FROM THE LIBRARY OF
REV. LOUIS FITZGERALD BENSON. D. D.
BEQUEATHED BY HIM TO
THE LIBRARY OF
PRINCETON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
3'
p
s
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
IN THE
PUBLIC WORSHIP OF THE CHURCH
INSTRUMENTAL MIS 1 "
IN THE
rriiuc woHsinr
OF
THE CHTJKCH.
JOHN L. GIRARDEAU,
Professor in Columbia Theological Seminaky, South Carolina.
RICHMOND. VA:
Whittet A Sm i .;\m !.-. LOO] Main Bj
188
Copyright
by
JOHN L. GIRARDEAU,
1888.
.•REPACK.
The following treatise owes its origin to a desire
expressed by members of the last Senior Class in Col-
umbia Theological Seminary to hear a discussion of
the question whether instrumental music may be legit-
imately used in the public worship of the Church.
I of deep convictions on that subject, the
writer could not refuse compliance with such a re-
quest, and accordingly delivered a course of lectures
to the class. A dear Christian friend, who heard one
of these lectures preached as a sermon, suggested the
propriety of their being published, and being aware
that the writer was not encumbered with a superfluity
of this world's goods, generously tendered the means
to render the suggestion practical. Although cautioned
that she might make a useless pecuniary sacrifice afl
the current of the Church's views is now set in a direc-
tion opposed to the doctrine of the treatise, she insisted
upon executing her intention, on the ground that she
would contribute to erect a testimony to the truth.
Hence the appearance of this little book before the
public.
6 PKEFACE.
It will, no doubt, be said that the attempt to prove
the unjustifiable employment of instrumental music in
the public worship of the Church is schismatical, since
the practice is now well-nigh universal ; that it is trivial,
inasmuch as it concerns a mere circumstantial in the
services of religion ; and that it is useless, as the ten-
dency which is resisted is invincible, and is destined to
triumph throughout Protestant Christendom. To all
this one answer alone is offered, and it is sufficient,
namely : that the attempt is grounded in truth. It in-
volves a contest for a mighty and all-comprehending
principle, by opposing one of the special forms in
which it is now commonly transcended and violated.
It is that principle, emphasized in the following re-
marks as scriptural and regulative, that lends impor-
tance to the discussion, and redeems it from the re-
proach of being narrow and trifling.
The argument is commended to the consideration
of any of God's people into whose hands it may fall ;
but it is especially addressed to Presbyterians, to whose
venerable standards, as well as directly to the Scrip-
tures, the appeal for proof is taken. They are en-
treated to read it, and to render judgment according
to the evidence submitted. May that Almighty Spirit,
whose illumination our divine Lord and Saviour prom-
ised to his followers, guide each reader to the truth !
Columbia. S. C.
C S T E N T S.
I'AiiK.
The Question Stated, 9
I. General Argument from Scripture, ... 9
II. Argument from the Old Testament, . . 27
HI. Argument from the New Testament, . . 80
IV. Argument from the Presbyterian Stand arks, . 123
V. Historical Argument, ..... 155
VI. Arguments in Favor of Instrumental Music Con-
sidered, ....... 180
VTI. Concluding Remarks, 200
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
IN THE
PUBLIC WORSHIP OF THE CHURCH
In the discussion of the question, Whether the use
of instrumental music iu the worship of the church is
permissible or uot, it must be premised:
First, that the question is not in regard to private or
family worship, or to that of social gatherings which
are not ecclesiastical in their nature, nor with reference
to the utility or tastefulness of instrumental music, nor
in relation to the abuse to which it maybe liable; but,
S 'in//;/, the question is precisely, Is the use of in-
strumental music in the public worship of the church
justifiabb t The design of this discussion is, with the
help of the divine Spirit, to prove the negative.
I.
The General Argument prom Scripture.
Attention, at the outset, is invoked to the considera-
tions which serve to establish the following controlling
principle : A divine warrant is necessary for every ele-
ment of doctrine, government and worship in the
church; that is, whatsoever in these spheres is not
commanded in the Scriptures, either expressly or by
good and necessary consequence from their statements,
rbidcU //.
10 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
1. This principle is deducible by logical inference
from the great truth — confessed by Protestants — that
the Scriptures are an infallible rule of faith and prac-
tice, and therefore supreme, perfect and sufficient for
all the needs of the Church. " All Scripture is given
by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for
reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness :
that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly fur-
nished unto all good works." This truth operates posi-
tively to the inclusion of everything in the doctrine,
government and worship of the church which is com-
manded, explicitly or implicitly, in the Scriptures, and
negatively to the exclusion of everything which is not so
commanded.
2. This principle of the necessity of a divine warrant
for everything in the faith and practice of the church
is proved by didactic statements of Scripture.
Num. xv. 39, 40 : " Eemember all the commandments
of the Lord and do them ; and that ye seek not after
your own heart and your own eyes, after which ye use
to go a whoring : that ye may remember and do all my
commandments, and be holy unto your God." Ex.
xxv. 40: "And look that thou make them after their
pattern, which was showed thee in the mount." Heb.
viii. 5: "Who serve unto the example and shadow of
heavenly things, as Moses was admonished of God,
when he was about to make the tabernacle : for, See,
saith he, that thou make all things according to the
pattern showed to thee in the mount." Deut. iv. 2:
"Ye shall not add unto the word which I command
you, neither shall ye diminish aught from it, that ye
may keep the commandments of the Lord your God
GENERAL ARGUMENT PROM SCRIPTURE. 11
which I command you." Dent. xii. 32: "Whai thing
soever T command \ on, observe to do it : thou Bhali n< »t
add thereto, nor diminish from it." Prov. x\\. 5, 6:
•• Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them
that put their trust in him. Add thou not unto his
words, lest he reprove thee, and thou be found a liar."
Isa. yiii. 20: " To the law and to the testimony: if they
speak not according to this word, it is because there is
no light in them." Dan. ii. 44: "And in the days of
these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom,
which shall never he destroyed : and the kingdom shall
not he left to other people." Matt. xv. 6 : "Thus have
ye made the commandment of God of none effect by
your tradition." Matt, xxviii. 19, 20: "Go ye, there-
fore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have
commanded you." Col. ii. 20-23: "Wherefore if ye
he dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world,
why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to
ordinances, (touch not; taste not; handle not; which
are all to perish with the using ; ) after the command-
ments and doctrines of men? which things have indeed
a shew of wisdom in will-worship, and humility, and
neglecting of the body; not in any honor to the satis-
fying of the flesh." 2 Tim. iii. 16, 17: "All scripture
i> given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doc-
trine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in right-
eousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thor-
oughly furnished unto all good works."' Rev. xxii. IS,
l'.> : "For 1 testify unto every man that heareth the
words of the prophecy of this book. If any m.iii shall
12 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
add unto these things, God shall add unto him the
plagues that are written in this book : and if any man
shall take away from the words of the book of this pro-
phecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of
life, and out of the holy city, and out of the things
which are written in this book."
These solemn statements and awful warnings teach
us the lesson, that to introduce any devices and inven-
tions of our own into the doctrine, government or wor-
ship of the church, is to add to the words of God, and
to fail in maintaining the principles and truths, or in
complying with the institutions and ordinances, delivered
to us in the Scriptures, is to take away from the words of
God. The Romanists, for example, who hold the doc-
trine of transubstantiation, and observe the sacrifice of
the mass, add to God's words ; and the Quakers, who
maintain the co-ordinate authority of immediate reve-
lations of new, original truth with the inspired Oracles,
and neglect the observance of the sacraments, both add
to and take away from them. And, in like manner,
those who import instrumental music into the ordained
worship of the New Testament Church transcend the
warrant of Scripture, and add to the words which Christ
our Lord has commanded.
3. There are concrete instances recorded in the Scrip-
tures which graphically illustrate the same great prin-
ciple.
(1.) Gen. iv: Cain and his offering. The brothers,
Cain and Abel, had been in childhood beyond all doubt
instructed by their parents in the knowledge of the first
promise of redemption to be accomplished by atone-
ment. They had, we have every reason to believe, often
GENERAL \\u\i .Ml'.M fi;om sruirTiKi:. L3
Keen their father offering animal sacrifices in the wor-
ship of (rod. To this mode of worship fchey had been
accustomed. Cain, the fcype of rationalists and fabri-
cators of rites and ceremonies in the house of the Lord,
consulted his own wisdom and taste, and ventured fco
offer in God's worship the fruit of the ground— an un-
bloody sacrifice ; while Abel, conforming fco the appoint-
ments and prescribed usages in which he had been
trained, expressed his faith and obedience by offering
a land). Abel's worship was accepted and Cain's re-
jected. "And in process of time it came fco pass, that
Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto
the Lord. And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings
of his nock and of the fat thereof. And the Lord had
respect unto Abel and to his offering; but unto Cain
and his offering he had not respect." Thus, in the
immediate family of Adam, we behold a signal and
typical instance of self-assertion and disregard of divine
prescriptions in the matter of worship. This was swiftly
followed by God's disapprobation, and then came the
development of sin in the atrocious crime of fratri-
cide, and the banishment of the murderer from the
communion of his family and the presence of his
God.
Lev. x. 1-3: Nadab and Abihu. "And Nadab
and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, took either of them his
censer, and put fire therein, and put incense thereon,
and offered strange tire before the Lord, which he com-
manded them not. 1 And there went out tire from the
Lord, and devoured them, and they died before the
Lord. Then Moses said unto Aaron, This is it that the
1 That is. which he
d commanded Moses to smite the
rock at Horeb. This he did, and water gushed forth
abundantly. The apostle Paul tells us that that rock
typified Christ. The typical teaching furnished by
Moses, then, was that from the one death of Christ
under the smiting of the law the grace of the Holy
Ghost should proceed to satisfy the thirst of the soul.
Christ was to be smitten unto death only once. Now
again, at Kadesh, the Israelites suiter for want of water.
God commands Moses to speak unto the rock. To this
explicit command lie rashly ventured to add. He spoke
to the people, instead of the rock, and he smote the
rock and smote it twice. He used his own judgment,
asserted his own will, and taught the people falsely.
For this sin he and Aaron, who concurred with him in
Dunission, were excluded from entrance into the
pr< nnised land. " And the Lord spake unto Moses, say-
ing, Take the rod, and gather thou the assembly to-
gether, thou and Aaron thy brother, and speak ye to
the rock before their eyes; and it shall give forth his
water, and thou shalt bring forth to them water out of
the rock : so thou shalt give the congregation and their
- drink. And Moses took the rod from before the
Lord, as he commanded him. And Moses and Aaron
gathered the congregation together before the rock, and
id unto them, Hear now. ye rebels; must we fetch
you water out of this rock? And Moses lifted up his
hand, and with his rod he smote the rock twice : and
the water came out abundantly, and the congregation
drank, and their beasts also. And the Lord spake unto
Mos4 - and Aaron. Because ye believed me not, to sanc-
tify me in the eyes of the children of Israel, therefore
16 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which
I have given them."
We have here an inexpressibly affecting instance of
the sin and folly of adding human inventions to the
ordinances of God's appointment, of the dreadful re-
sults that may follow from what men may conceive slight
departures from obedience to the commands of God.
Not to speak of Aaron, the accomplished orator, the
venerable saint, the first anointed high priest of his
people, this incomparable man, Moses, in whom were
blended all natural gifts and supernatural graces, the
deliverer, the legislator, the historian, the poet, the
judge and the commander of Israel, after having
brought them out of Egypt, conducted them through
the parted waters of the Ked Sea, mediated between
them and God amidst the terrors of Sinai, led them
through the horrors of the waste and howling desert, —
this glorious man, now in sight of the Jordan, which
like a thread separated them from the long-sought,
long-coveted goal of their hearts, is doomed, for one
addition to God's command, which no doubt seemed to
him but a slight deviation from his instructions, to die
short of the promised land.
