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Zoom Discussion w/Dr. Tom Wadsworth on Worship & the Current State of the Church
Mar
10

Zoom Discussion w/Dr. Tom Wadsworth on Worship & the Current State of the Church

We welcome you to join us in an intimate discussion on worship and the current state of the church with Dr. Tom Wadsworth.

Dr. Tom Wadsworth Biography

I was raised Lutheran (LCA, before the ELCA merger). But when I was 18, I had a born-again experience when I was baptized through the influence of the Church of Christ. I then associated with the (non-instrumental) Churches of Christ. I earned my bachelor’s degree in biblical studies from Harding University, a Church of Christ school, where I minored in NT Greek. I then did three years of seminary at Harding School of Theology in Memphis, finishing with an MTh, which is now called an MDiv. New Testament studies were my focus.

In 1977, I became a minister for the non-instrumental churches of Christ. But in my first year as a pulpit minister, after studying 1 Corinthians 14, I was stunned to find that the Bible never described the purpose of the assembly as “worship.” Rather, Paul expressly points to “edification” as the purpose of “all things” in the assembly. These ideas seemed bizarre, and my Church of Christ strongly resisted them. But I was intrigued enough to continue to study them.

I got out of the professional ministry in 1985. Since then, we have since attended a variety of churches, including Evangelical, Methodist, and Presbyterian. Even though we’ve generally been actively involved with these churches, we have purposely never placed formal membership with any of them. All along, I was aware that the first-century assemblies were significantly differentthan the assemblies of any church I attended.

In 2016, I went back to school with the objective of studying my conclusions about first-century assemblies. By studying them at a deeper doctoral level, I wanted to see if my conclusions were sound. I was accepted for the doctoral program at the Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City, a Southern Baptist school. I chose that school because their New Testament faculty had obtained their advanced degrees from a wide range of seminaries, including world-renowned institutions in Scotland, England, Germany, and the U.S. I finished at MBTS with a ThM and a PhD in New Testament in 2022.

So, I have experience in a wide range of churches, and I don’t “have my own church.” Consequently, I feel no compulsion to defend any church’s approach to the assembly. And I don’t feel compelled to attack any church’s approach. I simply want to identify first-century practices and concepts.

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