In Deuteronomy 12.32, Deuteronomy
12.32, what things soever I command you, observe to do it, thou shalt
not add thereto, nor diminish from it. In the Hebrew Bible, this is
actually the first verse of chapter 13, before the discussion of
the false prophets. In the context, we see, however,
at the beginning beginning of chapter 12, that when God brought
his people into the promised land, he set forth a series of
particular enactments regarding their worship. He tells us these
are the statutes and the judgments which you shall observe to do
in the land, which the Lord God of your fathers giveth thee to
possess it all the days that you live upon the earth. God
predicates his granting of possession of the land to the people that
he's called out, predicates that upon their keeping this series
of enactments regarding his worship. And then, in the second and third
verse, he begins by commanding them to remove all of the monuments
of idolatry. In fact, he tells them they have
to destroy every vestige of these places and every remembrance
of the practices of idolatry. This divine command is founded
upon the tendencies of human nature. To remove out of sight everything
that had been associated with idolatry is necessary so that
it might never be spoken of, so that no vestiges of it might
remain. You see that's the only way God
can keep the Israelites from falling into the temptations.
So in verses 2 and 3 he says, you shall utterly destroy all
the places wherein the nations which you shall possess serve
their gods upon the high mountains and upon the hills and under
every green tree. You shall overthrow their altars
and break their pillars and burn their groves with fire. You shall
hew down the graven images of their gods and destroy the names
of them out of that place. God is concerned that should
these things remain, a people who've been brought out of bondage,
the bondage of an idolatrous nation, that they might be tempted,
that they might be drawn back into the idolatry through the
monuments being left behind in this nation. We see as well in verse 4, Scripture emphasizes here that
God is not to be worshipped according to the devices of the heathen.
You shall not do so unto the Lord your God. They were forbidden then to worship
either in the impure superstitious manner of the heathen or in any of the places frequented
by the heathen. Anything that had any kind of
association with heathenism was to be purged out of the land. God wants none of that being
brought into His worship. God wants all of that rooted
out of His holy nation. Now instead of that, we were
told that God would appoint a place of His own choosing, under which
all His people would come. All the sacrifices, all the offerings,
they have to be brought up to the one appointed place to be
offered up. Deuteronomy 5, 12 verses 5 and
6, But unto the place which the Lord your God shall choose out
of all your tribes, to put His name there, even under his habitation
shall you seek, and thither thou shalt come. And thither you shall
bring your burnt offerings, and your sacrifices, and your tithes,
and heave offerings of your hand, and your vows, and your freewill
offerings, and the firstlings of your herds and of your flocks." Now this would be Mizpah, the
Watchtower. And then there would be Shiloh,
which was the place of rest. And finally, this place would
be the teaching of peace, Jerusalem. That's what Jerusalem refers
to, the teaching of peace. And so in the Old Testament dispensation
we see God is leading his people. First he places his name in Mizpah,
the watchtower, and then in Shiloh, the place of rest, and finally
in Jerusalem, which is the place where there is the teaching of
peace. Now it's over this final place,
in fact, that we find that controversy in John's Gospel referred to
with the Samaritans. The Samaritans did not understand
this or rejected it because of the translation that they found
in the Samaritan Pentateuch. Nonetheless, what follows then
in Deuteronomy 12 are commands and these commands are aimed
at making and keeping a distinction between that which is sacred
and that which is common. Now there were special rules
which were to be regarded with respect to animals used in the
sacrificial system. And there were also rules which
were used to emphasize the significance of the shedding of blood and
the sanctity of blood in that ceremonial system of the Mosaic
economy. And so to that end then, God's
people at this time are duly instructed to attend to those
commissioned by God to teach them in these matters. This is
why in verse 19 he says, take heed to thyself that thou forsake
not the Levite as long as thou livest upon the earth. The Levite
is going to teach them to keep this distinction between the
clean and the unclean. Between the sacred and the profane
or the common. There are a number of rules.
