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Matthew Everhard

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Matthew Everhard

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Member Since
July 2013

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Average rating: 4.48 · 275 ratings · 61 reviews · 22 distinct worksSimilar authors
Worshiptainment: The Modern...

4.46 avg rating — 136 ratings3 editions
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Souls: How Jesus Saves Sinners

4.52 avg rating — 48 ratings4 editions
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Hold Fast the Faith: A Devo...

4.64 avg rating — 33 ratings — published 2012 — 3 editions
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Unknown: The Extraordinary ...

4.24 avg rating — 34 ratings — published 2013 — 4 editions
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Holy Living: Jonathan Edwar...

4.60 avg rating — 10 ratings2 editions
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Un-Precious: An Invitation ...

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The Westminster Society Jou...

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Christ Our Supreme Joy: Enc...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2012
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Beauty of the Local Church:...

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Zero: Apart From Christ You...

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“Every single sin we commit, all the way back to Adam and Eve consuming the piece of forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden, is therefore a failure to recognize the glory of God as our true joy, summum bonum, or chief end.”
Matthew Everhard, Souls: How Jesus Saves Sinners

“Nobody telling everybody about somebody.” This sums up the Great Commission quite succinctly.”
Matthew Everhard, Unknown: The Extraordinary Influence of Ordinary Christians

“The “Order Principle” in 1 Corinthians 14 means that Christian worship should be structured in such a way that instruction is clear, intelligibility is essential, ordained roles and teaching offices are maintained, all the saints are built up in the faith, love and peace are abundant, and God is glorified in all things.

It is for this reason that Christians have historically ordered their meetings and services around a well-structured service that takes believers through all of the essential components or elements of a full, robust worship experience. We might speak of this as the “liturgy,” from the Latin word liturgia meaning “service.” A well-ordered liturgy takes the gathered saints through an incredibly beautiful journey in which practically every aspect of the history of redemption is recalled and applied.

Although there is great variation in ancient, historic, Protestant, and even Reformed liturgies of worship, certain basic elements are usually present somewhere in the service. These include: an acknowledgment of God as Creator, a confession of the fallen state of man, a rehearsal of the Law of God, the proclaiming of the saving Gospel of Christ, the tangible celebration of the sacraments, and the blessing of the Christian life.

In other words, the service moves through the history of redemption: Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Consummation. Worship is therefore Trinitarian. God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit are each extolled and praised.”
Matthew Everhard, Worshiptainment: The Modern Church's Golden Calf




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