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<blockquote data-quote="bbsam" data-source="post: 944328" data-attributes="member: 22662"><p>This is one time I think I can add to the discussion where Wiki stops. A Christian going to a liturgical church can go to a similar liturgical service hundreds of miles away, and the lessons and gospel will be on a selected and agreed upon set pertaining to the season (ex. 1st Sunday in Lent, 3rd Sunday of Advent, etc.). Furthermore, the liturgy follows the same design across denominations of Christianity whether Baptist, Lutheran, Catholic, or Methodist. Non-liturgical churches do not follow these guidelines. Is one better than the other? I have no idea. But I would say that the lessons from the 12th Sunday in Pentecost probably have as much to teach me as a Good Friday service. Might even speak more to everyday living and I don't know if such a lesson would be evident in a non-liturgical setting. Also, I think humans nee repitition and the revolving church liturgy does provide that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bbsam, post: 944328, member: 22662"] This is one time I think I can add to the discussion where Wiki stops. A Christian going to a liturgical church can go to a similar liturgical service hundreds of miles away, and the lessons and gospel will be on a selected and agreed upon set pertaining to the season (ex. 1st Sunday in Lent, 3rd Sunday of Advent, etc.). Furthermore, the liturgy follows the same design across denominations of Christianity whether Baptist, Lutheran, Catholic, or Methodist. Non-liturgical churches do not follow these guidelines. Is one better than the other? I have no idea. But I would say that the lessons from the 12th Sunday in Pentecost probably have as much to teach me as a Good Friday service. Might even speak more to everyday living and I don't know if such a lesson would be evident in a non-liturgical setting. Also, I think humans nee repitition and the revolving church liturgy does provide that. [/QUOTE]
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