There are a number of enactments that God makes under this mosaic
economy which have to be followed with great precision. And the
job of the Levite is, in fact, to keep track of all of that. Now, finally, and immediately
preceding the text that we want to look at more closely, God's
people are enjoined in Deuteronomy 12 to avoid being snared by the
influence of their Egyptian education. So in verses 30 and 31, they're
warned, take heed to thyself, that thou be not snared by following
them, after that they be destroyed from before thee, and that thou
inquire not after their gods, saying, how did these nations
serve their gods? Even so will I do likewise. shall
not do so unto the Lord thy God for every abomination to the
Lord which he hateth have they done unto their gods or even
their sons and their daughters they burnt in the fire to their
gods. Now the point here is this, although
the Israelites have been delivered from the physical bondage of
Egypt, These warnings are leveled against
remaining in the spiritual bondage of Egypt. God may have regenerated you. God may have, in fact, delivered
you out of spiritual bondage. But if your education remains
in the world you're going to gravitate back to that spiritual
bondage. They've been educated early and
for a very long duration in what we can only call principles of
Egyptian theology. And this is exactly what needs
to be remedied. It has to be fixed. Now from all of this we can observe
that first of all The great design of God's delivering
a people from the Egypt of sin is to bring them to a place to
worship it. God delivers people from sin
so that he can seek at their hands praise and worship. So in John 4.23 when Jesus is
speaking to this woman at the well, this Samaritan,
he says to her, the Father seeketh such to worship him. The psalmist tells us that whoso
offerth praise glorifieth me. God saves men not simply for
themselves, but for himself. And this is the very point of
that first question in the Catechism. The chief end of man is to glorify
God and to enjoy Him forever. Man's chief end is to glorify
God. That's what comes first. Our
enjoyment of God must follow upon and be in subordination
to our glorifying of God and so the great design of salvation
is always that we glorify God. When God brings His people into
the Promised Land, that is what He's instructing them to do. But then again, we can observe
that the Lord marks it a great sign of obedience in His people
to forsake their idols. Paul actually commends the Thessalonians
in 1 Thessalonians 1 verse 9. He says, for they themselves
show of us what manner of entering in we had unto you, and how you
turn to God from idols to serve the living and true God. Now on the other hand, it's marked
as a note of rebellion and as something which fits one for
judgment when those who profess the name of God do not forsake
their idolatry. So in Ezekiel chapter 20 verses
7 and following, the Lord says, Then said I unto them, Cast ye
away every man the abominations of his eyes, and defile not yourselves
with the idols of Egypt. I am the Lord your God. But they
rebelled against me, and they would not hearken unto me. They
did not every man cast away the abominations of their eyes, neither
did they forsake the idols of Egypt. Then I said, I will pour
out my fury upon them to accomplish my anger against them in the
midst of the land of Egypt." Just as much as God would have
his people give up the devices of heathenism, just as he would
have them abandon that worship associated with the theology
of Egypt, those who refuse to put aside
that corrupted worship, those who insist on bringing in all
of the accoutrements of heathen idolatry, Those bring upon themselves,
those bring upon the church of God, the fury and the wrath of
God. It makes God angry to see those
who profess His name, to take it in vain by offering up a worship
that He has not commanded. But we can see as well here that
the Church has nothing at all to learn from the heathen regarding
the manner or the manner of worshipping the true God. How could they? Now Jeremiah
10 verses 1 and following, we are told to be not dismayed at
the signs of heaven. God tells His people, O house
of Israel, be not dismayed at the signs of heaven, for the
heathen are dismayed at them, for the customs or the ordinances
of the people are vain. The fact is that the heathen
are darkness. They're not simply in darkness,
they are darkness. There is no light in them. They
have, to the best of their ability, put out all of the light of nature
that they can. They've given themselves over
to every kind of wickedness, to work iniquity after iniquity. And so all of their customs,
that is to say, all of their ordinances are ordinances of
vanity, because they themselves are vain. They've shown themselves
vain. And it should come as no surprise,
Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians chapter 2, that the natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness
unto him. Neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned. The fallen men cannot know how
to worship God right. Fallen men don't have the spiritual
capacity. It is not a property of darkness
to approach unto the light. It's not a property of darkness to open itself up to light because
