Christianity - Saturday Sunday Worship

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HSC SOR Study Day

Saturday / Sunday
Worship
Dr Paul O’Shea
[email protected]
Christ has died!
Christ is Risen!
Christ will come again!
Syllabus 40-41
Christianity:
The focus of this study is the contribution of
significant people, ideas, practices and
ethical teachings to an understanding of
Christianity as a living religious tradition.
The study of Christianity is to be of the
WHOLE tradition where applicable.
Outcomes
 H1 explains aspects of religion and belief systems
 H2 describes and analyses the influence of religion and belief
systems on individuals and society
 H4 describes and analyses how aspects of religious traditions are
expressed by their adherents
 H5 evaluates the influence of religious traditions in the life of
adherents
 H6 organises, analyses and synthesises relevant information about
religion from a variety of sources, considering usefulness, validity
and bias
 H7 conducts effective research about religion and evaluates the
findings from the research
 H8 applies appropriate terminology and concepts related to
religion and belief systems
Significant practices in the life
of adherents
 Students learn about:

 ONE significant practice within Christianity


drawn from:
 Baptism
 Marriage ceremony
 Saturday/Sunday worship
 Students learn to:

 describe ONE significant practice within


Christianity drawn from:
 Baptism
 Marriage ceremony
 Saturday/Sunday worship
 demonstrate how the chosen practice
expresses the beliefs of Christianity

 analyse the significance of this practice for


both the individual and the Christian
community
Origins of the Christian Sabbath
Hebrew Bible reference example:
Exodus 23.12
For six days you shall do your work, but on
the seventh day you shall rest, so that your
ox and your donkey may have relief, and
Your home-born slave and the resident alien
may be refreshed.
The followers of Jesus followed the
traditional Sabbath observance but quickly
transferred it from the seventh day (God
resting from the work of creation) to first day
of the week – Christ rising from the dead.

Mark 16.2: Very early on the first day of the


week, when the sun had risen, they went to
the tomb.
Acts 20.7: On the first day of the week,
when we met to break bread, Paul was
holding a discussion with them; since he
intended to leave the next day, he
continued
speaking until midnight.

From earliest times Sunday was the


Christian holy day – to remember the
Resurrection and “break bread”.
Do this in memory of me.
Christian Sabbatarianism
A small number of Christians maintain
Saturday or Sabbath worship. Most of
these denominations grew out of the
Protestant Reformation.

The most famous group are the Seventh


Day Adventists.
Sunday Worship
Avoid generalisations.
E.g. All Christians celebrate Eucharist on Sunday.
a) Many Protestant denominations do not
celebrate weekly Eucharist.
(Uniting Church, Presbyterian Church)
b) Salvationists are non-sacramental Christians
c) Adventists celebrate Eucharist on Saturday.
Eucharist
 From the Greek εὐχαριστία meaning
“thanksgiving”.
 Alternate names: Mass, Divine Liturgy;
Divine Service; Holy Communion …
 Use “service” unless you use the correct
term for the appropriate denomination.
 E.g. Mass – Catholic; Divine Liturgy –
Orthodox.
The “theme”
 Every Eucharist celebrates the life, death
and resurrection of Jesus Christ – and
NOTHING else.
 “When we eat this bread and drink this
cup, we proclaim your death Lord Jesus,
until you come in glory”.
 It is the single greatest act of Christian
worship for Catholics, Orthodox and most
Anglicans.
Eucharist
 Language may vary but the structure is
the same.
 Introductory rites
 Two “hinges”
 Liturgy of the Word
 Liturgy of the Eucharist
 Closing rites
Introductory Rites
 Opens worship.
 Usually consists of acts of penance /
reconciliation and praise / call to worship /
invocation (depends on denomination)
 “Lord Have Mercy”; Gloria – tend to be
common elements
 Opening Prayer – a focus of prayer –
Sunday is always resurrection!
Liturgy of the Word
 Always biblical readings
 Usual pattern but may vary:
 Hebrew Bible;
 Psalm
 New Testament other than the Gospel;
 Gospel – always!
 Preaching
 Prayers of the People
Liturgy of the Eucharist
 Presentation and Preparation of Gifts
 Gifts …
 Significance of the Collection
 Great Thanksgiving
 Preface – seasonal, specific etc …
 Eucharistic Prayer – variations …
Eucharistic Prayer
 In most denominations there is a set
pattern.
 Anamnesis - remembrance
 Epiclesis – work of the Holy Spirit
 Institution Narrative – doing as Jesus
commanded
 Doxology – The Words of Glory
Communion rite
 Usually, but with some variation …
 The Lord’s Prayer
 Sign of Peace – location varies
 Fraction – “breaking of the bread”
 Reception of the Sacrament – mode varies
Post-communion
 Final prayer
 Blessing
Ministers
 Ordained ministers for Anglican, Catholic,
Orthodox and most Protestant denominations
 Some Protestant denominations allow “lay
presiders”
 Catholic, Orthodox and traditional Anglicans only
permit and recognise male ministers
 Most Anglican provinces and many Protestant
denominations ordain women.
Individual / Community
 Eucharist is an act of PUBLIC worship
 No such thing as a “private” Mass
 Catholics and Orthodox believe it is the
whole Church – visible and invisible
worshipping together.
 Christians worship together – it is one of
the marks of the Tradition – “where ever
two or three are gathered in my name …”
(Matthew 18.20)
 Christ is present among his people in:
a) The Word proclaimed
b) The Sacrament broken and shared
c) The Assembly of the Baptised
d) His Spirit that lives through the believer
 Eucharist is the ritual expression of all Christian
belief.
 Creeds – One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic
 Augustine: The church believes as she does.
 "What the soul is to a person's body, the Holy
Spirit is to the Body of Christ, which is the
Church. The Holy Spirit does in the whole
Church what the soul does in all members of
one body … a Christian is Catholic while they live
in the body …” Sermons, 267, 4, 391-430 CE.
Become what you eat …
 Augustine again: “You will not change me
into yourself as you would food of your
flesh; but you will be changed into me.”
 Christians believe sharing in the Eucharist
transforms us into the body of Christ.
 Eucharist is the food for the journey …
 The foretaste of the Lord’s Table in the
Kingdom of God …
Become other Christ’s …
 Christians believe they are empowered by
the Eucharist to be other Christ’s for the
world.
 The Blessing and Sending Forth command
Christians to “go in peace to love and
serve the Lord”.
 Sunday Worship + Social Justice =
Christianity in action.
Fr Pedro Arrupe SJ 1907-1991
“When people are hungry anywhere in the
world, our Eucharist is incomplete”
Bishop Helda Camara 1909-1999
“When I give the poor bread, they call me a
saint. When I ask why the poor have no
bread, they call me a communist.”
Best revision?
 Go and participate!
 Visit another Christian denomination –
preferably one that is very different to
your own.
 Read the Liturgical Texts – Roman Missal,
A Prayer Book for Australia, Uniting in
Worship.

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