"That Room": Augustana Chapel and the Preparation of Leaders for the Church (Essay) "That Room": Augustana Chapel and the Preparation of Leaders for the Church (Essay)

"That Room": Augustana Chapel and the Preparation of Leaders for the Church (Essay‪)‬

Currents in Theology and Mission, 2008, Dec, 35, 6

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

(1) At least once a week, Mark Bangert and I chat about how worship forms Christians and, more particularly, about how seminary chapel does and does not prepare our students for ministry. As professors of liturgy and homiletics, we are very skilled at opining on how preparation did and did not happen on any given day. When I was a student in Notre Dame's doctoral program in liturgical studies, my Lutheran colleagues and I often mused that we were devoting our lives to the study of adiaphora, "ceremonies or ecclesiastical practices that are neither commanded nor forbidden in God's Word but that were introduced in the churches for the sake of good order and decorum." (2) Are the adiaphora that happen in chapel really worth worrying about? Wading through the often conflicting demands of seminary worship, I am frequently tempted to approach chapel as an auxiliary, even secondary, part of the curriculum, and to submit that "the community of God in every place and at every time has the authority to alter such ceremonies according to its own situation, as may be most useful and edifying for the community of God." (3) Taking this approach to the extreme, worship becomes a reflection of the community; anything goes as long as "the Gospel is purely preached and the holy sacraments are administered according to the Gospel." (4) While this approach is certainly theologically sound, it overlooks the power of worship to form Christians, communities, and leaders for the Church. Worship as formation

GENRE
Politics & Current Events
RELEASED
2008
December 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
14
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lutheran School of Theology and Mission
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
485.4
KB

More Books by Currents in Theology and Mission

Jesus Christ and the Modern Sinner: Karl Barth's Retrieval of Luther's Substantive Christology. Jesus Christ and the Modern Sinner: Karl Barth's Retrieval of Luther's Substantive Christology.
2007
Faithfulness: Luther's Vision of Excellence in Ministry (Martin Luther) (Critical Essay) Faithfulness: Luther's Vision of Excellence in Ministry (Martin Luther) (Critical Essay)
2009
Jesus for You: A Feminist Reading of Bonhoeffer's Christology (Viewpoint Essay) Jesus for You: A Feminist Reading of Bonhoeffer's Christology (Viewpoint Essay)
2007
Jesus Christ Is His Own Rhetoric! Reflections on the Relationship Between Theology and Rhetoric in Preaching. Jesus Christ Is His Own Rhetoric! Reflections on the Relationship Between Theology and Rhetoric in Preaching.
2005
Bitterness and Friendship: A Feminist Exegesis of the Book of Ruth (Critical Essay) Bitterness and Friendship: A Feminist Exegesis of the Book of Ruth (Critical Essay)
2005
Matthew and Anti-Judaism. Matthew and Anti-Judaism.
2007