Danii writes
I’m not sure I see the problem, for from what I can see, the NT churches had none of this either (or at least not in a mandatory formalised way.)
Actually, it is very hard to work out what church looked like in the NT era, but there are key principles that arise. The word of God governs the church, which should be read in the meeting, and taught. There is provision for the ministry of the word to the congregation (prophesying) provided it is intelligible and is weighed up by the elders. In the letters of Paul we see helpful summaries of the Christian faith. All through the NT it is clear that we never graduate from needing God’s mercy.
Now Danii, I am not arguing that the use of written creeds/ confessions etc is mandated by the New Testament, but I am suggesting that they help congregations remember key truths. If they are not used at all, it is my experience that many congregations drift into pragmatism as the final authority, semi pelagian theology raises its ugly head, and sin and judgment tend to lose their place as central truths to understanding the gospel. One only has to go to modern Christian funerals to see this happening: the eulogies now take pride of place over a sermon explaining the death and resurrection of our Lord and the implications for us. Instead, the deceased is presented as a near sinless person, and this even at Christian funerals!
And then there is the authority of the Bible over the church. When the only readings are those explained by the sermon we are unwittingly teaching people that the scriptures cannot stand alone. Further, much of the Bible is not read at all. The BCP ensured that the Bible was read through and that the Bible, not the sermon, was the supreme authority over us.
Finally, I don’t think that the future lies in a return to set piece liturgy. I am urging much more thought about what has been gained and what has been LOST by the changes in the way in which we do church. I myself think the answer to what I see as a very serious problem is to encourage denominational leaders and respected theologians to workshop with clergy/ pastors what they do at church and critique what they do theologically.
Lamentably in my own denomination our denominational leaders do not appear to have the time to do this, and sometimes in the past bishops have used a stick, not encouragement in a workshop environment, to help others think through how we organise church. However, we do need more rigorous thinking about church- I believe this is now urgent.