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ltwin
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There are some Pentecostals who believe in Real Presence. Daniel Tomberlin, an ordained bishop in the Church of God (Cleveland, TN), wrote a book 3 years ago called Pentecostal Sacraments: Encountering God at the Altar where he draws on the thought of Gregory Palamas and Pentecostal spirituality to inform his own thoughts on Real Presence. This review of the book from Regent University gives some idea as to what Tomberlin is talking about.In the Catholic Church, the best part of the service is the Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist.
Daniel Albrecht wrote about Pentecostal worship and liturgy in The Spirit and Spirituality:Volume 4, saying that the dimensions of Pentecostal worship included worship as: encounter with God, as attentiveness to God, and as yielding a sensitivity to human need. Pentecostals believe strongly in the manifest presence of God, and this belief endows them with expectancy to encounter him in worship.
Believers expect God to come and meet with them. Pentecostals believe that God alone inaugurates such a meeting by God’s gracious acts and presence. Believers can only prepare themselves. The worshippers cannot force God’s presence and movings. They can, however, prepare and wait for God’s actions in and among them, and then respond to the “flow of the Spirit” when God’s “promptings” or “stirrings” occur. Although pastoral or liturgical leadership is exerted, Pentecostals look to the Spirit who ultimately initiates, guides, facilitates, and leads the worship. (p. 72).
In attending to God, Albrecht writes, “Pentecostals see themselves engaged in serving or performing for the Divine. God is the audience and the congregation performs the drama of praise. . . . It is a way of ‘ministering to God.’” This attentive adoration “sensitizes them to the needs of humanity.” Albrecht illustrates,
The pattern is understood as follows: in worship, the believers minister to God and then God in turn ministers in and through the believers to others. For example, in many Pentecostal church services it is customary to engage in some form of healing rite during the worship service. Congregants may form circles of prayer, praying for one another’s needs. Or, the pastor may call those who desire prayer for a need to come to the altar to be prayed for by the elders. At other times, worshippers may simply be asked to stand to signify a prayer request. Other worshipers will then come to pray with them. In each case, congregants reflect a sensitivity to human needs, a sensitivity founded on the belief that God is concerned with the human condition in all of its manifestations and that God calls and gifts believers to minister to human needs. (pp. 72-73)
The word of God/biblical authority, spiritual gifts, an oral liturgy, and spontaneity (which allows improvisation in the oral liturgy) facilitate these dimensions of worship. On spontaneity, Albrecht compares the interplay between the oral liturgy and “liturgical improvisation” with jazz, where a scored or scripted melody is well known or memorized but the musicians are free to spontaneously adapt, invent, expand, and embellish on the original. The Pentecostal script is well known (even if it isn’t written down), but it expects improvisation. It is through spontaneity and improvisation that Pentecostals attempt to interact with and follow the Spirit with authentic and heartfelt expressions (p. 76).