(5.) 1 Sam. xiii. : Saul offering a burnt-offering at
Gilgal. The king had no command to officiate as
priest. Saul added to God's command and performed
a function for which he had no authority. The circum-
stances seemed to him to justify the act. But he gained
the divine disapprobation and lost his kingdom for the
blunder. "As for Saul, he was yet in Gilgal, and all
the people followed him trembling. And he tarried
seven days, according to the set time that Samuel had
GENERAL ARGUMENT PROM B0RIPT1 BE. 17
appointed: but Samuel came not to Gilgal; and the
people weir scattered from him. And Saul said, Bring
hither a burnt-offering to me, and peace-offerings. And
he offered the burnt-offering. And it came to pass,
that as soon as he had made an end of offering the
burnt-offering, behold, Samuel came; and Saul went
out to meet him that he might salute him. And Samuel
said, What hast thou done? And Saul said, Because
1 saw that the people were scattered from me, and that
thou earnest not within the days appointed, and that
the Philistines gathered themselves together at Mich-
mash ; therefore said I, The Philistines will come down
now upon me to Gilgal, and I have not made supplica-
tion unto the Lord: I forced myself therefore, and
offered a burnt-offering. And Samuel said to Saul,
Thou hast done foolishly : thou hast not kept the com-
mandment of the Lord thy God which he commanded
thee : for now would the Lord have established thy
kingdom upon Israel forever. But now thy kingdom
shall not continue : the Lord hath sought him a man
after his own heart, and the Lord hath commanded
him to be captain over his people, because thou hast
not kept that which the Lord commanded thee."
(6.) 1 Chron. xiii. 7, 8 ; xv. 11-15 : Uzza and the ark,
and David's subsequent obedience. The Levites, or,
more particularly, the Kohathites, were expressly com-
manded to bear the ark. The manner of hearing it
was also commanded. Rings were appended, through
which staves were run. These poles, covered with
gold, were to be supported on the shoulders of the
bearers. They were forbidden to touch the ark upon
pain of death. "After that, the sons of Kohath shall
18 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC LN CHURCH WORSHIP.
come to bear it: but they shall not touch any holy
thing, lest they die." Such was God's command. In
transporting it from the house of Abinadab, David in-
fringed the divine command by directing the ark to be
borne on a cart drawn by oxen. Then when the ani-
mals stumbled, Uzza, with the intention of saving the
ark from falling, touched it with his hand. He was
instantly killed for his pious disobedience. " And they
carried the ark of God in a new cart out of the house
of Abinadab : and Uzza and Ahio drave the cart. And
David and all Israel played before God with all their
might, and with singing, and with harps, and with
psalteries, and with timbrels, and with cymbals, and
with trumpets. And when they came unto the thresh-
ing-floor of Chidon, Uzza put forth his hand to hold
the ark ; for the oxen stumbled. And the anger of the
Lord was kindled against Uzza, and he smote him, be-
cause he put his hand to the ark : and there he died
before God." The offence was the more inexcusable,
because the staves were never detached from the ark,
and it is not at all likely that the Philistines, who had
been subjected to so severe a treatment while they had
it in their possession, had ventured to steal them. And
it deserves consideration that those heathen had not
been killed for handling the ark, while for doing the
same thing God's people, who should have known bet-
ter, were taught an awful lesson.
The magnificent demonstration suffered a disastrous
arrest, and the king of Israel, sobered by the warning
he had received, returned home to do what he ought to
have done before — to study the law of God. Having
accomplished this neglected office, he makes a second
GENERAL ARGUMENT PROM BORLPTUBE. 1 ( .)
attempt to remove the sacred symbol of God's covenant
to Jerusalem, but in a different fashion from the former.
Let us hear the record. "And David called for Zadok
and Abiathar the priests, and for the Levites, for l/iiel,
Asaiah, and .Tod. Shemaiah, and Eliel and Amminadab,
and said unto them, Ye arc the chief of the fathers of
the Levitts: sanctify yourselves, both ye and your
brethren, that ye may bring up the ark of the Lord God
of Israel unto the place that I have prepared for it.
For because ye did it not at the first, the Lord our God
made a breach upon us, for that we sought him not
after the due order. So the priests and the Levites
sanctified themselves to bring up the ark of the Lord
God of Israel. And the children of the Levites bare
the ark upon their shoulders with the staves thereon,
as Moses commanded according to the word of the
Lord." It merits notice that when the ark was to be
removed and instated in its place in the temple which
was about to be dedicated, Solomon caused the "due
order" to be observed. "And all the elders of Israel
came; and the Levites took up the ark. And they
brought up the ark, and the tabernacle of the congre-
gation, and all the holy vessels that were in the taber-
nacle, these did the priests and the Levites bring up.
. . . And the priests brought in the ark of the cove-
nant of the Lord unto his place." ! The history of this
matter enforces the impressive lesson that we are not
at liberty to use our own judgment and to act without
a divine warrant in regard to things of God's appoint-
ment.
1 2 Chron. v. 4, ",. 7.
20 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
(7.) 2 Chron. xxvi. 16-21 : King Uzziah officiating as
a priest. God had given no warrant to a king to act
as priest, and Uzziah arrogantly undertook, without
such warrant, to discharge sacerdotal functions. The
consequences of his impiety are vividly depicted in the
following record: "But when he was strong, his heart
was lifted up to his destruction : for he transgressed
against the Lord his God, and went into the temple of
the Lord to burn incense upon the altar of ineense.
And Azariah the priest went in after him, and with him
fourscore priests of the Lord, that were valiant men :
and they withstood Uzziah the king, and said unto him,
It appertaineth not unto thee, Uzziah, to burn incense
unto the Lord, but to the priests, the sons of Aaron,
that are consecrated to burn incense: go out of the
sanctuary ; for thou hast trespassed ; neither shall it be
for thine honor from the Lord God. Then Uzziah was
wroth, and had a censer in his hand to burn incense :
and while he was wroth with the priests, the leprosy
even rose up in his forehead before the priests in the
house of the Lord, from beside the incense altar. And
Azariah the chief priest, and all the priests, looked
upon him, and behold, he was leprous in his forehead,
and they thrust him out from thence, yea, himself
hasted also to go out, because the Lord had smitten
him. And Uzziah the king was a leper unto the day of
his death, and dwelt in a several house, being a leper ;
for he was cut off from the house of the Lord."
(8.) 2 Chron. xxviii. 3-5 : King Ahaz doubly offend-
ing as to function and place. He performed priestly
functions without a divine warrant, and performed them
in places which God had not appointed. For this
GENERAL ARGUMENT FROM SCRIPTURE, 21
wicked self-assertion be was visited with divine ven-
geance. " Moreover he burnt incense in the valley of
the son of Hinnoni, and burnt his children in the tire.
After the abominations of the heathen whom the Lord
had east out before the children of Esrael. He sacri-
ficed also and burnt incense in the high places, and on
the hills, and under every green tree. Wherefore the
Lord his God delivered him into the hands of the IHng
of Syria ; and they smote him, and carried away a great
multitude of them captives, and brought them to Da-
mascus. And he was also delivered into the hands
of the king of Israel, who smote him with a great
slaughter."
(9.) The jealousy of God for the principle of a divine
warrant for everything in his worship is most conspicu-
ously illustrated in New Testament times, by the tre-
mendous judgments which befell the Jewish people for
perpetuating, without such a warrant, the typical ritual
of the temple-service. Until the great atoning sacrifice
was offered, they had a positive warrant from God for
the observance of that order. But when that sacrifice
had been offered, the veil of the temple had been rent
in twain, and the Holy Ghost had been copiously
poured out at the inauguration of a new dispensation,
the positive warrant; for the temple-worship was with-
drawn. This Stephen insisted on before the Council,
and the illustrious witness for Christ was murdered for
his testimony. He charged that when their fathers had
no warrant to worship sacriricially except at the temple
they had persisted in observing that worship elsewhere;
and now that God had withdrawn the warrant to wor-
ship at the temple, they demanded the right to worship
3
22 INSTEUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
there. "Ye do always," said the glorious servant of
Jesus, " resist the Holy Ghost." For this sin, by which
they endorsed their rejection of their Messiah and Sa-
viour, their church-state and national polity were de-
molished, and they, after the experience of an unparal-
leled tribulation, were scattered to the four winds of
heaven. Have we not the evidence before us at this day ?
The mighty principle has thus been established, by
an appeal to the didactic statements of God's word, and
to special instances recorded in scriptural history, that
a divine warrant is required for everything in the faith
and practice of the Church, that whatsoever is not in
the Scriptures commanded, either explicitly or by good
and necessary consequence, is forbidden. The special
application of this principle to the worship of God, as
illustrated in the concrete examples which have been
furnished, cannot escape the least attentive observation.
God is seen manifesting a most vehement jealousy in
protecting the purity of his worship. Any attempt to
assert the judgment, the will, the taste of man apart
from the express warrant of his Word, and to introduce
into his worship human inventions, devices and me-
thods, was overtaken by immediate retribution and re-
buked by the thunderbolts of his wrath. Nor need we
wonder at this ; for the service which the creature pro-
fesses to render to God reaches its highest and most
formal expression in the worship which is offered him.
In this act the majesty of the Most High is directly
confronted. The worshipper presents himself face to
face with the infinite Sovereign of heaven and earth,
and assumes to lay at his feet the sincerest homage of
the heart. In the performance of such an act to violate
GENERAL ARGUMENT FROM SCRIPTURE. *J.'>
divine appointments or transcend divine prescription,
to affirm the reason of a sinful creature against the
wisdom, the will of a sinful creature against the autho-
rity, of God, is deliberately to flaunt an insult in his
face, and to hurl an indignity against his throne. What
else could follow hut the Hash of divine indignation?
It is true that in the New Testament dispensation the
same swift and visible arrest of this sin is not the ordi-
nary rule. But the patience and forbearance of God
can constitute no justification of its commission. Its
punishment, if it be not repented of, is only deferred.
" Because sentence against an evil work is not executed
speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully
set in them to do evil;" while the delayed justice of
God is gathering to itself indignation to burst forth like
an overwhelming tempest in the dreadful day of wrath.
The principle that has been emphasized is in direct
opposition to that maintained by Komanists and Pre-
latists, and I regret to say by lax Presbyterians, that
what is not forbidden in the Scriptures is permitted.
The Church of England, in her twentieth article, con-
cedes to the church "a power to decree rites and cere-
monies," with this limitation alone upon its exercise,
"that it is not lawful for the church to ordain anything
that is contrary to God's written word." 1 The princi-
' Some curious and remarkable statements have been made with re-
ference to this article. When, in 1808, the question of the introduc-
tion of instrumental music into public worship was before the Presby-
tery of Glasgow, the Rev. Dr. Begg, father of the late Dr. James I '•■
published a treatise on the "Use of Organs, " in which the following
statement is attributed to the Rev. Alexander Eislop: "The Church
land has admitted into its articles this principle, tli.it it belongs
to 'the church' of her own authority, to 'decree rites and ceremonies.'
24 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
pie of the discretionary power of the church in regard
to things not commanded by Christ in his Word, was
the chief fountain from which flowed the gradually in-
creasing tide of corruptions that swept the Latin church
into apostasy from the gospel of God's grace. And as
surely as causes produce their appropriate effects, and
history repeats itself in obedience to that law, any Pro-
testant church which embodies that principle in its
creed is destined, sooner or later, to experience a simi-
lar fate. The same, too, may be affirmed of a church
which formally rejects it and practically conforms to it.
The reason is plain. The only bridle that checks the
degenerating tendency of the church — a tendency man-
ifested in all ages — is the Word of God : for the Spirit
of grace Himself ordinarily operates only in connec-
tion with that Word. If this restraint be discarded, the
downward lapse is sure. The words of the great theo-
logian, John Owen — and the British Isles have pro-
duced no greater — are solemn and deserve to be seri-
ously pondered: "The principle that the church hath
power to institute any thing or ceremony belonging to
(Article 20 ) As a matter of historical fact, this principle was never
agreed to by the Convocation that adopted the Thirty-nine Articles,
this sentence being found neither in the first printed edition of the
articles, nor in the draft of them that passed the Convocation, and
which is still in existence, with the autograph signatures of the mem-
bers ; but it is believed to have been surreptitiously inserted by the
hand of Queen Elizabeth herself, who had much of the over-bearing
spirit of her father, Henry VIII., and who, as head of the church,
which the English constitution made her, was determined to have a
pompous worship under her ecclesiastical control." In support of this
statement, reference is made to ' ' authorities in Presbyterian Review,
July, 1843." The Use of Organs, etc., by James Begg, D. D., (p. 150).
See also Bannerman's Oliurch of Christ, Vol. I., p. 339.