Darkness, when it comes into contact with light, ceases to
be darkness. And yet, if it were no longer
darkness, they would no longer be heathens. So the things that
they continue to do are vain. They're darkness. Darkness can't mimic light. Darkness
cannot in any way imitate the light. Any imitation is simply an outline
that contains within it more darkness. We can also see that it's a great
preventative means to preserve God's worship pure and entire
and to avoid the introduction of corrupt and heathenish customs,
as well as to reserve a unity and brotherly love amongst the
people of God for them to meet together in one place. God, after
telling them to cast down all of these monuments of idolatry,
after instructing them to stay away from heathenism, tells them to come together to
that place which He's chosen, that one place This is why the
Apostle in Hebrews 10 emphasizes virtually the same point. He
says, Let us hold fast to the profession of our faith without
wavering, for he is faithful that promised. And let us consider
one another to provoke unto love and to good works, not forsaking
the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is, but
exhorting one another. And so much the more as you see
the day approaching. For if we sin willfully after
we have received the knowledge of the truth, There remaineth
no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for
of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries." Under the New Testament, the name of God is placed very
clearly in the Lord Jesus Christ. So if we move from Mizpah, the
watchtower, to Shiloh, the place of rest, to Jerusalem, the teaching
of peace, we finally come to Jesus, which means that salvation
is of the Lord. We cannot compromise that principle. And yet, that is exactly the
concern. because the purity of the worship
of God here is being put in juxtaposition to worshiping God in the one
place where he has appointed. If we worship God in the one
place where he's appointed, we're not going to hold on to these
monuments of idolatry. On the other hand, if we follow
these monuments of idolatry, if we're casting ourselves in
the way of heathenism, we're not going to be brought to that
one place wherein the unity of the truth is held, which now
is in Jesus. Again though, we see it's the
responsibility of those who profess to be the people of God to come
to a right understanding, a right apprehension of the truth of
God's Word in this matter of worship. It's not enough to claim ignorance.
God tells them to remember the Levite. Why? There are all these
rules they need to know, they need to understand. You can't
say, I don't understand, and then plead that your lack
of understanding is that you ignored the teachings of the
Levites. You have an obligation to gain
a right understanding, a right apprehension of the truth of
God's Word, particularly in this matter of worship. John 4.24, Jesus tells this Samaritan
woman, God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship
him in spirit and in truth. It's to this end that God has
appointed teachers to aid his people in this most solemn responsibility. Ezekiel 44, 23, they shall teach
my people the difference between the holy and the profane, and
cause them to discern between the unclean and the clean. In fact, he condemns those teachers
that fail in this regard. Ezekiel 22 verse 26. Her priests have violated my
law to profane my holy things. They put no difference between
the holy and profane. Neither have they showed difference
between the unclean and the clean. They have hid their eyes from
my Sabbaths, and I have profaned among them. So if there is a
responsibility on the part of the people of God to gain a right
understanding, a right apprehension of this truth, there's an equal
responsibility on the part of those who would be teachers in
the church to be very clear in declaring the difference between
what is holy and what is profane, what is acceptable and what is
unacceptable. God wants His people to know
the difference between what is the acceptable way of worshipping
Him and what is not. God wants His people to understand
the difference between heathenism and true religion. God wants
His people to understand the difference between the obedience
of faith and the presumption of their ignorance. They have
obligations. It's not enough for them simply
to say, ah, I am among those called the people of God. Jesus doesn't say that they that
worship Him should worship Him in spirit and in truth. That would be enough that it
should move you to be very, very careful in this matter. But Jesus
says, in fact, they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit
and in truth. It's not simply a very strong
desire that's being expressed. What is being expressed is the
absolute prohibition of the contrary. And that absolute prohibition
of the contrary could only be upheld and could only be displayed
if the people have a proper understanding between what's holy and what's
profane. People can't do that without
that understanding. And so, what Jesus says should
tell us very clearly that this is a requirement of believers. This is why the responsibility
is so strong. We must have a right understanding. We must have a proper apprehension
of the truth, particularly with the matter of God's worship.
