Today our congregation started incorporating elements from the new worship book produced by the ELCA and approved at this summer’s churchwide assembly. Though the book itself won’t be in use til this fall as I understand it.
Now, I freely admit to being resistant to change; just when I get used to a particular liturgy they go and change it on me. This forces me to focus on the liturgy when the point is to have our attention on God. The liturgy is, after all, an instrument of worship, and an instrument works best when you scarcely notice you’re using it, right?
Nevertheless, change is sometimes necessary I suppose. But what I’ve seen so far isn’t too encouraging. There were two changes in particular that I noticed. The first was the response after the first reading. Usually, after finishing the reading, the reader says, “The Word of the Lord,” and the congregation responds, “Thanks be to God.” But today it was “Holy wisdom, holy word”/”Thanks be to God.” I’m not really sure why that change was made, but I seem to recall reading somewhere that it actually dates back to the early church.
The other, more significant change was in the Trinitarian invocation at the end of the service. Instead of “May God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit bless you now and forever” we got “Holy Eternal Majesty, Holy Incarnate Word, Holy Abiding Spirit, one God, bless you now and forever.” While admittedly not as bad as the popular, and highly theologically dubious, “Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier” I admit that I don’t really think that the Trinitarian name is something we should be monkeying around with. I’m all for gender neutral or feminine images being used to balance out traditional masculine imagery, but the Christian Church has always held that the Trinitarian name is part of God’s self-revelation. It’s not something we came up with ourselves. It’s God’s proper name. As Robert Jenson put it:
From time to time, varous concerns lead to proposed replacements of the trinitarian name, for example, “In the name of God: Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier” or “In the name of God the Ground, God the Logos, and God the Spirit.” All such parodies disrupt the faith’s self-identity at the level of its primal and least-reflected historicity.
Such attempts presuppose that we first now about a triune God and then look about for a form of words to address him, when in fact it is the other way around. Moreover, “Creator, Redeemer, and Sanctifier,” for example, is, like other such phrases, not a name at all. It is rather an assemblage of after-the-fact theological abstractions, useful in their place but not here. Such assemblages cannot even be made into names, for they do not identify. Every putative deity must claim, for example, somehow to “create,” “redeem,” and “sanctify.” There are also, to be sure, numerous candidates to be “Father” or “Spirit,” but within the trinitarian name, “the Father” is not primarily our Father, but the Father of the immediately next-named Son, that is, of Jesus. The “Holy Spirit” within the name, is not merely any “spirit” claiming to be holy, but the communal spirit of the just-named Jesus and his Father. By these relations inside the phrase, “Father, Son and Holy Spirit” is historically specific and can be what liturgy and devotion–and at its base, all theology–must have, a proper name of God. (The Triune God, p. 17)
By all means, experiment with a variety of images for God. Many of our hymns do this wonderfully. But the Trinitarian name isn’t something to be cast aside for the sake of change or for some politically correct agenda.

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