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(P, C)
"... the Holy Spirit fell on all who heard the word."
The sermon which sometimes lasted two hours was the centerpiece of New England Puritan worship. William Bradshaw said that to "preach the gospell solemnly and publickly to the Congregation ... was the greatest worke that Christ and his Apostles did." In the church that followed, this was the "highest and supreame office and authoritie of the Pastor."
But the Puritans realized that even the mighty sermon was powerless without the working of the Spirit. Asked John Preston:
What do wee when we dresse up a sermon never so well? It is but the rigging of the sails, and what will all this do without wind? Is not the Spirit the wind? What is all our preaching when the Spirit is absent? ... What is it without the almighty hand of God? ... No man can make you New Creatures. It is God must do it.
As Peter discovered, God through the Holy Spirit does make new creatures of us. And great preaching always points beyond itself to the Holy God, lest the worshiper, like Cornelius, fall down and honor the frail human instrument of the One who alone is worthy of praise.
(Quotations from J. Von Rohr's "Worship in the Puritan Tradition" in New Conversations, Winter 1979/80)
-- Bachelder
"... the Holy Spirit fell on all who heard the word."
The sermon which sometimes lasted two hours was the centerpiece of New England Puritan worship. William Bradshaw said that to "preach the gospell solemnly and publickly to the Congregation ... was the greatest worke that Christ and his Apostles did." In the church that followed, this was the "highest and supreame office and authoritie of the Pastor."
But the Puritans realized that even the mighty sermon was powerless without the working of the Spirit. Asked John Preston:
What do wee when we dresse up a sermon never so well? It is but the rigging of the sails, and what will all this do without wind? Is not the Spirit the wind? What is all our preaching when the Spirit is absent? ... What is it without the almighty hand of God? ... No man can make you New Creatures. It is God must do it.
As Peter discovered, God through the Holy Spirit does make new creatures of us. And great preaching always points beyond itself to the Holy God, lest the worshiper, like Cornelius, fall down and honor the frail human instrument of the One who alone is worthy of praise.
(Quotations from J. Von Rohr's "Worship in the Puritan Tradition" in New Conversations, Winter 1979/80)
-- Bachelder