GENERA1 \i;(,!Mi:\ I FROM scinnrm-:. 25
the worship of God, either as to matter or manner, be-
yond the observance of such circnmstancee as neces-
sarily attend such ordinances as Christ himself hath
instituted, lies at the bottom of all the horrible super-
stition and idolatry, of all the confusion, blood, per-
secution and wars that have for so long a season spread
themselves over the face of the Christian world."
In view of such considerations as these, confirmed,
as they are, by the facts of all past history, it is easy
how irrelevant and baseless is the taunt flung by
high churchmen, ritualists and latitudinarians of every
stripe against the maintainors of the opposite principle,
that they are narrow-minded bigots who take delight in
insisting upon trivial details. The truth is exactly the
other way. The principle upon which this cheap ridi-
cule i*> cast is simple, broad, majestic. It affirms only
the things that (rod has commanded, the institutions
and ordinances that he has prescribed, and besides this,
discharges only a negative office which sweeps away
every trifling invention of man's meretricious fancy. It
is not the supporters of this principle, but their oppo-
nents, who delight in insisting upon crossings, genu-
flexions and bowings to the east, upon vestments,
altars and candles, upon organs and cornets, and "the
dear antiphonies that so bewitch their prelates and their
chapters with the goodly echo they make ;" in fine, upon
all that finical trumpery which, inherited from the
woman clothed in scarlet, marks the trend backward to
the Rubicon and the seven-hilled mart of souls.
But whatever others may think or do, Presbyterians
cannot forsake this principle without the guilt of de-
fection from their own venerable standards and from
26 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
the testimonies sealed by the blood of their fathers.
Among the principles that the Keformers extracted
from the rubbish of corruption and held up to light
again, none were more comprehensive, far-reaching and
profoundly reforming than this. It struck at the root
of every false doctrine and practice, and demanded the
restoration of the true. Germany has been infinitely
the worse because of Luther's failure to apply it to the
full. Calvin enforced it more fully. The great French
Protestant Church, with the exception of retaining a
liturgical relic of popery, gave it a grand application,
and France suffered an irreparable loss when she dra-
gooned almost out of existence the body that maintained
it. John Knox stamped it upon the heart of the Scottish
Church, and it constituted the glory of the English
Puritans. Alas ! that it is passing into decadence in the
Presbyterian churches of England, Scotland and Amer-
ica. What remains but that those who still see it, and
cling to it as to something dearer than life itself, should
continue to utter, however feebly, however inopera-
tively, their unchanging testimony to its truth ? It is
the acropolis of the church's liberties, the palladium
of her purity. That gone, nothing will be left to hope,
but to strain its gaze towards the dawn of the millen-
nial day. Then — we are entitled to expect — a more
thorough-going and glorious reformation will be effected
than any that has blessed the church and the world
since the magnificent propagation of Christianity by
the labors of the inspired apostles themselves.
II.
AjEtQUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT.
In the Jewish dispensation God was pleased U) pro-
ceed in accordance with the great principle which has
been signalized, in regard to the introduction of instru-
mental music into the public worship of his people.
He kept the ordering of this part of his formal and in-
stituted worship in his own hands. There is positive
proof that it was never made an element of that worship
except by his express command. Without his warrant
it was excluded; only with it was it employed.
1. Let us notice the operation of this principle with
reference to the tabernacle-worship.
Moses received the mode of constructing the taber-
nacle and the order of its worship by divine revelation.
"See, saith he, that thou make all things according to
the pattern showed to thee in the mount." It will be
admitted that the instructions thus divinely given de-
scended to the most minute details — the sort of fabrics
and skins to be used, and their diverse colors, the pins,
the ouches and the taches, the ablutions, the vestments
and the actions of the officiating priests and Levitts.
the ingredients of the holy ointment and the incense,
the parts, the arrangements, the instruments of wor-
ship, — to everything connected with the tabernacle
these specific directions referred. Of course, if God
had intended instrumental music to be employed, it
28 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
would have been included in these particular directions ;
the instruments would have been specified for its per-
formance, and regulations enjoined for its use.
What, now, are the facts'? No directions are given
respecting instruments of music. Two instruments of
sound are provided for, but they were of such a char-
acter as to make it impracticable to use them ordinarily
as accompaniments of the voice in singing. The record
is: "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Make
thee two trumpets of silver ; of a whole piece shalt thou
make them : that thou mayest use them for the calling
of the assembly, and for the journeying of the camps."
" And if ye go to war in your land against the enemy
that oppresseth you, thou shalt blow an alarm with the
trumpets ; and ye shall be remembered before the Lord
your God, and ye shall be saved from your enemies.
Also in the days of your gladness, and in your solemn
days, and in the beginnings of your months, ye shall
blow with the trumpets over your burnt-offerings, and
over the sacrifices of }^our peace-offerings ; that they
may be to you for a memorial before your God : I am
the Lord your God." The blowing of these trumpets
as a signal for marching, or for going to war, had cer-
tainly nothing to do with worship, neither did the call
of the congregation to assemble belong to the perform-
ance of worship, any more than a church bell now, the
ringing of which ceases when the services begin. There
is nothing to show that the blowing of the trumpets, on
festival days and at the beginning of months, over the
offerings was accompanied by singing on the part of
priests and Levites. There is no mention of that fact,
and Jewish tradition opposes the supposition. More-
LBGUMENT riio.M TEE OLD TESTAMENT. 29
over, it is almost certain that the blowing of trumpets
on such occasions was a representative act performed
by the priests, ami that consequently it was not accom-
panied by the sringmg of tlic congregation. It is true
that there is one recorded exception (2 Chron. \. 12,
13) which occurred, however, when the tabernacle had
given way to the temple . At the dedication of the lat-
ter edifice, the priests blew the trumpets at the same
time that the Levites sang and played upon instruments
of music, so as "to make one sound;" but it is evident
that on that great occasion of rejoicing, what was aimed
at was not musical harmony, but a powerful crash of
jubilant sound. We are shut up to the conclusion that
there was nothing in the tabernacle-worship, as ordered
by Moses, which could be justly characterized as instru-
mental music.
This absence of instrumental music from the services
of the tabernacle continued not only during the wander-
f the Israelites in the desert, but after their en-
trance into the promised land, throughout the protracted
period of the Judges, the reign of Saul, and a pari of
David's. This is a noteworthy fact. Although David
was a lover of instrumental music, and himself a per-
former upon the liar]), it was not until some time after
his reign had begun that this order of things was changed,
and. as we shall see, changed by divine command. Let
us hear the scriptural record (1 Chron. xxiii. 1 (>): "So
when David was old and full of days, he made Solomon
lii> -on king over Israel. And he gathered together all
the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites.
Now the Levites Were numbered |,y the age of thirty
yean and upward: and their number by their polls,
30 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
man by man, was thirty and eight thousand ; of which
twenty and four thousand were to set forward the work
of the house of the Lord ; and six thousand were officers
and judges : moreover four thousand were porters ; and
four thousand praised the Lord with the instruments
which I made, said David, to praise therewith. And
David divided them into courses among the sons of
Levi, namely, Gershon, Kohath and Merari." Now,
how did David come to make this alteration in the
Mosaic order which had been established by divine re-
velation ? For the answer let us again consult the sa-
cred record (1 Chron. xxviii. 11-13, 19): "Then David
gave to Solomon his son the pattern of the porch,
and of the houses thereof, and of the treasuries thereof,
and of the inner parlors thereof, and of the place of the
mercy-seat, and the pattern of all that he had by the
Spirit, of the courts of the house of the Lord, and of
all the chambers round about, of the treasuries of the
house of God, and of the treasuries of the dedicated
things : also for the courses of the priests and the Le-
vites, and for all the work of the service of the house of
the Lord, and for all the vessels of service in the house of
the Lord. . . . All this, said David, the Lord made me
understand in writing by his hand upon me, and all the
works of this pattern." 2 Chron. xxix. 25, 26 : "And
he [Solomon] set the Levites in the house of the Lord
with cymbals, with psalteries, and with harps, accord-
ing to the commandment of David, and of Gad the
king's seer, and of Nathan the prophet : for so was the
commandment of the Lord by his prophets."
In the light of these statements of God's Word sev-
eral things are made evident, which challenge our se-
AKC.UMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 31
rious attention. First, instrumental music never was
divinely warranted as an element in the tabernacle-
worship until David received inspired instructions to
introduce it, as preparatory to the transition which was
about to be effected to the more elaborate ritual of the
temple. Secondly, when the temple was to be built
and its order of worship to be instituted, David re-
ceived a divine revelation in regard to it, jnst as Moses
had concerning the tabernacle with its ordinances.
Thirdly, this direct revelation to David was enforced
upon Solomon, and upon the priests and Levites, by
inspired communications touching the same subject
from the prophets Gad and Nathan. Fourthly, instru-
mental music would not have been constituted an ele-
ment in the temple-worship, had not God expressly
authorized it by his command. The public worship
of the tabernacle, up to the time when it was to be
merged into the temple, had been a stranger to it, and
so great an innovation could have been accomplished
only by divine authority. God's positive enactment
grounded the propriety of the change.
Is it not clear that the great principle, that whatso-
ever is not commanded by God, either expressly or im-
pliedly, in relation to the public worship of his house,
is forbidden, meets here a conspicuous illustration?
The bearing of all this upon the Christian church is as
striking as it is obvious. If, under a dispensation domi-
nantlv characterized by external appointments, instru-
mental music could not be introduced into the worship
of God's sanctuary, except in consequence of a warrant
furnished by him, how can a church, existing under the
Car simpler and more spiritual dispensation of the gos-
32 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
pel, venture, without such a warrant, to incorporate it
into its public services ? and that no such warrant can
be pleaded will be made apparent as the argument ex-
pands.
2. Against the conclusiveness of this argument it is
objected, that the Israelites were accustomed to use
instrumental music at their option, and that especially
was this the case on occasions of public rejoicing, when
thanksgivings were, by masses of the people, rendered
to God for signal benefits conferred by his delivering
providence. So far as the allegation concerns the em-
ployment of that kind of music in private or social life,
it is irrelevant to the scope of an argument which has
reference explicitly and solely to its use in the public
worship of God's house. This will rule out many of
the instances which are cited to prove the untenable-
ness of the principle contended for in this discus-
sion.
There remains, however, another class of cases to
which attention may be fairly directed, cases in which
public worship appeared to be offered. Into this class
fall the instances of Miriam's playing upon the timbrel
at the Red Sea, the welcome of Saul and David by the
women with singing, dancing and instrumental music,
the like instance of Jephthah's daughter, the accom-
panying of the ark by David and Israel with bands of
music, and the minstrelsy of the prophets to whom
Saul joined himself. In reply to the objection based
upon these instances, the general ground may be taken
that they are examples not of church- worship, but of
public rejoicing on the part of the nation or of com-
munities, with the exception of the prophets' minstrelsy,
AIK.IMIM FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 33
which will be separately considered. Some special re-
marks are, however, pertinent in regard to them.
In the first place, it will be noticed from the account
of the triumphant rejoicing on the shore of the Red
Sea that the men sang only : " Then sang Moses and the
children of Israel this song nnto the Lord, and spake,
saving," etc. What can be gathered from this simple
singing of the males of Israel, in praise of God for their
great deliverance, in favor of instrumental music in
worship, it is rather difficult to see.
In the second place, it was Miriam and the women
who used instruments of music on the occasion: "And
Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a tim-
brel in her hand ; and all the women went after her
with timbrels and with dances." The argument of the
objector proves too much. If from this instance the
legitimacy of employing instrumental music in the pub-
He worship of the Jewish Church is to be inferred, so
may the legitimacy of its use by women in that wor-
ship. But the history of the appointments of that
worship furnishes no evidence of the tenableness of the
latter inference. The contrary is proved. Women
were excluded from any prominent, at least any official,
function in the services of God's house in the Mosaic dis-
pensation. ! It was the males of Israel who were com-
manded to repair to Jerusalem on those festival occa-
sions when bursts of instrumental music were united
with the singing of praise in the temple-worship. In-
deed, so far from the women taking an active part in
1 The daughters of Heman, mentioned 1 Chron. xxv. 5, were not
singers and performers on instruments in the public worship, for they
are not included in the enumeration of the courses which follows.
4
34 INSTEUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
that worship, it would seem to have been limited, as to
its outward expression in sounds, to the priests and
Levites, who, as the divinely appointed official repre-
sentatives of the congregation, sang and played on
instruments of music. The argument might do for a
modern advocate of woman's rights, but it will hardly
answer for the Jewish dispensation. It is as barren of
results as was Miriam herself of issue.
