WHY
DO PRESBYTERIANS OBSERVE HOLY DAYS?
Dr. Samuel Miller, Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church
Government at Princeton Seminary wrote confidently in 1835
"Presbyterians do not observe Holy Days."1
Yet some 164 years after the book in which Miller made that bold
declaration was published, an informal survey of 30 churches in the
Presbyterian Church in America, the largest of the theologically
conservative Presbyterian bodies in the United States, indicated
that 83% of the churches do regularly celebrate Holy Days.
What happened in those intervening 164 years? Did the practice of
Presbyterians change significantly in that time or was Miller’s
declaration inaccurate when he made it? What might have brought
about such a radical change if it did in fact occur? This essay will
seek to answer these questions. Because of space constraints,
considerably more time will be spent examining the history of the
development of Presbyterian practice in the United States regarding
Holy Days than in examining the theological foundations for that
practice. Nevertheless, it is appropriate to begin by discussing the
theological reasoning behind Dr. Miller’s declaration.
Presbyterians, and indeed most Christians, who describe their
theology as distinctively "Reformed", believe that the Worship of
the Church is one of the most important aspects of the Faith.
Furthermore they believe that this worship must be guided by the
theology of the Bible. What makes the worship of those whose
theological roots are in the Puritan wing of the Reformation
distinctive, is their belief that the only worship that is
acceptable before God, is that worship which is expressly commanded
in His word, the Bible. This Puritan belief is succinctly summed up
in the most important of the Puritan Creedal documents, The
Westminster Confession of Faith, in the first section of the
twenty-first chapter:
The light of nature showeth that there is a God, who hath
lordship and sovereignty over all, is good, and doth good unto
all, and is therefore to be feared, loved, praised, called
upon, trusted in, and served, with all the heart, and with all
the soul, and with all the might. But the acceptable way of
worshiping the true God is instituted by himself, and so
limited by his own revealed will, that he may not be worshiped
according to the imaginations and devices of men, or the
suggestions of Satan, under any visible representation, or any
other way not prescribed in the Holy Scripture.
In accordance with their beliefs, the Puritans attempted to ensure
that only those elements that were directly instituted by God were
present in their worship. Such worship was distinctively different
from that of other Protestants such as the Lutherans and Anglicans,
who tended to believe that true worship consisted of that which was
commanded by God and anything which was not specifically
condemned. Accordingly, outside of the Puritan wing of the
Reformation, many innovations in worship that had been adopted by
the Church since the closing of the Canon were retained. The fact
that the Anglican church in particular retained many of these
innovations is particularly important, because it was in the attempt
to thoroughly reform the Church of England that the majority of the
Puritan battles were waged, and it was out of these battles that the
Presbyterian Confessional Standards came.
Amongst those innovations that continued to be practiced by the
Anglican church after they broke with Rome, was the observance of
what had come to be called the Church Year. The Church Year
consisted of a series of festivals or feast days on which the church
traditionally held special worship services and employed particular
liturgies. While feast days were most commonly held to celebrate the
birth or martyrdom of a Saint, the two most popular feast days in
the Anglican Church were undoubtedly Christmas and Easter, which
celebrated the birth and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ. The
Puritans did not observe Christmas and Easter because they did not
wish to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, but because they
believed that God had instituted a cycle not of two special feast
days, but of fifty two holy days on which to glorify Jesus Christ
and to preach on the importance of his birth, death, and
resurrection.
These fifty two holy days were, of course, Sunday – the Lord’s
day. The Puritans observed every Sunday as the New Testament
continuation of the Old Testament Sabbath day of rest and worship:
As it is the law of nature, that, in general, a due
proportion of time be set apart for the worship of God; so, in
his Word, by a positive, moral, and perpetual commandment
binding all men in all ages, he hath particularly appointed
one day in seven, for a Sabbath, to be kept holy unto him:
which, from the beginning of the world to the resurrection of
Christ, was the last day of the week, and, from the
resurrection of Christ, was changed into the first day of the
week, which, in Scripture, is called the Lord's day, and is to
be continued to the end of the world, as the Christian
Sabbath.2
For the Puritans, these Christian Sabbaths were the only days
that were specifically set aside by the Lord for worship. There had
indeed been specific feast days apart from the Sabbath in the Old
Testament period, but the Puritans felt that these feast days were
part of the Ceremonial Law, and as such had passed away when Christ,
the reality which they foreshadowed, appeared. The Sabbath, on the
other hand, as both a creation ordinance (cf. Genesis 2:2-3) and
part of the Moral Law (Exodus 20:8-11) was an occasion to be
observed by all of the people of God throughout all the ages.
