|
CommanderRed
|
read my profile
sign my guestbook
Name: Adam State: Kansas Gender: Male
Interests: LOVES: Christ, Music, Drama.
THINGS I DO: I love being invovled in my Church and in my college Bible Study I attend Friends University where I am getting a BA in Music and a Drama Minor. At Friends I am involved in a group called AOF (Acts of Faith). It is a Christian drama group where we perform Christian material in a showcase in the Fall, and in the Spring we do performances at various churches in the area.
\QUIRKS: I am very scatterbrained. I often lose my train of thought, and forget where I am going (no, I'm not 82).
(P.S. My other website is under construction, so there isn't much on it. There will be more in time to come.)
Message: message meEmail: email me Website: visit my website
Member Since:
12/17/2005
|
|
|
Philippians 3:12
"Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected; but I press
on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of
me."
"Not that I have already attained" - In the verses immediately
preceding, Paul tells of all of the "qualifications" that, according
to the law, would make him acceptable to God, and those were the
"qualifications" that many so-called brothers were teaching in the
church. Paul then goes on to say that he counted all those
"qualifications" loss in order that he might gain Christ.
Paul's desire was to know Christ fully. Reading that, it might seem to
some that Paul had given up all for Christ, and that he was some sort of super
Christian that had fully obtained Christ. In this verse Paul makes it
very clear that he has not fully attained Christ. The word here for
attained (?aµß???)
has the connotation of grasping, getting hold of, or even taking hold
of. It gives the idea that Paul had made effort to fully grasp Christ,
but he had not achieved that goal.
note: this word (?aµß???) is not the same word which he uses in verse 11 in reference
to "attain' to resurrection of the dead. The word there is (?ata?t??)
which has the meaning of "arriving at", not that of grasping for
something. In 11 Paul is indicating that the end result will be
resurrection from the dead, not that that is what he is trying to attain.
"or am already perfected" - Paul had received salvation and
the righteousness which was not from the law, but through Christ, yet he doubly
emphasized that he had not yet been made "perfect", or as it might be
translated, completed. This is a state that is often bemoaned by
Christians, and Paul himself grappled with the issue in Romans chapter 7:21-24:
"I find then a law, that evil is present with me, the one who wills to
do good. For I delight in the law of God according to the inward man. But I see
another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me
into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I
am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?"
Thankfully, as Paul says in verse 25, we do have that deliverance through
Jesus Christ our Lord. However, that struggle still exists. We have
been saved from sin, but as of yet, we have not been completed/perfected.
"but I press on" - Despite the fact that Paul had not
yet been made totally complete in Christ, he pressed on. It would be
easy to give up, and say, "I will not be completed until I die, so why
try?" But Paul pressed on, not out of vanity, but, as he explained
next, it is because it is why Christ has laid hold of him. The word here
for "I press on" is a term used for a sprinter (d????).
Depending on context, it can also mean pursuing, pressing toward, or even
to persecute. It has the idea of an energetic pursuing of
something. So Paul wasn't just doing it half-heartedly, he was
pursuing it with all he had.
"that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold
of me" - this is Paul's goal. The word here for "lay hold
of" is a more intense form of the same word that he used last time (?ata?aµß???).
But what was it that Paul wanted to seize? I think a clue
is in v. 14 where he said, "I press toward the goal for the prize of the
upward call of God in Christ Jesus." I will talk about this more
shortly, but it is clear that Paul's ultimate goal is to receive the prize,
which is to be brought into the presence of God. However, that is
only the end result, but what is the goal on his journey to get
there? For that answer, I think we need to back to verse 10.
"That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship
of His sufferings, being conformed to His death." Paul had laid down
all of his human "qualifications" so that he could fully know
Christ. That was his goal. His goal was not just to make it to
heaven, which makes him stand in stark contrast to many popular evangelists who
preach as if the gospel were a get out of hell free card. No! Paul wanted
to fully know the power of Christ resurrection. He wanted to become
a participant in Christ's sufferings. And he to become the of the
character, that he could be considered like Christ, even in Christ's
ultimate display of His character, His death on the cross. He chose to
pick up his cross and follow Christ. That is what Paul wanted to be like,
but it was not as if it entirely relied upon him because Christ had already laid
hold of him for that very purpose. Whereas Paul's grasping was not
complete, Christ's was. Paul had not fully attained Christ, but Christ
had already fully attained him. We see this clearly in Christ coming to
Paul on the road to Damascus. Paul was trying to destroy the church, but
Christ had chosen him. Christ's holding onto him had nothing to do with
Paul's success after he was saved, but it had to do with what Christ did.
This echoes what Paul says elsewhere:
"For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to
the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren.