It wouldn't simply do just to have a good idea about it. We
need to know the difference. We need to be able to show the
difference. But again, here we see this.
Evil associations and ungodly education, though it were in
the past. Yet, those evil associations,
that ungodly education that you acquired, continue to wield influence
in the present. And that has to be fought. Paul
tells us about this in Romans 7. He says, I find in a law that
when I would do good, evil is present with me. For I delight
in the law of God after the inward man. But I see another law in
my members, warring against the law of my mind and bringing me
into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. Paul is talking about indwelling
sin. What is it that has given this
indwelling sin such a power in his life? Practice. He's practiced it. He's very practiced in resisting
the truth. He tells us again and again how
often he was most forward in persecuting the truth of God
as a Pharisee. What is it God is worried about,
as it were, here in Deuteronomy 12, when he warns the Israelites
against following the heathens? He's worried about the influence
of their Egyptian education. He knows that there's a difference
between being brought out of Egypt and actually forsaking
the idols that you were educated in front of while you were in
Egypt. He knows that there is a difference
between God's deliverance from sin and the mortification of sin
that is required in every believer every day of his life. So Peter tells us we must be
admonished continually 1 Peter 4 verses 1 and following, For
as much then as Christ has suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves
likewise with the same mind. For he that has suffered in the
flesh hath ceased from sin, that he no longer should live the
rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the
will of God. For the time past of our life may suffice us to
have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness
lusts, excessive wine, revelings, banqueting, and abominable idolatries. The apostles are concerned about
our previous education just as much as Moses. We've been educated in Egypt. It has an influence. The world
has left its imprint We don't think correctly about the prospect
in front of us and what is required of us. Now let's look at the scope of
God's concern regarding the worship of God here. The first word, actually, in
the Hebrew is the word et. It's a word that's not translated,
but it is a word that, in fact, is a marker of a direct object. It's a little pointer in Hebrew. And it's pointing in a way that
serves to emphasize what comes next. What it's doing, syntactically,
is it's making this statement in Deuteronomy 12, 32, an imperative. That's precisely why it appears
that way in our translation. What does he say? What's thingsoever? That is, the word is in this
place connoting a totality. He's not trying to leave out
anything. He wants you to understand in this matter of the worship
of God, He wants you to consider the entire thing. The whole of
it. There's a focus here on the totality
of the object or the idea. What so ever. What thing so ever. It expresses the absolute encompassing
nature of the verse. Deuteronomy 12, 32. What thing soever I command you,
observe to do it. What thing soever then, have
us look at the whole. So in Numbers 5.30, when the
spirit of jealousy comes upon him, and he be jealous over his
wife, and she'll set the woman before the Lord, the priest shall
execute upon her all this law. But things soever, all this law. Now while the immediate and primary
reference is to the things that have been mentioned before, the things that come immediately
after regarding both the worship of God and the revelation of
God's will. Those things which are mentioned,
the removing of idols, removing the occasions to idolatry, making
proper distinctions between the sacred and the common, sanctifying
God in the way he's appointed, The fact is that we must recognize
this principle really applies to everything written by God. Which is why in Deuteronomy 4.2
he says, You shall not add unto the word which I command you,
neither shall you diminish aught from it, that you may keep the
commandments of the Lord your God, which I command you. So
the word thing here literally, the word devar, it means statement,
it's a word or message, a communication. He's concerned about the whole
of whatever it is which God is communicating to us here. What
thing soever. But then it proceeds by saying,
which I. And this is important because
in this context, what is being made clear, lest anyone should
think that the prerogative of appointing the worship of God
had somehow fallen into the hands of Moses. It needs to be very
clear that the Lord is the one who's speaking. He's the one
commanding. He's doing it in the first person.
