an anamnesis of the divine
economy. Salvation history gives the structure and substance to Christian worship, instilling
the memory of God’s mighty acts in the hearts of the worshipping community. It guides and
molds worship. The character and saving acts of God, especially as revealed in Christ,
Indeed, Adventists are not the only Christians who perceive worship as recapitulation
of salvation history. Swiss Reformed liturgical theologian, Jean-Jacques von Allmen, for
Allmen, is “the recapitulation of the history of salvation.”12 By this, he means that the
worship of the church sums up “the major events in the history of salvation and so, implicitly
of the whole history of salvation.”13 He posits that this history is especially revealed in the
life and ministry of Jesus Christ.14 Accordingly, he calls for a more intentional emphasis on
creation, the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus; the ongoing missio dei in the world and the
eschatological kingdom of God.15 For von Allmen, worship recapitulates, rehearses and
celebrates the history of salvation and it is “by its worship that the Church becomes itself,
becomes conscious of itself, and confesses itself as a distinct entity.”16 In this, he echoes
11 Ed Zinke, “The Revelation of His Righteousness,” in The Great Controversy and the End of Evil:
Biblical and Theological Studies in Honor of Ángel Rodríguez in Celebration of His Seventieth Birthday,
Gerhard Pfandel, ed., (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute, 2015), 191-200.
300
Schmemann who saw the “genuine discovery of worship as the life of the Church, the public
act which eternally actualizes the nature of the Church as the Body of Christ.”17
Significantly, von Allmen argues that the church assumes its liturgical role by
celebrating salvation history through the sanctification of time.18 He agrees with other
6.1.2 Sabbath
Interestingly, the Sabbath combines both the elements of salvation history and the
Sakae Kubo puts it aptly: “[T]he significance of the Sabbath spans the history of the world
from beginning to end. In a sense it takes up the whole plan of salvation, so comprehensive is
its scope.”20
This understanding of the Sabbath is not unique to Adventism. Karl Barth and Jürgen
Moltmann, for instance, have not missed the significance of the Sabbath in their respective
18 Von Allmen, Worship, 210; See also his treatment of Sunday, 213-239.
19 See for instance James F. White, Introduction to Christian Worship (Nashville, TN: Abingdon,
1980), 52-87; Gordon W. Lathrop, Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1998,
36-43, 66-79; B. Chilton, Redeeming Time: The Wisdom of Ancient Jewish and Christian Festal Calendars
(Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2002), 1-20; Robert E. Webber, Worship Old and New (Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan, 1982), 161-173. Writing on Christian worship, Webber argues that the “Christian conception of time
is important because it plays a significant role in the worship of the church.” Robert E. Webber, Worship Old &
New, 164.
20 Sakae Kubo, God Meets Man: A Theology of the Sabbath and Second Advent (Nashville, TN:
Southern Publishing Association, 1978), 8.
301
theologies.21 Barth stressed the “radical importance” of the Sabbath because it sets “a
beginning and a goal” of the Gospel.22 Moltmann also explored the Sabbath by linking it to
the doctrines of creation, redemption and eschatology.23 Other Christians have also explored
the Sabbath subject and, like Barth and Moltmann, ultimately apply their understanding of
Crucially, the Sabbath informs the way Adventists think about and practice their
worship. This is particularly relevant to our study for, whereas a large number of Christians
follow a liturgical calendar to structure their worship, Adventists mainly determine their
liturgical time by keeping the seventh-day Sabbath.25 For them, “[a] proper observance of the
21 Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics: The Doctrine of Creation, ed. T. F. Torrance and G. W. Bromiley,
trans., T. H. L. Parker et al., vol. 3, part 4 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1961); Karl Barth, Church Dogmatic: The
Doctrine of Creation., ed. T. F. Torrance G. W. Bromiley, trans., A. T Mackay, T. H. L. Parker, H. Knight, H.
A. Kennedy and J. Marks, vol. 3, part 4 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1961), 47-72. See also “Creation and
Covenant” in Karl Barth, Church Dogmatic: The Doctrine of Creation., ed. T. F. Torrance and G. W. Bromiley,
trans., O. Bussey, J. W. Edwards, and Harold Knight, vol. 3, part 1 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1958), 98-9, 212-
39; Jürgen Moltmann, God in Creation: A New Theology of Creation and the Spirit of God the Gifford Lectures
1984-1985, trans. Margaret Kohl (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993). I’m particularly indebted to
Higashide Katsumi for the different references in his treatment of Barth and Moltmann theologies in PhD
dissertation, Meanings of the Sabbath for Worship in the Seventh-Day Adventist Church.
22 Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics: The Doctrine of Creation, ed. T. F. Torrance and G. W. Bromiley,
trans., T. H. L. Parker et al., vol. 3, part 4 (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1961), 57, 54.
23Jürgen Moltmann, God in Creation: A New Theology of Creation, Their reflections have deepened
Adventist discussions on the subject. Hans K. LaRondelle, "Contemporary Theologies of the Sabbath," in The
Sabbath in Scripture and History, ed. Kenneth A. Strand (Washington, D. C.: Review and Herald, 1982);
Likewise, Raoul Dederen highlights how Barth’s treatment of the Sabbath highlights the “revelation of the
nature of God and of His purpose.” See, Raoul Dederen, “Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath,” in The
Sabbath in Scripture and History, ed. Kenneth A. Strand (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982), 196,
304.
24 Lynne. M Baab, Sabbath Keeping: Finding Freedom in the Rhythms of Rest (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 2005); Walter Bruggemann, Sabbath as Resistance: Saying No to the Culture of Now
(Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 2014); Marva J. Dawn, Keeping the Sabbath Wholly: Ceasing,
Resting, Embracing, Feasting (Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans, 1989); Christopher J. Donato, ed.,
Perspectives on the Sabbath: 4 Views (Nashville, TN: B&H Academic, 2011); Edward O’ Flaherty, Sunday,
Sabbath, and the Weekend: Managing Time in a Global Culture (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans,
2010); Norman Wirzba, Living the Sabbath: Discovering the Rhythms of Rest and Delight (Grand Rapids, MI:
Brazos, 2006).
302
Sabbath . . . is an integral part of an attitude of worship and reflects a genuine reverence for
God.”26 The Seventh-day Adventist Church Manual states, “The Sabbath holds a very special
place in the lives of Seventh-day Adventists.”27 This point is explicitly made by Holmes who
stresses that the Sabbath is so embedded in Adventist history and identity that “it is not
without reference to the Sabbath and its meaning.”28 It is critical to note that “Seventh-day
Adventists observe the day in a spirit of worship and devotion of heart and not legalistically
This sense of the Adventist attachment to the seventh-day Sabbath finds its clearest
expression at worship time every Saturday morning when worshippers greet each other with a
familiar “Happy Sabbath.” This simple expression links the joy of gathering for worship with
communal worship every Saturday? In the following section, I highlight how the Adventist
Creator, Redeemer and Restorer. This understanding constitutes the foundation for an
26 Denis Fortin, “A Seventh-day Adventist Perspective on Worship” in Thomas Best F and Heller
Dagmar, eds.2 Worship Today: Understanding, Practice, Ecumenical Implications (Vol. 194. World Council of
Churches, 2004), 168.
29 Seventh Day Adventist Encyclopedia (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 1996), 11:505.
303
6.2 SABBATH AND CREATION
creation week. Ellen White connects the origin of the Sabbath to creation thus: “When the
foundations of the earth were laid, then was also laid the foundation of the Sabbath.”30
Commenting on the Israelite economy, White posits that “Sabbath observance was to be an
act of grateful acknowledgement, on the part of all who dwell upon the earth, that God was
their rightful Sovereign: that they were the works of His hands and the subjects of His
In Adventist thinking, the foundational reality of worship is that it has its source in the
creatorship of God.33 In worship, God’s people open themselves to the Creator’s presence. 34
According to this understanding, God does not only transcend time; He also involves Himself
32 See for instance, Patriarchs and Prophets, 307, 336-337. The same ideas are shared in Raymond
Holmes, Sing a New Song, 32-33 and Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, ‘Elements of Adventist Worship: Their
Theological Significance’ in Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, ed., Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church,
136.
33 Canale comments on this understanding of Adventist worship: “As we approach the presence of the
infinite and mysterious Creator, a sense of awe and reverence will fill our hearts and houses of worship.”
Fernando Canale, “Principles of Worship and Liturgy,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 20/1-2,
2009, 97-98.
304
In Adventist thinking, the Sabbath encapsulates God’s benevolent intention.35
Creation finds its culmination in the Sabbath when God “ended all the work He had made . . .
rested on the seventh day . . . blessed and sanctified it” (Gen. 2:2, 3).36 Adventists stress the
unique character of the Sabbath by insisting that God not only “rested on the seventh day,
from all the work God had done” (Gen. 2:3b), He also “blessed and sanctified it,” thus
separating the seventh day from the realm of the ordinary and devoting it to a sacred
purpose.37 The first stanza of the song, Crowning Jewel of Creation (SDA Hymnal 385),
35Fritz Guy, Thinking Theologically: Adventist Christianity and the Interpretation of Faith (Berrien
Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1999), 237.
36 Balentine observes that the Sabbath “holds the key to the liturgy of creation” in that “it is a kind of
climax that is marked by rest.” Samuel E. Balentine, The Torah’s Vision of Worship (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress
Press, 1999), 92.
305
On the seventh-day, not only do Adventists believe that they enter into divine rest and
divine blessing;38 they also believe that they enter into holy time.39
Besides, the creation account has special significance for Adventists because of its
Christological focus. They affirm the biblical teaching that Christ is the Agent of both
creation and redemption, the One through whom God creates, sustains, and reconciles to
Himself all things in heaven and things on earth (John 1:1-3; Col. 1:15-20; Eph. 1:10, 1 Cor.
8:6, Heb. 1: 2, 10; John 1:3).40 “Since He made all things,” Ellen White contends, “He made
the Sabbath.”41 Accordingly, “[a]s the Creator, Christ gifted humanity with the Sabbath, of
As such, the Sabbath reminds humanity of its unique place in God’s creation. Created
in the imago dei, humanity is invited to enter into the imitatio dei by participating in God’s
38This blessing of the seventh day is not an end in itself. For Adventists, it is intended to be a means
through which God showers His blessings for the benefit and enjoyment of the entire human race (Ellen G.
White, Education, 251). In an Adventist-Catholic Conversation held in Genève, Switzerland, May, 2002
Rodríguez observed: “If the verb “to bless” (brk) expresses the basic idea of bestowing benefits upon something
or someone, then when God blessed the Sabbath He bestowed it with benefits that would be enjoyed by those
who will keep it. A day that is not blessed is a day deprived of positive content for human beings (Jer 20:14).”
Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, “The Biblical Sabbath: The Adventist Perspective, Biblical Research Institute 2,”
accessed July 31, 2018 at https://www.adventistbiblicalresearch.org/sites/default/files/pdf/
Sabbath-Catholic_2002.pdf.
39 Raymond Holmes observes that “in the beginning of earth’s history God did not consecrate a place
for His dwelling. Rather, He consecrated a period of time in which His creatures were to meet Him in fellowship
and communion.” (see, C. Raymond Holmes, Sing a New Song, 28. The Sabbath derives its holiness from God
not from man It is called the “holy Sabbath” (Ex. 16:23; 31: 14, 15; 35:2; cf.Isa.58: 13) and man is enjoined to
keep it holy (Ex. 20:8-18; Deut. 5:12-14).
40 For the centrality of Christ in Adventist thinking, see Raoul Dederen, ‘Christ: His Person and Work’
in Handbook of Adventist Theology, 160-204. Dederen asserts (p. 198) that “Seventh-day Adventists advocates a
Christ-centered theological system” which depicts Christ as Creator, Redeemer, Lord of the Sabbath, High
Priest and soon-returning King.
42 Ellen G. White, Desire of Ages, 285. She further observes that “by him it was set apart as a memorial
of creation”, hence pointing “to Him as both the Creator and Sanctifier. Ibid., 288. Elsewhere, she refers to the
Sabbath as a token of Christ’s love and power. Ellen G. White, From Heaven with Love (Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 1984), 185.
306
original rest. Theologically, being has priority over doing, or as Moltmann puts it, “existence
precedes activity.”43 For Adventists, this implies that the Sabbath is more than a time for
breaking off from work to recuperate from fatigue.44 Sabbath keeping is relational and
sanctifying in the sense that God invites humanity to draw near in order to partake of one of
How does the idea of God sanctifying the Sabbath inform the Adventist understanding
of worship? In order to answer this question, I explore in the following section the
significance that the Sabbath draws from creation and its implications for Adventist worship.
“[T]he first theological meaning of the Sabbath is its celebration of God’s creative
activity.”46 It points humanity to the only true God, the Maker of heaven and earth, in
opposition to all false deities.47 For, Ellen White, “God gave to men the memorial of His
creative power, that they might discern Him in the works of His hand.” She adds, “The
Sabbath bids us behold in His created works the glory of the Creator.”48
43Jürgen Moltmann, God in Creation: An Ecological Doctrine of Creation: The Gifford Lectures
1984-1985, 4th edition (London: SCM Press, 1997), 286.
45 Mathilde Frey, “The Sabbath in the Pentateuch: An Exegetical and Theological Study,” PhD
Dissertation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 2011, 71-72.
46
Fritz Guy, “The Presence of Ultimacy” in Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson, ed., (Takoma Park,
MD: Associations of Adventist Forums, 1985), 30.
47 Ellen G. White, Patriarchs and Prophets, 48; Idem, Testimonies to the Church 7:139; Idem, Selected
Messages 2:107; Idem, The Story of Redemption (Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1980), 383; Idem,
Patriarchs and Prophets, 336.
307
There is a direct correspondence between the Sabbath’s revelation of God as Creator
and our response to Him as worshippers. Adventist theologian, Raoul Dederen affirms that
“[t]he Sabbath illuminates our understanding of God. The Sabbath yields theology in the
strict sense of the term, i.e., it provides us with a doctrine of God as Creator of heaven and
earth, and of man’s final goal in Him.”49 As man remembers his Creator, he rediscovers his
illustrated by the inclusion of Joachim Neander’s famous hymn, “Praise to the Lord, the
Almighty, the King of creation!” as the first hymn in the Adventist Church Hymnal.
communion with the Creator.50 She further notes that the Sabbath “was designed to keep the
living God ever before the minds of men as the source of being and the object of reverence
and worship.”51 She insists that the Sabbath was given “to preserve among men a knowledge
of Himself” so that minds would be “directed to Him as the true living God, and that through
Him we may have life and peace.”52 In the same way, John Andrews, an early Adventist
theologian, wrote:
The importance of the Sabbath as the memorial of creation is that it keeps ever
present the true reason why worship is due to God. For the worship of God is based
upon the fact that he is the Creator and that all other beings were created by him. The
Sabbath therefore lies at the very foundation of divine worship, for it teaches this
great truth in the most impressive manner, and no other institution does this. The true
49 Raoul Dederen, “Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath,” in The Sabbath in Scripture and
History, Kenneth Strand, ed., (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982), 296.
308
ground of divine worship, not of that on the seventh day merely, but of all worship, is
found in the distinction between the Creator and his creatures.53
In sum, the Sabbath reveals the character and purpose for the entire creation: to
worship the Creator. Hence, in Adventist thinking, to worship on the Sabbath means to
subscribe belief in a perfect Creator who is worthy of honour and praise.54 As such, it is “an
Essentially, a theology of worship that arises from the Sabbath of creation points to
the God who initiates and defines our worship. Sakae Kubo reflects on what the Sabbath tells
us about divine initiative: “The Sabbath also tells us that God takes the initiative. He creates,
He gives, He provides, He invites, He blesses, He sanctifies. Man is the created recipient, the
spectator, the guest.”56 A theology of worship centred around the Sabbath and divine
initiative illustrates a fundamental fact about Christian theology—the fact that human
worship is conditioned by God’s grace, not human efforts. God draws humanity into worship
and because the initiative is His, all adoration, confession, thanksgiving, petition, and
right relationship with God. This is important because the centre of Christian worship is God,
not humanity. For this reason, authentic worship is based on a correct understanding of God.
54 Samuele Bacchiochi, Divine Rest for Human Restlessness: A Theological Study of the Good News of
the Sabbath for Today (Berrien Springs, MI: Biblical Perspectives, 1990), 70.