In the third place, it again proves too much, if the
word rendered "dances" is correctly translated. It
would prove that religious dancing was an element in
the prescribed worship of God's people. The conse-
quence refutes the argument.
But to return to the general position, that the in-
stances mentioned in the objection were those not of
ecclesiastical worship, but of national rejoicing. Against
this general view it is urged, in reply, that an unwar-
rantable distinction is made between the Jewish church
and the Jewish nation. This raises the question whether
such a distinction is valid. Were state and church
identical ? Did the members of the state act as mem-
bers of the church ? Did the members of the church
act as members of the state ? It may be admitted that,
in the main — that is, with certain exceptions, such as the
proselytes of righteousness, for example — the nation
and the church were numerically coincident. Ordina-
rily — that is, with certain exceptions — the rite of circum-
cision designated one alike a member of the state and
of the church. But that these two institutes were iden-
tical ; that the functions of the one were the functions
of the other, considered as organisms, is to my mind
not susceptible of proof. It would be unsuitable here
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 35
to enter at Large into this question, but it lies across the
track of the argument in hand, and a brief considera-
tion of it, as it is not illogically interjected, will not be
regarded as Impertinent. The question is acutely and
ably discussed by that great man, George Gillespie, in
his Aaron s Rod Blossoming* I shall give a mere out-
line, the bare heads, of a part of his argument to pro ve
that the Jewish state and church, although in the main
the same materially, that is, as to personal constituents,
were organically and formally distinct institutes ; and
I do this the more readily because Gillespie's valuable
work is now rare and difficult of access. The) T are dis-
tinct :
(1.) In respect of laws. The judicial law was given
to the state; the ceremonial law to the church.
Ci.i In respect of acts. The members of the state
did not, as such, worship God and offer sacrifices in
the temple, etc. ; and the members of the church did
not, as such, inflict physical punishments.
(3.) In respect of controversies to be decided. Some
concerned the Lord's matters, and were to be ecclesias-
tically settled ; some the king's matters, and were to be
civilly decided.
(4.) In respect of officers. The priest> and Levites
were church officers; magistrates and judges were state
officers.
(5.) Id respect of continuance. The Romans took
away the Jewish state and civil government, but the
Jewish church and ecclesiastical government remained.
(6.) In respect of variation. The constitution and
government of the Jewish state underwent serious
changes under different civil administrations; but we
36 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
cannot say that the church was remodelled as often as
the state was.
(7.) In respect of members. There were proselytes,
the proselytes of righteousness, who were admitted to
membership in the church with its privileges, but were
not entitled to the privileges of members of the state.
(8.) In respect of government. In the prosecution
of this argument to prove the distinctness of the Jewish
church and state, Gillespie takes the ground that there
were two Sanhedrims, one civil, the other ecclesiasti-
cal ; and he cites, as maintaining that view, Zepperus,
Junius, Piscator, Wolfius, Gerhard, Godwin, Bucerus,
Walseus, Pelargus, Sopingius, the Dutch Annotators,
Bertramus, Apollonius, Strigelius, the professors of
Groningen, Keynolds, Paget, L'Empereur, and Elias,
cited by Buxtorf.
[This special argument Gillespie presses elaborately
and acutely by more than a dozen separate considera-
tions derived from Scripture. But as the question has
been ably debated on both sides by men learned in Jew-
ish affairs, no positive opinion is here expressed as to
the conclusiveness of the proofs presented by the great
Scotch divine.]
(9.) There was an ecclesiastical excommunication
among the Jews different from the penalties inflicted
by the criminal law of the state.
Such are the ribs merely of a powerful argument in
favor of the distinction between the Jewish state and
church, by one who had the reputation of being one of
the astutest debaters in the Westminster Assembly of
Divines. That distinguished scholar, Dr. Joseph Ad-
dison Alexander, expresses the opinion, in his Primi-
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 37
tm Church Offices, that the Jewish stale and church
wt'iv one organization, with two distinct classes of func-
tions, one civil and another ecclesiastical. But Gil-
lespie shows that the numerical components of some of
the courts were different; they consisted of different
men. Take either view, however, and the ends of this
argument are met, more conclusively upon Gillespie's,
it is true, hut conclusively upon both. What the state
as such did, the church as such did not do, and vice
Vi rsa. And if this be so, it follows that the same thing
holds in regard to the people. What they did in a na-
tional capacity they did not necessarily do in an eccle-
siastical. When, then, Miriam and the women with
her, the women who welcomed Saul and David return-
ing home in triumph, the daughter of Jephthali cele-
brating her father's victory, and the mass of people
who accompanied the ark in its transportation to Jeru-
salem, played on instruments of music, they w T ere com-
memorating national events w r ith appropriate national
rejoicings. They were not acting worship as the church
or as the members of the church.
In regard to the company of prophets whom Saul
joined, it is sufficient to say that they were, in part, the
poets and minstrels of the nation, and that as the inci-
dent occurred during the existence of the tabernacle,
the incontestable proof which has been already ex-
hibited, that instrumental music such as that which they
employed was not allowed in its worship, is enough to
Bweep all ground from beneath the objection now con-
sidered against the operation of the great principle of
limitation upon church worship for which I have con-
tended. This holds good whether or not the view
38 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
which has been presented as to these prophets be cor-
rect. Their playing on instruments had nothing to do
with the public, formally instituted worship of the house
of the Lord.
It has thus been shown, by a direct appeal to the
Scriptures, that during all the protracted period in
which the tabernacle was God's sanctuary the great
principle was enforced, that only what God commands
is permitted, and what he does not command is for-
bidden, in the public worship of his house. Moses with
all his wisdom, the Judges with all their intrepidity,
Saul with all his waywardness and self-will, David the
sweet Psalmist of Israel with all his skill in the musical
art, did not, any of them, venture to violate that prin-
ciple, and introduce into the public services of God's
house the devices of their imagination or the inventions
of their taste. The lesson is certainly impressive, com-
ing, as it does, from that distant age ; and it behooves
those who live in a dispensation this side of the cross
of Calvary and the day of Pentecost to show cause, be^
yond a peradventure, why they are discharged from the
duty of obedience to the divine will in this vitally im-
portant matter.
3. The next step in this argument is to show that no
musical instruments were used in the synagogue-wor-
ship.
As this is almost universally admitted, no extended
argument is needed to prove it. It might have been
expected from the jealousy which God had always pe-
culiarly manifested in enforcing the principle that with-
out an express warrant from him nothing was to be
introduced into the public worship of his people, and
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 39
especially from the facts already emphasized that no
instruments of music were allowed t<> be employed in
the tabernacle, and that they were included ill the ser-
vice at the temple only in consequence of explicit divine
instructions to that effect, it might have been expected
that instrumental music would not have been incorpo-
rated into the worship of the Jews on ordinary Sabbath
days not embraced in the three national festivals.
This presumption is confirmed by the facts of the
case.
The writers who have most carefully investigated
Jewish antiquities, and have written learnedly and elab-
orately in regard to the synagogue, concur in showing
that its worship was destitute of instrumental music.
What singing there was, and there was not much of it
in proportion to the other elements of worship, was
plain and simple. In his great work On the Ancient
Synagogue, Yitringa shows 1 that there w r ere only two
instruments of sound used in connection with the syna-
gogue, and that these were employed, not in worship or
along with it as an accompaniment, but as publishing
signals — first, for proclaiming the new year; secondly
for announcing the beginning of the Sabbath; thirdly,
for publishing the sentence of excommunication; and
fourthly, for heralding fasts. These were their sole
uses. There were no sacrifices over which they w r ere
to be blown, as in the tabernacle and temple. And
from the nature of the instruments it is plain that they
could not have accompanied the voice in singing. They
were only of two kinds — trumpets (tufap), and rams'
1 Be Sffnag. Vetere, Lib. I., Pars i , Chap. 10. Lightfoot on Matt.
vi. 2. Bee ibo Josephus, Ant, Jud., Lib. iii., Chap. 12.
40 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC LN CHURCH WORSHIP.
horns or cornets (buccince). The former were straight,
the latter curved. Nor is it to be supposed that the
cornet, like the modern instrument of that name, was
susceptible of modulation, and therefore of accompany-
ing vocal melody. It had but one note, and was so easy
to be blown that a child could sound it. Further, they
were, for the most part, used not even 'in connection
with the synagogue buildings, but were blown from the
roofs of houses, so as to be heard at a distance. Enough
has been said to prove that no instrumental music en-
tered into the services of the Jewish synagogue. 1
The elements of worship in the Mosaic dispensation
were of two kinds :
(1.) The generic or essential. Those observed in the
synagogue were the reading and exposition of God's
Word, exhortation, prayers, accompanied with singing,
if the common recitation by the people of parts of the
Psalms can be so characterized, and the contribution of
alms. "Without here raising the question whether syna-
gogues had an existence prior to the Babylonian exile,
one would risk little in taking the ground that, during all
the time of the church's development in the past, God's
people had been accustomed to meet on Sabbath days for
engagement in these essential parts of divine worship.
The patriarchal dispensation being left out of account,
in which, however, every sentiment of piety and rever-
ence, the original institution of the seventh day as one
of rest, and the acquaintance of the Israelites with the
law of the Sabbath before the promulgation of the
1 The orthodox Jews, even to the present day, oppose its use in the
synagogue. The writer knew a congregation in Charleston, S. C, to
be rent in twain in consequence of an attempt to introduce an organ.
ARGUMENT fcROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 41
Sim-nth- law, render it highly probable that such a prac-
tice was maintained, a few reasons will be intimated in
favor of its maintenance during the period of the Jew-
ish economy :
First, The fourth commandment made the sacred
observance of every Sabbath day obligatory. It is not
nahle to suppose that the law contemplated the
merely individual and private keeping holy of the day.
Secondly, The Israelites, during their sojourn in the
Wilderness, were accustomed to worship every Sabbath
day in mass at the tabernacle. It was accessible from
every part of the encampment which was around it on
every side. The proof of this is given in Lev. xxiii. 3 :
" Six tlays shall work be done : but the seventh day is the
Sal »1 >ath < )f rest, an holy convocation." The prescriptive
osage of meeting for worship on every Sabbath was
thus established during their forty years' pilgrimage in
the desert. In all that time during which they held
weekly assemblies, let it also be observed, they knew
nothing of instrumental music. It is altogether un-
reasonable to Suppose that this habit, ingrained into
them in the early period of their national existence and
consecrated by innumerable sacred and splendid asso-
ciations, would have ceased to be influential after their
wanderings had ceased and they had been permanently
located in the land of rest. Such an innovation upon
their customs could only have occurred in consequence
either of a divine command enforcing the change, or of
a serious defection from their religious principles. We
know that neither of these causes operated to produce
the supposed revolution in their habits of worship.
Upon their settlement in Canaan, they were of course
42 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
dispersed in consequence of their tribal distribution
throughout the length and breadth of the country from
Dan to Beersheba, and, as the tabernacle was necessa-
rily at any particular time confined to one spot, it was
not accessible to congregations representing all Israel,
except upon the occasions of the prescribed national
festivals. What, then, were they doing on all the other
Sabbaths of the year in their cities and towns, villages
and rural neighborhoods ? It cannot be supposed that
on those Sabbaths they never met for worship. 1 This
consideration is mightily enhanced by the fact that only
the males of Israel were enjoined to attend the great
annual festivals. Were the women, the mothers of Is-
rael, the trainers of children and youth, left destitute of
all public worship ? The supposition cannot be enter-
tained. Provision must have been made for their en-
gagement in the stated public worship of their God.
Thirdly, The priests and Levites, when not occupied
in the discharge of their formal, official duties at the
temple, were distributed through the land, and there is
evidence to show that they acted as teachers of schools.
Is it likely that ministers of religion would have edu-
cated the people in everything but the divine law, or
that they would have failed to assemble them on Sab-
bath days for the reception of religious instruction, or
that such instruction would have been unattended by
worship ? It may be said that this amounts to no more
than a presumption. But if so, it is a powerful pre-
1 ' ' Under every preceding dispensation the sanctity of the Sabbath
had been a fundamental part of revealed religion; the synagogue
worship goes back, possibly, to the captivity in Egypt, certainly to
the captivity in Babylon." — Breckinridge's Subjec. Theology, p. 530.
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 43
sumption, and is strongly confirmed by other considera-
tions, such as those that follow.