Part of the proof for the Puritans that new feast days were not
to be created and observed was the fact that they had not been
invented or observed by either the Apostolic or the early Church.
The Scriptures contained no references whatsoever to the actual
dates on which the events which were later celebrated were to be
observed had occurred. The church did not begin to seriously
conjecture as to when these events had taken place until the third
century AD and it was not until the fourth century AD that the
church began to celebrate the feast of the nativity (Christmas) for
instance. The placement by the church of this event on December 25th
had less to do with the date they felt was most likely for the birth
of Christ, than the desire to undermine the celebration of the
Saturnalia, a pagan festival beginning on the December 17th,
with a rival Christian holiday. The choice of December 25th,
the winter solstice, was made because the Roman Emperor Aurelian,
had decreed in 274 AD that December 25th was to be kept
as a public festival in honor of the Invincible Sun.3
The choice of the 25th was therefore both an attempt to
challenge the Pagan feast day and to maximize on the obvious
metaphor between the "invincible sun" of Roman Paganism and the
"Invincible Son" (Jesus Christ) of Christianity.
But more important than the questionable circumstances of their
institution for the Puritans, was the simple fact that the
celebration of these holy days had no warrant in the Word of God. On
the contrary, the Puritans and their descendents were concerned that
the Word of God forbade their celebration:
We believe that the Scriptures not only do not warrant the
observance of such days, but that they positively
discountenance it. Let any one impartially weigh Colossians
ii. 16 and also, Galatians iv. 9, 10, 11; and then say whether
these passages do not evidently indicate, that the inspired
Apostle disapproved of the observance of such days.4
Another concern for the Puritans was the mode in which these Feast
Days were commonly celebrated. In English society at the beginning
of the 17th century the celebration of Christmas had
become particularly scandalous. Far from being a season of dignified
worship it had become a prolonged bacchanal that seemed to have more
to do with the original feasting and festivity of the Roman
Saturnalia than the celebration of Christ’s birth:
Celebrants devoted much of the season to pagan pleasures
that were discouraged during the remainder of the year. The
annual indulgence in eating, dancing, singing, sporting, card
playing, and gambling escalated to magnificent proportions.5
Accordingly Puritan condemnation of the festival of Christmas in
particular often focused on the common abuses of the holiday.
William Prynne’s Histriomastix (1633) for instance commented
"Into what a stupendous height of more than pagan impiety… have we
not now degenerated!" Another common complaint was that well over
half of the days on the calendar were holy days. This seriously cut
into the amount of time that could be spent occupied in labor. It
seemed to John Northbrooke, another English Reformer writing in
1577, that the Pope, "not God in his word" had appointed Holy days
"to traine up the people in ignorance and ydleness, wherby half of
the year, and more, was overpassed (by their ydle holy-dayes) in
loytering and vaine pastimes & c., in restrayning men from their
handy labors and occupations."6
It should be stressed that the Puritans and Presbyterians were
not the only descendants of the Reformation who held to this belief.
Even the inheritors of the Radical Reformation, the Anabaptists,
Baptists, and Quakers loathed Holy days as Papist abominations
without scriptural warrant. This united support for the abandonment
of feast days was to prove particularly important in the colonies of
New England, where the celebration of feast days was to become
virtually unheard of outside of the few Anglican enclaves that
existed.7
While the Reformers in the Anglican church corporately decided to
retain these holy days in 1562 and endeavored unsuccessfully to gain
control of them, the Puritans decided to strike them from their
calendars entirely for the above stated reasons.
When the Puritans assembled at Westminster in the 1640s to draw
up the Standards that would define Presbyterian belief for centuries
to follow, they did not mince words regarding holy days. The
Directory for the Publick Worship of God, which was a part of the
original Westminster Standards adopted by parliament, was intended
to guide and inform (but not liturgically constrain like the
Anglican Book of Common Prayer) the worship of the Church. Included
in the Directory was the bold theological declaration:
THERE is no day commanded in scripture to be kept holy under
the gospel but the Lord's day, which is the Christian Sabbath.
