A second function of worship is the creation and maintenance of views and attitudinal stances that identify the members of the society to each other and in relation to other groups. Worship thus involves social learning: the members of the community, through their common worship, learn how to plant, to cultivate the soil, to hunt game, to engage in warfare, to settle disputes, to relate to the various strata of the society. Worship displays and reinforces the character of the society; the traditions are passed along through the worship of the community. In this way, acts of worship sum up and reinforce the moral and cultural commitments and understandings of the community. In a situation in which one religion predominates, such social learning pervades the entire society. This situation formerly pertained, for example, in Ethiopia, where the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church was closely identified with the character and objectives of the state.
EpiphanyEthiopian Orthodox priest during the Epiphany ceremony, Gonder, Ethiopia.Jialiang Gao
The worship of a particular group within a society performs the same purposes for that group. Group concord is effected and maintained through the rites and formal acts of group worship. The celebration of fundamental understandings and values through worship bestows solidity and substance on them so that they become a part of the divinely ordained system of laws, customs, and social practices. Doctrines or dogmas are significantly strengthened and reinforced through worship, and religious truths become a part of the very existence of a group as they are embodied in the art, music, drama, and public rites of the worshipping community. Group learning also is effected, since occasions for worship offer opportunity for the group to reflect upon the significance of its history, rites, and traditions and to celebrate the import of these. The remembrance of deliverance from Egypt (i.e., the Exodus, 13th century bce) became a regular part of the celebration of Passover for the Jews.
A third function of worship is that of providing personal support to individual members of a group or of a society. Because life is marked by anxiety, disasters, and dangers from natural and historical happenings, the individual is provided with a sense of well-being through acts of worship. Worship is viewed as relating the disparate elements of life to the life, purposes, and plans of the divine; and in this way the worshipper is enabled to believe that the burden has been shared, or taken over, by the gods.
Since acts of worship need to be performed in the “right” way in order to be efficacious, there is a strong tendency toward conservatism regarding the forms and understandings of worship. The desire for release of personal or group anxiety also makes it likely that the practice of worship may support conservatism within the group, since the tendency is to rely upon past solutions to personal or group problems long after the time when such solutions appear to be entirely satisfactory. This conservatism belongs to the nature of religion, inasmuch as religion deals precisely with those issues of life that yield no easy resolution or solution: the mystery of life itself, the travails of birth, initiation into the community of adults, marriage, sickness, public disasters, and death. It is of great social importance that worship brings to the group and its members a sense of the enduring qualities of life, hope for a doubtful future, and a sense of well-being and health in the midst of trials and illness and danger. The result, however, can also be that the forward movement of the society is inhibited by the religious traditions and claims of a past age that are regularly reinforced through acts of worship. Types of worship
The forms and types of worship are extraordinarily rich and varied. Three types may be distinguished: corporate exclusive worship; corporate inclusive worship; and personal worship. Corporate exclusive worship
Exclusive corporate worship is worship that belongs to the group alone. Such exclusive groups may understand their distinct status over against other groups on the basis of a divine mission in the world (e.g., Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), of clan, social, or initiatory distinctions (e.g., totemic societies, gnostic groups), or by reference to certain ritual or ethical commitments and practices (e.g., Seventh-day Adventists) characteristic of the group. Study of contemporary religious groups discloses many similarities of belief among these exclusive communities, and distinctions considered unique by the group may not be unique at all—but they are perceived to be unique.
Among the exclusive types, the mystery religions (e.g., Eleusinian) of the Mediterranean world are particularly well-known. The worship of such communities (also including gnostic sects) centred in the sharing of secret knowledge concerning the origin of the world and also of humanity’s true nature, proper vocation, and destiny. An elaborate system of initiation brought the new member into the community. The community maintained its exclusiveness through the passing on of the secret lore to new members through rites designed to free the devotee from the hold of the material world and thus prepare the way for his ascent to the realm of the divine, from which he had been separated.
Totemic societies are drawn and held together by the recognition of the significance of the animal or object that embodies and displays the holy in their midst. Signs worn or placed on the body identify the adherents of the society. Groups otherwise quite similar in language, customs, religious rites, social behaviour, and culture are held distinct from one another through the power of the totem, and worship underscores and helps to maintain this exclusivism.
Certain social or ethical commitments operate to single out the exclusiveness of religious communities and to define their form of worship. The commitment of Mennonites (a Christian group originating during the 16th century) to refuse participation in acts of war, for example, affects the character of their worship as well as of their general religious life. The worship is conducted over against the larger society, especially the power and commitments of the state. It centres upon peace and reconciliation, upon the moral demands laid upon each worshipper, underscoring the need for worship that issues in the service of fellowmen caught up in the evil of warfare.
The worship of the “gathered church” has a similar character: Baptists, Congregationalists, and many of the free churches—i.e., those not connected with the state (including Mennonites)—engage in a form of worship that stresses the need for each member to make his own confession of faith and to identify personally the character of his religious commitment. The new member must enter such a community on the basis of personal testimony and commitment. Those who do not share these commitments are, in principle (if not in actual fact), not to be accepted into membership.
Racial, ethnic, and language distinctions also can operate to create and maintain exclusive communities. African American churches of the United States, though open to members who are not African American, have become, in many sections of the United States, exclusive communities, largely through the exclusion of blacks from white churches. The worship of African American communities has incorporated elements from African religions and has focused upon forms of worship appropriate to a people oppressed by the larger society and excluded from many of its benefits. The service generally is “freer” than that of the white churches, including a more significant place for congregational singing and responses and more active participation by the congregation than has become customary in most white churches.
Many other exclusive communities could be mentioned: new religious groups in Japan and African countries (e.g., nativistic religious movements), in the United States and Canada (e.g., the Churches of Christ, the Nazarenes, the Nation of Islam), and in western European countries. These communities give prominence in worship to those features that called them into existence: sectarian religious concerns, nationalism, dissatisfaction with the worship and ideas of the dominant religious communities, or other distinctive commitments. Corporate inclusive worship