Moreover whom He predestined, these He also called; whom He called, these He
also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified."
(Rom. 8:29, 30)
Paul was so sure that God would complete the process which he started, that
he spoke about it in the past tense. And again Paul says, "being confident
of this very thing, that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it
until the day of Jesus Christ." (Philippians 1:6)
And yet again Paul says, "For if when we were enemies we were
reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been
reconciled, we shall be saved by His life." (Romans 5:10)
We are saved by Christ's life, not through any effort of our own. That
is the comfort that we have in Christ because Christ has laid hold of us,
but Christ did not lay hold of us just to save us. Christ has also
laid hold of us so that we might be conformed to His image, and, as in
Philippians 1:6, that is the work that He is faithful to complete.
However, that does not mean that we sit idly by and let God work because how
can we not change if God is working? God has called us to pursue Him and
to "seize for" being like Him. As it say in Ephesians 2:10,
"For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which
God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them." So then, we
strive to be like Christ, to seize onto Him, knowing all the while that it is
He who has "seized" us.
Philippians 3:13 "Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended; but one thing I
do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those
things which are ahead,"
"Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended" - Paul
emphasizes that he had not fully laid hold of Christ. This word is
the same word used in verse 12 to say, "lay hold of" (?ata?aµß???).
Paul had tried and failed to fully be like Christ. He had
not fully managed to lay hold of that for which Christ had laid hold of
him.
"but one thing I do" - Again right after Paul had stated
that he had failed to be like Christ, he stated that he had not given up.
Here Paul gives the key to the ability to keep on pressing on, and this is an
important key for our sanctification.
"forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those
things which are ahead" - This was Paul's mindset. He
determined that he must take everything that was behind him and forget it,
and focus solely on the goal ahead. The fact that he so many
"qualifications" didn't matter. The fact that he failed over
and over again to be like Christ didn't matter. That fact that he had
done so many good things for Christ by suffering persecution and having
Christ be the sole purpose for living didn't matter. What mattered was
what was in front of him, that is, the running and grasping to be like Christ.
Philippians 3:14
"I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in
Christ Jesus."
"I press toward the goal" - The word for "press toward"
is the same word that Paul uses in verse 12 to say, "press on" (d????).
Paul used all of his might and energy to run towards the goal.
"for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus" - That
is the Christians ultimate prize, the prize of being in the presence of God and
eternal life with Him. The word here for call is (???^s??), which gives
the idea of an invitation. This idea is reminiscent of the Parable of the
three servants and the talents. To the faithful servants the master said,
"‘Well done, good and faithful servant; you were faithful over a
few things, I will make you ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of your
lord.’" (Matthew 25:21, 23) And Paul also said in 2 Timothy
4:7, 8:
"I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept
the faith. Finally, there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which
the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give to me on that Day, and not to me only
but also to all who have loved His appearing."
And again he said:
"Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of God; nor does corruption inherit incorruption. Behold, I tell you a
mystery: We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed— in a moment, in
the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and
the dead will be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. or this
corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on
immortality." (1 Cor. 15:50-53)
In that upward calling of God, we will put away with this corrupted flesh,
which still holds onto sin, and we will be changed. We will no longer
have to deal with sin because no sin will be allowed to enter that New
Jerusalem (Rev. 21:27). We will live in perfection with the One who is
perfect, and we shall be like Him, for we shall know Him as He is.
"Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed
what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall be like Him,
for we shall see Him as He is. And everyone who has this hope in Him purifies
himself, just as He is pure. (1 John 3:2, 3)"
That is the prize that Paul looked forward to, that
is what Paul grasped for, and that is why Paul laid aside everything that
the world considered gain. He laid it aside to gain Christ. He
purified himself because he had the hope of seeing Christ face to face.
| | |
|
“For as often as you eat this bread
and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes (1 Cor.
11:26).” This amazing verse has been on
my mind a lot the last couple of weeks mostly because of the fact that I am
graduating. My future is now very
unclear, and even day to day seems cloudy, so it makes it difficult for me to
trust God. But this verse serves as an
amazing reminder to me because it speaks to three different aspects of my life
– past, present, and future. It speaks
to my past because it reminds me of my Lord’s death. Jesus willing left His Father’s side and chose to die on the
cross to pay the penalty for my sin. It
speaks to my present because it reminds me that I am to proclaim Christ in my
life. In all of the uncertainties that
God brings in life, this purpose remains: I am to proclaim Christ. It speaks to my future because it tells me
that Jesus did not stay in the grave, no, He was resurrected from the grave so
that we have assurance of resurrection, and that we will be with Him.
