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Home/Featured/The Heart of Family Worship

The Heart of Family Worship

I think of family worship as being comprised of three interconnected variables: the heart of family worship, the timing of family worship, and the manner of family worship

Written by Scott Redd | Saturday, August 23, 2014

“Family worship supports and augments what have been called in certain circles “the ordinary means of grace,” meaning the reading of the Word of God, prayer, and the sacraments   (Westminster Larger Catechism Q. 154; Westminster Shorter Catechism Q. 88). By thinking of family worship in this way, we connect what we are doing in our living room to what is happening at church Sunday.”

 

My wife and I like to talk about family worship–not because we have it all figured out, but because we actually enjoy experimenting with different ways to draw ourselves and our five daughters to God (Yes, five! Yes, daughters!). Of course, family worship with little children can be particularly intimidating to young parents trying the balance the complexities that go with that season of life.  Be encouraged, meaningful family worship is within reach.

I think of family worship as being comprised of three interconnected variables: the heart of family worship, the timing of family worship, and the manner of family worship. In the next two posts in this short series we will consider these three aspects. We will limit our consideration in this first post to the heart of family worship. The following treatment aims at being practical, but that requires us dabbling in a little theological grounding because, honestly, why else would we want to go through the cat-herding effort. To paraphrase the song, our family worships because “the Bible tells us so.” For the most part though, what comes next will deal with the hows and whats of regular family devotions in the midst of swim team schedules, play dates, distractible personalities, and bedtimes.

The Heart of Family Worship

Family worship supports and augments what have been called in certain circles “the ordinary means of grace,” meaning the reading of the Word of God, prayer, and the sacraments   (Westminster Larger Catechism Q. 154; Westminster Shorter Catechism Q. 88). By thinking of family worship in this way, we connect what we are doing in our living room to what is happening at church Sunday. If we think about our time as being part and parcel of the life of the church, we are able to see family worship as part of a larger movement of the gospel in the world. The heart of family worship is that it serves to help us be better worshippers on the Lord’s Day with the covenant community. We see this in at least four ways:

Reading the Word of God.  Our family better receives the preached word on Sunday if we have spent time in it during the week. That is why our family worship usually includes a direct reading of the Bible or at least allusions to biblical passages that address an issue we are talking about. We want ourselves and our children to be literate not only in the biblical text but the overarching themes and narrative that hold the biblical story together. We want them to be cognizant of the major biblical stories but also of the major biblical story.

Practicing Family Prayer.  We pray through song and we pray through spoken word. The children have opportunities to pray out loud and quietly. One thing that we have emphasized is prayer as a response to God’s word to us in the Bible. What about the Bible reading gives us cause to pray? Does it make us thankful, repentant, needful, and so on? Prayer is the other side of the conversation that God institutes and initiates through his word.

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Related Posts:

  • How to Prepare for Sunday Worship
  • How Did We Get the Westminster Shorter Catechism?
  • The Westminster Standards and the "Ordinary Means"
  • The Slow Work of Sabbath Rest
  • Praying in Grace By the Power of God

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