Festival days, vulgarly called Holy-days, having no warrant
in the word of God, are not to be continued.8
The Puritans had declared Holy Days theologically unwarranted,
and as they began to gain the upper hand in the English Parliament,
they moved decisively against both the public and ecclesiastical
celebration of Holy Days. In 1642 Parliament outlawed the seasonal
plays and pageants that proliferated around holy days and purposely
met on every Christmas from 1644 to 1652 to show their disdain for
what they felt was an unwarranted innovation that produced nothing
but moral abuses. Finally in 1652 after the Triumph of the Puritan
Statesman Oliver Cromwell and the beheading of Charles I, the
observance of Holy days was "strongly prohibited" and ministers who
preached on the birth of Christ on Christmas risked imprisonment.
Shops were required to keep open and Churches were heavily fined for
attempting to put up decorations.9
As was to be expected, many of the common English people and
Anglican clergy, were not at all happy with this Puritan suppression
of "their holiday." Consequently, after the death of Cromwell and
the restoration of both the King and the primacy of the Anglican
Church, the celebration of holy days was once again declared legal.
Their celebration returned as a permanent part of both the English
secular and ecclesiastical landscape.
In Scotland however, the Reformation was more thoroughgoing and
the Presbyterian Church successfully purged holy days almost
entirely from their landscape. All English attempts to reintroduce
them failed miserably, and indeed Scotland was not to officially
recognize Christmas as a holiday until the 1950s – by which time the
influence of the Presbyterian church on Scotland had long since been
waning.
Before the short-lived victory of the Puritan armies in England,
many Puritans had despaired of reforming the Church of England. By
the early sixteen hundreds the struggle to reform the Anglican
church had been going on for over half a century with little or no
success. Every English monarch since Henry VIII had resisted,
suppressed, or martyred the Puritans. After years of suppression and
ecclesiastical maneuvering by Elizabeth I, Puritan hopes for reform
were rekindled with the accession of James I to the throne of
England. King James was a Scot who had been trained by Presbyterian
tutors, so it was hoped that he at last would be the monarch who
would bring in a thoroughgoing Reformation of the English Church.
These hopes were cruelly dashed however, when it became painfully
apparent that the new King despised the Puritans and was insistent
on preserving or even strengthening the existing status quo in the
English Church.
For many Puritans this was the last straw, their hopes turned
either to separating themselves entirely from the English Church or
establishing a purified church elsewhere to act as a shining
example. Some emigrated to the Holland, where the Reformed faith was
more firmly entrenched. Other Puritans looked to the new colonies in
America. It was here in the New World that Puritanism was to reach
its fullest expression outside of Scotland.
In the Puritan Settlements of New England, the celebration of
Holidays simply did not occur outside of the few Anglican enclaves.
The pilgrims who emigrated to Plymouth spent their first Christmas
in America working in the fields. By spending the days on which holy
days were observed in a cycle of routine work these Puritan settlers
showed their utter contempt for what were to them symbols of the
corruption from which they had fled. Attempts by non-Puritans
visiting the colony at Plymouth to observe Christmas were initially
tolerated, but when it was discovered that they were actively
engaged in games and revelry on this day they were angrily told by
Governor William Bradford: "Your Conscience may not let you work on
Christmas but my conscience cannot let you play while everybody else
is out working"10
After this, attempts to celebrate Christmas in the English way
were punished, and Bradford noted years later that "no one had tried
to celebrate Christmas since that second year." Other American
Colonies such as Massachusetts and Connecticut also outlawed the
observance of Christmas and after the laws abolishing holy days were
passed in England, the Colonies gladly followed with their own. Even
after the Restoration monarchy forced the repeal of these laws in
the Colonies in the 1680s, the practice of not observing holy days
remained. While it may no longer have been strictly illegal,
socially and ecclesiastically holy days were anathema. The Puritan
Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and the other Dissenters of New
England were all unified in their belief that holy days were an
abomination, and no proper part of the worship of the people of God.
This common belief was to remain in place well into the 1800s.
Samuel Miller appears to be largely correct then when he declared
that "Presbyterians do not observe Holy Days." This was certainly
the understanding of the first Presbyterians, it had been codified
in their creedal documents, and it had been their practice both in
Scotland and America for over 200 years. What then happened in the
19th and 20th centuries to change the practice
of Presbyterians?
The answer to that question is complex, but surprisingly it does
not lie in any substantial rethinking of the underlying theological
presuppositions that have guided Presbyterian worship since the
Reformation. Rather, as we shall see, the increasing willingness of
Presbyterians to observe holy days was ultimately the result of
pressure from the laity, the movement towards the adoption of a
common liturgy, and the pervasive atmosphere of pluralism,
ecumenicism, and liberalism in the American Protestantism of the 19th
and 20th century.