So then, as I apply these truths to my life, I must
remember that my sin is forgiven, and I should be as Paul “forgetting those
things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead, I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ
Jesus (Phil. 3:13-14).” I should also keep
in mind the words of Jesus when I worry about my current situation, “Seek first
the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added
to you. Therefore do not worry about
tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Each day has enough of its own trouble (Matt.
6:33-34).” Lastly, I must remember that
Christ is coming again to make all things new.
I must remember that “the sufferings of this present time are not
worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us (Rom.
8:18).”
Lest anyone think that these are
truths just for me, they are not. They
are for anyone who has faith that Christ can do these things for him or
her. We have comfort in Christ’s
promises towards us. And whatever comes
into our lives, whether it is something as drastic as graduating, or as simple
as everyday life, we must remember Christ and His sacrifice. He proved Himself trustworthy then, and He
will now, and He will in the future, so we have good reason to believe the
amazing promise that God gave us in Romans 8:28, “We know that all things work
together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called
according to His purpose.”
Adam
| | |
|
March 29th. Thursday morning. 10:58. A dear sister went
home to be with her Lord, having succumbed to cancer that consumed her lungs. She touched many people by her living
testimony, whether it was by her friendliness to people, her openness about her
faith, or her willingness to open up her home and make them feel at home, and
it was those qualities that touched me many years ago and still remain with
me. A few years ago, her son and one of
his friends graduated, and they wanted to start a college age Bible study. Maria opened up her home to the college
group that summer and fall, and in that Bible study, for the first time in my
life, I found people that I could truly begin to identify with and begin to
develop friendships with. I don’t
remember what the topic of conversation was, but I recall several nights that
summer when Maria sat up a talked with me and my sister until sometime around
2:00 in the morning, and she still had to go to work the next morning. That may not seem much to many people, but
to me, someone who had been ignored and alone, having never really had a friend
before, the simple willingness to me meant a lot, and it was one step in
helping me overcome my fear of people, to open up, and to break down my thought
that no one really wanted to be my friend.
Even though that Bible has not meet at her home for several years, that
group still means a lot to me. It has
encouraged me to grow in Christ, and thanks in part to it, I have learned to
open up and reach out to people. Even
to the point that for the past year and a half, I have taught periodically, and
through that experience I have been given the opportunity to teach at my
church.
Her
character was a the more greatly shone when a growth in her left shoulder
caused by genetic condition, which actually caused abnormal growths in several
places that are inert and harmless other than discomfort, somehow developed
into a cancer. Doctors don’t know how
this occurs because the cancer is not cause by the genetic condition, and there
is no known treatment for this highly aggressive cancer. By the time the cancer was identified, in
had consumed tissue, cartilage and even some of the bone, so they had to
amputate her left arm. Through all of
it she trusted God, and she tried to reach out to all the people around her
because of the trial that God was bringing her through. The surgery was in Texas, and when she came
back to Wichita, one would think that people would have to encourage her, on
the contrary, she was full of praise and laughter, continuing to encourage
others by saying and showing that the Lord is faithful and sufficient.
Then about
six months ago, an x-ray of Maria’s lungs showed several small spots. The cancer had metastasized in her
lungs. There was nothing that could be
done. The cancer was untreatable, and
it couldn’t be removed. It was just a
matter of time, yet she told others not to worry about her, she knew where she
was going. Her concern was for her
family, her husband, her 21 year old son, 16 year old daughter, and 8 year old
son. And even as her last hour drew
closer, people’s testimony was that they were more encouraged by talking to her
than they think they encouraged her.
Several weeks ago my sister and I had the opportunity to talk with her
for a while. We talked a little bit
about her condition, but much of the time we talked about what the Lord had
taught her, and she spent time encouraging us to follow the Lord saying that
time is short, and we don’t know how much longer we have, and that serving the Lord
is the only thing that is worthwhile.
She encouraged us to follow the Lord, and both my sister and I left
feeling better than we had before.
Maria
touched many people, and especially during those last months, she was a sermon
preached much louder than words. I
don’t know why God choose to bring her through that trial, but this I do know,
that God used her. She touched my life,
and I will never forget everything that she did for me. Now because of God’s work in my life, and
Maria being one of those tools that God used, I pray that I may life my life to
reach others, and encourage other, and to serve the Lord with all my heart,
mind and strength.
A beautiful rose
Nurtured and cared for by a loving hand;
Its petals beautiful,
And fragrance delightful,
And yet, time shall claim its beauty fair,
Its petals on the ground,
Yet its fragrance remains.
For death cannot or'take
The fragrance of the flow'r.
Its beauty shall remain
As pleasing in God's sight.