Fourthly, The Israelites were commanded to pro-
claim the incoming of the Sabbaths and the new moons
by the blowing of trumpets. That these seasons were
observed with the solemn worship of assemblies is ren-
dered almost certain by the passage in 2 Kings, chap-
ter iv.. in which it is intimated that on those occasions
the prophets were accustomed to hold meetings for in-
struction and worship. The Shunammite, w r hose son
had been restored to life by Elisha, having lost the
child by death, proposed to her husband to provide her
with the necessaries for a journey to the prophet at
Mount Carmel. His reply was, " Wherefore wait thou
go to him to-day? It is neither new moon, nor Sab-
bath ? " The answer cannot be understood except upon
the supposition here contended for — namely, that the
Sabbaths and new moons were seasons of gathering for
instruction and worship ; and it is certain that Carmel
was not Jerusalem, and that weekly Sabbaths and the be-
ginnings of months did not occur only three times a year.
Fifthly, In Psalm lxxiv. 8, the Psalmist, in view of
the devastation of the country by its enemies, thus la-
ments : "They said in their hearts, Let us destroy them
together : they have burned up all the synagogues of
God in the land." It is not necessary to suppose that
tin- buildings here rendered synagogues exactly corres-
ponded witli those erected for worship after the return
from the Babylonish captivity, but they were places for
worship. 1 Possibly they were, as Prideaux and others
"See Horn.-. Introduction, vol. ii. j>. 102, for & confirmation of
this view. It i- there shown to have been advocated by Josephus and
Philo, and also by (in. tin-. Erin sti, Whitby, Doddridge, andLardner.
44 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
suggest, uncovered places of worship, proseuchce, but
they were buildings, else how could they have been
burned ? And that they were not the halls adjoining
the temple, as some conjecture, is proved by the state-
ment that they were throughout the land : " All the
synagogues of God in the land." Were the temple
buildings ubiquitous ? In this exposition not a few
eminent commentators agree. Dr. McCurdy, in Lange's
Commentary on the place, says that these buildings
were places of meeting in different parts of the land.
Calvin remarks : " I readily take the Hebrew moadim
in the sense of synagogues, because he says all the
sanctuaries, and speaks expressly of the whole land."
Adam Clarke observes : "The word moadey, which we
translate synagogues, may be taken in a more general
sense, and mean any places where religious assemblies
were held ; and that such places and assemblies did
exist long before the Babylonish captivity is pretty evi-
dent from different parts of Scripture." 1
Dr. Plumptre, in the article on synagogues in Smith's
Dictionary of the Bihle, citing Vitringa On the Syna-
gogue (pp. 271, ff.), says: " Jewish writers have claimed
for their synagogues a very remote antiquity. In well-
nigh every place where the phrase "before the Lord"
appears they recognize in it a known sanctuary, a fixed
place of meeting, and therefore a synagogue." This
view is taken in the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan.
1 George Gillespie says : ' ' After the tribes were settled in the land
of promise synagogues were built in the case of an urgent necessity,
because all Israel could not come every .Sabbath day to the reading and
expounding of the law in the place that God had chosen that his name
might dwell there. " Eng. Pop. Cerem. p. 116.
ARGUMENT FHOM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 45
"On the one hand," says Dr. Plumptre, "it is probable
that if new moons and Sabbaths were observed at all
j it was shown above that they were], they must have
been attended by some celebration apart from as weD
as at the tabernacle or the temple. . . On the other, so
far as we tind traces of sneli local worship, it seems to
have fallen too readily into a fetich religion, sacrifices
to ephods and teraphim, in groves and on high places,
offering nothing bnt a contrast to the 'reasonable ser-
vice.' the prayers, psalms, instruction in the law, of the
later synagogue." This, to some extent not univer-
sally, is lamentably true; but the abuse proves the le-
gitimate use of these stated seasons and places of pub-
lic worship separately from the tabernacle and temple
s.-rvices.
The gatherings of the elders during the exile for in-
stmction by the prophet, which are repeatedly men-
tioned in Ezekiel, infer that the practice of holding as-
semblies for worship and the hearing of the law ante-
dated the captivity. The exiles earned the custom with
them. The words in Ezek. xi. 15, 16, seem to imply
that God manifested his gracious presence in these
meetings of his people as in little sanctuaries, somewhat
as in former and better times he had done at the greater
sanctuaries in their native land. " This view is sup-
ported/ 1 remarks the learned author who has been
quoted, "by the LXX., the Vulgate, and the Author-
ized Version. It is confirmed by the general consensus
of Jewish interpret.
If these arguments have availed to prove that the
people of Israel were accustomed to hold stated meet-
far worship apart from the servicesof the taberna-
5
46 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
cle and the temple, the well- ascertained practice of the
post-exilian synagogues clearly establishes the absence
of instrumental music from those weekly assemblies.
For had that kind of music been employed in those
meetings, it would inevitably have been continued in
the synagogue -worship. Every conceivable considera-
tion would have opposed its elimination — the powerful
force of long-continued precedents, the prescriptive
usages of the past hallowed by sacred associations, the
conservative sentiment which resists a revolutionary
innovation, and more than all the demands of human
taste and the requirements of an acknowledged artistic
standard. But it is certain that no instrumental music
was used in the worship of the later synagogue. The
argument is well-nigh irresistible.
If it be contended that instrumental music, which
had previously existed, was purged out of the regular
worship of the Jews by the post-exilian reformation,
the question at issue is given up. For if the Jews re-
formed the worship of the church by abandoning in-
strumental music, much more should it have been dis-
carded at the greater reformation inaugurated by Chris-
tianity. Otherwise it would be conceded that the Chris-
tian Church was less pure in its worship, less thoroughly
reformed, than was the Jewish Church in its later and
better state.
It has thus been shown that the essential parts of
divine worship were maintained by the people of God
in their ordinary Sabbath-day worship during the Jew-
ish dispensation ; and it is the purpose of this discus-
sion, as it shall be developed, to evince the fact that
only these essential elements of worship passed over
ABOUXENT FKo.M THE OLD TESTAMENT. 47
into the Christian dispensation. They are permanent,
and like the covenant of grace in its generic and essen-
tial features as contiadistingnished to the specific and
accidental, were designed to endure unchanged through
all dispensations.
_ The second kind of elements of worship in the
Mosaic economy was the Specific or Accidental^ which
was Tii])'t<;tl / Scripture, Vol. ii., pp. 212, 213.
See also M'Ewen, Types, Bk. iii., § 3.
56 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
it superfluous to cite the testimouy of others to the same
purpose.
The Anointing Oil. Is it not clear from Scripture
that this typified the Holy Spirit? Under the Old
Testament economy priests, prophets and kings were
anointed. Did the anointing oil of the temple signify
that Christ would anoint himself? or rather, did it not
prefigure his anointing by the Holy Ghost ? He is the
Christ, God's anointed One, and the holy Unction
was the Spirit of wisdom, power and grace. Acts x.
38: "How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the
Holy Ghost and with power." This direct testimony
is sufficient. The anointing oil of the temple discharged
the typical office of prefiguring the holy Unction with
which Jesus was anointed, and who, coming from him
upon all his people, teacheth them all things. (1 Jno.
ii. 27.) This view also is sustained by the authority of
the distinguished scholar who has already been cited.
" The oil and anointing," he observes, " whereAvith the
priests and the vessels of the Lord's house were sanc-
tified, did denote the Word and the Spirit of God,
whereby he sanctifieth the vessels of his election, even
persons of his choice, to his service and acceptance." 1
The Oil in the Golden Candlestick. Taking into view
the analogy of Scripture teaching, one cannot doubt
that this oil typified the Holy Spirit. I cite the re-
marks upon this point of the Rev. Patrick Fairbairn, in
his Typology of Scripture : 2 " This symbol has received
such repeated illustration in other parts of Scripture,
y Ibid., p. 440. This view is also maintained by M'Ewen, Types, Bk.
iii. § 3.
2 Vol. ii., pp. 257, 258.
Aiit i r m i:nt from the old testament. 57
that there is scarcely any room for difference of opinion
as to its fundamental import and main idea. In the
tirst chapter of Revelation, the image occurs in its
original form, 'the seven golden lamps' (not candle-
sticks, as in our version, but the seven lamps on the
one candlestick) are explained to mean 'the seven
churches.' These churches, however, not as of them-
selves, but as replenished by the Spirit of God, and
full of holy light and energy ; and hence in the fourth
chapter of the same book we again meet with seven
lamps of tire before the throne of God, which are said
to be ' the seven Spirits of God ' — either the one Spirit
of God in his varieties of holy and spiritual working, 1
or seven presiding spirits of light fitted by that Spirit
for the ministrations referred to in the heavenly vision.
Throughout Scripture, as we have already seen in chap-
ter three of this part, oil is uniformly taken for a sym-
bol of the Holy Spirit. It is so, not less with respect
to its light-giving property, as to its qualities for anoint-
ing and refreshment; and hence the prophet Zechariah
i chap, iv.) represents the exercise of the Spirit's gracious
and victorious energy in behalf of the church under
the image of two olive trees pouring oil into the golden
candlestick, the church being manifestly imaged in the
candlestick, and the Spirit's assisting grace in the per-
petual current of oil with which it was supplied." 2
I
1 This is probably the true view.
1 In opposition to Fairbairn, and in agreement with the majority of
orthodox commentators, I would regard the golden candlestick as itself
■ type of Christ, and the liyhts merely, the lamps of revelation, as re-
presenting the Church. The oil, with Fairbairn, I take to typify the il-
luminating grace of the Holy Ghost; but the true Container of that oil
6
58 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
TJie Feast of Pentecost. " This festival," says Home,
in his Introduction, 1 "had a typical reference to the
miraculous effusion of the Holy Spirit upon the apos-
tles and first-fruits of the Christian Church on the day
of Pentecost, . . on the fiftieth day after the resurrection
of Jesus Christ." He refers, in support of this view, to
Schultz, Lamy, Lightfoot, Michaelis, Keland and Alber.
Home further says: 2 "One of the most remarkable
ceremonies performed at this feast, in the later period
of the Jewish polity, was the libation or pouring out of
water, drawn from the fountain or pool of Siloam,
upon the altar. As, according to the Jews themselves, 3
this water was an emblem of the Holy Spirit, Jesus
Christ applied the ceremony and the intention of it to
himself when he cried, saying, If any man thirst, let
him come unto me and drink. (Jno. vii. 37-39.)"
Treating of this feast, Fairbairn makes the following
instructive remarks : 4 " The rite that commemorated the
typical redemption had to take precedence of anything
belonging to the coming harvest, even of the presenta-
tion of its first ripening sheaf. But the work of re-
demption being finished, and the feast of fat things so
is originally Christ himself, not the church (except, perhaps, deriva-
tively), which receives it from him and manifests it in a world of dark-
ness. See M'Ewen, Types, Bk. iii. , § 3.
1 Vol. ii., p. 126.
2 Ibid., p. 127. M'Ewen strongly urges this typical significance of
the Feast of Pentecost.
3 In confirmation of this assertion the author quotes the following-
passage from the Jerusalem Talmud : ' ' Why is it called the place or
house of drawing ? Because from thence they draw the Holy Spirit :
as it is written, And ye shall draw water with joy from the wells of sal-
vation. "
4 Typol. Scrip., Vol. ii. p. 311.
AIM; l Ml AT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 59
long in preparation being ready, then the freest wel-
come is given {o eome and be satisfied with the loving-
kindness of the Lord. And Christ having suffered and
been glorified, what day eonld be so fitly ehosen for the
descent of the Holy Ghost as the day of Pentecost?
For to what end was the Spirit given? To take of
the things of Christ, and show them to Christ's people;
that is, to turn the riches of his purchased redemption
from being a treasure laid up among the precious
things of God, into a treasure received and possessed
by his people, so that they might be able to rejoice, and
call others to rejoice with them, in the goodness of his
house. Now the work of God is finished, henceforth
the fruitful experience of it among his people proceeds;
and the first-fruits of the Spirit having assuredly been
given, he can never withdraw his hand till the whole
inheritance of blessing is enjoyed."
Instrumental Music.
In the first place, it has already been shown that
neither by (rod's direction nor in the actual practice of
his people in the old dispensation were instruments of
music, susceptible of modulation, employed elsewhere
in public worship than in the temple. They were not
used in the tabernacle until David was preparing to
build the temple, or in the synagogue.