America after the Revolution was a very different place from
Europe, and even from the mother country she had painfully broken
away from. Unlike most European countries, which had one established
state church, America was simply awash in different forms of
Christianity. Immigrants seeking freedom from the Religious
persecution of Europe had flooded into the New World, and by the
1800s America was a nation unlike any other. A large town might have
Lutheran, Roman Catholic, and Presbyterian churches and whilst these
churches were initially strongly associated with the immigrant
populations they served (German Lutherans, French Catholics,
Scottish Presbyterians) the strong American desire for novelty and
experimentation gradually began to overcome the initial distaste for
worshipping outside of one’s own tradition.
Nowhere was this attraction more apparent than on Holy Days. By
the 1800s the initial Spiritual vigor that had marked the first
Puritan settlers of New England had begun to dampen. Nominalism,
legalism, revivalism, and heresy were all working to produce
moribund and listless congregations in what had once been the fiery
heart of Calvinism in America. Unitarian Universalism, which
represented the triumph of rationalism and liberalism over the
Scriptural faith nurtured by the Reformation, was growing in
popularity, and by 1805 even the old Puritan bastion of Harvard had
been overcome by it. In the midst of this sea-change in the
religious attitudes of New Englanders, both the laymen and clergy of
Calvinistic denominations began to express a curiosity about the
rites and practices of different denominations. After over 200 years
of non-observance, many of the descendents of the Puritans were
extremely curious about the colorful celebration of holy days in
non-Reformed denominations. In many cases it was precisely because
the Puritan victory over holy days had been so complete in the new
world that the laity and in some cases the clergy were unaware of
the theological arguments against their observance or of the battles
that had been fought in Britain over them. Henry Ward Beecher, who
was raised in a Presbyterian household, wrote in 1874:
To me Christmas was a foreign day. When I was a boy I wondered
what Christmas was. I knew there was such a time, because we
had an Episcopal church in our town and I saw them dressing it
with evergreens, and wondered what they were taking the woods
in church for; but I got no satisfactory explanation. A little
later I understood it was a Romish institution, kept up by the
Romish Church.11
Initially, the reaction amongst Reformed clergy to clandestine
visits of their parishioners to other churches on Christmas and
Easter was often to oppose it directly: "Congregationalist ministers
countered by ordering fasts on Christmas Day and tried in other ways
to show their disregard for the festival. One spent the Sunday
preceding Christmas outlining his proof that the celebration of
Jesus’ birth was ‘Popery and prelactic tyranny, a destroyer of
consciences.’"12 But gradually under
the influence of social pressure Reformed churches began to change
their practice. In 1772, for instance, the Baptist Church in Newport
observed Christmas for the first time in its history. One observer
of the service, Ezra Stiles who had studied at the then Calvinist
Yale, remarked "this looked more like keeping Christmas than any
Thing that ever before appeared amongst the Baptists or
Congregationalists in New England…It is probable this will begin the
Introduction of Christmas among the Baptist Churches, about one
hundred and fifty years from the planting of New England and near
one hundred and thirty years from the foundation of the first
Baptist Church in New England."13
Ezra Stiles was a clandestine attendee of Christmas services,
attending his first in 1769. Initially Stiles seems to have been
driven to attend Christmas services solely by curiosity, remarking
in his diary that "Had it been the will of Christ that the
Anniversary of his Nativity should have been celebrated, he would
have at least let us have known the day." As has proved to be the
case time and again however, practice can have a very strong
influence on one’s belief, and by 1782 Stiles appears to have fully
acclimated himself to observing Christmas. That year he wrote that
he did "cordially joyn with the greatest part of christendom this
day in celebrating the nativity of a divine Savior; altho’ I well
know from Ecclesiastical History that this is not the true day of
his Nativity"14
The attraction of the Holy Day celebrations of Anglican and Roman
Catholic churches for those raised in communities that did not
observe them was very strong, and this attraction certainly exerted
it’s influence on the clergy. Thomas Robbins, a Congregational
minister, made a habit of slipping into an Episcopal Church on
Christmas. In his diary he notes that on December 25th of
1804 he was invited to a quiet "Christmas entertainment" with a
number of people who were also from denominations that did not
technically observe the day. By 1808 however, Robbins was already
venturing to "preach a little in reference to Christmas Day"15
One Presbyterian Pastor, the Rev. James Waddel Alexander, was
somewhat bolder than Rev. Robbins in appeasing his curiosity. He
records that on Christmas of 1851 he attended no less than nine
different churches in New York including several Roman Catholic
ones.16
But while the practice of observing holy days was growing
informally amongst congregants and clergy in denominations that had
formally eschewed them, there was as yet no formal acknowledgement
of the legitimacy of the practice. In many cases the practice of
attending a church that celebrated a holy day was a guilty thrill
that the individual knew the guardians of doctrine in their own
denominations would frown upon.