A beautiful life
Nurtured and cared for by the Master's hand;
Its joys overflowing,
And radiance mighty,
And yet, time shall claim its beauty fair,
Its shell turned into dust,
Yet its fragrance remains.
For death cannot or'take
The fragrance of that life.
It's beauty shall remain
As pleasing in God's sight.
~ Adam Luce inspired by the words of Maria Miller
| | |
| We can be quick to say that jumping around, raising hands, and shouting does not prove that one is truly worshiping God, but are we so willing to say that standing solemn and emotionless is as equally unimpressive?
And for some, that question might need to be reversed. | | |
| This is a research paper that I wrote for Senior Seminar. I learned a lot by doing this paper, and it challenged me to think about what I believe about music. If you want to take the time to read this, I think you will be challenged too.
Music in the Church: Philosophies of Its Usage In Antiquity and How It
Should Be Applied in the Present
By Adam Luce 12-13-06
From the beginning of history
through our current age there has always been the question of what is good
music. That battle has been fought by
many different cultures and religions.
That battle has raged on through countless generations, and the answer
to that question has changed on the winds of popular opinion. If there is one event that stands out in
history the most, it is when God became a man, died for the sins of the world
and then ascended to heaven, and that event brought about a change so drastic
that dates in history started being labeled B.C. (before Christ) and A.D. (Anno
Domino, the year of our Lord). The church was established and it took up the
conflict of what music should be used.
How should music be used in the Church?
Should it be used in the Church?
When should it be used in the Church?
And the conflict still rages today.
The purpose of this paper is to explore how the church in the past has
viewed the use of music in the church.
Furthermore, it will attempt to apply some of the principles learned
from that study to how music should be used in the Church today. Every form of music adopted by the church has been
adopted for a reason. The adoption of
the metrical hymn has a story of its own.
Vincent A. Lenti talks about how the metric hymn was adopted in his
article entitled Saint Ambrose, the
Father of Western Hymnody.
During the time of Ambrose (337-397 A.D.) there were several heretical
threats to the early church, two of them being the beliefs of the Arians, and
the threat of paganism regaining a hold in Rome. Lenti explains it this way, “The introduction of metrical hymns
occurred in 386 when Ambrose and his followers were besieged in the Cathedral
of Milan. The confrontation with
imperial authority was lengthy and fraught with danger, so Ambrose sought to
bolster confidence through singing.” He
introduced two customs of hymns singing.
First, he introduced antiphonal singing (the singing of a song in two
choirs). Second, he introduced the
singing of metrical hymns. Those
customs which he introduced continued on long after that event. Augustine said this:
“The
pious people kept watch in the church ready to die with their bishop. Then it was that the custom arose of singing
hymns and psalms, after the use of the Eastern parts, lest the people should
wax faint through the tediousness of sorrow; and from that day to this the
custom has been retained, in many, nay, almost all of the Christian
congregations throughout the rest of the world following therein. (as quoted by
V. Lenti)”
So the custom which was
started as a result of persecution, continued on even to this generation. This is not the only time this phenomenon is
seen in history. It is also occurred in
the times of the reformation with Luther, other hymn writers such as Bunyan, or
even in the development of the Negro Spiritual. A contemporary of Ambrose, namely Augustine (354-430
A.D.), was the second greatest influence on the early church. Although Augustine did not introduce any new
styles or write any hymns, he still struggled with how music should be used in
the church. The crisis was not just on
a corporate level, it was on a person level.
He was torn between the love of the music itself and the love for the
message it conveyed. Augustine himself
testifies in his book Confessions that before his conversion, he was enraptured
by the sound of music until God set him free from his addiction to
it, but even after he was converted he said, “I admit that I still find some
enjoyment in the music of hymns, which are alive with your praises, when I hear
them sung by a well trained, melodious voices.” So even though he was no longer bound to music, he still had
within him a struggle between the music and the message conveyed by the music. He testified, “But if I am not to turn a
deaf ear to music, which is the setting for the words which give it life, I
must allow it a position of some honor in my heart, and I find it difficult to
assign it to its proper place.”
Augustine recognized the power of music to emphasize the text, to help
convey the texts meaning and to aid in its memorization. So on the only hand,
he had the benefits of music and his flesh, which could never get enough of it,
and on the other hand, he had the conviction that the text and its message are
primary. So he struggled with trying to
find the balance. He commented that it
would be easy and much safer for him to follow the precepts of other who
completely banned music in the church, even to the point of making the reading
of the scriptures in a monotone voice.
To that idea he responded:
“But
when I remember the tears that I shed on hearing the songs of the Church in the
early days, soon after I had recovered my faith, and when I realized that
nowadays it is not the singing that moves me but the meaning of the words when
they are sung in a clear voice to the most appropriate tune, I again
acknowledge the great value of this practice.”