309
It is important to realise that the Sabbath sheds a distinct light on God’s character and
intent for His creation. The God of the Sabbath is a relational God, “a present God, a Person
who is committed to Creation and One who is involved in Creation up close and personal.”57
He is not the god of the deists who creates the world and then immediately distances Himself
from the work of his hands, or a pantheistic deity who gets so close to creation that he cannot
be distinguished from it. He is close to but distinct from the world, ever close and yet not
Without the divine communion and fellowship on the seventh day, without man’s
entering into God’s rest on that day, the whole creation would be cut off from its
Maker and necessarily have to find its purpose and sense in itself. Then God’s rest
indeed would rather be the cryptic indication of God’s return to the aseity (the
absolute self-existence) of the inner glory of His being and existence, leaving man and
the world to themselves.58
LaRondelle stresses the relational character of the Sabbath by adding, “God’s rest
then means His ceasing the work of creation in order to be free for the fellowship with man
… the imago Dei, his festive partner.”59 Similarly, Moskala points out that “the culmination
point of God’s creative activity is not the sixth day (humans as a crown of God’s physical
creation), but the seventh-day Sabbath (humans in a vivid mutual relationship with their Holy
Creator, worshiping Him).”60 Transcendent in His nature, absolute in His power, God draws
near and initiates the contact. In other words, “[t]he Sabbath is an experience of Immanuel,
57Sigve Tonstad, The Lost Meaning of The Seventh Day (Berrien Springs MI: Andrews University
Press, 2009), 35.
58
Hans K. LaRondelle, Perfection and Perfectionism (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press,
1971), 72.
60 Jiří Moskala, “The Sabbath in the First Creation Account,” in Journal of the Adventist Theological
Society, 13/1 Spring 2002, 59-60.
310
‘God with us.’”61 It points to an offer for communion with the Triune God since “biblical
spirituality can only take place within the parameters of divine and human relationality.”62 In
this sense, Adventist spirituality is lived within the context of the “God who dwells with His
relationship.64 Through the presence of the Spirit, God offers Himself in a personal
relationship of grace and His people respond to Him in worship. Or as Wolterstoff puts it, in
worship we approach God as “One who participates in mutual address.”65 Worship exists
when God’s love is accepted and publicly acknowledged. The God who is absolute in
perfection and power is also absolute in love. He creates special time for His “children to
have special fellowship with Him and with their fellow worshippers.”66 In this understanding,
How does the relational character of worship play out in Adventist liturgy?
and proclamation of the Word, the quarterly Communion Service and the benediction.
Through the Word and the ordinances, actuated by the presence of the Holy Spirit, God
63 Ibid., 139.
64 Adventists are not alone in stressing the relational character of the Sabbath. Barth puts it this way:
He [God] was content with the creation of the world and man. He was satisfied to enter into a relationship with
this reality distinct from Himself, to be the Creator of this creature, to find in these works of His Word the
external sphere of His power and grace and the place of His revealed glory. (Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics vol.
3.1, 1970 edition (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1970), 214-215).
311
brings the worshipper into a living relationship with Himself. The songs, prayers, tithes and
In essence, the Sabbath is a reminder that worship is not predominantly based on what
permeates and empowers worship. The relational understanding of the Sabbath points to the
Trinitarian character of Adventist worship. The worship of the church is ultimately the work
of the Godhead. In their treatment of the Trinity, Adventist theologians Moon, Whidden and
Reeves ask this practical question: “To whom should we pray?”67 With Scriptural references,
they answer this question by affirming that our petitions and praises can be addressed to
either the Father, to the Son or the Holy Spirit because “the persons of the Godhead are truly
one in nature, character and purpose.”68 However, they insist that for Adventists, “the normal
pattern of prayer is to the Father, in the name of the Son, with the knowledge that the
“groanings” of the Holy Spirit expedite our prayers.”69 Yet, in practice, Adventist worship is
discreetly Trinitarian in the sense that references to the term “Trinity” or expressions such as
“in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost” are very rare in Adventist worship.
Broadly speaking, this means that Adventist worship is not always explicitly Trinitarian
67 Woodrow Whidden, Jerry Moon, and John W. Reeve, The Trinity, 272-273.
68 Ibid., 273.
312
6.2.2.3 Worship as Remembrance.
A key liturgical and theological notion comes with Sabbath worship: remembrance.
The Sabbath is the only commandment in the Decalogue to begin with the word ‘remember.’
This word may carry several concepts. Although the exact signification of the term
‘remembrance’ is much debated,70 theologians would generally agree that “to remember”
goes beyond the exercising of cognitive memory.71 In its most basic sense, to ‘remember’
In the Decalogue, ‘remembrance’ is a divine command that is included with the other
nine precepts. Hence, for Adventists, the command to “remember the Sabbath day” (Ex.
20:8) is invested with not only a liturgical imperative, but with a moral one as well. To put it
differently, “[t]he focus of the Sabbath command is thus within the orbit of human beings’
inalterable moral relationship with their Creator, not of the changing ritual forms by which
they worship their Creator.”73 Inscribed at the heart of the Decalogue, the commandment to
keep Sabbath is a reminder “(1) to accept God’s gift for humanity, (2) to follow the divine
Exemplar’s pattern, (3) to acknowledge Him as Creator, and (4) to participate in God’s
rest.”74
70
See for instance, Paul Bradshaw, “Anamnesis in Modern Eucharistic Debate,” in Memory and
History in Christianity and Judaism, ed., Michael Alan Signer (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame
Press, 2001).
71Referring to the Sabbath, Walter Brueggemann comments: “The act of remembering here [Exod.
20:8], as in the remembering of the eucharist (sic), means to appropriate actively as a present reality.” Walter
Brueggemann, "The Book of Exodus: Introduction, Commentary, and Reflections," In The New Interpreter's
Bible, ed., Leander E. Keck (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1994), 845.
74 Hasel, 30.
313
Without knowing or remembering who God is and what He has done, God’s people
cannot offer authentic worship.75 In worship, God retells His creative and redemptive actions
in Christ, reminding worshippers of their unique identity in Him. This explains why Fanny
Crosby’s ‘Don’t Forget the Sabbath’ (that she wrote with Sunday in mind) is an Adventist
favourite. The first stanza of the hymn (SDA Church Hymnal 388) states:
The purpose of remembering points to the ‘then’ of creation but is also directed to the
‘now’ of faithful response. For Adventists, remembrance also happens on the level of an
active response.76 “The act of remembering has a prospective outlook, that is, remembering
in order to obey.”77 In the words of Adventist theologian Gerhard Hasel, “the memory of the
past (retrospective aspect) is to lead to right action in the present and to faithful obedience in
the future (prospective aspect).”78 Within this understanding, past, present and future are
75
Eugene H. Merrill, “Remembering: A Central Theme in Biblical Worship,” Journal of Evangelical
Theological Society, March 2000, 43/1, 27-36.
76
Gerald Klingbeil, “The Sabbath Law in the Decalogues: Creation and Liberation as a Paradigm for
Community,” Revue Biblique, 2010, T-17-4, 506.
77 Ekkehardt Mueller “The Sabbath Commandment in Deuteronomy 5:12–15,” Journal of the Adventist
Theological Society, 14/2 (Fall 2003), 145; see also, Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 289.
78 Gerhard Hasel, “The Sabbath in the Pentateuch” in The Sabbath in Scripture and History (Kenneth
Strand, ed. (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982), 30-31.
314
6.2.2.4 Worship as Holy Time.
Memory and holiness are intrinsically linked. God’s people are called to “remember
the Sabbath day to keep it holy” (Exod. 20:8). For Adventists, to enter into the Sabbath
means to enter into holiness in time.79 To put it differently, the Sabbath is a sanctuary in
time.80 It should be noted that it is the use of time, more than the use of space, which
expresses Adventist worship most strongly. For instance, Adventists consider the whole of
the Sabbath, not only the hour of worship, to be holy time.81 This understanding of the
holiness of the Sabbath sets a boundary between what is sacred and what is common.
In worship, Adventists view themselves as meeting a holy God in holy time because
of God’s special presence in it. The most appropriate response to God’s holy presence is
reverence, which Adventists often equate with ‘no useless noise or talking’ during worship
service. It is thus that many traditional Adventist worship services use Fanny Cosby’s “Tread
Verse 1
Be silent, be silent,
A whisper is heard;
Be silent, and listen,
Oh treasure each word.
Refrain
Tread softly, tread softly,
The Master is here;
Tread softly, tread softly,
He bids us draw near.
79 Referring to the creation story where God sanctified the Sabbath, Adventist theologian, Samuele
Bacchiochi, comments: “It is noteworthy that the word “holy” is used for the first time in the Bible with
reference, not to an object such as an altar, a tabernacle, or a person but with regard to time, the seventh day.
Samuele Bacchiochi, Divine Rest for Human Restlessness, 83.
80Abraham Joshua Heschel, The Sabbath: Its Meaning for Modern Man (New York, NY: Farrar,
Straus and Giroux, 1951).
315
In general, Adventist worship expresses holiness by adopting a meditative posture
rather than exuberance. Yet, there has been a discrepancy in the way Adventists ascribe
sacredness to worship. Although Adventists affirm that reverence is the appropriate response
Ellen White wrote years ago that “[n]early all need to be taught how to conduct
themselves in the house of God”83 and that Adventist “churches need to be educated to
greater respect and reverence for the sacred service of God.”84 Half a century later, McCall
complained “that too often there is a growing tendency within Adventist churches to lose this
sense of the presence of a Holy God, which is so essential to true worship.”85 He blamed the
problem to “the lost conception of the reality of worship.”86 Additionally, he traced the
problem to Adventist reactions against “the coldly legalistic phases of formal worship” which
has unfortunately led them to “develop a public service that all too often resembles the
decorum of a lecture crowd or even of a club meeting, rather than a congregation of ps.”87 In
transcendence.88
83
Ellen G. White, Testimonies for The Church, 5:496.
85 Clark B. McCall, “Reverence Essential in Acceptable Worship,” Ministry Magazine, August 1957,
10.
86 Ibid., 10.
88 See for instance, Gordon W. Lathrop, “New Pentecost or Joseph’s Britches? Reflections on the
History and Meaning of the Worship Ordo in the Megachurches,” Worship 72, 1998, 522-523; John Jefferson
Davis, Worship and the Reality of God: An Evangelical Theology of Real Presence (Downers Grove, IL: IVP
316
For Ellen White, however, the problem is not the lack of a sense of transcendence, but
rather the lack of understanding of worship, coupled with a lack of spirituality. First, she
asserts that “uncultivated ideas” cannot appreciate holy things, for “unless correct ideas of
true worship and true reverence are impressed upon the people, there will be a growing
tendency to place the sacred and eternal on a level with common things.”89 Second, she
insists that the holiness of the Sabbath can only find its true meaning in a holy people (see
Ex. 31:13).90
Yet, the question remains: how can sinful beings live holy lives and offer proper
worship to God? According to Ellen White, “In order to keep the Sabbath holy, men must
themselves be holy. Through faith they must become partakers of the righteousness of
Christ.”91 “All that man can do without Christ is polluted by selfishness and sin. It is the
For this reason, Christ’s sanctifying power in the lives of worshippers is attached to
Sabbath-keeping.93 The sanctifying power of the Sabbath becomes a reality only insofar as
the p allows the Sabbath to bring him/her into a living relationship with God through Christ. 94
Academic, 2010), 102-104; James K. A. Smith, Desiring the Kingdom: Worship, Worldview and Cultural
Formation (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2009), 141-142.
90Ellen G. White considers sanctification as “the work of a lifetime” (Christ’s Object Lessons, 65). For
more on her understanding of sanctification, see Ellen G. White, The Sanctified Life (Hagerstown, MD: Review
and Herald, 2006).
94Roy E. Gane, “Sabbath and Sanctification,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 22/1
(2011), 3-15.
317
Kenneth Strand echoes Ellen White when he writes: “True observance of God’s Sabbath
involves the sanctification of life which Christ gives.”95 Likewise, Jacques Doukhan states,
“The Sabbath will not be holy without human beings; holiness of the Sabbath implies the
holiness of men and women.”96 Similarly, for Sakae Kubo, Sabbath does not “simply mean
holiness of time, but holiness in time, or holy people.”97 As such, the Sabbath is a sign of that
sanctified and sanctifying relationship (Ex. 31:12, 13; Ezek. 20: 12, 16).
Such an understanding of the Sabbath underlines not only the holiness of the day but
also the holiness of God’s people brought about by encountering God in it. In typical Free
Church understanding, holy worship can only be offered by holy people.98 Ecclesiologically
speaking, this is a vision of a regenerated community of disciples who have accepted the
lordship of Christ and who are eager to live their baptismal identity. Worship is offered with
joy, but also in humility in recognition of the people’s utter sinfulness and constant need of
God’s grace.
This leads us into our next section, the Sabbath and redemption as it relates to
Adventist worship.
97Sakae Kubo, The Experience of Liberation in Roy Branson, ed., Festival of the Sabbath (Takoma
Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985), 46.
98 See Graydon F. Snyder and Doreen M. McFarlane, The People are Holy: The History and Theology
of Free Church Worship (Macon, GA: Mercer Press, 2005).
318
6.3 SABBATH AND REDEMPTION
The Sabbath has a second major purpose for Seventh-day Adventists: it is a symbol of
God’s redemptive work in Christ.99 The third stanza of the hymn, Far From All Care, penned
by Douglas Aufranc (SDA Hymnal 394) links Christ’s work of redemption to the rest of the
Sabbath:
This link between redemption and Sabbath is not arbitrary. Sabbath observance
marked the Israelites’ release from Egyptian bondage (Deut. 5:12-15). After instructing His
people to observe the Sabbath and keep it holy, God gave the basic reason: “remember that
you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God brought you out from there by a
mighty hand and by an outstretched arm; therefore, the Lord your God commanded you to
Thus, just as the creation of the world culminated in the Sabbath, so did the Exodus
from Egypt.101 God’s goal in liberating His people was for worship (see for instance, Ex.
3:12; 4:23; 7:16; 8:1, 20; 12:31; 19:1, 13). God’s act of liberation became the foundation
99 Even in 1860, before the official organization of their denomination, Adventists believed Christ
turned the Sabbath into a “great temple of divine worship, where sacrifices, prayers, hymns of praise and holy
teachings alone should be witnessed,” a day sacred to “divine worship and deeds of benevolence “Observance of
the Sabbath.” Review & Herald, February 16, 1860, 100.
100 Bacchiochi notes that “the fact that the theological scope of the Sabbath is enlarged in
Deuteronomy to include the remembrance of the Exodus indicates that this institution is not static but dynamic.
Its meaning and function increase with the unfolding of salvation history” (See, Samuele Bacchiochi, Divine
Rest for Human Restlessness, 139).
101 See Jürgen Moltmann discussion on the link between Sabbath and Exodus in God in Creation, 287.
319
upon which His people would recover their identity as a believing and worshipping
community, “a kingdom of priests and a holy nation” (Ex.19: 5-6). Significantly, “God, not a
place, was the destination of the liberated people” because “what they were meant to be could
only be found in what God is.”102 Certainly Canaan was a destination for Israel, but not the
ultimate destination. Ultimately what God was leading His people into was His presence
through right worship, unencumbered by constant reminders of slavery. However, the central
focus of Adventist Sabbath worship is not the Exodus with its man-made sanctuary; it is the
cross of Christ. Worship is offered in and through Christ, the Redeemer, humanity’s
celebrate divine love and justice. Alienated from God and lost in sin, humanity deserved to
die; yet Christ came and delivered humankind by His death on the cross. Adventists believe
that “Christ’s death and resurrection from the grave lie at the very heart of the plan of
salvation.”103 Out of love, “Christ offered Himself once for all when He offered Himself . . .
This is not to be repeated.”104 Calvary provides the supreme example of divine self-giving
and self-disclosure in human history. Through Christ’s death and resurrection, humanity is
reconciled to God. “We owe everything to grace,” maintains Ellen White, “free grace,
sovereign grace. Grace in the covenant ordained our adoption. Grace in our Saviour effected
102 Sigve K. Tonstad, The Lost Meaning of the Seventh Day, 86.
103 Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, “The Sanctuary” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, 375.
