The Church, the Place of Worship
It would seem that at first Christians
worshiped in any place which they could use with safety.
“But soon the Lord revealed Himself to the
world as the King of it, until in a few generations
the earth was covered with His shrines, and mines
and forests and human skill offered to Him their best
gifts.” “The custom of setting apart
places and houses as holy and dedicated to God’s
worship was ever a part of the faith of God’s
people.” Thus it was said to Israel in
the wilderness, “Let them make Me a sanctuary;
that I may dwell among them.” Of the building
of the Temple Solomon says, “Behold, I purpose
to build a house unto the name of the Lord my God,
as the Lord spake unto David my father, saying, Thy
son, whom I will set upon thy throne in thy room,
he shall build a house unto My name.” Our
Lord confirms this practice as one of sound and true
religion. He called the Temple “My Father’s
house,” and by cleansing it of buyers and sellers
showed that it was to be used for no other purpose
than the worship of God. Christians from the
earliest days have had consecrated places which were
held in reverence as distinct from the home.
And so the Prayer-Book says, “Devout and holy
men, as well under the Law as under the Gospel, moved
either by the express command of God, or by the secret
inspiration of the blessed Spirit, and acting agreeably
to their own reason and sense of the natural decency
of things, have erected houses for the public worship
of God, and separated them from all unhallowed, worldly,
and common uses, in order to fill men’s minds
with greater reverence for His glorious Majesty, and
affect their hearts with more devotion and humility
in His service; which pious works have been approved
of and graciously accepted by our heavenly Father.”
It is an ancient custom to dedicate
churches to the glory of God and in honor of some
special saint. This custom probably arose from
the fact that in early days churches were commonly
built over the graves of martyrs, or in the place
of their martyrdom, and hence were called by their
names. Sometimes the church is named from some
fact in the sacred history of our redemption, as the
Incarnation, the Annunciation, the Nativity, the Epiphany,
the Transfiguration, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection,
the Ascension. Or it may take its name from the
Holy Trinity, or from some title of our Lord or of
the Holy Ghost. Or it may be named for one or
all of the holy angels. It must be felt to be
a decided advantage to have the place of the worship
of God designated by a dignified name, and one non-secular
and religious in its associations.
The word “church,” by
which we designate the place of divine worship, being
derived from the Greek kuriakon, the Lord’s
house, embodies the idea of its sacred character.
A canon, or law, of the Church forbids
consecration so long as a debt remains on the building.
It may, however, before consecration be used for
worship.
As consecrated and set apart for the
holy offices of religion, the church is the proper
place for the ministration of the Sacraments, and,
preferably, for marriages and burials. The Church’s
rule in reference to Holy Baptism is that even children
shall not be baptized at home “without
great cause and necessity.” This rule is
laid down because the decency and solemnity suited
to so great a Sacrament can be had better in the church,
set apart and arranged for the purpose, than in any
private house, and in order that by the public ministration
others may be instructed by the service.
Of the Solemnization of Matrimony
the Church says, “The persons to be married
shall come into the body of the church, or shall be
ready in some proper house, with their friends and
neighbors.” That the church is named first
as the proper place shows that it is to be preferred
for a marriage. It can be solemnized there in
a more seemly and dignified way than elsewhere, and
those coming to plight their vows may be more deeply
impressed with the solemnity and importance of the
step.
In the Office for the Burial of the
Dead the church only (or the churchyard) is named
as the place. The Church evidently has no thought
of any other place as appropriate for the burial of
her children. It is the spiritual home of all
the baptized. Christian consolations are preeminently
there imparted. These considerations, in addition
to those of reverence and convenience, mark this as
the proper place for the Burial Office.
The consecrated character of the church
should have distinct recognition in use and conduct.
The building has been thereby “separated from
all unhallowed, worldly, and common uses.”
It is wrong to use it for purposes of amusement or
business. It has been given to God. It
has been consecrated for religious purposes.
It is sacrilege to treat it as a common thing.
It should be recognized also in personal
conduct. A prayer should always be said on entering.
The manner should be reverent and quiet. All
light and useless talk should be restrained.
It should be recognized in conduct
in reference to others. As “God’s
house,” all of His children have a rightful place
there. This right should be recognized by courtesy
to others, especially to strangers and to people in
humble station.
Wherever possible, the church should
be open every day and all day for private prayer and
meditation. Many must of necessity live in crowded
dwellings, or in circumstances in which quiet and privacy
are hard to obtain. But to all, whatever their
circumstances, the open church offers opportunities
not afforded at home. Sacred associations and
objects greatly aid thought and devotion; and in the
quiet church, where there is so much to remind
of God and sacred things, and so little of the world
and of sin, we can think and pray better than elsewhere.
It has been found a very helpful thing in the Christian
life to form the habit of stopping in the church, whenever
in its neighborhood, for a few moments of prayer,
and to use it also as a place of refuge in time of
trial and temptation.