So that was the line that
Augustine tried to walk. He didn’t want
to put overdue emphases on the music, but he also didn’t want to completely
banish it either. So he concluded that
he should allow the singing of music, but that when the music becomes more
moving than the message conveyed, that is a grievous sin. However, Augustine’s convictions were not shared by all
the clergymen of his time and those that followed. As time went on, the music in the church began to change. More and more complex music was developed
and used in the church. There was the
introduction of the mass, which began simple, but as time went on, it became
increasingly complex. Moving into the
Renaissance, there began the development of the motet. The motet form grew increasingly
complex. It would often have 4, 5 or
even more parts. In that type of
setting, text is very muddled and hard to distinguish. That placed the text in the background, and
put the music to the forefront. Even if
the text were understandable, it would have made little difference to the
congregation because they would not have understand the text because the Roman
Catholic mass was performed in Latin and not the vernacular (the language of
the people). Thus by around 1500, the
music of the Roman Catholic Church held to none of the principles that were
held by Augustine. Although the
disregard for the text and message of the music was not a primary cause of the
reformation, music was ripe for reform.
During the time of the reformation there were several different camps of
thought not only when it came to theology, but when it came to music as well. One school of thought was Luther (1483-1546 A.D.). There is evidence to suggest that there
existed hymns in the German vernacular before Luther, but as a whole the
congregations in Germany were not allowed to sing in the church service. William J. Reynolds and Milburn Price state it
their book A Survey of Christian Hymnody that, “The same conviction that
prompted Luther’s translation of the Bible into the language of the people also
produced the desire for congregational involvement in the liturgy through
singing. (p. 18)” Luther also allowed
for the text of German chorals (hymns) to be taken from sources other than the
Bible (p. 19). Luther, unlike Calvin,
also kept the basic form of the liturgy.
He just modified it for his own uses.
One of the most famous writers of music for the Lutheran liturgy was J.
S. Bach. Another
school of thought was John Calvin (1509-1564 A.D.). In contrast to Luther, Calvin believed in Scripture alone as a
source for the texts to be used in Church music. Furthermore, he believed that instruments were not to be used in
the worship. Those who opposed the idea
of having no instruments in the church pointed to the fact that the Old
Testament directed or sometimes even commanded the Israelites to use
instruments in their worship services.
Calvin argued against that because he claimed that the command to use
instruments was part of the Old Covenant law and only applied to the temple
worship. In his commentary of Psalm 92,
he commented on the command in verse 4 to have the Levites use their
instruments in the service. He said
this, “Not as if this [using the instruments] were in itself necessary, only it
was useful as an elementary aid to the people of God in these ancient
times.” He said that the purpose of the
instrument was not for God’s sake, but for the sake of Israelites. The instruments purpose was to “stimulate
the worshippers, and stir them up more actively to the celebration of the
praise of God with the heart.” Calvin
viewed that not as a necessity to worship God, but that it was “only necessary
to help forward a people, as yet weak and rude in knowledge, in the spiritual
worship of God.” However, Calvin
believed that the church under the New Testament has reached full maturity, and
thus, is no longer in need of any aid in worship. Furthermore, to use instruments in the church would only serve to
cause the church to regress to a state of being under the law. Another reason for Calvin’s rejecting instruments in the
church is that in his thoughts, instruments are equivalent to speaking in tongues. Now before this is to be seen as too
strange. The first thing that must be
understood is that Calvin viewed the communication of doctrine as essential. Every part of the service must be
understandable and capable of instruction.
Calvin said this in his preface to the Genevan Psalter, “Because to say that we are able to have
devotion, either at prayers or ceremonies, without understanding anything of
them, is a great mockery.” For Calvin,
since instruments cannot communicate any sort of doctrine, it is no better than
speaking in tongues without an interpreter.
As Calvin concluded in his commentary of Psalm 71, “They [instruments]
are banished out of the churches by the plain command of the Holy Spirit, when
Paul, in 1 Corinthians 14:13[,
],
lays it down as an invariable rule, that we must praise God, and pray to him
only in a known tongue.” And so Calvin’s
conclusion was that instruments should not be used in the church because they
do not meet the standard necessary for proper worship. Now this should not be seen as Calvin’s attempt to
entirely reject using music in the church.