320
Adventist worship, therefore, is a grateful response to God’s work of redemption in
Christ. “The restoration of fellowship through the infinite sacrifice of His Son reaffirms God
as the exclusive object of worship for humans.”106 The Sabbath, according to Adventists,
testifies to this fact. Adventists believe “[t]he Sabbath marks not only the completion of
Creation Week, but also the completion of Passion Week.”107 In their understanding, the
redemptive meaning of the Sabbath was supremely illustrated in the crucifixion. As in the
creation account, Christ completed His earthly mission on the sixth day and rested from His
‘finished’ work (John 19:30) on the seventh-day, infusing it with the added significance of a
When Christ finished His work of Creation—His first great act in world history—He
rested on the seventh day. The rest signified completion and accomplishment. He did
the same at the end of His earthly ministry, when He completed the second great act
in history. On Friday afternoon, the sixth day of the week, Christ finished His
redemptive mission on earth. His last words were, “It is finished!” (John 9:30).
Scripture emphasizes that when He died, “it was Preparation Day, and the Sabbath
was about to begin” (Luke 23:54 NIV). Following His death, He rested in a tomb,
thus symbolizing that He had accomplished the redemption of the human race. 109
106 Angel Manuel Rodriguez, Elements of Adventist Worship: Their Theological Significance, 135.
108 Skip McCarthy “The Seventh-Day Sabbath” in Arand, Charles, Craig L. Blomberg, Skip MacCarty,
and Joseph A. Pipa, Perspectives on the Sabbath: 4 Views. Christopher John Donato, ed., (Nashville TN: B&H
Publishing Group, 2011), 65. Norman Gulley compares creation Friday and creation Sabbath with crucifixion
Friday and crucifixion Sabbath and sees Christ as central in both: “On creation Friday He gave life to Adam and
Eve. On crucifixion Friday He gave life to everyone who accepts it. On creation Friday Christ gave the gift of
life to two humans and their posterity. On crucifixion Friday Christ gave the gift of eternal life to whoever
accepts it. How significant that the Sabbath following the two gifts was time for celebration of the completed
work of Christ.” Norman Gulley, “Basic Issues between Science and Scripture: Theological Implications of
Alternative Models and the Necessary Basis for the Sabbath in Genesis 1–2,” Journal of the Adventist
Theological Society, 14/1, 223.
321
With the Sabbath, the “it is good” of Creation merged with the “it is finished of
redemption as the Author and Finisher once again rests in completion.”110 Kenneth Strand
points out that “[t]he Sabbath as a sign of redemption actually has precedence over the
Sabbath as a memorial of Creation,” because “[o]nly those who are redeemed in Christ can
truly recognise and understand what creation means.”111 Redemption points back to the
meaning of creation, i.e. communion with God. Accordingly, the salvation guaranteed in
Jesus Christ leads believers to reflect on His act of creation and celebrate their place in it.
“Christ’s twofold role as Creator and Redeemer.”112 The One who performed the miraculous
act of creation is the same One who performed the miraculous act of liberation on the cross.
“It was the perfect, divine hands of Christ that first gave man life; and it is the hands of
Christ, pierced and blood stained, that will give man eternal life.”113 Adventists, therefore, see
no split in the divine economy. They see the Sabbath as being associated with both creation
and redemption. In both events, Christ displays Himself as the Sovereign Lord. At the same
they associate His resurrection with the individual’s new life in Christ, as symbolized by
113 Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 88. Compare Ellen G. White, Education, 132: “The hand that
sustains the heavens in space, the hand that holds in their orderly arrangement and tireless activity all things
throughout the universe of God, is the hand that was nailed on the cross for us.”
114This position has been consistently held by Adventists over the years. For instance, in 1861, B.F
Snook stressed that baptism is a memorial of the burial and resurrection of Christ (Col. 2:12). See, B. F. Snook,
Christian Baptism (Battle Creek, MI: Steam Press of Review and Herald Office, 1861). Thirty years later, E.J
Waggoner emphasised the same point: “Baptism signifies the death and resurrection of Christ; but it signifies
our acceptance of that sacrifice, and that we actually share His death and resurrection. See, Ellet Joseph
Waggoner, Baptism: Its Significance (Oakland, CA: Pacific Press, 1891), 5.
322
6.3.2 Implications for Adventist Worship
In the preceding section, I have outlined how Adventist worship is impacted by the
The person of Christ and Sabbath celebration are inseparable in Adventist thinking.
For them, Christ as the Lawgiver could not be against the Sabbath, of which he is the Lord
(Mark 2:28). Christ, in His inaugural Sabbath sermon (Luke 4:18-19), made it clear that He
had come to fulfil God’s restoration agenda (Is 61:1-2; cf Is 58). Unsurprisingly, Jesus chose
to perform so many of His miracles on the Sabbath.115 These healings, according to Strand,
“called attention to His divinity, to His Oneness with the Father and to His work of
salvation.”116 Even in His debates with the Pharisees over the observance of the Sabbath
115 For a discussion on Jesus’ Sabbath healings, see Samuele Bacchiochi, Divine Rest and Human
Restlessness, 144-156. See also Mark 1:21-28 [Luke 4:31-37]; Matthew 12:9-14 [Mark 1:29-31; Luke 4:38, 39];
Matthew 10:11, 12; Luke 13:10-17; Luke 14:1-4; John5:1-18; John 7:19-24; John 9:1-41.
116 See Kenneth A. "The Sabbath." Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, Commentary
Reference Series (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 2000), 12:504.
117 James Dunn observes that the contention revolved more around “a question of how the Sabbath
should be observed, not whether the Sabbath should be observed.” James Dunn, Did the First Christians
Worship Jesus: The New Testament Evidence (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2010), 48.
Similarly, Specht observes: “The Pharisees treated the day as though man were created to serve the Sabbath,
rather than the Sabbath meeting the needs of man.” Walter F. Specht, ‘The Sabbath in the New Testament,’ in
The Sabbath in Scripture and History, Kenneth A. Strand, ed., (Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982),
96. Crucially, it was “His custom” to worship on the Sabbath (Luke 4:16).
323
Raymond Holmes argues that “[t]he Sabbath for the Christian gets its meaning from
Christ.”118 In celebrating God on the Sabbath, Adventists affirm that God has acted decisively
in human history in the person of Jesus Christ. The Sabbath tells the story of a Covenant-
Making God.119 Though supreme in glory, He maintains a connection with his creation in an
effort to redeem and restore what He has made. Indissolubly linked to the Sabbath, Adventist
worship services tell this story, continually proclaiming Jesus Christ and His saving grace. 120
For Adventists, “all truth, all doctrine, all worship, must be understood and grasped in
relation to the living Christ.”121 This centrality of Christ can be seen in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church Hymnal. Whereas the hymnal includes 14 hymns dedicated to the Holy
Spirit (Hymns 257-270) and 41 specific hymns dedicated to God the Father (Hymns 74-114),
it has 172 hymns dedicated to Jesus Christ (Hymns 115-286). Thus, 76% of all hymns
Such a Christocentric emphasis is instructive. On the one hand, this could represent an
imbalanced Trinitarian focus, a problem that has been noted in other Christian bodies.122 On
the other hand, the predominance of such hymns could markedly indicate that Adventist
worship is thoroughly Christ-centred. Many of their hymns take the form of meditations on
the cross, such as Isaac Watts’s “When I Survey The Wondrous Cross,” (SDA Hymnal 155),
118 C. Raymond Holmes, Sing A New Song, 36. Kenneth Strand puts it this way: “The basis for both
our theology and our Sabbathkeeping is a close personal relationship with Christ, our Savior. He is the Center
for which all our religious beliefs and activities radiate.” (Kenneth Strand, ‘The Sabbath’ in Handbook of
Adventist Theology, 514).
121 Edward Heppenstall, Our High Priest (Washington, D.C: Review & Herald, 1977), 68.
122See for instance, Robin Parry, Worshipping Trinity: Coming Back to the Heart of Worship (Milton
Keynes, Paternoster), 2005.
324
George Bennard’s “The Old Rugged Cross” (SDA Hymnal 159), or Chris Tomlin’s “At the
Raymond Holmes sees the centrality of Christ and its relationship to the Sabbath as
follows:
Worship for the Christian centres in redemption, and redemption centres in Christ. We
do not worship because of the Sabbath. We worship on the Sabbath because of what
Christ has done, and is doing, for us redemptively. It is his act of redemption that
gives meaning to the Seventh-day Sabbath. Redemption is the fulfilment of the
Sabbath’s meaning.123
“symbol of the believer’s entering into the gospel rest,” the Sabbath serves as a reminder
“that true worship cannot be separated from the gospel.”124 Spiritual rest and true worship can
only be found in the contemplation of Christ’s finished work – whether at creation or on the
cross.
remains the defining fulcrum of their worship. Sakae Kubo affirms, “The central focus of
every worship service must be what God has done for His people through Jesus Christ. The
God’s Word, in the offering of music, prayers or offerings, or in the ordinances of the Lord’s
123 C. Raymond Holmes, Sing a New Song (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1984), 37.
124
Seventh-day Adventists Believe, 291.
125
Sakae Kubo, ‘The Experience of Liberation’ in Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson, ed., (Takoma
Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985), 52.
325
It must be noted here that the locus of Adventist worship is not only Christ’s atoning
death but His continuing ministry in heaven.126 According to Adventist theology, the focus in
worship should not only be on a glorified cross and an empty tomb but also a living and
coming Christ who is now ministering in the heavenly sanctuary.127 In other words, not only
does Adventist worship look back to creation and forward to the second coming; it also
focuses on what Christ is doing in the present, as He ministers now in “the presence of God
on our behalf” (Heb. 9:24).128 In Adventist worship, there is no other Mediator other than
Jesus Christ.129 Ellen G. White repeatedly refers to Jesus as “the connecting link”130 who is
126 Ellen White goes as far as to write: “The correct understanding of the ministration in the heavenly
sanctuary is the foundation of our faith.” Ellen G. White, Evangelism, 221.
127 Holmes describes it this way: “When Seventh-day Adventists assemble for worship they not only
exercise historical memory and “remember” the past events in the history of God’s grace, but their faith actively
reaches into the realms heaven itself today. Such faith follows Jesus from the cross to the crown, from the thorns
on His brow to the throne of God.” C. Raymond Holmes, Sing A New Song, 41.
128 Alain G. Coralie, “The Trinitarian Dynamic of Worship,” Ministry, March 2011, 21-22. Moskala
summarizes this understanding as follows: “What happened on the cross is a unique, unparalleled, non-
repeatable, and unprecedented divine act of salvation (Heb. 10:12, 14) from which all the benefits flow out,
including the intercessory ministry of Christ for us today.” Jiří Moskala, “The Meaning of the Intercessory
Ministry of Jesus Christ on Our Behalf in the Heavenly Sanctuary,” Journal of the Adventist Theological
Society, 28/1 (2017): 3-25. This emphasis on the biblical teaching that Jesus Christ is our Intercessor is not
unique to Adventism. On the significance of the Christ’s heavenly ministry by non-Adventists, see for example
Gerrit Scott Dawson, Jesus Ascended: The Meaning of Christ’s Continuing Incarnation (London: T&T Clark,
2004); Douglas Farrow, Ascension and Ecclesia: on the Significance of the Ascension for Ecclesiology and
Christian Cosmology (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1999); J. J. von Allmen, Worship: Its Theology and Practice
(London: Lutterworth Press, 1965), 21-41; Sotorios Christou, The Priest and the People of God: A Royal
Priesthood (Cambridge: Phoenix Books, 2003, 1-23; Duncan Forrester, James McDonald and Gian Tellini,
Encounter With God (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1983), 33-35; David Peterson, Engaging with God: a Biblical
Theology of Worship (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1992), 228-260; James Torrance, Worship, Community and the
Triune God of Grace (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1996), 32. See also his comments on Heb. 8:1-2 in, 5 and 21-31 and
‘The Place of Jesus Christ in our Worship’ in Ray Anderson, ed., Theological Foundations for Ministry
(Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1979), 349-351; Geoffrey Wainwright, Doxology: A Systematic Theology: The Praise
of God in Worship, Doctrine and Life (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980), 62-70.
130
Ellen G. White, Special Testimonies, Series B 14.2; Idem, Testimonies to the Church 8:178; Idem,
Signs of the Times June 6, 1895; Idem, Signs of the Times June 6, 1895; Idem, Manuscript 32a-1894; Idem,
Manuscript 52-1896.23; Idem, Manuscript 67-1910.27; Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the
Messiah—Book III, 307.
326
As the Mediator of the New Covenant and our leitourgos (Heb. 8:2),131 Christ is
uniquely qualified to cleanse and purify our tainted worship and prayers in order to offer
them spotless to the Father. Rather than disincarnating and etherealising Jesus, such an
understanding recognises Jesus’ full humanity in heaven. “Our Savior bears the names of all
His people on His heart in the holy place.”132 As our High Priest, Christ carries our names,
our lives, our petitions and praises on his heart as He ministers in the sanctuary. “As our
representative He appears continually before the face of God in our stead.”133 To put it
differently, in the very heart of the Trinity is a human face we can recognise.
This image of Christ leading worshippers has the potential to counteract Pelegian
tendencies and earthly sacerdotalism. “In Christ the believer is invited to come boldly to the
throne of grace.”134 “Every believer has direct access to Christ, and an intimacy with God that
displaces any earthly mediator.”135 Within such a vision, the local worship leader does not act
on behalf of worshippers but amongst them in recognition that a single high priest now serves
on our behalf in the heavenly sanctuary. Worship, offered in Christ, is therefore, the affair of
131 For Christ as leitourgos, see James Torrance, Worship, Community and the Triune God of Grace.
Carlisle: Paternoster, 1996, 32. See also his comments on Heb. 8:1-2 in, 5 and21-31and ‘The Place of Jesus
Christ in our Worship’ in Ray Anderson (ed.), Theological Foundations for Ministry (Edinburgh: T&T Clark,
1979), 349-351.
135 Geroge W. Reid, “Toward an Adventist Theology of Worship,” accessed April 3, 2018,
https://www.adventistbiblicalresearch.org/sites/default/files/pdf/advtheoworship.pdf, 6.
327
For Ángel Rodríguez, the supreme importance of Christ’s intercession must find its
way into Adventist pulpits.136 Perhaps Adventist preaching has not caught up with its
professed theology. The Adventist theological insistence on the high priestly ministry of
Christ has not yet found its way into their hymnody. The 1985 edition of the Adventist
hymnal contains only four hymns dedicated to Christ’s heavenly priesthood (SDA Hymnal
grounds their worship in Christ for “[w]ithout Christ’s intercession, not a prayer could be
“Happy Sabbath!” is often the first greeting people hear at an Adventist worship
service as the celebrant welcomes the worshipping community. With the Sabbath comes not
only a sense of completion, satisfaction, and celebration, but also a divine invitation for
humanity to fellowship with God – “the occasion for the vertical relationship,”139 and the
horizontal. As a result, joy becomes an important and integrated part of Sabbath celebration.
In the Adventist understanding and experience, “the Sabbath is a gift of gladness,”140 “a day
136 Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, “Elements of Adventist Worship: Their Theological Significance” in
Ángel Manuel Rodríguez ed., Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church Studies, Adventist
Ecclesiology 3 (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute, 2016), 142.
137 SDA Hymnal 177-180. Hooper and Seton noted this problem in the earlier versions yet the problem
was not solved in the latest hymnal. See, Wayne Hooper & Bernard E Seton, “Is it Time for a New Hymnal,”
Ministry 54, April 1981, 11. The 1941 SDA Hymnal has three hymns dedicated to Christ’s heavenly priesthood
ministry (Hymns 137-139).
139 Jacques B. Doukhan, “Loving the Sabbath as a Christian.” in The Sabbath in Jewish and Christian
Traditions. Edited by Tamara C. Eskenazi, Daniel J. Harrington and William H. Shea (New York, NY:
Crossroads, 1991), 159.
140Charles Scriven, ‘Gladness of Hope’ in Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson, ed., (Takoma Park,
MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985), 46.