In tin- second place, it has also been shown that
whatever element of worship was embraced in the tein-
ple-service, and was absent from that of the synagogue,
was typical in its character. This was true of instru-
mental music. Therefore, as an element of the temple-
worship, it was typical.
60 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
In the third place, it has been proved that some of
the elements contained in the temple-service were typi-
cal of the Holy Spirit and of the effects to be produced
by him in the New Testament dispensation, such as
consecration, illumination, purification, and the conver-
sion of souls ; and now,
In the fourth place, I lay down the proposition that
the instrumental music of the temple-worship was typi-
cal of the joy and triumph of God's believing people to
result from the plentiful effusion of the Holy Ghost in
New Testament times.
It was suited to discharge such a significant office in
the age in which God saw fit to prescribe its employ-
ment as a part of a typical ritual. It produces an ex-
hilaration of the senses, and that is about all that it
does produce. We have seen that the Israelites, like
all other peoples, employed it in their national and secu-
lar rejoicings. Now, the Mosaic dispensation was not
peculiarly a dispensation of the Spirit. It is a dis-
tinctive glory of the Christian economy that it is " the
ministration of the Spirit." "But," says Paul, "we
speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hid-
den wisdom, which God ordained before the world unto
our glory: which none of the princes of this world
knew : for had they known it, they would not have cru-
cified the Lord of glory. But as it is written, Eye hath
not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the
heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for
them that love him. But God hath revealed them unto
us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things,
yea, the deep things of God." 1 Cor. ii. 7-10. This
revelation, partially made in the old dispensation, is far
ABGUMENT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 61
more folly unfolded even in this life in fche present, and
will be still more amply and gloriously in the heavenly.
"But if," also says the same apostle, "the ministration
of death, written and engraven in stones, was glorious,
so that the children of Israel could not steadfastly be-
hold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance ;
which glory was to be done away: how shall not the
ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious ? For if
the ministration of condemnation be glory, much more
doth the ministration of righteousness exceed in glory.
For even that which was made glorious had no glory in
this respect, by reason of the glory that excelleth." (2
Cor. iii. 7-10.) In the New Testament we are clearly
taught the reason of this. It was not meet that the
Holy Spirit should be copiously poured out before the
actual offering up of the great atoning sacrifice and the
entrance of the true high priest into the heavenly holy
of holies. " In the last day, that great day of the feast,
Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let
him come unto me, and drink. He that believeth on
me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall
How rivers of living water. (But this spake he of the
Spirit, which they that believe on him should receive;
for the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because that
Jes us was not yet glorified.") (Jno. vii. 37-39.) As, then,
in the ancient dispensation, the veil of the temple was
not rent in twain, as the full liberty of adoption and
boldness of access into the presence of God, with the
assurance of faith and hope, which makes heaven begin
on earth, were not granted to the worshipper, it pleased
God to typify the spiritual joy to spring from a richer
ii of the Holy Spirit through the sensuous rap-
62 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
ture engendered by the passionate melody of stringed
instruments and the clash of cymbals, by the blare of
trumpets and the ringing of harps. It was the instruc-
tion of his children in a lower school, preparing them
for a higher. Meanwhile, it must not be forgotten,
they were habitually recalled, even in that dispensa-
tion, by the simpler and more spiritual worship of their
weekly assemblies, to a service of God which, as it had
always existed in the past, contained in itself a pro-
phecy of permanence through the whole future devel-
opment of the church.
That the instrumental music of the temple, which, as
we have seen, was introduced into its services only by
express divine warrant, was typical, and therefore tem-
porary, is further proved by the fact that it was not
practised in the apostolic church. This, it is true, re-
mains to be established in the progress of the argu-
ment, but it is so generally admitted that it may here
be assumed. Most certainly if the King and Law-giver
of the church had intended that kind of music to accom-
pany its singing of praise under the New Testament, he
would have instructed its inspired organizers to that
effect. That they did not sanction it is evidence that
he did not command it, and that in turn proves that it
was designed to be merely typical during the contin-
uance of the temple- worship.
Now, it must have been typical, either of Christ in
his person or offices, or of the use of instrumental music
by the church in the New Testament dispensation or
some other outward action, or of the Holy Spirit in his
person or offices, or of an effect produced by his grace.
There is no other supposition I can think of. There is
ARGUMENT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 63
no conceivable sense in which it could have typified
the person or offices of Christ. There is no sense in
which it is supposable that it typified any other exter-
nal action of the church than the use of instrumental
music. Tt could not have typified the use of instru-
mental music itself, for that would involve the absurdity
of a thing typifying itself— of an identity of the repre-
sentation with the thing represented, of a type with its
antitype. We cannot imagine any way in which it
could have typified either the 1 invisible person or the
offices of the Holy Ghost. We are shut up, then, to
the position that it was typical of an effect to be pro-
duced by the grace of the divine Spirit; and I but echo
the opinion of eminent and godly divines in maintain-
ing that it was designed to be a type of that spiritual
and triumphant joy which is engendered by the plenti-
ful effusion of the Holy Ghost upon believers under the
Christian dispensation. The Spirit having been poured
out, and that abundant joy of believers having been ex-
perienced, th< i shadow gave way to the substance, tin;
type to the antitype.
In order to evince the fact that this view is not novel
or singular, I adduce the testimony of a few distin-
guished theologians, showing, in general, that instru-
mental music was typical, and, in particular, that it was
typical of the graces of the Holy Spirit.
" To sing the praises of God upon the harp and
psaltery," says Calvin, " unquestionably formed a part
of the training of the law and of the service of God un-
der that dispensation of sJ,mJ,nr.-< and figures; but they
an not now to be used in public thanksgiving." 1 He
1 On Ps. lxxi. 22.
64 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IX CHURCH WORSHIP.
says again: "With respect to the tabret, harp, and
psaltery, we have formerly observed, and will find it
necessary afterwards to repeat the same remark, that
the Levites, under the law, were justified in making use
of instrumental music in the worship of God ; it having
been his will to train his people, while they were yet
tender and like children, by such rudiments until the
coming of Christ. But now, when the clear light of
the gospel has dissipated the shadows of the law and
taught us that God is to be served in a simpler form, it
would be to act a foolish and mistaken part to imitate
that which the prophet enjoined only upon those of his
own time." 1 He further observes : " We are to remem-
ber that the worship of God was never understood to
consist in such outward services, which were only ne-
cessary to help forward a people as yet weak and rude
in knowledge in the spiritual worship of God. A dif-
ference is to be observed in this respect between his
people under the Old and under the New Testament ;
for now that Christ has appeared, and the church has
reached full age, it were only to bury the light of the
gospel should we introduce the shadows of a departed
dispensation. From this it appears that the Papists,
as I shall have occasion to show elsewhere, in employ-
ing instrumental music cannot be said so much to imi-
tate the practice of God's ancient people as to ape it in
a senseless and absurd manner, exhibiting a silly de-
light in that worship of the Old Testament which was
figurative, and terminated with the gospel." 2
"The first question," says Ames (Amesius) in his
Church Ceremonies* "was, If -the primitive church had
1 On Ps. lxxxi. 3. 2 On Ps. xcii. 1. 3 P. 404.
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 65
such ohaunting idol-service, as is in our cathedral
churches. The Rejoinder [Dr. Burgess] after some
words spent about singing (about which he bringeth
not the least resemblance of that in question, until the
fourth age [century] after Christ) excepteth first, That
organall music was God's ordinance in the Old Testa-
ment, and that not significant, or fcypicall; and there-
fore is sinfully called idol service. ... To this I say
1 . That his denying of organall music to have been
significant <>r typicaU is without reason, and against
tin current of our divines [N. B.] ; taken, as it may
seeme, out of Bellarmine (O/i the Mass, B. 2, C. 15),
who nseth this evasion against those words of P. Mar-
tyr: 'Musical! organs perteyne to the Jewish cere-
monie, and agree no more to us than circumcision.'
Bo that we may neglect it, and take him as saying, that
nothing which was ordained in the Old Testament (no,
not sacrificing of beasts) is now an idol-service."
Yet, Bellarmin, who is here referred to by Ames as
evading the judgment of Peter Martyr, himself ex-
368 the same judgment in another place. 1 "Jus-
tinus," he observes, "saith that the use of instruments
was granted to the Jews for their imperfection, and that
therefore such instruments have no place in the church.
We Bellarmin and the Catholics] confess indeed that
the use of musical instruments agreeth not alike with
the perfect and with the imperfect, and that therefore
tiny began hut of late to he admitted into the church."
Bellarmin lived from 1542 to 1621.
1 DeBon. Operibnx^ I Ah. \. Cap. 17. We appeal from Philip drunk
to Philip sober— from Bellarmin the partisan to Bellarmin the theolo-
gian.
66 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
This last mentioned opinion of the great polemic
Cardinal had been previously expressed by Thomas
Aquinas, the angelic doctor of the Church of Rome,
in his Summa Theological "Instruments of music,"
he says, "such as harps and psalteries, the church does
not adopt for divine praises, lest it should seem to Ju-
daize." " Instruments of this sort more move the mind
to delight, than form internally a good disposition. Un-
der the Old Testament, however, there was some utility
in such instruments, both because the people were more
hard and carnal, and needed to be stirred up by instru-
ments of this kind as by promises of earthly good, and
also because material instruments of this sort figured
something."
"It is evident," says Zwingle, 2 " that that same eccle-
siastical chanting and roaring in our temples (scarce
also understood of the priests themselves) is a most
foolish and vain abuse, and a most pernicious let to
piety. In the solemn worship of God, I do not judge
it more suitable than if we should recall the incense,
tapers and other shadows of the law into use. I say
again, to go beyond what we are taught is most wicked
pervicacity."
Voetius, in his great work, the Ecclesiastical Polity \
elaborately argues against the use of instrumental music
in- the Christian church, and among the arguments
which he advances employs this : " Because it savors
of Judaism, or a worship suited to a childish condition
under the Old Testament economy; and there might
with equal justice be introduced into the churches of
1 II. ii. 2, xci., A. ii., 4, etconclusio: Tom. iv., Ratlsbonce, 1884, p. 646.
2 Act. Disp. ii. p. 106, quoted by Ames.
!
AKor.MKNT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 67
the New Testament the bells of Aaron, the silver trum-
pets of the priests, the horns of the Jubilee, harps,
psalteries and cymbals, with Levitical singers, and so
the whole cultus of that economy, or the beggarly ele-
ments of tin 1 world, according to the words of the apos-
tle in the fourth chapter of Galatians." 1
Buicer, in his Thesaurus* argues at length to vindi-
cate Clement of Alexandria from the representation
that he favored the use of instruments in the church,
and to show that he and Isidore of Pelusium regarded
the instrumental music of the Old Testament as typical
of the joyful praise of the New Testament church for
the rich benefits of an accomplished redemption. He
a canon of one of the Councils of Carthage to this
effect : " On the Lord's day let all instruments of music
be silenced ;"' and remarks that hut few in his own time
favored the use of instruments in the church.
orge Gillespie, in his Assertion of ike Government
of the ( '/> urch <>f Scotland, 3 says : " The Jewish Church,
Dot as it was a church hut as it was Jewish, had an
Hij^h Priest, typifying our great Hi< Pastor "ml tin' Prelate-.* "The Pastor
1 Lib. ii., Tract, ii., Cap. iii., Tom. i., Kmsbel, p. 554.
ward, Organ.
<'h. iii.. j,. 13; J% m's Armory, Vol. i.
4 V. 1. Pre$byterian'$ Armory, Vol. iii.
68 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
loveth no music in the house of God but such as edi-
fieth, and stoppeth his ears at instrumental music, as
serving for the pedagogy of the untoward Jews under
the law, and being figurative of that spiritual joy where-
unto our hearts should be opened under the gospel.
The Prelate loveth carnal and curious singing to the
ear, more than the spiritual melody of the gospel, and
therefore would have antiphony and organs in the
cathedral kirks, upon no greater reason than other
sJiadows of the law of Moses ; or lesser instruments, as
lutes, citherns and pipes might be [to be] used in other
kirks."
"As good an argument," remarks Dr. James Begg,
" can be made for the use of incense, priests, sacrifices,
indeed of the whole temple system, as for the use of
instrumental music in Christian worship." 1
Dr. Killen, in his Ancient Church, says: 2 "As the
sacrifices, offerings and other observances of the tem-
ple, as well as the priests, the vestments, and even the
building itself, had an emblematic meaning, it would
appear that the singing, intermingled with the music
of various instruments of sound, was also typical and
ceremonial."