On the contrary, Calvin considered music very important. For Calvin also said in his preface to the Genevan Psalter, “Now among the other
things which are proper for recreating man and giving him pleasure, music is
either the first, or one of the principal; and it is necessary for us to think
that it is a gift of God deputed for that use.” Calvin believed that music was very important and that it was
even a gift from God; however, that does not give us free license to do with
music whatever we want with it, on the contrary, as Calvin said, “we ought to
be the more careful not to abuse it, for fear of soiling and contaminating it,
converting it our condemnation, where it was dedicated to our profit and
use.” So Calvin did not reject
instruments in the church because he was some sort of maniac, rather it was
because he thought that he had a rational Biblical reason, and even more than
that, he did not want to risk abusing the gift that God had given. Calvin was not alone in his belief of using no
instruments in the church. Spurgeon
(1834-1892 A.D.) followed in that tradition.
Like Calvin, he considered music very important, and also like Calvin,
he did not consider the lack of instruments equal to having poor music in the
church. He believed that the church should not be lacking in singing with great
fervor. He said in his commentary on
Psalms chapter 4, “Our holy mirth is
none the less overflowing because we prefer to express it in a more spiritual
manner, as becometh a more spiritual dispensation. (from The Treasury of David)” He also instructed believers saying, “Let us
lay ourselves open to the Spirit's touch, so shall we make melody. May we be
full of faith and love, and we shall be living instruments of music.” So Spurgeon believed that the New
Testament believer was to sing with all his heart. So even without instrumental music, it was still to be
musical. In his commentary of Psalm 81,
Spurgeon gave several principles for singing in the church. He gave this command for congregational
singing:
“Sing, in
tune and measure, so that the public praise may be in harmony; sing with joyful
notes, and sounds melodious. Aloud. For the heartiest praise is due to our good
Lord. His acts of love to us speak more loudly than any of our words of
gratitude can do. No dulness should ever stupefy our psalmody, or half
heartedness cause is to limp along. Sing aloud, ye debtors to sovereign grace,
your hearts are profoundly grateful: let your voices express your thankfulness.
Unto God our strength.”
So it is seen that Spurgeon
had a delight in the full, proper and enthusiastic singing. It was not supposed to be dull, as if the
lack of instruments should mean that the music is boring, rather it should be
sung with the whole heart as unto the Lord. However, not all followers of the tradition of no
instruments in the church were quite as balanced as Calvin and Spurgeon. Even though both of them rejected the use of
instruments in the church worship, and they would even argue that such a use is
unscriptural, they never went so far as to say that it is outright idolatry to
use instruments in church worship. As
such was the case with Robert L. Dabney
(1820-1898 A.D.). Dabney claimed that
because instrumental worship is not commanded by God, any use of
instrumental music in the church is idolatry because it is of human
invention. Part of Dabney’s fear was
that once the idolatry of instruments in worship was let in, any number of
idolatries would be allowed in. (REVIEW
by Robert L. Dabney of Dr. John L. Girardeau's Instrumental Music in Public Worship). However, that idea should not be seen as totally without
reason because he was reacting against the ideas of the Roman Catholic Church (or
what Dabney termed Popish music).
Dabney explained some of this in his article he wrote to the editor of
the Watchman
And Observer, Richmond VA,
February 22, 1849. His main
problem with the Roman Catholic mass was that it was addressed to the senses. All of the music in the mass was performed in
an unknown tongue (notice the echoes of Calvin). He explained their form of worship us thus:
“He [the Pope] asserts that even though there
were not an articulate word pronounced in any language, the solemn drama would
convey its instructions to the heart, through the genuflections, the pantomime,
the adoration of the priests, and the varying harmonies of the music. Their
theory of church music is just the same. The hymns are in an unknown language:
if the worshipper heard every syllable articulated, he would not understand the
ideas that are sung, nor does it matter that he should. The sentiment of
devotion is conveyed sufficiently, by the character of the music.”
So then, the worship of the
Catholic Church focused entirely on the fleshly communication of the service
because the text had absolutely no influence of the congregation. The Roman Catholic Church brought people in
by appealing to their senses, and by giving them a religious experience. Dabney strongly opposed those ideas of worship in the
church. His response was, “The theory of Protestant religious music is,
or ought to be, essentially different. We appeal to the understanding and to
those intelligent emotions, which are produced by the understanding on the
heart.” His belief was that there is no
religion contained in the music itself.
Music itself only assists in the conveying and impressing of the truths
contained in the text. He believed that
music should appeal to the emotions through the understanding of the mind. Thus he stated his purpose for music, “We
sing articulate, intelligent words, in a familiar language, conveying to every
hearer, instructive ideas and elevating sentiments. The articulation of words sung, is the very essence and soul of our
musical worship.” Thus far, the reasons given have
been mostly with theological arguments; however, Dabney gave some aesthetic and
practical reasons for not using them as well.