328
of rejoicing,”141 “a day of delight and joy.”142 It is “a time of worship, of joy, and of delight
in God and in his salvation,”143 “a day of delightful communion with God and with one
another.”144 “[I]ts weekly return,” according to Ellen White, “must be hailed with joy.” 145
Embedded in this understanding is the fact that the Creator and Saviour, in whom the
gathered body finds its rest, extends a special invitation for others also to enter into His
joy. In Isaiah 58:13-14, God promises that “if . . . you call the Sabbath a delight . . . then you
will find your joy in the Lord.”146 Ellen White links this delight to the believers’ experience
in Christ. She wrote that “To all who receive the Sabbath as a sign of Christ’s creative and
redeeming power, it will be a delight.”147 Joyful celebration is also connected to the Sabbath
in Psalm 92 where God’s mighty deeds in creation and redemption, as well as His eternal
Since Adventists view the Sabbath as a celebration of God’s creative and redeeming
acts, what is normally expected in worship services is a sense of joy. Christian worship is
filled with delight—the delight that worshippers find in their rest with Christ and being
141Raoul Dederen, ‘Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath’ in Kenneth Strand, ed., The Sabbath in
Scripture and History (Washington D.C: Review & Herald), 1982, 298
143 Niels-Erik Andreasen, Rest and Redemption, Andrews University Monographs Studies in Religion
no. 11 (Berrien Springs: Andrews University Press, 1978), 68.
146 Hazel and Murdoch note, “The person who calls the Sabbath a delight is also the one who is to
delight in the Lord (Is. 58:14) Hazel and Murdoch, 48. They further observe that “the idea of delight with regard
to the Sabbath combines both worship of the Lord and enjoying enjoyment through and in Him. Hazel and
Murdoch, 49.
148 See Richard Davidson’s extensive treatment in Love Song for the Sabbath, 1988.
329
satisfied in His presence. The joy of the Gospel is specially expressed in heartfelt singing as
the congregation ascribes glory to God for His marvelous gift of salvation.
Expressions of joy may also take other forms. According to cultures, it is not
uncommon to hear outbursts of “Hallelujah” or “Praise the Lord” or “Thank you Jesus”
during some Adventist worship services, expressing appreciation and thankfulness for divine
blessings. Raoul Dederen writes that, “Once every seven days, on the Sabbath day, the
Christian, like the Israel of old, is specially invited to remember that God is a liberator who
has put an end to all bondage and slavery.”149 Freed from the bondage of sin and of the devil,
worshippers can celebrate with gladness what Jesus has accomplished for their salvation.
Expressions of joy are not self-induced; they are the result of the Spirit’s action as
worshippers reflect upon God’s character and His mighty deeds in history and their own
experience. “Only persons who belong to God, who centre their existence in His love, who
worship Him as the source of their being and the key to all life, can have on the seventh day
an experience of festivity, renewal and hope.”150 In sum, their Sabbath celebration depends
The Sabbath helps Adventist worshippers to remember and praise Christ as their
Redeemer. The worship hour is a Christ-centred, festive and celebrative part of this time.
Unsurprisingly, the theme of “feast” is often associated with both the Sabbath151 and
149 Raoul Dederen, ‘Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath’ in Kenneth Strand, The Sabbath in
Scripture and History (Washington D.C.: Review & Herald, 1982)
151 See for instance, see Roy Branson, Festival of the Sabbath (Takoma Park, MD: Association of
Adventist Forums, 1985); Moltmann’s treatment in God in Creation, 275-292 and Abraham Heschel’s The
Sabbath: Its Meaning for Modern Man.
330
Christian worship in general.152 To quote Moltmann, the Church is a “Messianic community”
which, through worship, is enjoying “a messianic feast” in a foreign land.153 The fundamental
reality here is that “the messianic feast” is celebrated by the Church, but organised by God. It
is He who calls the meeting, invites His children and welcomes them into His presence where
reality of salvation that has been experienced by those who have responded to the Christian
kerygma. The liturgical act of gathering together affirms a biblical understanding of the
nature of the church as an assembled people “that belongs to God because He has called it
into being, dwells within it, and rules over it.”154 In worship, the “called out” come together
close link between the vertical and horizontal dimensions of Sabbath observance:
152 In his discussion Wannenwetsch in Political Worship: Ethics for Christian Citizens (Oxford:
Oxford University Press 2004), 21ff makes reference to the influential work of Schleiermacher, Praktische
Theologie, and Harvey Cox’s Feast of Fools amongst others on the essential mode of worship as feast. See also,
Justo L. Gonzales, “Worship as Fiesta,” in Dwight W. Vogel, Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology: A
Reader (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000), 255-260.
153Jürgen Moltmann, The Church in the Power of the Spirit: A Contribution to Messianic Ecclesiology
(Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993), 262.
155Roy Branson, ‘Festival of Fellowship’ in Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson, ed., (Takoma Park,
MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985), 46.
331
itself the only commandment which explicitly refers to both relationships, with God
and with humans.156
This principle influences the assembling of God’s people. The sense of fellowship is
much prized as worshippers greet each other in the parking lot and in the sanctuary. Forms of
affection are expressed by shaking hands, a hug, a kiss or a smile. Many congregations
position “greeters” in the church lobby to welcome worshippers. Others encourage fellowship
by including a time of mutual welcoming during the service as worshippers walk across the
Many worshippers refer to each other as “brother” and “sister.” This sense of
fellowship is intensified during Communion Service, especially during the foot washing, an
primarily from Christ to the believer, but also between the believers themselves.” 157
Participation in the Lord’s Supper “contributes to the unity and stability of the church,
This sense of fellowship is also expressed during the pastoral prayer when individuals
with special burdens and needs may, in some churches, be surrounded by fellow worshippers
The same spirit of fellowship is reflected even after the church service. Many
Adventist churches regularly organise potlucks where each family brings homemade food to
156 Jacques Doukhan, “What Can Adventism Learn From The Jews About The Sabbath?,” Spectrum
39/1, Winter 2011, 18-19.
332
be shared with all. Other churches have a dedicated team that cook food every week to allow
Yet, “[a]ssociating for an hour or two at the Sabbath worship does not represent all
the benefits and joys the Christian experiences in fellowship.”159 A variety of other activities
are encouraged on others days as well. These include small group networks, recreation and
“visiting and encouraging those who are discouraged or lax in their Christian experience and
commitment to Christ . . . or members who are unable to attend services.”160 In this way, the
Sabbath serves to organise the life of the church throughout the week.
The above sense of fellowship is essential to worship. Without it, the church fails to
reveal the reality of God’s Kingdom. A united worshipping community exhibits the power of
the Gospel. Such unity is made possible only through “the unity of the Spirit” (Eph. 4:3).161
This sense of community is not restricted to church members. For Christian fellowship to be
genuine, it needs to include the visitors too. This explains why Adventists have a long-
acceptance.162
and equality. Kenneth Strand sees the Sabbath as a “Leveler” because God’s rest is accessible
to all human beings, irrespective of their status or condition.163 Niels Erik Andreasen shares a
333
similar view when he argues that “genuine freedom [in Christ] must lead to equality.” 164
Andreasen observes further that, “On the Sabbath, the executive and his janitor share the
same pew; no one gives the other an order or extract a service. The Sabbath sets all people
free and makes them equals. It restores the ideals of solidarity and unity in the community.165
As such, the Sabbath is a reminder that God does not exhibit preferential treatment, but
invites all to enjoy His love and presence indiscriminately. This understanding has far-
reaching implications for everyday life because, correctly “[u]nderstood and applied, this
From a liturgical point of view, the meaning and nature of corporate worship is not
individual, but communal. Worship includes a dialogue and a communion along vertical and
horizontal axes, as it unites us both with God and with one another. In its simplest and most
authentic form, worship makes place for the other, the poor, the orphan, the widow, the
marginalized, the outcast and the downtrodden. It cannot be elitist or exclusivist. There is no
true Sabbath celebration without justice and solidarity. Kenneth Strand observes: “The
Sabbath reminds us that we all share a common salvation and that the One who is our Lord
and Saviour is also the Lord and Saviour of our Christian brothers and sisters. As we worship
This love cannot be confined within the walls of the church. It must extend to those
164 Niels Erik Andreasen, “Jubilee of Freedom and Equality” in Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson,
ed., Spectrum, 1985.
334
The necessities of life must be attended to, the sick must be cared for, the wants of the
needy must be supplied. He will not be held guiltless who neglects to relieve suffering
on the Sabbath. God’s holy rest day was for man, and acts of mercy are in perfect
harmony with its intent. God does not desire His creatures to suffer an hour’s pain that
may be relieved upon the Sabbath or any other day.168
Such an understanding of worship and of the Sabbath becomes a liberating factor for
the relief and emancipation of those in need. Worship in the church is tied to loving service in
the world. This link is often highlighted during the announcement period when special
community projects are brought to the church’s attention. Similarly, special outreach for the
needy and the sick are organised as Sabbath afternoon programs to encourage church
members to share God’s love. In sum, worship builds the church community so that it can
Restorer. Hence, both of these aspects of God’s relationship with humankind are reflected in
Sabbath worship. The Sabbath points beyond death to the hope of eternity.169 Raymond
In its worship the Seventh-day Adventist Church not only looks back in grateful
memory, but also looks forward in confident hope. That hope rests firmly on the
biblical promises concerning the imminent return of the Lord Jesus Christ. Adventist
worship takes place, therefore, on the threshold of His coming.170
335
Protology, soteriology and eschatology constitute the particular perspective from
which Adventist worship is offered. The gathered assembly does not only look backward
with gratitude to God’s creative and redemptive acts in Christ, it also looks forward to the
future restoration of the entire creation. This is crucial to a theology of worship, appreciating
that worship, according to Daniel Hardy, “is an encompassing activity in which all the
dynamic of creation and eschatology is incorporated within the response made to that
glory.”171
We find the Sabbath in the context of the new heavens and the new earth. In Isaiah
66:23, the Sabbath is mentioned in the context of eschatological worship. Ellen White
expands on this idea by observing that, “Heaven and earth will unite in praise, as “from one
Sabbath to another” (Isa. 66:23) the nations of the saved will bow in joyful worship to God
and the Lamb.”172 Hasel and Murdoch offer a standard Adventist interpretation of this text as
follows:
In the realm of the new creation beyond history there will be total restoration of the
break brought about by sin. ‘All flesh’ in the sense of all mankind, the redeemed
remnant of all times, will worship before the Lord Sabbath after Sabbath. As the
Sabbath was the climax of the first creation and destined for all mankind (Gen. 2:1-3),
so the Sabbath will again be the climax of the new creation and destined again for all
mankind in the new heaven and the new earth.173
Hazel and Murdoch conclude that “the Sabbath is a powerful catalyst of apocalyptic
eschatology and its future hope.”174 Zinke offers a Christocentric interpretation of the passage
171Daniel W. Hardy, “Creation and Eschatology,” in Colin E. Gunton, ed., The Doctrine of Creation
(London: T&T Clark, 2004), 128.
173 Gerhard F. Hasel and W. G. C. Murdoch, “The Sabbath in the Prophetic and Historical Literature of
the Old Testament,” in The Sabbath in Scripture and History, Kenneth A. Strand, ed. (Washington, D.C.:
Review and Herald, 1982), comment, 49.
336
in Isaiah 66:23 and avers that “the Sabbath is a reminder of God’s total plan for His children.
It is the great arch spanning time from a perfect creation to a perfect recreation. It represents
Christ in the creation of man, in the redemption of man, and in the recreation of man’s
original home.”175 Just as in the creation, God’s new creation will culminate in the Sabbath.
“Because it was made before sin, it will remain after sin is no more (Isa. 66:22, 23).”176
the outcome of the perfectly renewed creation.177 Ultimately, the Creator will fulfill His
restorative agenda for His entire creation. He will “make all things new” (Rev. 21:5) and
uninterrupted communion will be a tangible reality for “they shall see his face” (Revelation
22:4). Sabbath rest, the promised goal of the redeemed creation, will crown the divine-human
full reunification. At that time, weekly Sabbath worship will be the climax of all activities in
heaven when the redeemed will acknowledge that the Creator, Redeemer and the Restorer of
In commemorating the Sabbath, Adventists (1) anticipate the kingdom, (2) have a foretaste of
heaven, (3) experience the eschatological presence of the Spirit, and as a result orient their
175 Edward E. Zinke, “A Theology of the Sabbath,” Journal of Adventist Theology 2/2 1991, 151.
177 Interestingly, Barth also believes “History’s last day will be a Sabbath day, a time of freedom, and
joy, of fellowship in “the rest of God Himself.” Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, vol. 3, bk. 1, 218.
337
6.4.2.1 Worship as an Anticipation of the Kingdom.
Adventism is defined by its eschatological hope. Belief in the soon return of the Lord
Jesus Christ explains their raison d'être. This understanding influences their approach to
corporate worship. Adventist theologian, Richard Davidson, puts it this way: “As we joyfully
anticipate the approach of the Sabbath every week, we assume the posture of the one eagerly
There are many ways in which Adventists express this anticipation in worship. One of
these is the sermon. Adventist preachers often highlight “the signs of the times” announced
by Jesus (Matt. 24:3-31; Luke 21: 7-36), as well as other apocalyptic texts, associating them
with contemporary events to emphasize the approaching eschaton and the necessity of
spiritual preparation for that climactic event. Another way in which believers anticipate
God’s future is through singing. The Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal dedicates fewer hymns to
the cross, the resurrection, the ascension and Christ’s heavenly priesthood (Hymns 154-180)
than to the Second Advent and His future kingdom and reign (Hymns 200-227). Hymn
number 214 captures this apocalyptic anticipation of the Kingdom. Here is the first stanza:
Although less frequent, the Communion Service also is a special time when the
assembly expresses its hope in God’s future. At the table, they “proclaim the death of the
338
Lord until He comes.” Through the Lord’s Supper, the assembly tells salvation history, as
they commemorate deliverance from sin, experience corporate communion with Christ and
anticipate the Second Advent.179 For Adventists, the banquet table in heaven “is the climactic
expectation to which the Lord’s Supper points us- the joy of future glory through a personal
Prayer also expresses that same anticipation. Prayers are offered in the awareness that
God will have the last word. In the meantime, the church remembers humanity’s broken
condition and petitions God for itself to be spiritually vigilant and mission oriented while
As an eschatological community, the church praises and glorifies God while eagerly
waiting for the Second Advent. “In its worship, the last-day church is on tip-toe, on the edge
of its seat, on the threshold, eager to see and hear the Lord.”181 It proclaims the hope in God’s
Consequently, by anticipating God’s vision for the world, the Sabbath reinforces the
identity of God’s people as an eschatological community waiting for the Kingdom. “The
Sabbath brings the longing for God’s redemption within reach of every individual. It
announces proleptically the coming (eschatological) time of redemption once a week.” 182
Each gathering is an eschatological act where the community reminds itself that it does not
belong to the kingdom of this world but to the heavenly Kingdom. As a result, they reinforce
339
their identity as “resident aliens” and remind themselves that “[a] Sabbath rest still awaits the
Such an understanding has profound implications for how people worship. For
instance, preaching has a prophetic ring to it, challenging complacency and self-righteousness
wherever found in the church. Petitionary prayers become freighted with a sense of solidarity
as the assembly prays for God’s will to be done on earth as it is in heaven. Singing is offered
with eschatological expectancy until that day when “a single pulse of harmony and gladness”
will beat “through the vast creation.”184 Sabbath worship anticipates the coming Kingdom.
In his treatment of the Sabbath, Raoul Dederen notes that “the Sabbath rest is even
more than just a positive eschatological sign. It is also a sign that already grants participation
in that to which it points, for even now it provides a foretaste of the future rests into God’s
joyful rest.”185
Sabbath worship emphasises the double meaning of the kingdom of God. On the one
hand, it lays a strong emphasis on the fact that God’s Kingdom has not yet reached its final
eschatological goal. For instance, Doukhan states that, “Salvation is cosmic by nature and has
not yet occurred, although it has been anticipated and guaranteed through the event of the
cross, and although God is intensely present in our lives through His blessings and our
183 Reformed theologian, von Allmen stresses the eschatological character of worship as follows: “In
summing up the process of salvation, the cult is also directed toward the future. It is not merely a representation
of the death and victory of Christ, it is also an anticipation of His return and foreshadowing of the Kingdom
which He will then establish.” Von Allmen, Worship, 35.
185Raoul Dederen, “Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath,” in The Sabbath in Scripture and
History, 300.
340
religious experiences.”186 To put it differently, complete harmony between God and His
creation will reach its fulfillment when sin is eliminated and evil is destroyed. On the other
hand, the Sabbath reminds the church that meanwhile, it lives in eschatological times
between the already and the not-yet of the promised messianic age, the first and second
advents.187
The Sabbath emphasises these two eschatological orientations, the future and the
present. The eschatological dimension inscribed in the Sabbath is “a foretaste of our eternal
future in God’s kingdom.”188 This means that the eschatological vision of the Sabbath is not
limited to the future; it also entails a vertical breaking through into the present situation. It
must be remembered that Jewish traditions have for a long time regarded the coming of the
our eternal future in God’s kingdom,”191 “a foretaste of the future entrance into God’s joyful
186 Jacques Doukhan, “The Tension of Seventh-day Adventist Identity: An Existential &
Eschatological Perspective,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 26/1 (2015), 32.
