History, asked by shagun7242, 8 months ago

Narrate how traditional worship

Answers

Answered by Kannan0017
1

Answer:

Traditional Worship: ... Many churches that offer traditional services do so either because it is apart of their identity (and people come to their church seeking traditional worship) or they have (typically older) members who have been at the church a long time and want to continue worshiping the same way.

Explanation:

Focus – Many traditional worship songs are “about” God. The words of the hymns and anthems talk about the attributes and activities of God. Contemporary worship songs are “to” God, that is they have the worshipper addressing God directly. There are strengths and weaknesses in both styles.

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Answered by tanyaprasad1216
0

"Traditional" to me means worship as it was when I was in my formative years (1940-1955) up in Detroit, Michigan. The Methodist Church (not UMC then) up north was quite formal (think Episcopalian-light) and we often had all 5 parts of the traditional Mass (Kyrie, Gloria, Sanctus/Benedictus, Credo, and Agnus Dei) incorporated into the services, especially for Communion (in English, though, and usually spoken, not sung). We still pretty much followed the Order of Worship set forth by our Founder, John Wesley, who was an Anglican priest until he died. Our services were quite liturgical and included 3 hymns, 2 or 3 Scripture readings, a unison prayer or responsive reading, both the Doxology and Gloria Patri, and a Sermon (of course) that usually was 15 minutes or less. The choir usually opened the service with a short choral Call to Worship ("The Lord Is In His Holy Temple" or some such) and followed the Pastoral Prayer with a response ("Hear Our Prayer, O Lord" or similar). The choir sang an anthem during the collection of Tithes and Offerings. Every so often our Communion service was the full hour and was one of musical responses using the old Scottish 4-part chants.

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