One thing that must be understood before continuing is that in the 1800s
the controversial instrument that churches were arguing about was the organ, so
in both of his articles Dabney is speaking directly against the organ, but he
also made it clear that most of his arguments apply against all instruments. “And first; none who are familiar with the
use of the organ, can be so hardy as to deny, that it is unfavorable to distinct articulation,
which is the very essential of religious music.” Since Dabney believed that the communication of the text is of
primary importance, any instrument that breaks down the clearness and
distinctness of the text should not be used.
Furthermore, he also argued that since the organ is the most
overpowering instrument, it drowns out the congregation and further degrades
the integrity of the text (Watchman
And Observer, Richmond VA, February 22, 1849, Volume IV, No. 28). “Second: The organ is incapable of accentuation. The alternate notes played upon it
cannot receive any variety of ictus
or force, as should be the case in all music.”
Dabney further argued that English poetry requires an alternating accent
on the syllables, and the organ does not have that ability. Furthermore, he argued that the organ does
not contain the ability to be truly musical because it does not have the
ability to shape phrases. “Hence the
music of an organ, although it may have a certain kind of solemnity, can never
be spirited. It is only rescued from the character of drawling, by the power
and fullness of its tones. To use it as an accompaniment to vocal music, is death to the spirit and expression of
the poetry which is sung. (Watchman
And Observer, Richmond VA, February 22, 1849, Volume IV, No. 28)” Money
was also a big reason why he said churches should not use organs. “The money cost of these instruments, with
the damaging debts incurred for them, is a sufficient objection. The money they
cost, if expended in mission work, would do infinitely more good to souls and
honor to God. (REVIEW by Robert L.
Dabney of Dr. John L. Girardeau's Instrumental
Music in Public Worship.)” All those reasons were
important to Dabney, but the one thing that disturbed him the most was the
reason why churches were wanting organs.
He explains the pressure against churches in that time period, “It is always urged: "we must have an organ to keep pace with
other churches in attracting a congregation, and in retaining the young and
thoughtless."” Dabney
firmly believed that the people were to be attracted to the church by the
Gospel and the Word, not music. He
lamented, “Has it come then to this, that the chaste spouse of Christ is
reduced to borrow the meretricious adornment of the "scarlet whore,"
in order to catch the unholy admiration of the ungodly? (Watchman And Observer, Richmond VA,
February 22, 1849, Volume IV, No. 28)” One last thing that set the Calvinistic view apart
from that of the Lutheran view was that Calvin believed that the only source
for the texts of hymns in the Church is Scripture, and the Scriptures that were
predominantly used were the Psalms.
Calvin believed that the purpose of hymns in the church is to “incite us to pray to and praise God, and to meditate
upon his works in order to love, fear, honor and glorify him.” The question must be asked about how one is
to find text that can do that. Calvin’s
belief was that, “when we have looked thoroughly, and searched here and there,
we shall not find better songs nor more fitting for the purpose, than the
Psalms of David, which the Holy Spirit spoke and made through him.” So then, the decision to use only Scripture
is a very safe because who can go wrong with singing scripture. So then it is seen that Dabney was not just totally
off his rocker with the rejection of instruments being used in the church, and
the same goes for both Calvin and Spurgeon.
They had reasons for believing what they did, and there arguments should
be considered. That leads to the all-important question, “How
should music be used in the church, and how does what we learned apply to us
today?” I think one thing that we need
to realize is that the struggle of what to do with music is not a new
struggle. It has been wrestled with for
2,000 years, and if the Lord wills, it will be struggled with for another 2,000
years or longer. We are not alone in
our struggle, and I think it would be helpful for the church today to look back
at history and try to gain a clearer perspective on the struggles that we are
having now. For instance, we learn from Ambrose that some
musical styles often become popular because they speak to or assist in times of
trouble. We see this in the development
of the Negro spiritual, or as in the depression, the Southern Gospel song
brought the hope in using the Gospel and putting hope in the lyrics, and they
could easily be sung at home. It makes
me wonder if there wasn’t also a reason for the advent of the praise and
worship song? Maybe it was because the
previous generation lost its first love of singing the hymns to the Lord, and
the hymns became nothing more than tradition and not from the heart? We learn from Augustine that even though music has
the great power to move us, it also has the power to distract us from what is
really important. How often do we
consider in the music that we prefer, whether we like it because of the message
or just because the music moves us? Do
we fight that personal struggle to put music in its proper place? Luther encouraged the writing of the liturgy not
just to make pretty music, even though he loved pretty music, he did it to