189 Stephan Wahle, “Reflections on the Exploration of Jewish and Christian Liturgy from the
Viewpoint of a Systematic Theology of Liturgy,” Jewish and Christian Liturgy and Worship: New Insights into
Its History and Interaction 15 (Leiden: Brill, 2007), 169ff.
190Mishna Tamid 7.4 as referenced in Kenneth Strand, The Sabbath in Scripture and History
(Washington D.C.: Review & Herald, 1982), 513.
341
rest.”192 For them, it is “God’s special gift, enabling the human race to experience the reality
of heaven on earth.”193
Bernd Wannenwetsch observes that as a foretaste of the future age to come, the
Sabbath “comes to visit us like a beloved, honoured guest, and takes us into its own time.”194
However, Adventists insist that this Sabbath experience can only be apprehended by faith, as
the author of the book of Hebrews makes it clear. The future promise of rest (Hebrews 4:1),
characterized by the Sabbath (4:9) is already available to the believer but can be forfeited
through unbelief. It is only by responding to the Gospel that we enter this rest. The only way
to observe the Sabbath in the here and now is to live by faith in Christ (v.3) and by rejecting
physical and spiritual in nature, can thus be actualized in a unique way by means of the
weekly sabbath.”195
According to Ellen White, “to those who worship God in spirit and in truth and in the
beauty of holiness it [the Sabbath] will be as the gate of heaven.”196 To put it differently,
Sabbath worship represents a drawing close to the threshold of heaven itself, as worshippers
peer through heaven’s gate to catch a glimpse of God’s glory on display. The God who is
coming at the end of the age is already present with His people as they gather to worship. As
a blessed and sanctified day, the Sabbath allows worshippers to experience God’s presence in
194 Bernd Wannenwetsch, Political Worship: Ethics for Christian Citizens, 348.
195
Neils E. Andreasen, Rest and Redemption: A Study of the Biblical Sabbath (Berrien Springs, MI:
Andrews University Press), 116.
342
a way that stands in marked contrast to the rest of the week. Thus, worship is a present reality
which cannot be postponed. In sum, the Sabbath, for Adventists, constitutes God’s invitation
experientially because “it provides time to commune with God through worship, prayer,
song, the study of and on the Word, and sharing the Gospel with others.”197 It provides a
unique “opportunity to experience God’s presence,”198 and provides the setting for a
conversation between heaven and earth, between God and the body of Christ.
ultimate fulfillment in the worship of God.199 Through prayer, singing, preaching and the
ordinances, God’s people are reminded that God is at work in this world, as He prepares to
usher in total restoration and renewal to this world with Christ’s Second Coming.
The role of the Holy Spirit in the Church and its worship makes God’s Kingdom
present with us. Accordingly, worship is a spiritual activity in the sense that it must be
inspired and empowered by the Holy Spirit. The assembly is a temple of the Holy Spirit (1
Cor. 3:16) and every believer is also a temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor. 6:19). God dwells in
the midst of His people and worship is the outcome of His presence.
343
The Sabbath attests to the Spirit’s presence and activity. It provides an opportunity to
recognise, reflect on, and respond to God’s presence.200 The Sabbath also proclaims “His re-
creative power in man’s soul.”201 Response in worship is not possible without the presence
and empowering of the Holy Spirit. “The Spirit works upon our hearts, drawing out prayers
and penitence, praise and thanksgiving. The gratitude which flows from our lips is the result
of the Spirit striking the cords of the soul in holy memories, awakening the music of the
heart.”202
The presence of the Holy Spirit in the worshipping community turns worship into an
allowing them to experience the power of life of the kingdom here and now. As James Cone
puts it, “worship is an eschatological invasion of God in the gathered community of victims,
empowering them with the divine Spirit from on high.”204 A sense of immediacy and an
awareness of new possibilities characterises worship when the Holy Spirit is at work within
the worshipping community. As a result of the dynamic presence of the Spirit, signs of the
Considering that worship is not a human initiative but the believers’ response to
God’s intervention in history, authentic worship is both “epiclesis and paraclesis, i.e. the
invocation of the Spirit to inspire and empower us and the coming of the Paraclete to help
200 Fritz Guy, “The Presence of Ultimacy,” in Festival of the Sabbath, 32.
201 Raoul Dederen, “Reflections on a Theology of the Sabbath,” in Sabbath in Scripture and History,
299.
203 Alain G. Coralie, “The Trinitarian Dynamic of Worship,” Ministry, March 2011, 22.
204 Cited in James Harris, Pastoral Church Theology: A Black-Church Perspective (Minneapolis, MN:
Fortress Press, 1991), 89.
344
us.”205 There can be no teaching, no preaching, no healing of human brokenness, no genuine
communion unless worshipping communities are baptised into the creative and life-giving
power of the divine Spirit. In Adventist worship, the epicletic element is specially found at
the beginning of the service with the ‘Invocation,’ as the church “recognises and invites the
Father God, we have come into this place, gathered in Your name to worship You, all
because of Calvary. We magnify Your name because You alone are worthy. We lift
You up because You alone deserve all the glory. Lord, You deserve all our praise; so
we bless Your Holy name. We pray that You will tabernacle with us, today, that Your
Spirit will usher in a calm and a sense of worship and that Your angels will come
alongside us to lift Your name up as we praise you for all You have done and all that
You continue to do and all that You will do in our lives. In Jesus’ name we pray,
Amen.207
Such prayers of invocation are offered in the trust that God hears and answers the
pleading for His manifest presence among worshippers. Similarly, preachers also often pray
before their sermon, seeking for the Holy Spirit’s illuminating presence upon the preaching of
the Word, often quoting Psalm 19:14 in closing: “Let the words of my mouth and the
Most significantly, the extemporary nature of most Adventist pastoral prayers points again to
the epicletic element of Adventist worship. The worship from start to finish depends on the
Spirit’s presence. The gathered community meets in the expectation that the Spirit will be
present and at work in their midst as they reach out to God in worship. In Adventism, the
207 I was personally present at this worship service and later retrieved the content of the invocation
prayer by reviewing the service on the church’s Facebook account accessed August 25 2018, https://www.
facebook.com/restorationpraisecenter/videos/1621330384630600/.
345
work of the Holy Spirit in worship is linked to the life of worshippers as individuals and to
By tracing salvation history to its source, Sabbath worship recognises that the Triune
God is fully activity in the life of the worshipping community and in the world. Worship is
God’s people to be involved in the here and now.208 The question is: what kind of impact do
Adventist weekly worship gatherings have on the life of the church and the world at large?
Dederen observes that, “Sabbath worship is not to be conceived as an isolated act, one that
removes man from his everyday world. On the contrary it is the centre from which every day
of the week receives its meaning and light.”209 Hence, any discussion of the implications of
the Sabbath is incomplete unless we connect it to life as worship. Continuous worship is the
lifestyle of the true believer. Paul’s exhortation in Romans 12:1 “to offer your bodies as a
living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God” is particularly relevant here as “this is your true
Worship encompasses the whole of life, both “adoration and action.”210 Don Saliers, in
exploring the implications between liturgy, belief and behaviour, emphasises that “it is in the
208 Susan J. White, Foundations of Christian Worship (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press,
1997), 3-5
210 D. A. Carson, “Worship under the Word,” in Worship by the Book, ed., D. A. Carson (Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan), 23-24.
346
world that God is to be glorified by doing the works of God.”211 If worship is not translated
into acts of justice, mercy and love, that is an indication that “Christ’s liturgy is not fruitfully
enacted.”212 Weekly worship and daily life are interdependent. For Saliers, it is important to
keep in balance the “critical reciprocity between the lex orandi (pattern of prayer) and the lex
credendi (pattern of belief)” as well as the “lex agendi (pattern of intention-action) of the
church.”213 Worship and service are the true vocation of the church.214 According to
action, joining in and celebrating the politics of God, it enables them to act, judge and live
Allmen states that the church is “expressly commissioned to be dispersed in the world, to
penetrate it in every part, to live there on the Christ who has given himself to the Church, in
order to make him know and loved in the world.”216 Both liturgy and service need to be
For Adventists, Sabbath worship is a place where the assembly is restored and
empowered to live a life of praise and service. They would agree with Bernd Wannenwetsch
who notes that “the sanctification of our lives grows out of the sanctification of the
211 Don E. Saliers, Worship as Theology: Foretaste of Glory Divine (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press,
1994), 177.
213 Ibid., 187; Kevin Irwin uses the term “lex orandi, lex credendi, lex vivendi” to signify the same
view (see, Kevin W. Irwin, Context and Text: Method in Liturgical Theology (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, 1994), 55-56.
216Von Allmen, The Lord’s Supper, 12. Quoted in Bryan Spinks, The Place of Christ in Liturgical
Prayer: Christology, Trinity, and Liturgical Theology (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2009), 292.
347
Sabbath.”217 The life of contemplation (vita contemplativa) cannot negate the life of action
(vita activa). In essence, worship also means giving glory to God through a consecrated life
of service. Or, as Fritz Guy puts it, “To believe in the Advent hope is to be eager, patient and
active.”218
“True Sabbath observance will lead to the work of reformation pictured in Isaiah
58:5-12”219 “to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the
oppressed free and break every yoke… to share [our] food with the hungry and to provide the
poor wanderer with shelter…to clothe the naked… [to] do away with the yoke of
oppression… and satisfy the needs of the oppressed.” Ellen White repeatedly addresses this
True worship consists in working together with Christ. "Pure religion and undefiled
before God and the Father is this: To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction,
and to keep himself unspotted from the world." The love of Christ dwelling in the
heart, will be manifested in earnest effort to accomplish the work which Jesus came to
do. Kind words, deeds of benevolence, of tender care for the needy and the afflicted-
this is the fruit that grows naturally upon the good tree.220
Elsewhere, she calls for a more intentional emphasis on service, using the analogy of
Faithful work is more acceptable to God than the most zealous and thought-to-be,
holiest worship. True worship consists in working together with Christ. Prayers,
exhortation, and talk are cheap fruits, which are frequently tied on, but fruits that are
manifested in good works, in caring for the needy, the fatherless, and widows, are
genuine fruits, and grow naturally upon a good tree.221
217 Bernd Wannenwetsch, Political Worship: Ethics for Christian Citizens, 345.
218Fritz Guy, “Dynamics of the Advent Hope,” in Roy Branson, ed., Pilgrimage of Hope (Takoma
Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1986).
348
White did not believe that true worship was limited to loving service to others. 222
Yet, she firmly believed that true worship involves the whole of life. The authenticity of our
faith is measured by the way we treat others, especially those outside the faith community.
For White, a Christ-centred, people-oriented life of service exalts God. True worship includes
being collaborators with Christ in His ongoing ministry of reconciliation. She believed that
“[i]n order for worship to be acceptable, it must be offered in faith and hope, and the life must
be in harmony with it.”223 Consequently, “[f]orm and ceremony do not constitute the
kingdom of God.”224 The fact is that Christ “hungers to receive from His vineyard fruit in
holiness and unselfishness, deeds of goodness, mercy, and truth.”225 Hence, for Ellen White,
“[w]hen our hearts are tuned to praise our Maker, not only in psalms and hymns and spiritual
songs but also in our lives, we shall live in communion with Heaven. . . . This constitutes the
true worship of God.”226 This implies a selfless life of commitment to Christ. “The condition
and evidence of our discipleship is self-denial and the cross. Unless these are brought into our
experience, we cannot know God; we cannot worship him in spirit and in truth and in the
beauty of holiness.”227
This means that authentic Christian communities serve as a powerful witness of what
it means to be the people of God. “Created in answer to the call of the gospel of the kingdom,
223 Ellen White, Letter 143, “To Marian Davis,” April 28, 1904.
224 Ellen White, Evangelism, 511. In fact, she laments that as the “vital principles of the kingdom are
lost of Christ, “ceremonies become multitudinous and extravagant” falling short from what Christ requires from
his people. Ibid., 511.
349
the church witnesses to the kingdom.”228 According to this understanding, corporate worship
is incomplete unless it helps church members grow in Christ so that they can truly embody
the Christian faith. Adventists share the conviction that the Sabbath is a reminder “that God
has bestowed on human beings the need for fellowship and the capacity to love, care, and be
compassionate.”229 Viewed in this way, Sabbath worship leads to a life of total response to
Such an understanding of worship leads God’s people to live lives of integrity in this
present world with the ethos of the world to come. Charles Scrive observes that, “The
Sabbath heightens our awareness that we are going somewhere, intensifying our passion for
life. The peace and the gladness of the future becomes revolutionizing principles in the here
and now, enlarging our vision, giving vigor and direction to our existence.”230 Sabbath
worship reminds believers that this earth is still God’s earth. Thus, even though the earth
made new is their goal, God’s people still have a mission on this earth while they wait for its
transformation. Worship restores and empowers people to live an authentic Christian life in
the world. Holmes succinctly posits that, “While this worship on earth is a foretaste in
heavenly splendor, it is worship conscious of the world, and its need for redemption and
hope. The worshipping church is the ‘called out,’ while at the same time it is the ‘sent
229Kenneth A. Strand, “The Sabbath” in Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, ed., Raoul
Dederen (Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 2000), 511.
350
6.4.2.5 Worship as Evangelism.
Theologians are becoming increasingly aware that worship and evangelism form an
indissoluble unity.232 The worship of God involves witness as well as service. As Hardy and
Ford put it, evangelism is “the horizontal dimension of praise—the content of praise repeated
and explained to others so that they can join the community of praise.”233 For Adventists,
mission derives from the missio dei. Worship and the missio dei are both a reflection of the
announcing salvation to the whole world. This is linked to the believer’s baptismal identity
and commitment to follow in Christ’s footsteps. According to Ellen White, “Every true
disciple is born into the kingdom of God as a missionary. He who drinks of the living water
becomes a fountain of life. The receiver becomes a giver.”234 Thus, the very identity of the
church as the Body of Christ is defined by its mission in participating with Christ in His
232 The relationship between worship and mission has been widely commented. See for instance, Ruth
A. Meyers, Missional Worship, Worshipful Mission: Gathering as God’s People, Going Out in God’s
Name(Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2014); Sally Morgenthaler, Worship Evangelism: Inviting
Unbelievers into the Presence of God (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995); Robert E. Webber, Journey to
Jesus: The Worship, Evangelism and Nurture Mission of the Church (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 2003);
Stanley Hauerwas, “Worship, Evangelism, Ethics: On Eliminating the ‘And’.” In Liturgy and the Moral Self:
Humanity at Full Stretch before God: Essays in Honor of Don E. Saliers, Anderson E. Byron, and Bruce T.
Morrill, eds., (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1998), 95-106; J. G. Davies, Worship and Mission (New
York: Association Press, 1966); Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World (New York: World Student
Christian Federation, 1964).
234 Ellen G. White, Desire of Ages, 195. Ellen White also defines the specific task of evangelism this
way: “He who becomes a child of God should henceforth look upon himself as a link in the chain let down to
save the world, one with Christ in His plan of mercy, going forth with Him to seek and save the lost. Ellen G.
White, Evangelism, 250.
351
For Adventists, the worship service is an arena for evangelism. Members are
encouraged to bring visitors so that they can encounter and respond to the Gospel.235 Holmes
stresses that “Adventist worship deliberately and consciously includes evangelistic elements,”
because it is centred in the Creator/Redeemer. 236 Corporate worship is conducted with the
awareness that the gathered community may include “seekers” on the verge of making a
decision for the Kingdom. Holmes notes the evangelistic dimension of worship as follows:
“Worship that actively confesses sin, hears the good news of the gospel, responds in faith,
and sings the praise of the Lord and the Lamb is a powerful evangelistic medium, a powerful
intent. Holmes emphasises the role of “the Word of God, read and preached” in igniting and
sustaining faith, for “it is in response to the Word of God, read and preached, that the
Because Scripture contains all that is necessary for salvation and “faith comes from
hearing” (Rom. 10:17), the centre of Adventist worship is the proclaimed Word of God.
Adventists believe that preaching is the appointed instrument to secure decisions for Christ.