This is the divine I Am. And He's asserting His right
to tell sinful men what they are to do in this matter of worshipping
Him. What thing? Soever! Which I command you, or literally
am commanding you. He's saying command in the sense
of ordering. He's telling them. He's giving
instruction or direction. This is a decree. And in the
context of this decree, you need to understand it is stated with
the force or authority of what others must do, and the force
or authority which lies behind this command is the divine I
Am. This is a whole word then, this
is a complete doctrine. This communication, respecting
the divine worship, God does not merely suggest to you here,
The fact is, He is authoritatively commanding and directing you
to do it. Why should I obey God in this
matter of His worship? Why should I worship God in the
way He commands me to do it? Because He's commanding you. Those who attend to the hearing
of His Holy Word, He is commanding you. Those who profess to be
His holy people, He's telling you that you must do whatsoever
He's commanded you. Now the fact that God gave such
attention, even to the smallest details of His command, regulating
the worship of God, that is to say, the fact that He actually
put that little marker in the Hebrew, that should move us to
a greater appreciation of the importance of the matter. Even in a way that perhaps you
don't perceive in that, God's hand is at work. In fact, there
is some discussion as to what exactly that et means. It's a
combination of an aleph and a tau, which is the equivalent of our
A and our Z. And there are some who think
that this is an indication that there is a fullness that is being
implied in that little pointer. In other words, what sort of
thing I command you from A to Z Whatever it is, if it's more
than that direct marker, it is certainly a command of universal,
perpetual import. Psalm 117, 1, O praise the Lord,
all ye nations, praise Him, all ye people. God commands us to praise Him,
and He has regulated this worship even to the smallest detail.
Again, God has not given us a series of disconnected ideas concerning
His worship. We need to be very careful that
we do not misunderstand this. He's given us a coherent doctrine
which is discernible in His Word. Exodus 25 verse 40, "...look
that thou make them after their pattern which was shown thee
in the mount." Now the word pattern here actually refers to a written
or detailed plan. especially a plan that was given
for the purpose of constructing a blueprint. And that's exactly
and precisely what God has given us in his word when it comes
to the matter of regulating his worship. It contains a written
and a detailed plan for the proper manner and the proper mode of
worshiping the true God. and this plan contains the whole
of it. We don't need to go outside of
it to find anything substantial for the worship of God. But again, the regulative principle
of worship isn't the matter of the opinions of various sinful
men. This regulative principle is not coming to us from the
mouth of Moses, but God is speaking this direct. This is coming immediately
from the mouth of the Most High, the I Am. And if we regard it
as that, we will be much more inclined to be obedient. If we
think this is just simply some mosaic enactment, We may be more
inclined to set it aside, but this is in fact the word of God
for all time. If we disregard Moses and his
mission, we're told that a greater than Moses sent him. Exodus 3.14,
God said unto Moses, I am that I am. And he said, Thou shalt
say unto the children of Israel, I am has sent me unto you. Even if it were Moses, He only did it because I AM sent
Him. But we don't have to stop there because in this command,
God speaks in the first person. We see as well that God gave
us commandments that they might be kept. He didn't give us His
word for our opinion. He gave us His word for our obedience. That's what he tells us in Leviticus
22. Therefore shall you keep my commandments
and do them. I am the Lord. When God says,
I am the Lord, he is directing you to that supreme authority
which overrides all other authority, including your own. The worship
of God isn't to be conformed to your desires, to the dictates
and preferences of your own taste, or the taste of others, or the
taste of some committee. The worship of God, the acceptable
worship of God, is in fact that which he's told us is acceptable. Now look at the care that he
and joins upon us in the exercise of the matter of divine worship.
