John Owen on Delighting in Worship

Posted on 04. Sep, 2009 by Danny Hyde in John Owen

Owen-Brief InstructionFor many of you young reformers like me, I came out of a myriad of non-Reformed but evangelical churches to a Reformed church. Recall the struggle you may have had over the theology and practice of worshipping God in a Reformed church. In former churches we were taught that the effectiveness of any given Sunday’s worship was to be measured by our subjective experience of it in terms of how “uplifted,” “powerful,” and “enlivening” it made us feel. This is why when we walked into a Reformed church for the first time and then walked out of its doors on that Sunday, it seemed as though all emotion was gone and that our subjective experience of worship was a moot point. “How could I have just worshipped God when I don’t feel like it just did?”

So . . . what did the great Puritan, John Owen, say about our level of experiential delight in the weekly worship of God? Do we actually believe that worship should be a delight? Is it okay to feel anything in worship?

I have been making my way through John Owen’s 1667 treatise, A Brief Instruction in the Worship of God and Discipline of the Churches of the New Testament, which came to be known as “The Independents’ Catechism” (Works 15, 447–530). This treatise speaks to us today as we seek a helpful way forward for ourselves and our family, friends, and visitors to our churches who feel like we may be cold.

In one of the more beautiful and practical sections of this treatise, Owen spoke of our delighting in the divine service. Picking up in question and answer seven, we read Owen saying that when we gather for the divine service there are four “chief things that we ought to aim at in our observation” (Works 15, 455–456):

  1. To sanctify the name of God.
  2. To own and avow our professed subjection to Christ.
  3. To build up ourselves in our most holy faith.
  4. To testify and confirm our mutual love.

Owen went on to explicate this first aim, or, chief end, of the Christians’ observation of the divine service by further dividing it into five parts (Works 15, 456–459):

  1. to reverence God’s sovereign authority in appointing his gospel institutions.
  2. to regard God’s special presence in his ordinances.
  3. to exercise faith in the promises of God annexed to his ordinances.
  4. to delight in his “will, wisdom, love, and grace” manifested in his gospel ordinances.
  5. to persevere in our observance of Christ’s ordinances.

For our purposes, here I want to focus in on the fourth point that Owen made, namely, that we sanctify the name of God in worship by our delighting in God’s will, wisdom, love, and grace as they are manifested to us in the gospel ordinances (by which he means, Word, sacraments, prayer, and discipline). So what precisely does it mean to “delight” in worship?

First, Owen says what it does not mean. Our delighting in the service does not mean what he called a “carnal self-pleasing, or satisfaction in the outward modes or manner of the performance of divine worship.” What did Owen mean by this? He was saying that our delight in worship was not to be found in our sinful and experiential delights. In a word, worship is not about you! Further, he was saying this against those in his time who sought for delight in the outward form and beauty of the liturgy itself. Here Owen sought to cut off any idea that worship was for our pleasure, whether in serving our emotions or even serving our eyes, such as in the Mass or the English Prayer Book with its pomp and ceremony in the days of Archbishop Laud’s high church experimentation. So our delighting in the divine service is not about “what we get out of it,” to use an evangelical phrase. For many of us who became Reformed later, we get this. But here is where Owen warns us in a way we need to hear. We are not to find our delight in the divine service in the mere fact that our liturgy might have ancient roots, or in the trappings of candles, banners, crosses, incense, kneeling, coming forward for communion, vestments, the Geneva robe, or the fully printed-out liturgy itself. Owen is saying, be careful of the trappings of high church.

Instead of this, Owen said that our delighting in the divine service was rooted in “contemplation on the will, wisdom, grace, and condescension of God.” Our God has drawn near to us! And he has done so, as Owen wrote, “of his own sovereign mere will and grace.” Why? Owen gave five beautiful reasons:

  1. “so to manifest himself unto such poor sinful creatures as we are”
  2. “so to condescend unto our weakness”
  3. “so to communicate himself unto us”
  4. “so to excite and draw forth our souls unto himself”
  5. “and to give us such pledges of his gracious intercourse with us by Jesus Christ”

When we gather for the Divine service (meaning, God’s service to us in Word and sacrament and our service to him in prayer), we are to find our delight in our covenant God himself, not in anything else, whether within us or whether external to us that we have contrived. It is our communion with God that brings us delight and the means of grace serve to bring us closer to him that we might glorify him and delight in him.

Christian, God has so stooped down to you that he invites you into his heavenly presence in worship. What a privilege! Believer, delight in worshipping the Lord your God!

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5 Responses to “John Owen on Delighting in Worship”

  1. Greg Breazeale

    04. Sep, 2009

    When talking about worship not being about us, of which I agree, does Owen mention that when we come to sanctify God’s name, that at the same time we are satisfied, thus making worship about us only in the sense that our joy is in God. I am obviously referring here to Pipers comments in Desiring God about worship being a feast for our souls. Any thoughts? Just wondering if Owen dealt with this at all in the treatise.

    Great post!

    GB

  2. Danny Hyde

    04. Sep, 2009

    Great question, Greg, for the simple fact that you made me pick up Volume 15 and re-read the section! It really is wonderful.

    In this section on our sanctifying the name of God, Owen wants to stress the primacy of God’s grace in the whole matter of worship. He speaks here of the promise of God’s special presence and special grace in public worship (as a side note, you ought to get a hold of David Clarkson’s classic sermon, “Public Worship to be Preferred Before Private”).

    In terms of our response in worship and the delighting in God that entails, Owen does speak of a “holy, soul-refreshing contemplation on the will, wisdom, grace, and condescension of God” (Works 15, 458).

    So, one of the benefits we do receive in attending public worship is the refreshing of our souls by virtue of the due use of the means of grace.

  3. Rick Taron

    08. Sep, 2009

    Danny,
    What would Owen say about our practice of using musical accompaniment? And, are we ministering to ourselves or to the Lord when we play an instrument during the time we take the offering?
    Bellingham urc.

  4. Danny Hyde

    08. Sep, 2009

    Hello Rick,

    I do not have a quote for you, although Owen would have agreed with the Reformed at the time that musical accompaniment was a part of Roman idolatry.

    As far as your other question, don’t assume that “we” all have music during the offering. I know of many congregations that do not precisely because of your question. What is it? Performance? Mood music? Priestly offering? Something else?

  5. [...] September 11, 2009 by mattadair John Owen teaches us what it looks like to delight in God when we gather for worship. [...]

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