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Worship in the Bible
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- Description:
- Taylor Clarence Smith was Visiting Professor of New Testament. Smith is announced as Chapel speaker (0:00-0:08). A hymn is played (0:09-5:11). A word of prayer is followed by a hymn (cut) (5:12-6:52). Colossians 2:16-23 is the Scripture reading (6:53-8:34). The choir sings a song of worship (8:35-12:11). Smith begins his sermon by quoting from the books of Micah, Hosea, Psalms, and Matthew, focusing on Christians worshipping in shadows (12:12-16:18). Using the Scripture reading from Colossians, he emphasizes the Colossians’ integration of astral religion with the Christian faith (16:19-17:29). Smith explains that we have shadows, similar to the Jews’ shadows of worship of the altar and of the law (17:30-17:59). He lists several of these shadows, with the first one being the shadow of the manipulation of God—we use Him for our own advantages (18:00-24:01). Another shadow is one of admiration: instead of following Jesus’ teachings, we just admire and praise Him for His works (24:02-27:16). A third shadow is Bible worship, which involves those who “read” the Bible, but do not fully understand it or they place their own understandings on the Scriptures (27:17-27:48). This shadow leads to the belief that the Bible is God and just as the Pharisees, we can hide God behind the legalism of the Bible (27:49-30:52). Smith expresses that worshipping God is an encounter with a person not a book, and hence we should desire to turn away from worshipping God in the shadows (30:53-33:32). A word of prayer closes the sermon (33:32-33:59).
- Subject:
- Worship in the Bible and Bible. Colossians
- Creator:
- Smith, T. C. (Taylor Clarence), 1915- and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- November 3, 1988
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Taylor_Clarence_Smith_1988-11-03
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- Description:
- Dr. C. Welton Gaddy was a PhD graduate from Southern Seminary and was the campus minister at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. The service begins with piano music (0:00-3:00). There is a word of prayer (3:01-4:00). Thanks are given to those who have attended and supported the chapel services for the year (4:01-4:52). Welton Gaddy is introduced as the chapel speaker (4:53-6:04). The choir sings an anthem (6:05-9:14). Gaddy speaks of the reasons Zacchaeus was up a tree, both figuratively and literally (9:15-11:30). He uses Zacchaeus’s action to illustrate how in the present faith is becoming reason and routine, leading to a “passivity which breeds mediocrity” (11:31-13:05). Gaddy speaks of the word “hallelujah” being “ecstatic, unrestricted praise” and shares that one must not hold anything back in worshipping Jesus even if people worship in different ways (13:06-21:16). Gaddy argues, using the idea that if Zacchaeus would have held back his abandon, he may not have experienced Jesus, to show that all believers should not hold anything back lest they miss experiencing Jesus (21:17-26:29). Gaddy closes the service in a word of prayer (26:30-26:56).
- Subject:
- Praise of God and Worship in the Bible
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Gaddy, Welton
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- April 30, 1986
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Welton_Gaddy_1986-04-30
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- Description:
- Donald Hustad was the V.V. Cook Professor of Organ at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. The service begins with organ music (00:00-06:34). The speaker gives a word of prayer (06:35-07:50). Donald Hustad is introduced as the Page Lecturer (07:51-10:20). The choir sings the anthem (10:21-12:08). The title of Hustad’s lecture is “Sing Unto the Lord an Old Song.” Hustad speaks about hymns and worship in the evangelical tradition, and he walks through the problematic history of abandonment of historic worship for newer songs and styles as a reaction against traditionalism and liberalism (10:21-48:20). Hustad leads the audience in the reading of a hymn, and he gives the scriptural and historical background of the hymn (48:21-51:09). Hustad ends the service with a recommendation for reading hymnals (51:09-53:01).
- Subject:
- Hymns, Church music, and Worship in the Bible
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Hustad, Don
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- October 3, 1984
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Page_Lecture_Donald_Hustad_1984-10-03
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- Description:
- C. Michael Hawn was Associate Professor of Church Music. The service begins with C. Michael Hawn singing of the Lord’s Prayer (00:00-01:54). The speaker gives a word of prayer (01:55-02:45). An announcement is given on the evening praise service, and Professor Delos Miles leads in a word of prayer (02:46-04:10). C. Michael Hawn is introduced as the worship leader for chapel, and the speaker reads from Psalm 51 (04:11-07:40). Hawn begins his sermon by sharing his testimony about growing up as a Christian in Iowa (07:41-14:36). He speaks about the realities of being a worship minister in Baptist life, and he argues that music ministry should be gospel centered and for the edification of the church (14:37-23:01). Hawn closes the service with a song of worship (23:02-26:44).
- Subject:
- Witness bearing (Christianity), Church music, and Worship in the Bible
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Hawn, C. Michael
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 2, 1982
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_C_Michael_Hawn_1982-09-02