It was not until the liturgical movement, that a means was
created within Presbyterianism that might have real success in
gaining official recognition for the observance of the Church
Year at a denominational level.
Historically Presbyterians had rejected written liturgies, the
Westminster divines had made a conscious decision not to create a
formal liturgy that would restrict their freedom in worship and for
which they saw no warrant in Scripture, but they decided instead to
write a simple directory that would give guidance to
ministers in preparing their worship. The colonial Presbyterians had
inherited the same distrust of liturgies as their Puritan forbears,
but their distrust went even further. In 1729 when the American
Presbyterians decided to formally adopt the Westminster Standards,
they did not officially adopt the Directory for Publick Worship,
which had been considered an integral part of the Standards by the
Puritans who framed it. This was because of the hostility of many
American Presbyters to any document that smacked of usurping
the role of Scripture in guiding and shaping their worship. As a
result the Adopting Act framed by the Synod of 1729 only
"recommended" the directory to its members. In 1786 when the
Presbyterian church of the newly formed Untied States again adopted
the Westminster Standards as their Creedal statement they opted to
"receive" the the Directory as "in substance agreeable to the
institutions of the New Testament".17
This was an important distinction, for of all the documents
produced by the Westminster Assembly only the Directory
contained an explicit repudiation of the practice of observing Holy
Days. As we have seen, Holy Days are clearly inconsistent with the
idea of biblical worship as it is abundantly set forth in the
Confession, but in later years the concept that biblical worship was
only that which was explicitly authorized in scripture (this concept
is often referred to as the Regulative Principle of Worship)
was to come under attack within the Presbyterian church.
Until the mid 1800s, both the Regulative Principle and tradition
were usually enough to ensure that the Church Year had no place in
the Presbyterian Church. In 1837 the Presbyterian Church in the
United States had split into two separate camps, the "New" and "Old"
school. The issues that had caused the split had to do with the
feelings of ministers in either wing towards Calvinism and the
traditional polity and practice of the Presbyterian church. The New
School, which had been profoundly influenced by the sweeping
revivals of the 18th and early 19th centuries,
tended to believe that evangelistic considerations outweighed issues
like strict adherence to Confessional standards. Their worship
tended to be less constrained by the Regulative Principle and more
inclined to incorporate elements that were to be found in the
Protestant traditions that did not descend from Puritanism, or which
had moved further away from their roots. Despite this tendency
towards adopting new methods, the New School does not seem to have
initially been any more eager than their more conservative
counterparts to incorporate the observation of the Church Year into
their worship. Before that could happen there was to be a more
thoroughgoing revolution in Presbyterian attitudes towards worship.
In 1855 a book that began to change the way Presbyterians of both
the Old and New Schools thought about worship was published by a
Presbyterian minister by the name of Charles Baird. Baird had been
heavily influenced by the history of the continental Reformed
churches, and in particular he began to discover that the Reformed
tradition outside of England and Scotland had a rich tradition of
using liturgies. His book Eutaxia, or the Presbyterian Liturgies:
Historical Sketches, was the result of his discoveries. By
examining of the liturgies used by the likes of Calvin, Knox, and
the Huguenots, Baird was able to construct an argument for the
reintroduction of liturgical worship into the Presbyterian Church.
While Baird did not advocate a reintroduction of the Church Year
in Eutaxia, and his comments on the subject where limited to
an observation that even Calvin had observed Christmas on a few
occasions, his work paved the way for two important developments.
The first was a reassessment of the use of liturgies in
Presbyterianism and the second was the opening of a window in which
the practices of Reformed churches that had pursued a less
thoroughgoing reformation of Worship than the Scots and English
Puritans might be introduced. Both played on the growing distaste of
some within the Presbyterian church for purely extempore worship.