Two). It follows that there is always the danger that Adventist corporate worship could risk
lapsing into anthropocentricity, since the main focus is to secure decisions for the kingdom.
This may cause the worship service to lack verticality as it revolves around human wants and
352
desires instead of pointing to God. This self-centred mentality can potentially distort the
nature of true worship by displacing God from the centre. True worship is a matter of proper
focus. It “must first be God-focussed and then be human sensitive.”239 If this factor is
negative, the corresponding positive is that, when worship and evangelism are treated as
interrelated activities, the whole of life, including the liturgy, directs attention to God and His
Worship and evangelism are closely linked. Authentic worship makes evangelism
both the object of liturgical practices and a means of accomplishing this evangelistic goal.
missionary and evangelistic in nature. When the church responds to the call to worship, it is
enabled to respond to the call to evangelize.”240 He points out that evangelism “is the
This Adventist insistence on the link between worship and evangelism has been
shaped to a large extent by a prophetic message that speaks of worship, Revelation 14:6-
12.242 Adventists view this text as their mission imperative, their “special assignment.” 243
239 R. Kent Hughes, “Free Church Worship: the Challenge of Freedom,” in D.A Carson, ed., Worship
by the Book. (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2002), 151.
242Gerard Damsteegt, Foundations of the Seventh-day Adventist Message and Mission (Grand Rapids,
MI: William B. Eerdmans, 1977).
353
And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the everlasting gospel to
preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and
tongue, and people,
Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of his
judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and the
fountains of waters.
From earliest times, Adventists have interpreted the above passage eschatologically
Adventists consider this passage as God’s “last appeal to the world calling them to repentance
in view of the judgment . . . a prophetic and epochal end-time call, which both leads up to the
second coming of Christ and produces the final harvest of the earth (Rev. 14:6-14).”245
Like the Sabbath, Revelation 14:6-7 brings together the doctrines of creation,
redemption and eschatology. It points to God as Creator (“Worship him who made the
heavens and earth”), Redeemer (“the eternal Gospel”), and Judge/Restorer (“the hour of his
judgment has come”). The true ground of divine worship is found in the fact that God is the
Creator “who made the heavens, the earth, the sea and the springs of water,” expressions that
Adventists see as clear allusions to the Sabbath in Exodus 20:11.246 The “everlasting Gospel”
244 Hans K. Larondelle, “The Remnant and the Three Angels’ Messages in Handbook of Seventh-day
Adventist Theology, 883-7. Their mission statement reads: “The mission of the Seventh-day Adventist Church
is to call all people to become disciples of Jesus Christ, to proclaim the everlasting gospel embraced by the three
angels’ messages (Rev. 14:6-12), and to prepare the world for Christ’s soon return.” https://www.
adventist.org/en/information/official-statements/statements/article/go/-/mission-statement-of-the-seventh-day-
adventist-church/.
245Larry L. Lichtenwalter, “The Seventh-Day Sabbath and Sabbath Theology in The Book of
Revelation: Creation, Covenant, Sign,” Andrews University Seminary Studies, 49/2 2012, 2011, 291.
246 Larry L. Lichtenwalter, “The Seventh-Day Sabbath and Sabbath Theology,” 308; Jon Paulien,
“Revisiting the Sabbath in the Book of Revelation,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 9/1-2 (1998):
183-185; Mathilde Frey, “Sabbath Theology in the Book of Revelation” in Toward a Theology of the Remnant:
An Adventist Ecclesiological Perspective, Ángel Manuel Rodríguez ed., (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research
Institute, 2009), 127-137.
354
(Rev. 14:6) constitutes an appeal to true worship,247 which is offered at a time when “the hour
In this understanding, worship comprises liturgy but also a life of surrender and
obedience that is evidenced in everyday actions.249 Accordingly, God is glorified “when true
6.5 CONCLUSION
corporate worship based on their practice of keeping the seventh-day as the Sabbath. I have
pointed out that the Sabbath tells the story of salvation. Thus, Adventist worship has its roots
in creation, is made possible through redemption and is oriented towards the coming
Kingdom of God. As a celebration of God’s creative, redemptive and restorative vision for
creation, the Sabbath “is a perpetual reminder that we are but creatures and totally dependent
In Adventist thinking, the Sabbath provides the basis for a solid engagement with God
in corporate worship. As a thread running through salvation history, the Sabbath connects
247
Kwabena Donkor, “The Three Angels’ Messages, Creation Theology, and Worship,” in Let’s
Worship Him: World Adventist-Jewish Congress Papers July 2016, Richard Elofer ed., (Silver Spring, MD:
World Jewish Adventist Friendship Center, 2018), 148.
248There is an interesting parallel in the first part of the Decalogue (Ex. 20:1-11):Creator: For in six
days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in them (vs.11).Redeemer: I am the Lord,
who brought you out of the Egypt, out of the land of slavery (vs.2).Judge: For I, the Lord your God, am a
jealous God, punishing…those who hate me, but showing love to those who love me and keep my
commandments (vss.5, 6).
249Ranko Stephanovic, Revelation of Jesus Christ: Commentary on the Book of Revelation (Berrien
Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2002), 441-443; Jacques Doukhan, “Fear the Judge and Worship the
Creator: The Three Angels Message and the Day of Atonement” in Let’s Worship Him: World Adventist-Jewish
Congress Papers July 2016, Richard Elofer ed., (Silver Spring, MD: World Jewish Adventist Friendship Center,
2018), 58-59.
355
past and future, thereby defining present identity. It enables Adventists to rediscover their
As a divine gift of holy time, the Sabbath reminds Adventists that Christian worship is
not fundamentally people striving to connect with God; rather it is a celebration of how God
reaches out to people, uniting them to Himself. The Sabbath is a reminder that worship is not
a human pursuit of God, but a response to what God has already given. For Adventists,
worship means participating in the incredible drama of salvation history and being
transformed into the image that God had in mind initially at creation (Gen. 1:26).
356
CHAPTER SEVEN
7 CONCLUSION
My aim in this study has been to explore and understand Seventh-day Adventist
worship. This research has been necessary for many reasons. First, there are not many
academic studies on Adventist worship. Second, the few that are available proceed mostly
liturgical practices. Third, there has been no serious attempt to trace a comprehensive
history of Adventist worship. The connection between Adventist theology and Adventist
satisfactorily examine Adventist worship and its embedded theology. I limited the scope
the larger worldwide Adventist community. I examined the history, practice and overall
liturgy can be an artificial process and letting liturgy determine belief is fraught with
1 Stephan Wahle, “Reflections on the Exploration on Jewish and Christian Liturgy from the
Viewpoint of a Systematic Theology of Liturgy” in Albert Gerhards & Clemens Leonhard, Jewish and
Christian Liturgy and Worship (Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 2007), 170. See also Christopher Ellis,
Gathering, 245.
357
dangers. However, the interaction of the liturgical practices of a community and its
theological convictions do make possible a better understanding of both the worship and
Both worship and theology are human pursuits which have the goal of
acknowledging who God is and what He has done. For this reason, Adventism will
always need to discover (or rediscover) the vital link between theology and liturgical
implications of its theology and the theological implications of its liturgy. Unless this link
is conscientiously explored, there is a danger that a wedge will be driven between what
Adventism professes in books and what it practices in the pulpit and in the pews.
Constantly rehearsing and celebrating God’s action in history will ensure that God
is known and worshipped for who He is and for what He has done. This dialogical
movement could be discerned more deeply if Adventist worship were made more
Sabbath worship should be further explored to see how these fit into an overarching
Trinitarian pattern. The Father’s role in creation, the Son’s role in salvation and the Holy
Spirit’s role in testifying to the present dimension of God’s coming kingdom could be
emphasised. Adventism will always need to keep in mind that its worship is directed to
the Triune God who initiates, accompanies and empowers its worship. Otherwise, its
worship would always run the risk of becoming people-centred rather than God-centred.
Finally, despite any remaining flaws, Adventist worship can hope to contribute to
worship, it has been relatively silent in liturgical conversations. This is ironic since it
stands in a tradition which believes Revelation 14:6, 7 is a renewal God desires for the
entire Church, that is, to “Fear God and give glory to Him, for the hour of His judgment
358
has come; and [to] worship Him who made heaven and earth, the sea and springs of
water.” The emphasis within Adventism on liturgical simplicity and attention to salvation
history invites reflection and dialogue with fellow Christians in every communion.
359
BIBLIOGRAPHY
ADVENTIST LITERATURE
PRIMARY SOURCES
Books
Andrews, John Nevins. History of the Sabbath and First Day of the Week. Battle Creek,
MI: Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing, 1873.
Bates, Joseph. The Seventh-Day Sabbath: A Perpetual Sign, 2nd rev. and enl. ed. New
Bedford, MA: Benjamin Lindsey, 1847.
Bliss, Sylvester. Memoirs of William Miller. Boston, MA: Joshua V. Himes, 1853.
Fitch, Charles. Letter to the Presbytery of Newark. Oberlin, OH: James Steele, 1840.
Fitch, Charles. Letters by Charles Fitch from the Midnight Cry. March 14, 1844, 2. New
York, Midnight Cry, Vol 6, No. 8.
Fitch, Charles. The Glory of God in the Earth. Boston, MA: Joshua V. Himes, 1842.
Preble, Thomas. A Tract, Showing That the Seventh Day should Be Observed as the
Sabbath, Instead of the First Day; “According to the Commandment.” n.p, 1845.
Wellcome, Isaac. History of the Second Advent Message and Mission, Doctrine and
People. Yarmouth, ME: I. C. Wellcome, 1874.
White, Ellen G. Biography of E. G. White. Vol. 5. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
1981.
White, Ellen G. Child Guidance. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1954.
White, Ellen G. Christ Object Lessons. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1900.
White, Ellen G. Christ Triumphant. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1999.
White, Ellen G. Christian Education. Battle Creek, MI: International Tract Society, 1894.
360
White, Ellen G. Christian Experience and Teaching of Ellen G. White. Mountain View,
CA: Pacific Press, 1922.
White, Ellen G. Christian Experience and Teachings of Ellen G White. Mountain View,
CA: Pacific Press, 1922.
White, Ellen G. Christian Service. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1925.
White, Ellen G. Colporteur Ministry. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 2015.
White, Ellen G. Counsels for the Church. Nampa, ID: Pacific Press, 1991.
White, Ellen G. Counsels on Health. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1923.
White, Ellen G. Counsels on Stewardship. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1940.
White, Ellen G. Desire of Ages [The]. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1898.
White, Ellen G. Early Writings. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1882.
White, Ellen G. Ellen White 1888 Materials [The]. Materials 1-4. Washington, DC : Ellen
G. White Estate, 1987.
White, Ellen G. Faith and Works. Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing, 1979.
White, Ellen G. God’s Amazing Grace. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1973.
White, Ellen G. Gospel Workers. Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1915.
White, Ellen G. Gospel Workers. Battle Creek, MI: Review and Herald, 1892.
White, Ellen G. Great Controversy. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1911.
White, Ellen G. In Heavenly Places. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1967.
White, Ellen G. Life Sketches of Ellen G. White. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1915.
White, Ellen G. Lift Him Up. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1988.
White, Ellen G. Maranatha: The Lord is Coming. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald,
1976.
White, Ellen G. Messages to Young People. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1930.
White, Ellen G. Ministry of Healing. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1905.
361
White, Ellen G. My Life Today. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1952.
White, Ellen G. Pastoral Ministry. Silver Spring, MD: General Conference Ministerial
Association, 1995.
White, Ellen G. Patriarchs and Prophets. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1890.
White, Ellen G. Prophets and Kings. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1917.
White, Ellen G. Retirement Years [The]. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1990.
White, Ellen G. Selected Messages. Vol 1. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1958.
White, Ellen G. Selected Messages. Vol 2. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1958.
White, Ellen G. Selected Messages. Vol 3. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1980.
White, Ellen G. Sons and Daughters of God. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald,
1955.
White, Ellen G. Spiritual Gifts. 2 Vols. Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist
Publishing Association, 1860.
White, Ellen G. Steps to Christ. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1892.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers. Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 2003.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers. Mountain View, CA:
Pacific Press, 1923.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 1. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1868.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 2. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1871.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 3. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1875.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 4. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1881.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 5. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1889.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 6. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1901.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 7. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1902.
362
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 8. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1904.
White, Ellen G. Testimonies to the Church. Vol. 9. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1909.
White, Ellen G. Testimony Treasures. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1949.
White, Ellen G. That I May Know Him. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1964.
White, Ellen G. The Faith I Live By. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1964.
White, Ellen G. The Spirit of Prophecy. Vol. 3. Battle Creek, MI: Seventh-day Adventist
Publishing Association, 1878.
White, Ellen G. The Upward Look. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1982.
White, Ellen G. The Voice in Speech and Song. Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1988.
White, Ellen G. Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing. Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press,
1896.
White, Ellen G. The Sanctified Life. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2006.
White, James E. Life Incidents in Connection with the Great Advent Movement. Battle
Creek, MI: Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing Association,
1868.
White, James. A Word to the Little Flock. Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1847.
White, James. Comp., Hymns for Gods Peculiar People that Keep the Commandments of
God, and the Faith of Jesus. Oswego, NY: Richard Oliphant, 1849.
White, James. Life Incidents in Connection with the Great Advent Movement. Vol. 1.
Battle Creek, MI: Steam Press of the Seventh-day Adventist Publishing
Association, 1868.
Articles
“Drawing Near to God.” Review & Herald, February 21, 1854, 35.
“Observance of the Sabbath.” Review & Herald, February 16, 1860, 100.
363
“On Baptism.” Review & Herald, April 2, 1908.
“The Fruits of Millerism.” New York Observer, March 22, 1845, 47.
“The Horrors of Millerism: Trial of Israel Dammon.” Tri-Weekly Argus, March 14, 1845
“The New Hymn Book.” Review & Herald 6, February 20, 1855, 183.
Clarke, Joseph. “Congregational Singing.” Review & Herald, June 24, 1862, 29.
Friesbie, F. B. “Church Order.” Review & Herald, December 26, 1854, 147.
Frisbie, J. B. “Meetings in Wright, Michigan.” Review & Herald, February, 24, 1859,
112.
364
Goodwin, Elias. “Monthly Meetings in N.Y.” Review and Herald, March 6, 1866.
Holt, G. W. “From Bro. Holt.” Review and Herald, February 5, 1857, 110.
Hutchins, A. S. “Report from Bro. Hutchins.” Review & Herald, 20, 1864, 132.
Maxson, Mary F. “From Sis. Maxson.” Review & Herald, February 16, 1864, 95.
Maxson, Mary F. “The Fast.” Review & Herald, September 20, 1864, 133-134.
Priddy, Luella B. “Stories of a Pioneer Church.” The Youth’s Instructor, January 19,
1926. 10.
365
Review & Herald, June 24, 1862, 29.
366
Review and Herald, December 4, 1855.
Roberts, G. A. “The Holy Flesh Movement.” Document File no. 190, June 11, 1923.
Rock, Calvin B. “Black SDA Preaching: Betwixt & Between.” Ministry, September 2000,
5-10.
367
Sign of the Times, June 8, 1876.
368
Signs of the Times, May 19, 1890.
Smith, Uriah. “Prayerless Prayers.” Review & Herald, October 23, 1860.
The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, February 11, 1862, 85.
The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, June 28, 1864, 33.
The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, March 25, 1858, 152.
The Adventist Review, and Sabbath Herald, November 12, 1861, 190.
369
The Southern Watchman, January 29, 1903.
Utter, George B. “The Second Advent and the Sabbath.” Sabbath Recorder, June 13,
1844, 2.
Waggoner, Ellet J. “The Bible, Commentaries, and Tradition.” The Signs of the Times, 12.
1886, 13.
Waggoner, J. H. “In Ohio.” Review & Herald, December 29, 1863, 38-39.
Wagonner, E. J. “The Love of God.” The Present Truth December 5, 1895, 770.
White, Ellen G. The Signs of the Times, Review and Herald, March 29, 1905.
White, Ellen G. “Beloved Brethren, Scattered Abroad.” Present Truth, December 1849.
White, Ellen G. “Two Kinds of Service.” Review and Herald, March 25, 1909.
White, Ellen G. Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, July 22, 1858, 77.
White, Ellen G. Advent Review, and Sabbath Herald, vol. 12 July 22, 1858, 77.