In a striking argument against the use of instrumen-
tal music in the worship of the Christian church, the
Rev. Dr. Alexander Blaikie, an American minister,
says: 3 "These [musical instruments] continued in the
temple -service of Jehovah so long as ' the first taber-
nacle was yet standing,' and no longer; for so soon as
1 On the Use of Organs, etc., p. 18. - P. 216.
3 The Organ and other Musical Instruments, as noted in the Holy
Scriptures.
i
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 69
tin 1 way into the holiest of all was made manifest (Heb.
i\. 8,) the bondage (beloved by every Jew) of these
'weak and beggarly elements' was in the worship of
God forever done away. He, 'in whom dwelleth all
the fulness of the Godhead bodily,' took the whole
'hand-writing of ordinances out of the way, nailing it
to his Cross.' Instruments of music in the worship of
God had there fulfilled their mission, in common with
the blood of bulls, of goats, and the ashes of heifers,
and they finished their course when Jesus died. No
blast of ' rams'-liorns,' nor other 'things without life-
giving sound ' had any longer a place with acceptance
in the worship of Jehovah. The ceremonial, sensual,
and ritual in his worship there forever ceased to be
appointed by and acceptable to God, when he who
'spake as never man spake' exclaimed, 'It is fin-
ished.'"
In his reply to the statement of the Rev. Dr. Ritchie,
submitted to the Presbytery of Glasgow' in favor of the
introduction of an organ in St. Andrew's church, Glas-
gow (the case was decided in May, 1808, adversely to
Dr. Ritchie), the Rev. Dr. Porteous remarks: "It seems
to be acknowledged by all descriptions of Christians,
that among the Hebrews instrumental music in the
public worship of God was essentially connected with
sacrifice — with the morning and evening sacrifice, and
with the sacrifices to be offered up on great and solemn
days. But as all the sacrifices of the Hebrews were
completely abolished by the death of our blessed Re-
deemer, so instrumental music . . . being so intimately
connected with sacrifice, and belonging to a service
which was ceremonial and typical, must be abolished
7
70 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
with that service ; and we can have no warrant to re-
call it into the Christian church, any more than we
have to nse other abrogated rites of the Jewish religion,
of which it is a part." '
That able and judicious theologian, Dr. Ridgley,
speaks very expressly, not only of the typical nature of
the instrumental music employed in the temple, but of
that which it was designed to typify. He says: "It
may be observed, that how much soever the use of
musical instruments which were in this worship may
be concluded to be particularly adapted to that dispen-
sation, as they were typical of that spiritual joy which
the gospel church should obtain by Christ ; yet the or-
dinance of singing remains a duty, as founded on the
moral law." 2
To the objection that "those arguments that have
been taken from the practice of the Old Testament
church to prove singing an ordinance may, with equal
justice, be alleged to prove the use of instrumental
music," he replies: "Though we often read of music
being used in singing the praises of God under the Old
Testament, yet if what has been said concerning its
being a type of that spiritual joy which attends our
praising God for the privilege of that redemption which
Christ has purchased be true, then this objection will
1 Dr. Candlish, The Organ Question, pp. 87, 88. It may be said in
answer, that on the same ground singing ought to be abolished. But,
first, singing was not as peculiarly connected with sacrifice as was the
blowing of trumpets ; secondly, that the use of instruments was peculiar
to the temple service, whereas singing was not. The argument only
holds in regard to the specific and temporary elements of worship, not
to the generic and permanent.
2 Body of Divinity, Quest. CLIV., VoL iv., p. 82, Philadelphia, 1815.
!
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 71
appeal to have no weight, since this type is abolished
together with the ceremonial law." 1
I have heard the view maintained thai the reason
why this music was not in use in the synagogue wor-
ship was that it would have involved a violation of the
law commanding the Sabbath day to be kept holy; that
it required a species of labor which, as it was not ne-
• v, would have violated the commandment enjoin-
ing abstinence from all unnecessary work on that day.
And in support of this view, it is claimed that instru-
mental music was permitted, and was actually employed
on the week-days between the Sabbaths. In reply I
would say :
In the first place, the allegation, that instrumental
music was used on week-days in the synagogue before
the Christian dispensation began, needs to be con-
tinued. The fact that such a practice now exists, or
xisted for a long time, proves nothing. The ra-
tionalism and indifferentism of many of the modern
Jews would be sufficient to account for the fact, just as
that heterodox temper affords an explanation of the
employment of organs in the synagogue-worship even
on the Sabbath.
In the second place, if the allegation were true, it
would establish nothing in opposition to the view
maintained in this discussion. For, during the Mosaic
dispensation, the Jews ever manifested a tendency to
disobey divine commands and contemn divine ordi-
nances, in the assertion of their own will and the grati-
fication of their own taste -a disposition which fre-
quently incited them to flagrantly idolatrous worship.
1 Ibid., pp. 87, 88.
72 INSTKUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
And although, after the Babylonian captivity open
idolatry ceased, the same disposition continued, and
called forth the rebuke administered by Christ to the
Scribes and Pharisees for making void the command-
ments of God by human traditions. The oral law over-
lay the written, tradition superseded the Bible.
Furthermore, it may be questioned, whether this re-
puted worship of small numbers of persons in a syna-
gogue on the days of the week could be put into the
category of solemn, formal, public worship, such as that
which obtained on Sabbath days.
In the third place, it is admitted that instrumental
music was not employed in the synagogue on the Sab-
bath. The reason assigned is, that it would have in-
fringed the law of the Sabbath requiring a cessation of
all unnecessary work. Now, the question arises, how,
in view of that law, it was employed in the temple on
the Sabbath ? The answer given is, that God, in that
case, by his authority relaxed the rigor of the fourth
commandment, and warranted work which otherwise
would have been unjustifiable. I rejoin :
A relaxation of the Sabbatic law, in favor of the
temple-services, is not granted. Whatever was neces-
sary or proper, according to God's appointment, in or-
der to the observance of his worship, was provided for
in that law. It was not requisite for God to dispense
with his own authority to secure compliance with it.
Further, if, according to the supposition, God relaxed
his law in one case, the question is, Why did he not re-
lax it in the other ? If for the temple, why not for the
synagogue ? The same authority was sufficient for the
relaxation in the latter case as well as in the former.
Ai;<;rMF.NT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 73
But this hypothesis of a relaxation of the law being
discharged, the question returns, Why was not instru-
mental music employed on the Sabbath in the syna-
jue as well as in the temple ? The answer is, Because
God did not so command. He commanded it to be
usc.l in the temple ; he did not, as he might have done,
command it to be used in the synagogue. Now, why?
There must be an adequate reason for the difference.
What was it ? The only reply which appears to furnish
a solution of the difficulty is, that the temple-worship
was typical, that of the synagogue not. The employ-
ment of types in the synagogue would have contradicted
the very idea of the temple. The reason of the singu-
lar and exceptional existence of the latter was that it
embraced a typical service. To have made the types
common would therefore have subverted the temple.
The argument may be made still clearer by testing
it upon the instance of sacrifices. They were offered at
the temple on the Sabbath. Why were they not offered
in the synagogue on that day? Will the Jew himself
contend that the reason was that the law of the Sabbath
would have been violated? He himself will concede
that sacrifices, as typical, could only have been offered
at the temple. If he deny, he denies the meaning of
and the genius of the Jewish religion. So
was it with all the types, including instrumental music.
Would he say that sacrifices were permissible in the
synagogue on other than Sabbath days? Would he
that such a practice ever actually obtained? He
must find, thru, another reason why sacrifices were not
offered in the synagogue on the Sabbath, than the in-
fraction of the Sabbatic law which they would have in-
74 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
volved. The same argument holds good in relation to
instrumental music. But the question here is with the
Jew, and the attempt to convince him, without the con-
currence of almighty grace, would be as operative as an
effort to reduce Gibraltar with an argument.
It has been proved by this special line of argument
that, in consequence of the absence of a divine com-
mand justifying its use, instrumental music was not in-
cluded in the syn agogue -worship ; that, as Christ, the
procurer of redemption, was promised, so also the Holy
Spirit, the applier of redemption, was promised, in the
Old Testament — that a whole salvation by blood and
by water was revealed in its didactic statements, its
prophecies, and its types ; that the elements in the tem-
ple service, which were not embraced in that of the
synagogue, were typical ; that some of these were typi-
cal of the Holy Ghost and the effects to be produced
by his grace in New Testament times ; and that among
them instrumental music must be classed. From all
this it follows, first, that to bring over into the new dis-
pensation the features of worship which belonged to
the temple, and not to the synagogue, is more unwar-
rantable in us than the importation of the distinctive
elements of the temple-worship into the synagogue
would have been to the Jews; secondly, that, as the
types of the Holy Spirit in the temple-service are ful-
filled in his application to believers of the benefits of a
purchased redemption, to retain them in the Christian
church is as much to dishonor him as to retain bloody
sacrifices would dishonor Christ; and thirdly, that
therefore, as instrumental music in the temple-worship
was one of those types, its employment in the public
Al;<;iM].\T FROM Tin: old TESTAMENT. 75
services of the Christian olmrch is at once tm warrant-
able ami dishonoring to the ever-blessed Spirit.
4. To all this argument derived from the Old Testa-
ment it is triumphantly objected that the Psalms exhort
all men to praise God with instruments of music, and
that they were designed to be sung in every age of
the church. The objection is as futile as it is popular.
In the first place, why did not David, who was one
of the principal authors of the Psalms, introduce at an
earlier period than he did instrumental music into the
tabernacle worship? The reply is, that he was not di-
vinely commanded to do it. Why did not Moses, who
was an accomplished psalmist, and who heard the
thrilling sound of timbrels in the great rejoicing over
the discomfited host of Pharaoh on the shore of the
Bed Sea, incorporate this kind of music as an accom-
paniment of singing into that worship? The answer
is, Because he had no divine warrant for such a mea-
sure. We have seen that David, by divine command,
prepared instruments of music, and directed them to be
used in the temple when that edifice should be erected.
He would have had no right to take that step had he
not been inspired and commanded to do so by God,
who alone possessed the prerogative to dictate the mode
in which he should be worshipped. It deserves in-
quiry, too, whether any of the Psalms which are
ascribed to David, in which musical instruments are
mentioned, have any reference to their employment in
the public worship '>f God's house. Let those who arc
wont to plead the authority of his name examine the
57th, 108th, and 144th Psalms, and discover in them,
if they can, anything more than references to his indi-
76 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
vidual worship. The 81st is attributed to Asaph, and
may well have been composed after the dedication of
the temple.
It may also be observed, while this Psalm is under
notice, that the argument derived from it in favor of the
early use of musical instruments by the Israelites has
no value. The words are : " Take a psalm, and bring
hither the timbrel, the pleasant harp with the psaltery.
Blow up the trumpet in the new moon, in the time ap-
pointed, on our solemn feast day. For this was a
statute for Israel, and a law of the God of Jacob. This
he ordained in Joseph for a testimony, when he went
out through the land of Egypt." The statute, law,
ordinance here mentioned manifestly relates especially
to the feast of the Passover, which, when it occurred at
the new moon, was attended with the solemn blowing
of trumpets, as the parallel passage shows : Ex. xiii. 8,
9, 14-16. If this is not deemed satisfactory, let the
statute, law or ordinance be pointed out which enforced
the use of timbrels, harps and psalteries upon the
Israelites in connection with their exodus from Egypt.
Until that is done loose assertion will avail nothing.
The ninety-second Psalm is auonymous, and refers
to individual worship. The thirty-third, which is
anonymous, does not necessarily relate to public wor-
ship. The ninety-eighth, one hundred and forty-ninth
and one hundred and fiftieth are also anonymous, and,
while -they summon all creatures to praise God, cannot
be proved to have reference to the public worship of
his house. But if they do, so far as they inculcate the
use of instruments they relate to a ceremonial and typi-
cal worship.
ARGUMENT PROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 77
Unless, therefore, the temple-worship, in which alone
that sort of music as an accompaniment of singing in
public worship was divinely authorized, can be legiti-
mately brought over into the New Testament dispensa-
tion, the appeal to the Psalms in favor of instruments
in the public worship of the Christian church is desti-
tute of the slightest force.