He says, observe. Keep it. Obey this commandment
with diligence and in detail. Observe it. The word that's used here doesn't
simply mean that we should take note as if we've been instructed,
but rather this word means that we should take heed that we do
it. We're to conform ourselves with
diligence and with regard to detail to the whole doctrine
of the Word of God. We're to observe to do it. to
do what God has said, to behave or have our conduct in that particular
way. We're to take a particular care
to the worship of God in order to change our conduct in this
matter. We're to do what God says and
not what we want. Deuteronomy 17 verse 11, according
to the sentence of the law which they, that is the Levites, the
teachers of the true God, the sentence of the law which they
shall teach thee, and according to the judgment which they shall
tell thee, thou shalt do. Thou shalt not decline from the
sentence which they shall show thee to the right hand nor to
the left. If we would but consider the
nature of fallen man, we would be moved to a realization of
the necessity for this command concerning the worship of God. We cannot know that acceptable
way. We are sinners by nature. We
are darkness by nature. He is light by nature. He is holy and just and righteous
by nature. We cannot approach unto Him by
nature. We must approach unto Him only
in and through our Lord Jesus Christ. Observe then that God
is telling us to take heed to perform the whole duty of worship,
not by parts or in parts, but in its entirety. Keeping the
regulative principle is not a matter of keeping it only in parts. Psalm 29.2, give unto the Lord
the glory due unto his name. Worship the Lord in the beauty
of holiness. There are proposals that I've seen that call for
the churches to all worship God singing songs. And that's good. That's according to the regulative
principle. That's according to God's appointment
and command. But the same proposals I've seen
have asked people who are psalm singers to compromise with people
who want instrumental music in the worship of God. They want
a compromise that allows the bringing in of Old Testament
types and ceremonies to pollute the New Testament worship of
God. The regulative principle is not asking us to do it by
halves. We're to do it in its entirety. We don't have a right to pick
and choose what part of the regulative principle we want to abide by.
We don't have a right to tell God, oh, well, we're going to
keep these holy days, but we're going to make them properly reformed. We're going to put Christ back
in Christmas. We're going to put Jesus back
in Easter. We're going to somehow re-infuse
true religion into pagan usages as if it had ever been there.
Or we're going to try to infuse the New Testament theology into
the Old Testament ceremonies and deny that Christ has actually
come in the flesh, or we're going to pick up and use the things
that please men in the worship of God so that we can, as I've
heard some say, be all things to all men so that some men might
be saved. That's not a command to compromise
the regulative principle of God in his worship. It's not enough for us to know
the will of God, we have to seek to do the will of God. Jesus says in John 13, 17, if
you know these things, happy are you if you do them. And this
is especially the case in the matter of worship, I'm the Lord God. This is my
name and my glory will I not give to another, neither my praise
to graven images. Now let me tell you, those people
who have low thoughts of this regulative principle of worship
demonstrate this. They demonstrate that they have
very high thoughts of themselves and they have very low thoughts
of God. They think they know better. They think they have
some kind of inside line on what God is going to accept, even
though He's warned us He will not. Listen to what the psalmist says.
Psalm 50 verse 21. These things hast thou done,
and I kept silence, though thou thoughtest that I was altogether
such a one as thyself. but I will reprove thee and set
them in order before thine eyes." Again, listen to what Paul told
those at Mars Hill. When describing the true God,
he says, neither is he worshipped with men's hands as though he
needed anything saying he giveth through all life and breath and
all things. What is it God needs from you? Well Paul just told
you. The answer is nothing. You need
everything from him and nothing that you offer to him is acceptable
to him apart from Him sanctifying it by the Spirit of God. And the Spirit of God is not
going to work, is not going to sanctify anything that you're
doing apart from the Word of God, particularly in this matter
of the worship of God. You have no reason to expect
that. It's not acceptable worship. It's not okay with God. Listen to the regulatory prohibitions
given us here in Deuteronomy 12.32. Thou shalt not add thereto. There's preemptory force in this
statement. God, just as much as he's giving
us this command in the first person, he's addressing you in
the second. Whoever hears this communication,
those who are hearers of this law, those who profess to be
the people of the true God, thou, what does he go on to say? Shout
not. In other words, permission denied.
All permission is denied by the Holy One of Israel. You are not
allowed to do what? Well, you're not allowed to add.
And literally this word means to increase or cause to add to.
