How does your congregation do it in a fitting and orderly way? And who decides and authorizes whether it is being followed like St. Paul says it is supposed to be?
During a church service, it would be the pastor ultimately, but this authority for regulating the meeting is also delegated to the speaker or leader at the time. For example, during the congregational singing, it would be the worship leader/pastor/director (whatever the title is) that would be leading the service. Or perhaps another minister besides the pastor is presiding over or speaking or exhorting during a particular part of the service. These would have responsibility for ensuring that all things are done decently and in order. My pastor has called out people at times that he thought were out of order, and no one questions that church leadership has the power to impose order.
Post #111 on page 8 may give you some insight to this as well. There is a traditional pattern of order in a Pentecostal church when it comes to the exercise of vocal gifts. I can tell you from personal experience that there is a change in the atmosphere of a service right before the operation of a vocal gift. An expectation comes over the congregation and it is like the Spirit of God is telling us to pause the service. When a message in tongues or a prophecy begins everything else occurring at that moment stops. My parents put the fear of God into me during these moments, and even now as an adult the most solemn moment of any church service for me is when a message or prophecy is given, because in that moment God is directly speaking to the church.
Any one speaking must stop. Any music playing must stop. This is a big deal. No matter how much Pentecostals love “mood music” there is one time during the service when no music or anything that could become potential emotional manipulation should be used and that is when God speaks. I remember we had a new drummer in our church. He was new to church in general, just got saved. The preacher was preaching, and as he does sometimes he called the band on stage to play music while he ended his sermon on a high note. And then the service shifted and someone began to give a message in tongues. All the other musicians yielded and stopped playing, but the drummer kept banging on the drums. Everyone was horrified and the pastor’s wife began running up the church waving her arms trying to signal to him to stop. He eventually stopped and the interpretation was given.
Alternatively, when a leader ignores a message or a prophecy, it can cause problems. I remember once our church was in turmoil and strife over a lot of stuff. We had just changed pastors and the church was split between supporters of the new pastor and dissenters. (My family was on the dissenting side, but we also had representation on the board.) Anyway, the pastor’s wife was leading praise and worship, and my uncle began to give a message in tongues. Under her leadership, the worship team kept on singing and playing. At this point, the entire congregation was confused and many of us were angry that known church order (and scripture nonetheless) was being violated.
When you get down to it, both were violating church order. The pastor’s wife for refusing to yield and my uncle for insisting on completing the message despite the confusion it was causing. In retrospect, she claimed that she did not hear a message, which could be possible given the volume of the music, but tensions were high at the time and many thought she could have done it on purpose because she feared what might be said.
The assistant pastor took over the service. He gave a rather lengthy speech on church order, how the worship leader’s oversight was unfortunate and should not have happened but even so was accidental. None of that changed the fact that at that point she was in charge of the service and it was her’s to yield and not my uncle’s to take. And then he said that he had been given the interpretation of the message and proceeded to give it. And the service continued as usual.
We take order very seriously. And we do what Paul says, “When you come together, each one has a hymn, a lesson, a revelation, a tongue, or an interpretation. . . . If a revelation is made to another sitting there, let the first be silent. For you can all prophesy one by one, so that all may learn and all be encouraged, and the spirits of prophets are subject to prophets. For God is not a God of confusion but of peace.”
Now, you will find that some of these traditional features are changing. For example, many Pentecostals have made background music a permanent feature in their services, so that even during a message in tongues or a prophecy a piano or some other instrument will be playing softly. Larger churches also have caused changes. Some churches designate microphones for people with vocal gifts to use, but of course, to get access to the microphones you have to go through the pastor or a designated official. They have to approve the message before you speak it out. In some ways, this is good. It could be a valid exercise in discerning a valid message from a faulty one. However, it also serves to filter out any content that might offend the congregation or the leaders, such as a justified message of rebuke.
Continued in next post.