Alison and I recently put together a Lenten supplement to our work last year during Advent. What follows here is the introduction I wrote for the resource, briefly outlining the place of worship in formation. You can view the rest of the resource here.
One way of approaching
Christian anthropology is to say that humans are lovers. We are what is known
as Homo Liturgicus; liturgical animals, who can‘t not worship. That
before you say anything else about humans, whether it be as rational beings or
believers, you must say that we are lovers. The centre of gravity of a human
person is not the brain but the kardia – the heart. Although there is
deep and complex relationship between our heart, mind, will, affections, and
body, we are, when it comes down to it, made to love and be loved.
“Hear, O Israel: The Lord
is our God, the Lord alone. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and
with all your might.”
(Deuteronomy 6:4-5)
(Deuteronomy 6:4-5)
“Teacher,
which commandment in the law is the greatest?” He said to him, “‘You shall love
the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all
your mind.’ This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like
it: ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself.’”
(Matthew 22:36-39)
(Matthew 22:36-39)
"You
have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest
in you."
(Augustine of Hippo)
(Augustine of Hippo)
It follows then that one of
the major changes wrought on humans by the entry of sin, evil and death into
God’s good world was on our heart. We become people who loved the wrong things.
We love the creation rather than the creator. We make good things ultimate
things, instead of receiving them as gifts of a kind and gracious Father. And
instead of cherishing something for the thing itself, we use and abuse them, as
we look to them to give something they weren’t created to provide. Our desires
are disordered.
The work of the Holy Spirit
amongst who have been united to Christ and justified by grace through faith is
to reorder our desires so that we love in the right way. This is the work of
sanctification, grounded in our justification that changes our hearts to love
in a right way. One of the ways this happens is through worship – as we
apprehend the generosity of our heavenly Father and the work of his Son, our
affections change. As we hear the gospel again, we apprehend the beauty and
majesty of Christ, and so worship him. And this happens with our bodies. You
and I are embodied beings. We inhabit a body. As we stand, sit, or knell, as we
sing, pray, or declare, as we partake in the sacraments, we worship with our
bodies. And what we do with our bodies has the power to shape and drive who or
what we love. That is to say the practices in which you habitually engage have
such power to shape what you ultimately love. Our heart’s desires are shaped
and moulded by the habit-forming practices in which we participate daily and
weekly.
Worship plays a transformative
role in our growth towards Christ likeness. And liturgies – the practices that
we habitually partake in – when they are charged by God’s word and his Spirit,
they reorder our hearts and minds to desire God and his kingdom. It expels the
disordered loves that have occupied our heart, and brings forth a new
affection. Worship forms who we love. And we are what we love.*
* James K.A. Smith, Imagining the Kingdom.
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