You're not to add thereto. That is, to the commandments
of God concerning His worship. So, think about this now. You
don't have a right to add anything to the worship
of God that He hasn't commanded. You simply do not have the right. But there's another prohibition
here. He says, nor diminish from it. Nor tells us that this is equally
prohibitive. The word diminish means to reduce,
decrease, subtract, omit, or have some reduction Again, the
command or communication of God concerning what is and is not
acceptable in His worship. You don't have a right to add
to it nor detract from it. You don't have a right. Why? Because, you see, you're to observe
what God has commanded you to do. He's already told you. He's given you exactly what you
need to do. Remember, He gave you a blueprint.
He gave you a pattern. Now there are three ways that
we add or increase that which God commands in His worship.
First of all, we can add in our thoughts. And we do that whenever
we join to the meaning of the Word of God any vain notions
of our own. And we can say as well, whenever
we join to the worship of God, any vain notions of our own. When we try to impose our thoughts
on what God has commanded, we've added to it. Isaiah 55, verse
8 and 9. For my thoughts are not your
thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For
as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher
than your ways, and my thoughts and your thoughts. The customs of the heathen are
vain. Thoughts which arise from your
fallen nature, from indwelling sin, are vain. You have no right
to add your interpretation or your meaning with your own spin
or twist on what it is God has commanded. Let us therefore not
cease to strive against these vain imaginations. We need to
seek to bring all of our thoughts in line with God's thoughts. which is what the Apostle tells
us in 2 Corinthians 10, 5. We are to cast down imaginations
and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge
of God, bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience
of Christ. We're told, we know, if you've
ever stopped to reflect, you know, very often your thoughts
are contrary to the thoughts of God. How often has the Word
of God caused you to stick? You hear something, and you just
say to yourself, that can't be so. And you hear it again, and
you wish it were not so, but finally you must bring your thoughts
into conformity to and submission to that Word. And you have to
do that in the realm of worship. We add or increase what God commands
in His worship in word when we join to the teaching of the Word
of God, doctrines of our own devising. That is, when we move
from these vain thoughts and we begin to construct elaborate
defenses, we try to come up with reasons why it's okay. What? Why is it okay? for us to use
musical instruments? Why is it okay for us to sing
hymns of human composition? Why is it okay to observe these
holy days? We can come up with all kinds
of doctrines of our own devising, but all of these doctrines stand
condemned in Jeremiah 29-23 which says, they have spoken lying
words in my name which I have not commanded them. And Jesus,
in Mark 7, how be it in vain do they worship me, teaching
for doctrines the commandments of men. It's a false teaching,
and it leads to a false practice. We're in violation of this regulative
principle, and we bring it into the worship of God when we construct
false doctrines to justify false practice, which is the last way
that we, in fact, add or increase the command in the worship of
God, when we do it in deed. Once we've devised a doctrine,
the next logical step for fallen men is to bring it into the service
of God. And so men construct ceremonies
and rituals of their own devising, which is exactly what Needhab
and Abihu did, and it did not end well with them. We're told
in Leviticus 10 verse 1, Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron,
took either of them as censer and put fire therein, put incense
thereon, and offered strange fire before the Lord, which He
commanded them not." What did they do? They didn't
detract. They added to the Word of God. They added to the command. They didn't follow through and
observe what God commanded them to do. They thought that it might
be okay if they jump-started their ritual with a little fire
from somewhere else. And God killed them for doing
it. Likewise, there are three ways
in which we can diminish or decrease from what God commands in His
worship. Again, we can do it in thought.
And that is whenever we worship God with mere formality. When our minds are afar off. Matthew 15 verse 8, This people
draw nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with
their lips, but their heart is far from me. God complains about
formal worship, which fails to join our thoughts to what we're
doing, we're diminishing. We're not observing to do what
God has commanded, we're diminishing. But we do it in word as well.
