Well, Paul said to let all those things be done unto edifying. As well as decently in order by taking turns and not monopolizing the floor, yes.
No need to sit around doing nothing but waiting the whole time, rather to pray and worship and enter into His courts with praise and thanksgiving. :)
Just want to add to this a reminder that we are a kingdom of priests now....a priesthood of ALL believers as the scriptures say. With Christ as our High Priest and Head, who leads by the Spirit.
1 Peter 2:9, But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a HOLY nation, God's special POSSESSION, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light..
Peter is speaking here of those who are HOLY, that God has full control over ie led by the Spirit and who have been Illumined and are now walking in the glorious light. These are the ones who are priests, not the ones who have gained the entry stage but still walking according to the flesh which means are still sinning, despite their desire not to (Romans 7).
The debate as to whether the priest should face the congregation or have his back to them is moot for the new covenant church.
The point for them is to show that whoever is leading is unimportant and so does not display his face but rather faces the altar like others who stand too in a group for the service. That speaks of humility. In fact the laity have a much greater role in EO churches.
There are some things I really love about EO but they are so much in error over over things and will not accept me because of my views on baptism and some other things.
I can't picture the early church going from humble house to humble house to meet with the Lord and break bread conducting "formal" church services like that. In fact they were so informal that some people were making a meal out of the Lord's supper and had to be admonished.
But that was in the beginning where must needs. I am not saying that one must have 'formal' church. However, men being as they are, they need some sort of structure like this to continue in spiritually lean times.
Actually I think the synagogues of old had the right idea to some extent....they were seated in a circle with everyone on a fairly equal footing and able to see/hear each other - with the people, the men, taking turns standing up from their seats and contributing. Though nobody special in terms of religious hierarchy, just the son of a carpenter, Jesus took his turn in the synagogue to stand up and read from Isaiah. That doesn't mean there isn't to be any leadership....you need pastors and leaders to facilitate and guide the meetings, and discern and bring correction etc if anything is off. And those with preaching/teaching gifts, as well as prophets, I assume would just naturally have the floor more than others...they would usually have more to say I would think. And just a little example, once when I was at a gathering of believers and during it, at an appropriate time, the Holy Spirit gave me a couple of hymns to suggest and we all sang them and it was just so lovely. God will do things HIS way, not man's way, when He is allowed to and the Holy Spirit is not being quenched. His way is always better and so much more edifying.
Amen and lovely experience for you. The Holy Spirit must have freedom to do it God's way of course, but in reality there are times when things are pretty lukewarm.
I don't know what I am.....maybe a purist, at least that is my goal. Being taught by the Lord, not by man.
Indeed it is what is best, but we all have down times. Going back to Quakerism, I think that George Fox was the most enlightened man in the west and he was taught entirely by God as he wandered England looking for some one to help him find The Way once he was in Purification but no-one helped him and he turned entirely to God and went through the Holy Baptism. It is wonderful how God uses our suffering.
Not saying you have to give up that belief, although you never know (and I'm not saying I know) but some of it might need a little tweeking possibly. Whenever I have offered something back to the Lord, on the altar so to speak, He has been faithful to give it back to me purified.
I have already been on the altar and accepted the stripping in my life which took everything away from me, family, health, career, riches, and all of my confidence in my reasoning. I have had to relearn everything - all that I understood from 17 years of Bible study on top of everything I knew about life.
I found that regarding doctrines, it started with just having that feeling that something was missing for example on Substitutionary Atonement Theory and so I would start to look for answers and when it came for the time when I would be ready to go deep, the answers came whereby all doubts would go and I knew I had the truth which I later found confirmations.
If you mean me saying that salvation is at the second blessing, then I have gone into it so deeply that I cannot go back to where I was.
Even if it wasn't stood against in principle, perhaps just the understanding of it could have gotten a little skewed possibly? Possibly some of their understanding might have become tainted by flesh and carnal mind....in an "if we think we know we do not yet know as we ought" kind of way..?
The opposite for me.
ok, thanks for clarifying that.