Baird’s book was to create an opportunity for other Presbyterians
who wanted to "improve" Presbyterian worship by making it more
liturgical, and in many cases, directly tied in to the Church year.
One such individual was a Presbyterian elder and businessman by the
name of Benjamin Bartis Comegys. Comegys had no sympathy whatsoever
for the older Puritan view of worship. His views were highly colored
by his romanticism and attachment to all things Medieval. His
sympathies lay so thoroughly in the Anglican camp that one friend
commented "A stranger visiting his library would probably conclude
that it’s owner was a clergyman of the Church of England, as few
clergymen in this country, even those of the Episcopal Church,
possessed so complete a liturgical library."18
This combination of Romanticism and sympathy for high-church
Anglicanism led Comegys to an almost total rejection of the
Regulative Principle of Worship and in particular the Puritan
rejection of Holy Days. Consequently, he endeavored to see Holy Days
restored, and while he agreed that these Holy Days had no warrant in
scripture, he pointed out that the Presbyterian Church had been
gradually introducing other innovations that did not square with the
regulative principle and that "no bad effects have followed." From
this he concluded that the average layman (and presumably himself)
could not "see why other changes may not be adopted."19
Comegys even went so far as to say that preaching was not the
primary element in Sunday worship: "The grand object of the church
service was prayer and praise" he hoped therefore to make
Presbyterianism into "a people who express their devotions in
well-ordered prayer and praise."20 To
this end Comegys published An Order of Worship with Forms of
Prayer for Divine Service in 1885 and then A Presbyterian
Prayer Book for Public Worship. His stated intention was to
"create a public opinion which will not be startled" by the move
away from traditional Presbyterian Worship according to the
Regulative Principle to a more expressly liturgical and Anglican
model. Both books had an impact on American Presbyterian practice
that was so deep that one need not hesitate in concluding Comegys
achieved his stated intention. Needless to say both of Comegy’s
books included mention of the Church Year. But as yet, there was no
official Book of Common Worship that would officially tie the
Presbyterian Church to the observation of Holy Days.
The stage had been set for the creation of such a book by the
publication of several smaller books of "forms" of worship by the
Denominational press – the Presbyterian Board of Publication. The
advantage of creating a book of forms for worship over a set liturgy
was that it seemed to tie in better with the Presbyterian practice
of not forcibly determining exactly how worship should proceed. The
first of these books was A. A. Hodge’s Manual of Forms
published in 1877. Hodge’s manual was really quite conservative and
certainly did not advocate the observance of the Church year in any
way. The second of these was Forms for Special Occasions by
ex-moderator of the General assembly, Herrick Johnson. Johnson’s
book published in 1889 wasn’t that much more radical than Hodge’s
work, but it did take another step closer to a set liturgy by
including liturgical diction in prayer.
While Hodge and Johnson were cautiously moving towards a more
expressly liturgical format in worship, by producing books that were
safe enough for the denomination to publish, private individuals
like Comegys were producing other volumes that moved considerably
more quickly. Eventually these two streams were to merge in the
production of an official Book of Common Worship. An important
agency that was to pave the way for this was the Church Service
Society formed in 1897 by two influential American Pastors –
Henry Van Dyke, pastor of the prestigious Brick Presbyterian Church
of New York City and Louis Benson an influential Philadelphian and
pastor of another prestigious church in the suburbs of that city.
Both had worked extensively to privately produce liturgical
materials that included the observation of the Church Year.
The effect of forming the Church Service Society was to
create an organization that unified the various men fighting for the
institution of a standardized Presbyterian Liturgy. Most of these
men were gentlemen of "pastoral, esthetic, and literary
inclinations"21 and not the
foremost theologians of Presbyterianism. One author observed that
this was because "most of Presbyterianism’s theologians were too
busy fighting in the opening engagements of the
fundamentalist-modernist war and defending scholastic Calvinism to
take an active part in what became a significant movement"22
While the organization stated their commitment to the
Presbyterian Standards in their "Statement of Principles" it seems
clear that with individuals such as Comegys on board, this
commitment was to a very broad definition of these Standards in
regard to worship. The group did no more than survey the practices
of churches and the way in which ministers were trained concerning
worship, but the effects of the surveys themselves were far
reaching. They stirred the Church into concerted action on the issue
of worship and led several Presbyteries, most notably that of New
York, to comprehensively examine the issue themselves.
The fruits of this examination where to quickly become apparent.