Whenever we neglect to receive the whole word of God in this
matter of worship. You know, every failure in this
respect is dangerous and sinful. Proverbs 5, 7. Hear me now, therefore,
all you children, and depart not from the words of my mouth. There are a lot of people who
find this idea of a regulative principle simply too restrictive. It's not to their liking, it's
not to their taste. It seems to them to be a deadening
thing. It seems to them to be very off-putting. And certainly it will not serve a very useful purpose in
evangelizing the world. Again, that problem is rooted
in a very large misunderstanding of the purpose of the Church.
The public worship of the Church is for the people of God, it's
not for the evangelizing of the world. We need to receive the whole
Word of God in this matter of worship. We need to obey this
regulative principle. We need to be careful that we
don't diminish from this regulative principle by refusing to heed
its very Word. We do it indeed whenever we neglect
to make use of the whole service of God as detailed in His Word.
In our confession in chapter 21, section 5, we're told that
the reading of the Scriptures with God we fear, sound preaching
and conscionable hearing of the word and obedience unto God with
understanding, faith and reverence, singing of psalms with grace
in the heart, as also the due administration and worthy receiving
of the sacraments instituted by Christ, are all parts of the
ordinary religious worship of God, beside religious oaths,
vows, solemn fastings, and thanksgivings upon special occasions, which
are in their several times and seasons to be used in a holy
and religious manner." There are a lot of things there
that are deeds which are commanded in the Word of God. And yet there
are a lot of professing Presbyterians who don't follow these in deed. If we move simply beyond the
issue of psalm singing and people who want to add to that, by the
way, when they add to the singing of psalms, what they're really
doing is detracting from the singing of psalms because every
time they sing a hymn, they're not singing a psalm. And so it's not as if they're
doing one or the other, they're doing both. They're adding to
and diminishing from what God said to do. But if we move beyond that, we
have all of this talk of religious oaths and vows, solemn fastings
and thanksgivings upon special occasions. It used to be the
practice of the Presbyterian Church to have appointed days
of fasting, appointed days of thanksgiving. It used to be the practice of
the Presbyterian and Reformed Churches to engage themselves
in religious oaths and vows. When we fail to do this, when
we try to make the case that these things belong to another
dispensation, the Old Testament, We're denying this regulated
principle of worship. We're failing to observe to do
everything God has commanded us to do. That doesn't say that these things
are ordinary parts of religious worship, but they still are part
of religious worship. And their neglect is, in fact,
a neglect that calls into serious question those very churches
which would profess to hold to the regulative principle and
even outwardly to appear to be very strict in their adherence. The fact is we must adhere to
this whatsoever thing God has commanded we have to observe
to do it. We can't add to it, we can't
diminish from it. So, what should we do? Well, we need
to be admonished that it is very important that we take heed how
we hear. We need to be very careful that
we exercise a godly diligence in these matters of worship,
that we be not found guilty of adding to nor subtracting from
the acceptable worship of the living God. God has given us a means and
he's given us his word and we are without excuse if we do not
worship him according to his command. Finally, we need to
consider and be comforted knowing that Christ our Savior is the
end of the law, including the regulative principle. Just as there was only one place
where the people of old could meet with God, the place where
He said His name, so too in our day there is only one place where
we can meet with God. There is one God and one mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus. He is the only
place where we can meet with God. He is the only one that
can make all that we do acceptable before Him. We have to be acceptable
in Him or we will not be accepted. And so although it is our responsibility
to observe to do it, we know that it is the failure of our
nature and we will not do all that we ought to do in this matter
either. The presence of indwelling sin
in the spots of the children of God are no excuse for us to
ignore this principle altogether. We need then to come together
and reason with God and ask Him to have mercy upon us and accept
the offerings of our lips, the fruit of our lips in thanksgiving
to Him, not for our sake, but for Christ's sake. And know that
the only way that we will find acceptance with Him is when He
joins with us in the singing of His praises, because we're
told in Hebrews 2, He offers up a song of praise in the midst
of His brethren. And if He's offering up that
song of praise, we can be assured He's doing it in the words which
He's indicted and by the Spirit which He's given. And that is
the way we ought to do it as well. Let's observe then to do
the things He's commanded us and not seek to add to nor diminish
from it in any way. Amen. Still Waters Revival Books
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