Ok, I must admit that a couple of times when talking to the praise team I have used "set the atmosphere" and I do believe that part of it is hype. You could make the case that getting the people in one mind and one place (mentally, spiritually, etc.) is setting the atmosphere, but my concern is what biblical precedent (if the Bible is our guide) do we have of someone "setting the atmosphere?" I kind of think that the "set the atmosphere" concept (and probably 80% of what we do in church today) is a product of socialization. We saw one church do it and just passed on and passed on.
Ok, there was something earlier discussed about taking stuff from ancient Judaism and paganism. It seems to me that the author is arguing that NOTHING should be taken from Judaism and paganism. I'm with him on paganism, not as sold on the Judaism point. Again, I feel like he would argue (and I'm assuming) that the Old Testament is irrelevant to New Testament Christians. To me, Christianity came from Judaism just as a movement to radically shift some things. We still do some Judaic practices today. For example, standing to reverence scripture. In some country churches for special programs the men and women sit on the opposite side of one another. That's Judaic too. So I'm not sold yet on his view about taking in Judaic practices, but I'm still open-minded.
Next thing, I'm with LaRue as far as lowering down how much money is spent on the building. I'm not sure if I totally agree with his argument of what church buildings take away from the worship experience. Again, I still think it could be a "what you make of it" type thing. I wonder how many pastors would be willing to redesign certain things in their church building to make it more "open-participatory." A few questions I want to pose....
Does anybody buy the idea that worship in the New Testament was not clergy-led and that everyone participated and it should be the same way today?
Do you buy the idea of the clergy/laity divide not being the original intent? If so, do you see the current church getting away from it?
At the end of the day, what are we to do if most people are arguing that none of it matters? My thing is that most people (again I'm assuming) would not view these issues we've discussed so far as heaven/hell issues. They would view it as "to each its own" and therefore not feel like the issues matter.
There's probably more but I don't remember what everyone discussed....LOL!