In 1903 both New York and Denver Presbyteries overtured the General
Assembly to produce forms for public worship. With Henry Van Dyke
acting as the chairman of the all-important Committee on Bills and
Overtures, the committee quickly resolved to answer the two
overtures favorably and appointed a committee to consider the
preparation of a simple common book of worship for voluntary usage
in Presbyterian churches. This measure too was approved and
eventually resulted in the publication in 1906 of the Book of Common
Worship. While the General Assembly stressed that the use of this
book was strictly voluntary and not officially recommended (the
title page simply stated "Prepared by the Committee of the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. for Voluntary
Use") it had far reaching effects – it was, after all, an official
publication of the denomination. More importantly, as far as the
question we are considering was concerned, it contained prayers for
Good Friday, Easter, Advent, and Christmas. Barely 71 years since
Samuel Miller had declared that "Presbyterians do not observe Holy
Days" the denomination had boldly proclaimed that this was no longer
true.
The 1906 edition of the Book of Common worship was eventually
replaced twenty-two years later by the edition of 1932. The 1932
edition continued the advance towards a liturgical format and
included even more emphasis on the Church year, with prayers
provided for Lent, Palm Sunday, Pentecost, and All Saints’ Day. The
1932 edition was also the first edition to be officially accepted by
the Southern Presbyterian Church. This was even more startling in
light of the fact that in 1899 the Southern General Assembly had
declared:
"There is no warrant in Scripture for the observance of
Christmas and Easter as holy days, rather the contrary (see
Gal. 4:9-11; Col. 2:16-21), and such observance is contrary to
the principles of the Reformed Faith, conducive to will
worship, and not in harmony with the simplicity of the Gospel
of Jesus Christ."23
Apparently the intervening 33 years and the obvious influence of the
1906 edition of the Book of Common Worship had made a world of
difference in Southern Presbyterian Attitudes. It is important to
note however, that the original declaration of the 1899 General
Assembly was never repealed.
As the Book of Common Worship continued to be revised, subsequent
editions indicated that Presbyterians continued to become more and
more comfortable with the observance of Holy Days. The 1946 edition
included prayers for Maundy Thursday, Ascension Day, Trinity Sunday,
and thirteen Sundays after Trinity.
By 1955, when Northern Presbyterians were once again considering
another revision of the Book of Common Worship, it had become
painfully obvious that the Directory of Worship of 1788, which was
still technically in force, had little or nothing to do with the
actual worship of Presbyterians. Indeed it was questionable whether
the Presbyterian practice could even claim to follow the Regulative
Principle of Worship outlined in chapter twenty-one of the
Westminster Confession, especially now that the gap between
Presbyterian and Anglican worship was rapidly closing. The solution,
of course, was to revise the Directory for Worship of 1788 and to
produce a modern edition that would finally put an end to the need
to give lip service to the principles that had guided the worship of
the Puritans. Accordingly, the new Directory, published in 1961,
stated that worship should draw its order and content not only from
Scripture but also from the historical experience and resources
of the Christianity. At last the Northern Presbyterian Church (UPCUSA)
had altered its theological foundations to allow for what they had
already been officially practicing for over 55 years.
This new directory was not accepted by the Southern Presbyterian
Church (PCUS) however, and the directory they produced was far
closer to the content and format of the Directory of Worship of
1788. It differed markedly from these documents however, in that it
too gave a notable prominence to the Christian year, but without
clearly admitting, as the Northern Directory had, that the new
worship model followed by the PCUS was not strictly scriptural.
In 1973 many conservative Southern Presbyterians faced with the
prospect of the union of the body they belonged to (the PCUS) with
the more liberal Northern UPCUSA opted instead to withdraw and form
a new theologically conservative Presbyterian Church. This new
church, the Presbyterian Church in America, opted not to adopt the
liturgically oriented Book of Common Worship of the PCUS, its
revised Directory of Worship, or any of the alterations that had
been made to the Presbyterian Standards since adoption in 1789.
Instead the PCA adopted the 1789 revision of the Westminster
Standards and set to work on creating their own Directory of
Worship. The non-binding Directory they created – while it is far
more liturgical than the original Directory for Publick Worship, and
includes sample forms for special occasions – does not contain a
single reference to the Church year. In fact at no point in the
history of the Presbyterian Church in America has the practice of
observing Holy Days been officially authorized by the General
Assembly, nor does anything in the Constitution of the Church
legitimate the practice. To the contrary, since the constitutional
documents of the PCA uphold and endorse the original Puritan concept
of the Regulative Principle of Worship as it is set forth in chapter
21.1 of the Westminster Confession of Faith, the practice of
observing Holy Days in worship is logically forbidden as no one has
ever been able to prove that the practice of their observation was
instituted by God in His Word. What is odd in light of this is that
very few, if any, members of the PCA view the observance of Holy
Days as an exception to the teaching of the Westminster Standards.
