Viewing archives for "February 2, 2011"
This entry is part 1 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

My argument in this series will be that conservative worship is essential to the preservation of truth for this reason: we will have preserved truth successfully only if it is truth rightly imagined, and our imagining truth rightly depends heavily on the forms of worship that we employ.

What is Truth?

We must first clarify what it is [...]

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This entry is part 2 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

If, as I argued in the last post, truth is more than factual correspondence—if it has an aesthetic aspect to it—then both the apprehension and the presentation of truth involve more than just intellect; they involve the aesthetic part of man, in particular, his imagination.

Today we use the term “imagination” to mean something more similar to [...]

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Truth and Worship Forms

On February 16, 2011 By
This entry is part 3 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

I have argued to this point that preserving the truth must include not only the preservation of right doctrine, but also the preservation of right imagination. As we have already seen, the imagination is shaped and cultivated through aesthetic forms. We have focused most specifically on literary forms since this is what we find in the Bible, but [...]

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Truth and Tradition

On February 23, 2011 By
This entry is part 4 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

I have argued thus far that successful preservation of the truth necessitates that what is preserved is the doctrinal affirmations and the proper imagination of such affirmations, and I have suggested that the primary way in which this imaginative aspect is persevered is through conserving the Bible’s aesthetic forms in our worship.

Culture and Imagination

To speak of [...]

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Culture and Tradition

On March 2, 2011 By
This entry is part 5 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

I argued in the last post that all cultural forms are built upon something that came before, and we call this “tradition.” The implication of this is that all of the various cultural institutions, forms, artistic expressions, media, languages, and systems of thought are what they are today based on hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of [...]

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This entry is part 6 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

I argued in the last essay that if we intend to preserve the truth handed down to us, we must never reject tradition outright. Instead, if we are intent upon preserving the truth handed down to us from Scripture, both its doctrinal content and the way the truth is imagined, we must continue to preserve and cultivate what [...]

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This entry is part 7 of 8 in the series Preserving the Truth in our Worship

I have suggested in this series that in order to preserve the truth in our worship, we must be concerned about how we are shaping the imagination in the presentation of biblical truth. This is no more important than with our children. It is my fear that most Christians do not recognize that before a child [...]

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