Thanks to Steadfast Lutherans for pointing this out, and even greater thanks to Pr. Cwirla, over at Higher Things, for composing it in the first place. This little gem deserves as much exposure and attention as it can get!
Why the Liturgy?  First a definition and a disclaimer.  By “liturgy” I  mean the western catholic mass form as it has been handed down by way  of the Lutheran Reformation consisting of the five fixed canticles -  Kyrie, Gloria in Excelsis, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei.  Pardon the  Greek and Latin, but it sounds cool and we still use ‘em.  “Liturgy”  also includes the assigned Scripture texts for the Sundays, feast days,  and seasons.  Most of what I will say about the liturgy of the Divine  Service will pertain to “liturgical worship” in general.
   
Now, why do we worship according to the western, catholic liturgy?
1.  It shows our  historic roots.  Some parts of the liturgy go back to the apostolic  period. Even the apostolic church did not start with a blank liturgical  slate but adapted and reformed the liturgies of the synagogue and the  Sabbath.  The western mass shows our western catholic roots, of which we  as Lutherans are not ashamed.  (I’d rather be confused with a Roman  Catholic than anything else.)  We’re not the first Christians to walk  the face of the planet, nor, should Jesus tarry, will we be the last.   The race of faith is a relay race, one generation handing on  (“traditioning”) to the next the faith once delivered to the saints.   The historic liturgy underscores and highlights this fact.  It is also  “traditionable,” that is, it can be handed on.
2.  It serves as  a distinguishing mark.  The liturgy distinguishes us from those who do  not believe, teach, and confess the same as we do.  What we believe  determines how we worship, and how we worship confesses what we believe.
3.  It is both  Theocentric and Christocentric.  From the invocation of the Triune Name  in remembrance of Baptism to the three-fold benediction at the end, the  liturgy is focused on the activity of the Triune God centered in the  Person and Work of Jesus Christ.  Worship is not primarily about “me” or  “we” but about God in Christ reconciling the world to Himself and my  baptismal inclusion in His saving work.
4.  It teaches.  The  liturgy teaches the whole counsel of God - creation, redemption,  sanctification, Christ’s incarnation, passion, resurrection, and reign,  the Spirit’s outpouring and the new life of faith.  Every liturgical  year cycles through these themes so that the hearer receives the “whole  counsel of God” on a regular basis.
5.  It is transcultural.   One of the greatest experiences of my worship life was to be in the  Divine Service in Siberia with the Siberian Lutheran Church.  Though I  spoke only a smattering of Russian, I knew enough to recognize the  liturgy, know what was being said (except for the sermon, which was  translated for us), and be able to participate knowledgeably across  language and cultural barriers.  I have the same experience with our  Chinese mission congregation.
6.  It is repetitive in a  good way.  Repetition is, after all, the mother of learning.  Fixed  texts and annual cycles of readings lend to deep learning.  Obviously,  mindless repetition does not accomplish anything; nor does endless  variety.
7.  It is corporate.   Worship is a corporate activity.  “Let us go to the house of the Lord.”   The liturgy draws us out of ourselves into Christ by faith and the  neighbor by love.  We are all in this together.  Worship is not simply  about what “I get out of it,” but I am there also for my fellow  worshippers to receive the gifts of Christ that bind us together and to  encourage each other to love and good works (Heb 10:25).  We are drawn  into the dialogue of confession and absolution, hearing and confessing,  corporate song and prayer.  To borrow a phrase from a favored teacher of  mine, in church we are “worded, bodied, and bloodied” all together as  one.
8.  It rescues us from  the tyranny of the “here and now.”  When the Roman world was going to  hell in a hand basket, the church was debating the two natures of  Christ.  In the liturgy, the Word sets the agenda, defining our needs  and shaping our questions.  The temptation is for us to turn stones into  bread to satisfy an immediate hunger and scratch a nagging spiritual  itch, but the liturgy teaches us to live by every word that proceeds  from the mouth of God.
9.  It is external and  objective.  The liturgical goal is not that everyone feel as certain way  or have an identical “spiritual” experience.  Feelings vary even as  they come and go.  The liturgy supplies a concrete, external, objective  anchor in the death and resurrection of Jesus through Word, bread, and  wine.   Faith comes by hearing the objective, external Word of Christ.
10.  It is the Word of  God.  This is often overlooked by critics of liturgical worship.  Most  of the sentences and songs of the liturgy are direct quotations or  allusions from Scripture or summaries, such as the Creed.  In other  words, the liturgy is itself the Word of God, not simply a packaging for  the Word. Many times the liturgy will rescue a bad sermon and deliver  what the preacher has failed to deliver.  I know; I’ve been there.
Ten is one of those good numbers in the Bible signifying completeness, so I'll stop at ten.  I'm sure there are more.

 
 
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