So while we can answer clearly why Presbyterians who belong to
the PCUSA observe Holy Days, for they changed their doctrinal
standards to allow for the practice, one cannot answer that question
when it comes to members of other bodies that have not, such as the
PCA. Their doctrinal standards clearly do not permit the practice,
and yet it would seem that the majority of PCA churches observe Holy
Days anyway. Why is that? Well one might be tempted to conclude that
it is because the General Assembly has never tackled the subject,
but the far more obvious answer is that they observe them because
the Church they left observed them and the vast majority of modern
evangelical churches around them observe them. In most cases
no-one living can remember a time when Holy Days were not observed
and most Presbyterian clergymen seem unaware that there was once a
time when they were not observed. Even the oldest of PCA saints
might be reasonably tempted to conclude that a notion that Holy Days
should not be observed represents the thought of a crackpot.
Of course, while these conclusions address the specifics of how
it was that the vast majority of American Presbyterians came to
celebrate Holy Days when their forbears clearly did not, they do not
tell us from whence the psychological impetus for these changes
comes. Perhaps it was an unconscious desire to return to the
comforting traditions and symbolism of medieval Roman Catholicism,
this is for instance, the supposition advanced by James Hastings
Nichols in Corporate Worship in the Reformed Tradition.
Nichols notes that Catholic conceptions and forms of worship
"established themselves in a few Reformed centers in the day of
cultural romanticism and political reaction" and from thence "they
have increasingly penetrated the main Reformed bodies…" Nichols goes
on to point out that while the Catholicizing tendency has often been
blunted by the "legacy of anti-Romanism" it has "established it’s
right to exist in these churches and won official toleration."24
It is more likely however that the answer ultimately lies somewhere
in a statement made almost 200 years ago by French Statesman and
observer of the new American society, Alexis de Toqueville:
"All the clergy of America freely adopt the general
views of their time and country and let themselves go
unresistingly with the tide of feeling and opinion which
carries everything around them along with it."
ENDNOTES
1 Samuel Miller, Presbyterianism, (Philadelphia, Presbyterian
Board of Publication, 1835), 73
2 Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 21, Section 7
3 Penne L. Restad, Christmas in America, (Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 1995), 4
4 Miller, 72
5 Restad, 6
6 Leigh Eric Schmidt, Consumer Rites, (Princeton,
Princeton University Press, 1995), 24
7 Bruce C. Daniels, Puritans at Play, (New York, St.
Martin’s Press, 1995), 89
8 The Directory for the Publick Worship of God,
Westminster Divines (1645)
9 Restad, 8
10 Schmidt, 89
11 Restad, 31-32
12 Ibid. 16
13 Ibid. 30
14 Ibid. 31
15 Ibid. 32
16 Ibid. 31
17 Julius Melton, Presbyterian Worship in America,
(Richmond, John Knox Press, 1967), 17
18 Ibid.102
19 Ibid. 103
20 Ibid. 104
21 Ibid. 121
22 Ibid. 121
23 General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United
States (Southern Presbyterians), Deliverance on Christmas and Easter
(1899).
24 James Hastings Nichols, Corporate Worship in the Reformed
Tradition, (Philadelphia, The Westminster Press, 1968), 153
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Daniels, Bruce C., Puritans at Play, New York, St.
Martin’s Press, 1995
The Westminster Assembly, The Directory for the Publick
Worship of God, (1645)
Melton, Julius, Presbyterian Worship in America,
Richmond, John Knox Press, 1967
Miller, Samuel, Presbyterianism, Philadelphia,
Presbyterian Board of Publication, 1835
Nichols, James Hastings, Corporate Worship in the Reformed
Tradition, (Philadelphia, The Westminster Press, 1968), 153
Restad, Penne L., Christmas in America, Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 1995
Schmidt, Leigh Eric, Consumer Rites, Princeton,
Princeton University Press, 1995
Smith, Morton, How is the Gold Become Dim? Greenville,
GPTS Press, 1973
The Westminster Assembly, Westminster Confession of Faith
(1645)
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