White, Ellen G. Adventist Review and Sabbath Herald, December 13, 1864, 18.
White, Ellen G. Adventist Review and Sabbath Herald, July 22, 1858, 77.
370
White, Ellen G. Review and Herald, April 14, 1885.
371
White, Ellen G. The Review and Herald, February 4, 1902.
372
White, Ellen G. The Review and Herald, October 24, 1899.
373
White, Ellen G. The Signs of the Times; January 26, 1882.
White, James. “James White to My Dear Brother.” Berlin, Connecticut, July 2, 1848.
Review and Herald, August 19, 1851.
White, James. “Letter to Brother and Sister Hastings.” Middletown, Connecticut: April
1848.
White, James. “Preach the Word.” Review & Herald, December 11, 1855.
White, James. “Report of General Conference held at Battle Creek, Michigan, June 3-6,
1859.” Battle Creek, MI: General Conference, 1859.
White, James. “The Immediate Coming of Christ.” Review & Herald, January 20, 1853,
141.
White, Ellen G. “The Lord’s Supper and the Ordinance of Feet-Washing.” Review and
Herald, May 31, 1898.
White, Ellen G. “The Only Rule of Faith and Doctrine.” Review and Herald, July 17,
1888.
White, Ellen G. “The Passover.” Signs of the Times, March 25, 1880.
White, James. “Come to Jesus in the Boldness of Prayer.” Review & Herald, July 15,
1862, 54.
374
White, James. “Gospel Order.” Review and Herald, December 20, 1853, 188-189.
Whitney, S. B. “From Bro. Whitney.” Review & Herald, August 15, 1865, 87.
Winslow, H. C. “From Bro. Winslow.” Review & Herald, December 11, 1866, 10.
White, Ellen G. Letter 1, 1848. “To Brother and Sister Hastings.” May 29, 1848. For
another instance of prostration, see Ellen White, Letter 31, 1850; James White to
Ellen White, Nov. 6, 1860.
White, Ellen G. “To Brother and Sister Hastings.” May 29, 1848.
White, Ellen G. “To Brother and Sister Howland,” August 15, 1850. Letter 12, 1850.
White, Ellen G. “To Brother and Sister Lindsay.” Letter 90, 1897, 5-8. August 18, 1897.
White, Ellen G. “To James White.” Letter 21, 1880, 2. April 15, 1880.
White, Ellen G. “To Marian Davis.” Letter 143. April 28, 1904.
White, Ellen G. Letter 118, 1896, 5. “To Addie and May Walling.” November 17, 1896.
375
White, Ellen G. Letter 198, 1899.
376
White, Ellen G. Letter 8, August 4, 1850.
377
White, Ellen G. Manuscript 29, 1892, 26.
White, Ellen G. Manuscript Releases. Vol. 1. No. 19-96. Silver Spring, MD: Ellen G.
White Estate, 1981.
White, Ellen G. Manuscript Releases. Vol. 2. No. 97-161. Silver Spring, MD: Ellen G.
White Estate, 1987.
White, Ellen G. Manuscript Releases. Vols. 3-19. No. 162-1419. Silver Spring, MD:
Ellen G. White Estate, 1990.
White, Ellen G. Manuscript Releases. Vols. 20-21. No. 1420-1500. Silver Spring, MD:
Ellen G. White Estate, 1993.
378
Official Documents
“2017 Annual Statistical Report for 2015 and 2016.” Accessed August 14, 2018.
http://documents.adventistarchives.org/Statistics/ASR/ASR2017.pdf.
379
Adventist Minister’s Handbook. Silver Spring, MD: General Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists, Ministerial Association, 2009.
380
School Lesson, July-October 1889. Oakland, CA: Pacific Press, February 19,
1889.
Holoviak, Bert B. and F. Donald Yost. A Report on the Use of Tithe in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church. Office of Archives and Statistics. Washington, DC: General
Conference of Seventh-day Adventists September, 1976.
SECONDARY SOURCES
Books
Andreasen, Niels Erik. “Jubilee of Freedom and Equality.” In Festival of the Sabbath.
Roy Branson, ed. Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985.
Bacchiochi, Samuele. Divine Rest for Human Restlessness: A Theological Study of the
Good News of the Sabbath for Today. Berrien Springs, MI: Biblical Perspectives,
1990.
Bradford, Charles E. Preaching to the Times: The Preaching Ministry in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church. Silver Springs, MD: Ministerial Association General
Conference of
Branson, Roy. “Festival of Fellowship.” In Festival of the Sabbath. Roy Branson, ed.
Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985.
Branson, Roy. Festival of the Sabbath. Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist
Forums, 1985.
381
Burt, Merlin D. “The Foundational Orientation of Ellen White’s Prophetic Ministry.” In
Alberto R. Timm and Dwain N. Esmond, eds. The Gift of Prophecy in Scripture
and History. Silver Spring, MD: Review and Herald, 2015. 267–284.
Burt, Murlin. “Ellen G. White and Religious Enthusiasm in Early Adventist Experience in
Appendix B.” The Ellen G. White Letters and Manuscripts. Vol. 1.
Donkor, Kwabena. “The Three Angels’ Messages, Creation Theology, and Worship.” In
Let’s Worship Him: World Adventist-Jewish Congress Papers July 2016. Richard
Elofer, ed. Silver Spring, MD: World Jewish Adventist Friendship Center, 2018.
Doukhan, Jacques. “Fear the Judge and Worship the Creator: The Three Angels Message
and the Day of Atonement.” In Let’s Worship Him: World Adventist-Jewish
Congress Papers July 2016, Richard Elofer, ed. Silver Spring, MD: World Jewish
Adventist Friendship Center, 2018. 58-59.
Doukhan, Liliane. In Tune with God. Hagerstown, MD: Autumn House Publishing, 2010.
Froom, Leroy. The Prophetic Faith of our Fathers. Vol. 4. Washington, D.C.: Review
and Herald, 1954.
Gulley, Norman G. “Ordinances of the Church: Baptism, Foot Washing, and the Lord’s
Supper.” In Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church Studies, Adventist
Ecclesiology 3. Ángel Manuel Rodríguez, ed. Silver Spring, MD: Biblical
Research Institute, 2016.
Guy, Fritz. “Dynamics of the Advent Hope.” In Pilgrimage of Hope. Roy Branson,
ed. Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1986.
Guy, Fritz. “The Presence of Ultimacy.” In Festival of the Sabbath. Roy Branson, ed.
Takoma Park, MD: Associations of Adventist Forums, 1985.
Guy, Fritz. Thinking Theologically: Adventist Christianity and the Interpretation of Faith.
Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1999.
Hasel, Gerhard F. and W. G. C. Murdoch. “The Sabbath in the Prophetic and Historical
Literature of the Old Testament.” In The Sabbath in Scripture and History.
Kenneth A. Strand, ed. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982.
382
Hasel, Gerhard. “The Sabbath in the Pentateuch.” In The Sabbath in Scripture and
History. Kenneth Strand, ed. Washington DC: Review and Herald, 1982, 30-31.
Heppenstall, Edward. Our High Priest. Washington D.C: Review & Herald, 1977.
Holbrook, Frank B., ed. Doctrine of the Sanctuary: A Historical Survey. 1845-1863.
Biblical Research Institute, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Silver
Spring, MD: 1989.
Holmes, C. Raymond. Sing a New Song!: Worship Renewal for Adventists Today. Berrien
Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1984.
Jones, R. Clifford. Preaching with Power: Black Preachers Share Secrets for Effective
Preaching. Silver Spring, MA: General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists,
Ministerial Association, 2005.
Kiesler, Herbert. “The Ordinances: Baptism, Foot Washing, and Lord’s Supper.” In
Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology. Raoul Dederen, ed. Hagerstown,
MD: Review and Herald, 2000.
Knight, George R. Angry Saints: Tensions and Possibilities in the Adventist Struggle
Over Righteousness by Faith. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1989.
Knight, George R. Meeting Ellen White: A Fresh Look at Her Life, Writings, and Major
Themes. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1996.
Knight, George R. Millennial Fever and the End of the World: A Study of Millerite
Adventism. Boise, ID: Pacific Press, 1993.
Knight, George R. Walking With Ellen White: The Human Interest Story. Hagerstown,
MD: Review and Herald, 1999.
Knight, George, ed. 1844 and the Rise of Sabbatarian Adventism. Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 1994.
Knight, George. A Brief History of Seventh-day Adventists. Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 1999.
Knight, George. A.T. Jones: Point Man on Adventism Charismatic Frontier. Hagerstown,
MD: Review and Herald, 2011.
383
Knight, George. Organizing for Mission and Growth: The Development of Adventist
Church Structure. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2006.
Knight, George. William Miller and the Rise of Adventism. Nampa, ID: Pacific Press,
2010.
Kubo, Sakae. “The Experience of Liberation.” In Roy Branson, ed. Festival of the
Sabbath. Maryland: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985. 46.
Kubo, Sakae. God Meets Man: A Theology of the Sabbath and Second Advent. Nashville,
TN: Southern Publishing Association, 1978.
Lake, Judson. “Preaching the Word of God for the People of God: A Proposed Definition
of Seventh-day Adventist Preaching.” In Ron Du Preez, Philip G. Samaan, and
Ron E.M. Couzet, eds. The Word of God for the People of God: A Tribute to the
Ministry of Jack J. Blanco. Collegedale, TN: School of Religion, Southern
Adventist University, 2004. 467-494.
Larondelle, Hans K. “The Remnant and the Three Angels’ Messages.” In Handbook of
Seventh-day Adventist Theology. ed., Raoul Dederen. Hagerstown, MD: Review
and Herald, 2000. 883-887.
Moon, Jerry. “Ellen White’s Role in the Trinity Debate.” In Woodrow Whidden, Jerry
Moon, and John W. Reeve. The Trinity: Understanding God’s Love, His Plan of
Salvation, and Christian Relationships. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald,
2002. 204-220.
Morris, Derek. “Lord of Our Service.” In The Spiritual Life: Experiencing Jesus Christ as
Lord. Derek Morris and John M Fowler, eds. Grantham, UK: Stanborough Press,
2005.
384
Neufeld, Don F., and Donald Ernest Mansell, eds. Seventh-day Adventist Encyclopaedia.
Hagerstown, MD: Review & Herald, 1996.
Newman, J. David and Kenneth Wade. “Is it Safe to Celebrate.” Ministry Magazine, June
1990, 26-29.
Nichol, Francis D. The Midnight Cry: A Defense of William Miller and the Millerites.
Takoma Park, WA: Review and Herald, 1945.
Nix, James R. Early Advent Singing: A Collection of 52 Early Adventist Hymns with
Illustrating Stories. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 1994.
Pease, Norval. And Worship Him. Nashville, TN: Southern Publishing, 1967.
Pipim, Samuel Koranteng, ed. Here We Stand: Evaluating New Trends in the Church.
Berrien Springs, MI: Adventists Affirm, 2005.
Richards, H. M. J. Church Order and Its Divine Origin and Importance. Denver, CO:
Colorado Tract Society, 1906.
Rodríguez, Ángel Manuel. Worship, Ministry, and the Authority of the Church. 2016.
Scriven, Charles. “Gladness of Hope.” In Festival of the Sabbath, Roy Branson, ed.
Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985.
385
Spalding, Arthur W. “Hymns of the Advent.” In Origin and History of the Seventh-day
Adventists. Arthur Whitefield Spalding, ed. Vol. 2. Washington D.C.: Review and
Herald, 1962. 129-139.
Specht, Walter F. “The Sabbath in the New Testament.” In The Sabbath in Scripture and
History, Kenneth A. Strand, ed. Washington, D.C.: Review and Herald, 1982.
Timm, Alberto R. “Sola Scriptura and Ellen G. White: Historical Reflections.” In Alberto
R. Timm and Dwain N. Esmond, eds. The Gift of Prophecy in Scripture and
History. Silver Spring, MD: Review and Herald, 2015.
Timm, Alberto. The Sanctuary and the Three Angels’ Messages, 1844-1863: Integrating
Factors in the Development of Seventh-day Adventist Doctrines. Berrien Springs,
MI: Adventist Theological Society, 1995.
Tonstad, Sigve. The Lost Meaning of the Seventh Day. Berrien Springs MI, Andrews
University Press, 2009.
Warren, Mervyn. Ellen White on Preaching. Hagerstown, MD: Review and Herald, 2010.
Whidden, Woodrow, Jerry Moon, and John W. Reeve. The Trinity: Understanding God's
love, His Plan of Salvation, and Christian Relationships. Hagerstown, MD:
Review and Herald, 2002.
White, Arthur L. Ellen G. White, Volume 1: The Early Years, 1827-1862. Hagerstown,
MD: Review and Herald, 1985.
White, Arthur Lacey. Ellen White: Woman of Vision. Hagerstown, MD: Review and
Herald, 2000.
Winslow, Gerald. “Moment of Eternity.” In Festival of the Sabbath. Roy Branson, ed.
Takoma Park, MD: Association of Adventist Forums, 1985. 94.
386
Zinke, Ed. “The Revelation of His Righteousness.” In The Great Controversy and the
End of Evil: Biblical and Theological Studies in Honor of Ángel Rodríguez in
Celebration of His Seventieth Birthday. Gerhard Pfandel, ed. Silver Spring, MD:
Biblical Research Institute, 2015. 191-200.
Articles
Amadon, Grace. “George W. Amadon.” Review & Herald, July 6, 1944, 9-10.
Anderson, Roy Allan. “What Is Expository Preaching?” Ministry, May 1948, 46-48.
Burt, Merlin D. “History of Seventh-day Adventist Views on the Trinity.” Journal of the
Adventist Theological Society, 17/1. Spring 2006, 125–139.
Caïrus, Aecio E. “Is the Adventist Faith Legalistic?” Journal of the Adventist Theological
Society, 7/2. Autumn 1996, 33.
Comstock, Darryl. “Selling Change: How to Bring about Change in your Church without
Losing your Members.” Ministry Magazine, October 1991, 30.
Coralie, Alain G. “The Trinitarian Dynamic of Worship.” Ministry, March 2011, 21-22.
Dombrowski, Tom. “’I Will Send a Famine’: An Interview with Dr. Walter C. Kaiser Jr.”
Ministry, July-August 2010, 30-31.
387
Doukhan, Jacques. “The Tension of Seventh-day Adventist Identity: An Existential &
Eschatological Perspective.” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 26/1
2015, 32.
Doukhan, Jacques. “What Can Adventism Learn From The Jews About The Sabbath?”
Spectrum 30/1 Winter 2011, 18-19.
Doukhan, Lilianne. “How Shall We Worship?” College and University Dialogue, 15:3
(2003): 17-19.
Edwards, Rex Daniel. “The Art of Expository Preaching.” Ministry, December 1994, 5-7.
Fortin, Denis. “God, The Trinity and Adventism: An Introduction to the Issues.” Journal
of the Adventist Theological Society, 17:1, 2006, 9.
Gane, Roy E. “Sabbath and Sanctification.” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society,
22/1 2011, 3-15.
Graybill, Ron. “Foot Washing in Early Adventism.” Review and Herald, May 22, 1975.
Gulley, Norman. “Basic Issues between Science and Scripture: Theological Implications
of Alternative Models and the Necessary Basis for the Sabbath in Genesis 1–2.”
Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 14/1, 2003: 223.
Haynes, Carlyle B. “Long Public Prayers Out of Place#.” Ministry, April 1936.
Hinson, E. Glenn. “Private Springs of Public Worship.” Review & Expositor, 1983, 109-
117.
388
Hooper, Wayne and Bernard E Seton. “Is it Time for a New Hymnal.” Ministry 54, April
1981, 11.
Hoyt, Frederick. “We Lifted up Our Voices like a Trumpet: Millerites in Portland,
Maine.” Spectrum, August 1987: 29-36.
Johnsson, William G. “The Art of Expository Preaching.” Ministry, May 1994, 6-9.
Joyce, Robert S. “Our Conduct in the Pulpit.” Ministry April 1939, n.p.
Klingbeil, Gerald. “The Sabbath Law in the Decalogues: Creation and Liberation as a
Paradigm for Community.” Revue Biblique, 2010, T-17-4, 506.
Knight, George R. “When Persecuted in One Text, Flee to the Next.” Ministry, May
1998, 7-9.
Land, Gary. “At the Edge of Holiness: Seventh-day Adventism Receives the Holy Ghost,
1892-1900.” Fides et Historia, vol. XXXIII. Summer/Fall 2001. 13-30.
