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Worship: The Regulative Principle and the Biblical Practice of Accommodation is unavailable, but you can change that!

In this volume, Ernest Reisinger and D. Matthew Allen define, explain, and defend the Reformed principle of worship—the regulative principle. Not leaving the principle in the realm of theory, Reisinger and Allen discuss the application of the principle in the context of modern evangelical life—paying particular attention to how to implement the regulative principle in congregations who do not yet...

for us. This is because it is only in the worship of God that we can truly find satisfaction. This was the very purpose for which we were made. We are most satisfied when we find our delight in our God. This means that public worship is God-directed, not self-directed. When we engage in true worship, we should not focus so much on how we feel as we sing and pray and take communion and listen to the preaching of God’s Word. We should not even come to church with the purpose in mind of feeling God’s
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