teach the word and to involve people in the proclaiming of God’s truth. Do we use music to encourage others? Do we use it to teach? And when we write songs, do we do it just to
make people feel good? Liturgies were
not put together haphazardly; they had a reason behind their structure and
form. Do we have a rhyme and reason
behind what we do, even if it is not a liturgy? Calvin put a great deal of emphases on the text and
message of music in the church. He
believed that every part of the worship meant something. Whether we agree or disagree with his
conclusions about instruments in the church, I don’t think anybody can truly
argue that his emphasis on text was unbiblical. Do we have that same zeal for the teaching of the Word? And even if we don’t agree that we should
base our hymns directly out of the Scriptures, do we have that same zeal for
accurately portraying the truths of God in the texts of our songs? Although Dabney might have been a little extreme,
does he not have several good points about the sometimes impracticality of
instruments? Can we become so caught up
in the instrumentation that we forget about the singing? Or can we get so caught up in the instrument
that we put a great deal of money and effort into them that could best be used
elsewhere? Lastly, I think we learn that many of the arguments that
we use in our churches today are not unlike those used in the past. Does not the argument used against organs
sound vaguely familiar to those used against the use of praise bands? We see by looking at history that many of
our arguments have been used against other things of which now we don’t even
give second thought to. So I find myself now caught up in two worlds. One world being that of musical training,
and the other being the generation around me that says it doesn’t matter as
long as you feel something. The former
have a style all its own, and the latter having its own as well. The former being traditional with its
popularity fading, but the latter is new and considered exciting by this
generation. But above both of those
worlds, the Word of God is calling me to proclaim the truths of God and to
praise my Creator and Savior. All music
could pass away, but that calling will never pass away. So I find myself in a battle about which
world to live in. Even though I don’t
agree with all of his conclusions, I whole-heartedly concur with Calvin on the
proclaiming of the Word, yet I still find in myself the desire, like Luther,
for the beauty and expression of music.
I also want to reach people, so what world do I live in? Do I embrace the popular so that I will be
listened to by all, or do I go with what is aesthetically pleasing and musically
refined? So, like Augustine, I find the
struggle within me about what to do with music. I don’t want to go to one extreme or the other. It would be easy if Scripture were clear on
the issue, so I am left without resolution on the issue. All I know for sure is that I want to please
my Lord by the music I create. So maybe
it is much as Mark Bartel, the choir conductor of the Singing Quakers at
Friends University, said, “It’s not so important what people decide about what
music they do as long as they have put thought into it and know why they do the
music they do.” So here and now, I will
make no firm decision on what style I will follow, but I do know why I do the
music that I do. I want to please my
Lord and Master in everything that I do, including my music, and I pray that in
all my music, whether I perform it or write it, that it will be glorifying to
Him, for I know that if desires to do so, it will be blessed, and it will be
fruitful.
Sources Saint Augustine, Confessions, book X
Robert L. Dabney, letter to
the editor of Watchman
And Observer, Richmond VA
February 22, 1849, Volume IV, No. 28.
Retrieved from http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil/dabney/organs.htm
Robert L. Dabney, a review
of Dr. John L. Girardeau's Instrumental Music in Public Worship.
Instrumental Music in the Public Worship of the Church. By John L. Girardeau,
D. D., LL.D., Professor in Columbia Theological Seminary, South Carolina.
Richmond: Whittet & Shepperson. 1888. The Presbyterian Quarterly, July
1889. Retrieved from http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil/dabney/organs.htm
Charles Spurgeon, The treasury of David, originally in
written form retrieved from http://www.spurgeon.org/treasury/treasury.htm
John Calvin, Commentary on the Psalms, originally
in written form retrieved from http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom10.html
John Calvin, preface to the Genevan Psalter, originally in
written from retrieved from
http://www.fpcr.org/blue_banner_articles/calvinps.htm
Vincent A. Lenti, Saint
Ambrose, the Father of Western Hymnody,
The Hymn vol. 48, No. 4 October 1997 William
J Reynolds and Milburn Price, “A Survey of Christian Hymnody” 4th ed.
Hope Publishing Company, Carol Stream.
1999.
1 Corinthians 14:13 “Therefore let
him who speaks in a tongue pray that he may ??interpret (NKJV).
At this point I think Calvin is
assuming the context of that verse, so it might help to clarify some of his
argument by pointing out verse 14-17 of the same chapter, “14 For if I pray in
a tongue, my spirit prays, but my understanding is unfruitful. 15 What is the
conclusion then? I will pray with the spirit, and I will also pray with the
understanding. ??I will sing with the spirit, and I will also sing ??with the
understanding. 16 Otherwise, if you bless with the spirit, how will he who
occupies the place of the uninformed say “?Amen?” ??at your giving of thanks,
since he does not understand what you say? 17 For you indeed give thanks well,
but the other is not edified.”
| | |
|