Lichtenwalter, Larry L. “The Seventh-Day Sabbath and Sabbath Theology in the Book of
Revelation: Creation, Covenant, Sign.” Andrews University Seminary Studies,
49/2 (2012): 291-308.
Mellor, C. M. “The Content of the Pastoral Prayer. Concluded.” Ministry, April 1970, 21-
22.
Moon, Jerry. “The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 1: Historical Overview.” Andrews
University Seminary Studies, 41:1 (2003): 113-129.
Moon, Jerry. “The Adventist Trinity Debate, Part 2: The Role of E. G. White.” Andrews
University Seminary Studies 41:2 (2003): 275–292.
Morris, Derek. “Preaching Out of the Overflow: The Spiritual Life of the Preacher, An
Interview with Barry Black.” Ministry, March 2004.
Moskala, Jiří. “The Meaning of the Intercessory Ministry of Jesus Christ on Our Behalf in
the Heavenly Sanctuary.” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society, 28/1 2017:
3-25.
Moskala, Jiří. “The Sabbath in the First Creation Account.” Journal of the Adventist
Theological Society, 13/1 Spring 2002, 59-60.
389
Mueller, Ekkehardt. “Seventh-day Adventists and the Lord’s Supper.” Ministry, April
2004, 12.
Newman, J. David and Kenneth Wade. “Is it Safe to Celebrate.” Ministry Magazine, June
1990, 26-29.
Paulien, Jon. “Revisiting the Sabbath in the Book of Revelation.” Journal of the Adventist
Theological Society, 9/1-2 (1998): 183-185.
Pfandl, Gerhard. “The Doctrine of the Trinity among Seventh-day Adventists.” Journal of
the Adventist Theological Society, 17/1 Spring 2006: 160–179.
Pierson, Robert H. “Never Loose Your sense of Urgency.” Ministry, December 1961, 17.
Pollard, Leslie N. “Saga and Song: African American Preaching.” Ministry Magazine,
May 1995, 5-9.
Solomon, John. “Worship and Praise: One Model for Change in the Worship Hour.”
Ministry Magazine, February 2000, 16-19.
Stefanovic, Ranko. “The Book of Revelation: Guidelines for Responsible and Meaningful
Preaching.” Ministry, September 2017, 9-12.
Swank, Grant Jr. “Excitement about Expository Preaching.” Ministry, May 2000, 28-29.
Swank, Grant, Jr. and Floyd Bresee. “Expository Preaching.” Ministry, January 1994, 7-
10.
Valentine, Gilbert. “The Stop-Start Journey on the Road to a Church Manual, Part I.”
Ministry, April 1999, 14-19.
Zinke, Edward E. “A Theology of the Sabbath.” Journal of Adventist Theology 2/2 1991,
151.
390
Dissertations
Bingham, James T. Liturgy and Ritual as Religious Education: Implications for the
Seventh-day Adventist Church. PhD Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews
University, 1984.
Blake, Ivan C. A Proposed Model Worship Service Incorporating a Biblical View of the
Holiness of God for the Urbandale, Michigan Seventh-day Adventist Church.
DMin Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1996.
Bucknor, Wayne Frederick Antonio. The Changing Role of Music in the Liturgy of the
African American Seventh-day Adventist Church. PhD Dissertation. Tuscaloosa,
AL: University of Alabama, 2008.
Chiomenti, Lyndelle Brower. A Comparison of the Adult Bible Study Guide of the
Seventh-day Adventist Church and a Prototype Guide Designed to Promote
Spiritual Growth. EdD Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University,
2007.
Higashide, Katsumi. Meanings of the Sabbath for Worship in the Seventh-day Adventist
Church. Doctoral Dissertation. Boston, MA: Boston University School of
Theology, 2010.
Jones, Gerald Hansel. A Model for Multicultural Worship Developed at the Fallbrook
Seventh-day Adventist Church. DMin Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews
University, 2014.
Masimba, Thomas. Application of Biblical Worship Principles in the New Life Seventh-
day Adventist Church in Nairobi. DMin Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI:
Andrews University, 2011.
Oliver, Barry. “SDA Church Organization: Past, Present and Future.” PhD Dissertation.
Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University, 1989.
Philips, L. Edgel. An Exploratory Study of the Aims and Methods of Family Worship in
the Seventh-day Adventist Church. PhD Dissertation. Berrien Springs, MI:
Andrews University, 1992.
Pierce, Charles. A History of Music and Music Education of the Seventh-day Adventist
Church. D.M.A Dissertation. Washington, DC: The Catholic University of
America, 1976.
392
Roy, Campbell Kenneth. Building A Place of Worship: The Journey of the Downsview
Seventh-day Adventist Church in Toronto. DMin Dissertation. Berrien Springs,
MI: Andrews University, 2005.
Online Materials
Burton Wade account to A. L. White, January 12, 1962. Accessed September 17, 2017.
http://www.whiteestate.org/issues/music.html#5.
Fortin, Denis. “Ellen G. White’s Theology of Worship and Liturgy.” Accessed 31st
August, 2017. https://www.andrews.edu/sem/inministry/uploads/
2015summersyllabi/chmn523_worship-word_and_music_fall13-cu-
david_williams-fortin_article-egw-theology-of-worship-and-liturgy.pdf.
Patrick, Arthur. c. 1999. “Early Adventist worship, Ellen White and the Holy Spirit:
Preliminary Historical Perspectives.” Spiritual Discernment Conference. Accessed
September 18, 2017. http://www.sdanet.org/atissue/discern/holyspirit.htm
and http://www.sdanet.org/atissue/discern/flesh.htm.
Patrick, Arthur. c. 1999. “Later Adventist Worship, Ellen White and the Holy Spirit:
Further Historical Perspectives.” Spiritual Discernment Conference. Accessed
September 19, 2017, http://www.sdanet.org/atissue/.
393
Payne, E. A. “The Free Church Tradition and Worship.” Accessed August 14, 2018.
https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/bq/21-2_051.pdf.
Rodríguez, Ángel Manuel. “The Biblical Sabbath: The Adventist Perspective, Biblical
Research Institute, 2.” Accessed July 31, 2018. https://www.
adventistbiblicalresearch.org/sites/default/files/pdf/Sabbath-Catholic_2002.pdf.
Books
Anderson, J. Frank. “Liturgy as Real Prayer for Real People.” In Vogel, Dwight W., ed.
Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology: A Reader. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, 2000.
Baab, Lynne. M. Sabbath Keeping: Finding Freedom in the Rhythms of Rest. Downers
Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2005.
Balentine, Samuel E. The Torah’s Vision of Worship. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press,
1999.
Barth, Karl. Church Dogmatic: The Doctrine of Creation. ed. T. F. Torrance and G. W.
Bromiley. Trans., A. T Mackay, T. H. L. Parker, H. Knight, H. A. Kennedy and J.
Marks. Vol. 3. Part 4. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1961.
394
Barth, Karl. The Humanity of God. Richmond, VA: John Knox, 1960.
Bartlett, Irving H. The American Mind in the Mid-Nineteenth Century. New York:
Thomas Y. Crowell, 1967.
Bradshaw, Paul and Bryan Spinks, eds. Liturgy in Dialogue: Essays in Memory of Ronald
Jasper. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1993.
Bradshaw, Paul F. New SCM Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship. London: SCM Press,
2013.
Calvin, Jean, Ford Lewis Battles and John T. McNeill, eds. Calvin: Institutes of the
Christian Religion. 2 vols. Philadelphia, PA: Westminster, 1960.
Carson, D. A. “Worship Under the Word.” In Worship by the Book. D. A. Carson, ed.
Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2002.
Chilton, B. Redeeming Time: The Wisdom of Ancient Jewish and Christian Festal
Calendars. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 2002.
Christou, Sotorios. The Priest and the People of God: A Royal Priesthood. Cambridge:
Phoenix Books, 2003.
Connors, Richard and Andrew Colin Gow, eds. Anglo-American Millennialism, from
Milton to the Millerites. Boston, MA: Brill, 2004.
Cox, Harvey. Feast of Fools: A Theological Essay on Festivity and Fantasy. New York:
Harper & Row, 1972.
Davies, Horton. Bread of Life and Cup of Joy: New Ecumenical Perspectives on the
Eucharist. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1997.
395
Davies, J. G. Worship and Mission. London: SCM Press, 1966.
Davis, John Jefferson. Worship and the Reality of God: An Evangelical Theology of Real
Presence. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2010, 102-104.
Dawn, Marva J. Keeping the Sabbath Wholly: Ceasing, Resting, Embracing, Feasting.
Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans, 1989.
Dawson, Gerrit Scott. Jesus Ascended: The Meaning of Christ’s Continuing Incarnation.
London: T&T Clark, 2004.
Donato, Christopher J., ed. Perspectives on the Sabbath: 4 Views. Nashville, TN: B&H
Academic, 2011.
Fahlbusch, Erwin, Geoffrey William Bromiley, David B Barret, eds. The Encyclopedia of
Christianity. Vol 5. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2008.
Farrow, Douglas. Ascension and Ecclesia: On the Significance of the Ascension for
Ecclesiology and Christian Cosmology. Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1999.
Finney, Charles. Memoirs of Rev. Charles G. Finney. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1876.
Flaherty, Edward O’. Sunday, Sabbath, and the Weekend: Managing Time in a Global
Culture. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2010.
Ford, David. Theology: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1999.
Forrester, Duncan, James McDonald and Gian Tellini. Encounter with God. Edinburgh:
T&T Clark, 1983.
Hardy, David and Daniel Ford. Praising and Knowing God. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock,
2004.
396
E. Saliers. Anderson E. Byron, and Bruce T. Morrill, eds. Collegeville, MN:
Liturgical
Irwin, Kevin W. Context and Text: Method in Liturgical Theology. Collegeville, MN:
Liturgical Press, 1994.
Johnson, Maxwell E. Praying and Believing in Early Christianity: The Interplay between
Christian Worship and Doctrine. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2013.
Kilmartin, Edward. “Theology as Theology of the Liturgy.” In Vogel, Dwight W., ed.
Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology: A Reader. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, 2000.
Lathrop, Gordon W. “New Pentecost or Joseph’s Britches? Reflections on the History and
Meaning of the Worship Ordo in the Megachurches.” Worship 72, 1998, 522-523.
Lathrop, Gordon. Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press,
1998.
Lathrop, Gordon. Holy Things: A Liturgical Theology. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press,
1993.
Miller, Perry. The Life of the Mind in America from the Revolution to the Civil War. New
York: Harcourt Brace, 1965.
397
Moltmann, Jürgen. God in Creation: A New Theology of Creation and the Spirit of God
the Gifford Lectures 1984-1985. Trans. Margaret Kohl. Minneapolis, MN:
Fortress Press, 1993.
Moltmann, Jürgen. The Church in the Power of the Spirit: A Contribution to Messianic
Ecclesiology. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993.
Moore, Russell D. Understanding Four Views of the Lord’s Supper. Grand Rapids, MI:
Zondervan, 2007.
Morgenthaler, Sally. Worship Evangelism: Inviting Unbelievers into the Presence of God.
Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1995.
Mouw, Richard J. and Mark Noll, eds. Introduction to Wonderful Words of Life: Hymns
in American History and Theology. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004.
Murray, Ian. Revival and Revivalism, the Making and Marring of American
Evangelicalism. Edinburg: The Banner of Trust, 1994.
Parry, Robin. Worshipping Trinity: Coming Back to the Heart of Worship. Milton
Keynes: Paternoster, 2005.
Peterson, David G. Engaging with God: A Biblical Theology of Worship. Downers Grove,
IL: IVP, 1992.
Platinga, Cornelius Jr. and Sue Rozeboom. Discerning the Spirits: A Guide to Thinking
about Christian Worship Today. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2003.
Redman, Robb. The Great Worship Awakening. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2002
Roth, John D. Practices: Mennonite Worship and Witness. Scottdale, PA: Herald Press,
2009.
Ruth, Lester. “Praise & Worship Movement.” In Paul F. Bradshaw, ed. The New SCM
Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship. London: SCM Press, 2002.
398
Sandeen, Ernest R. The Roots of Fundamentalism: British and American Millennialism,
1800-1930. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press, 1970.
Schmemann, Alexander. For the Life of the World. New York: World Student Christian
Federation, 1964.
Sears, Clara Endicott. Days of Delusion: A Strange Bit of History. Boston, MA:
Houghton Mifflin, 1924.
Shmeman, Aleksandr, and Thomas Fisch. Liturgy and Tradition: Theological Reflections
of Alexander Schmemann. Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1990.
Smith, James K. A. Desiring the Kingdom: Worship, Worldview and Cultural Formation.
Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2009.
Snyder, Graydon F. and Doreen M. McFarlane. The People are Holy: The History and
Theology of Free Church Worship. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 2005.
Strickland, W., ed. The Autobiography of Peter Cartwright: The Backwoods Preacher.
New York: Carlton and Porter, 1856.
Taft, Robert F. “What Does the Liturgy Do? Toward a Soteriology of Liturgical
Celebration: Some Theses.” In Dwight W. Vogel. Primary Sources of Liturgical
Theology: A Reader. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2000.
Torrance, James. “The Place of Jesus Christ in our Worship.” In Ray Anderson ed.,
Theological Foundations for Ministry. Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1979, 349-351.
Torrance, James. Worship, Community and the Triune God of Grace. Carlisle:
Paternoster, 1996
Van Dyk, Leanne, ed. A More Profound Alleluia: Theology and Worship in Harmony.
Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2005.
Vogel, Dwight W., ed. Primary Sources of Liturgical Theology: A Reader. Collegeville,
399
MN: Liturgical Press, 2000.
Von Allmen, J. J. “The Lord’s Supper.” Quoted in Bryan Spinks. The Place of Christ in
Liturgical Prayer: Christology, Trinity, and Liturgical Theology. Collegeville,
MN: Liturgical Press, 2009.
Von Allmen, Jean-Jacques. Worship: Its Theology and Practice. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1965.
Wahle, Stephan. “Reflections on the Exploration on Jewish and Christian Liturgy from
the Viewpoint of a Systematic Theology of Liturgy.” In Jewish and Christian
Liturgy and Worship: New Insights into Its History and Interaction. Albert
Gerhards and Clemens Leonhard, eds. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 2007.
Wannenwetsch, Bernd. Political Worship: Ethics for Christian Citizens. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2004.
Ward, Pete. Selling Worship: How What We Sing Has Changed the Church. Milton
Keynes, England: Paternoster, 2005.
Webber, Robert E. Journey to Jesus: The Worship, Evangelism and Nurture Mission of
the Church. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 2003.
Webber, Robert E. Worship Old and New. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1982.
Webber, Robert. Ancient Future Worship. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2008.
Webber, Robert. Exploring the Worship Spectrum. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004.
Westermeyer, Paul. Te Deum: The Church and Music. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 1998.
Williams, Don. “Charismatic Worship.” In Paul A. Basden, ed. Exploring the Worship
Spectrum: Six Views. 139-144. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2004.
Wirzba, Norman. Living the Sabbath: Discovering the Rhythms of Rest and Delight.
Grand Rapids, MI: Brazos, 2006.
Witvliet, John. Worship Seeking Understanding: Windows into Christian Practice. Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2003.
400
At the Service of the Liturgy. Charlotte Kroeker, ed. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, 2005.
Articles
Aune, Michael B. “Liturgy and Theology: Rethinking the Relationship.” Worship 81/1.
2007, 51.
Berger, Teresa. “Liturgy: A Forgotten Subject Matter of Theology.” Studia Liturgica 17.
1987. 16.
Faus, Nancy Rosenberger. “Spirituality and Worship in the Church of the Brethren.”
Brethren Life and Thought 39, n.d. 4: 241–250.
LaCugna, Catherine Mowry. “Can Liturgy Ever Again Become a Source for Theology?”
Studia Liturgica 19/1, 1989, 12.
Lathrop, Gordon W. “New Pentecost or Joseph’s Britches? Reflections on the History and
Meaning of the Worship Ordo in the Megachurches.” Worship 72, 1998, 522-523.
Lee, Magness Lee. “You. All. Are the Temple of God: Spirituality and Worship.” Leaven
12, 4, Article 11, 2004.
McKenzie, Jennifer. “Benedictine Spirituality and Congregational Life: Living Out St.
Benedicts's Rule in the Parish.” Congregations 30/1Winter 2004, 31–33.
401