In the second place, the argument from the Psalms
proves too much, and is therefore worthless. In the
fifty-first Psalm, which has been in all ages since its
incorporation into the sacred canon a vehicle for ex-
ring the penitential confessions of God's people,
David prays: ''Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be
clean ; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow."
The hyssop dipped into the blood of the paschal lamb
was used to sprinkle the lintels and door-posts of the
[sraelites, as a token of their salvation from the doom
which impended over the first-born of Egypt, and as a
type of a greater deliverance to be afterwards accom-
plished by (rod's appointed Lamb. (Ex. xii. 21-24.)
It was also employed in connection with the cleansing
of the leper i Lev. xiv.), and with the burnt-sacrifice of
the red heifer without the camp. (Num. xix.) In the
fiftieth Psalm, the Lord, addressing Israel, says: "I
will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices or thy burnt-of-
ferings to have been continually before me;" and in
the conclusion of the fifty-first, David, after praying
that (rod would do good in his good pleasure to Zion,
and build the walls of Jerusalem, exclaims: "Then
shalt thou be pleased with the sacrifices of righteous-
with burnt-offering and whole burnt-offering:
then shall they offer bullocks upon thine altar." While
78 INSTKUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHUECH WORSHIP.
these passages partly refer to individual cleansing, it
cannot be denied that they, far more clearly than those
cited in favor of instrumental music, relate to the pub-
lic worship of God's house. If, now, the argument
holds good, which is derived from the Psalms in sup-
port of the use of instruments in the public worship of
the Christian church, it equally holds in justification of
the offering of bloody sacrifices in that worship. The
absurdity of the consequence completely refutes the
argument.
The only way in which I can conceive that an attempt
may be made to evade the point of this fatal considera-
tion, is by maintaining that the sacrifices of the ancient
worship were types which have been abolished in con-
sequence of their fulfilment by Christ, the great expia-
tory sacrifice, but that instrumental music was not typi-
cal, and therefore remains. One can now see why the
preceding argument, to prove the typical character of
instrumental music as a part of the temple worship,
was so elaborately pressed, and sustained by so long a
catena of authorities. If that argument was conclusive,
this method of escape is nothing worth. Only what
was generic, essential, permanent in the worship of
God's ancient people passes over into the new economy ;
what was specific, accidental, temporary has vanished
with the old; and it has been shown by conclusive
proofs that to the latter kind of worship instrumental
music must be assigned. It was a temporary environ-
ment by which it pleased God to surround the singing
of his praise, and as typical it has been stripped away
by its fulfilment in the copious effusion of the Holy
Spirit, and the glorious effects of his grace in applying
ARGUMENT FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT. 79
the accomplished atonement of Christ. We are Chris-
tians. Jews we art', if believers, "inwardly/' as Paul
declares; Jews as we are the spiritual seed of Abraham,
and partake of his faith, as we possess, at least are en-
titled to possess, and possess more fully, the benefits
of that unchanging covenant of grace 1 which, in its essen-
tial provisions was administered in the Patriarchal and
Mosaic dispensations, is administered in the Christian,
and will, in the Heavenly, be administered "through-
out all ages, world without end." Jews we are not, as
says the same apostle, " outwardly :" Jews, not by carnal
nt or national lineage, not as bound by the posi-
tive enactments of the ceremonial law, not as subject to
ccidental provisions, the specific, peculiar, typical
elements which constituted the temporary shell of that
immutable covenant.
This argument from the Old Testament Scriptures
proves vastly too much. Those who have most ur-
gently insisted upon it have acted with logical consis-
tency in importing priests into the New Testament
church : and as priests suppose sacrifices, lo, the sacri-
fice of the Mass! Instrumental music may not seem to
stand upon the same foot with that monstrous corrup-
tion, but the principle which underlies both is the same ;
and thai whether we are content with a single instru-
ment, the cornet, the bass-viol, the organ, or go on by
a natural development to the orchestral art, the cathe-
dral pomps, and all the spectacular magnificence of
Rome. We are Christians, and we are untrue to Christ
and to the Spirit of grace when we resort to the abro-
I and forbidden ritual of the Jewish temple.
III.
Argument from the New Testament.
We have seen, by an examination of the Old Testa-
ment Scriptures, that throughout the Mosaic dispensa-
tion this great principle exerted a controlling influence :
That whatsoever God commands is to be observed, and
that whatsoever he does not command is forbidden, so
far as the public worship of his house is concerned.
Under the operation of that principle, instrumental
music, as an accompaniment of the singing of praise,
was excluded from the tabernacle during almost the
whole period of its existence, and from the synagogue,
and was introduced into the temple in consequence of
a divine warrant expressly furnished to that effect.
We come now to the consideration of the New Testa-
ment, and the question is, Has Christ, the King of the
church, prohibited the introduction of instrumental
music into its jmblic worship? That he has will be
maintained on the following grounds :
1. What was peculiar and distinctive in the worship
of the Jewish temple has been abolished.
This has been the general view of the Christian
church, but it has been ridiculed by infidels and op-
posed, in part, by some prelatists : ridiculed by the for-
mer because it supposes a change of divine enactments
and infers the admission of God's mutability ; l op-
1 The answer to this is found in the obvious distinction between
moral and positive laws — the former being immutable, the latter not.
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 81
posed by the latter, because they seek justification for
introducing into the Christian church a class of officers
and as order of worship which belonged alone to the
Jewish temple. It is somewhat curious that this ques-
tion is but rarelv discussed in systems of theology and
histories of the church. It will, therefore, not be gra-
tuitous to state some of the reasons which justify the
view, that what was peculiar to the temple-worship has
been abrogated. This may be inferred from —
(1.) The nature of the case. It is conceded that
some of the elements of the temple-service were typi-
cal. While the Jew denies that they have met their
fulfilment in their corresponding antitypes, the Chris-
tian affirms. The latter, consequently, must hold that
the types, not as objects of study, but as elements of
religion to be observed, have passed away. The anti-
types, as substantial realities approaching in the future,
cast their shadows before them. They were dimly out-
lined in those shadows. When, in the process of time,
the substances themselves were reached, what need was
there for further following the guidance of the shadows ?
To take another view, indicated also by Scripture, the
types were prophecies and promises presented con-
cretely, and not merely in words, to the ancient wor-
shipper. They were real manifestations, in the phe-
nomenal sphere, of the purpose of redemption and of
the sure Word of prophecy. But the things prophesied
and promised have been actually accomplished, and
are now in the possession of the Christian worshipper.
History in part, and in part a continuous present ex-
perience, have taken the place of prophecy and pro-
mise. Once more, the peculiar elements of the temple-
8
82 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHUKCH WORSHIP.
service were figurative representations of future reali-
ties, of realities not known by experience. What need
of the figures when the real objects figured are experi-
mentally known ? A surveyor's plat or a topographi-
cal map is of utmost value to one who expects to pur-
chase, but cannot inspect, a tract of land. When he is
in actual possession of it, he gazes upon it with his
own eyes, and the map is no longer a necessity. A
likeness of a person whom one has never seen, but de-
sires to see, is precious until actual acquaintance en-
sues. Why study the picture when one looks into the
face of the person himself? From the nature of the
case, then, the distinctive elements of the temple-wor-
ship have passed away. They have expired by their
own limitation.
(2.) The statements of Scripture. Let us follow the
order of the New Testament writings, and select some
of the testimonies which they furnish.
First, We encounter the song of Simeon, who, when
he had taken the infant Jesus into his arms, "blessed
God, and said, Lord, now lettest thou thy servant de-
part in peace, according to thy word: for mine eyes
have seen thy salvation ; " and the words of the pro-
phetess Anna, who " gave thanks likewise unto the
Lord, and spake of him [Jesus] to all them .that looked
for redemption in Jerusalem."
Secondly, The Baptist, pointing to Jesus as with the
index-finger of the old economy, exclaimed, "Behold,
the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
world." Look! there he is, God's provided and ap-
pointed Lamb, the great atoning sacrifice, who was
typified by every lamb sacrificed at the tabernacle and
the temple.
ARGUMENT FKO.M THE NEW TESTAMENT. 83
Thirdly, " Philip findeth Nathanael, and saith unto
him, We have found him, of whom Moses in the law, and
the Prophets, did write, Jesus of Nazareth, the son of
Joseph." And when Nathanael, convinced of his Mes-
siahship, uttered the confession, "Rabbi, thou art the
Son of (Jod; thou art the King of Israel," Jesus re-
ceived the confession and confirmed the testimony.
Fourthly, "After that John was put in prison, Jesus
came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom
oi God, and saving, The time is fulfilled, and the king-
dom of (lod is at hand." Again he said, "Neither do
men put new wine into old bottles : else the bottles
break, and the wine runneth out, and the bottles perish :
but they put new wine into new bottles, and both are
rved;" by which he evidently taught that, as the
new dispensation was about to begin, its spirit would
transcend the forms of the old, and necessitate their
al >r< igation. In his dying words, " It is finished," Jesus,
in actually fulfilling the types of the old economy, pro-
nounced them abolished. His whole mediatorial work
on earth was completed, and all the figures of it were
superseded by the reality. After his resurrection, in
rebuke of the unbelief of his disciples, he said, "0 fools
and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken : ought not Christ to have suffered these things,
and to enter into his glory? And beginning at Moses,
and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all
the Scriptures the things concerning himself."
There are three aspects iii which the necessity which
Christ here affirms for his suit', rings and glorification
may be regarded. First, there was an absolute neces-
sity, on the supposition of a free determination on
84 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
God's part to save sinners, that a competent atonement
for their guilt should ground their reconciliation to
him, consistently with his infinite perfections — his jus-
tice, truth and holiness. Secondly, there was a neces-
sity that the legal substitute who would die for the ex-
piation of guilt should be a priest, not only to evince
with perfect clearness his own free and cheerful suscep-
tion of the great undertaking, and to be qualified by
actual experience to sympathize with his people in suf-
fering, but also to provide, by the offices of an infinitely
meritorious Minister of worship, for the access of sin-
ners to God, and the acceptance of their prayers and
their praises. But, thirdly, there was a necessity for a
fulfilment of the types and prophecies of the Old Testa-
ment, and there can be but little doubt that it was
chiefly upon this point that the Lord Jesus insisted, in
his talk with the disciples on their way to Emmaus.
The legal and ceremonial institutions of Moses and the
promissory writings of the prophets he expounded as
having had reference to himself, and therefore virtually
declared that they had all been fulfilled, so far as they
related to his sufferings and atoning work, or were in
process of fulfilment, so far as they pointed to his en-
trance into his glory — his ascension to heaven, his ses-
sion on the throne, his intercession, his communication
of the Holy Spirit, and his second coming to complete
the redemption of his people and to judge the quick
and the dead. But a promise fulfilled ceases to be a
promise, and a type realized in its antitype is a type no
more : its prospective office necessarily expires. It is
evident, therefore, from the discourse ascribed by the
evangelist to our Lord, that the peculiar and distinctive
ABGUMENT FROM Till: NEW TESTAMENT. 85
elements of the temple-worship, so far as they figured
a future atonement by priestly sacrifice, had been abro-
gated, and so far as they represented a future effusion
of the Holy Ghost soon would be abrogated.
Fifthly, On the day of Pentecost Peter declared that
the wonderful outpouring of the Holy Spirit which was
then experienced was in fulfilment of a prophecy of
Joel. That fulfilment the apostolic preacher explained
by saying: ''This Jesus hath God raised up, whereof
We are all witnesses. Therefore being by the right
hand of God exalted, and having received of the Father
the promise of the Holy Ghost, he hath shed forth this
which ye do now see and hear." Now, not only were
the death and glorification of Christ conjoined with the
efi'usion of the Spirit in the prophecies, but they were
also associated with each other in the temple types.
Both classes of prospective representations, the pro-
phetical and the typical, in this their twofold signifi-
cance, were fulfilled. We have seen, moreover, that
the feast of Pentecost, which was a constituent element
of the temple-services, was typical of the copious effu-
sion of the Holy Spirit, and it was precisely on the day
of Pentecost that it met a conspicuous fulfilment. What
are we to conclude, but that as the types of Christ's
death and exaltation had necessarily expired, the same
was time of those which pre-figured the outpouring of
the Holy Ghost ? In answer to this it may be said
that the prophecy cited by Peter had only a partial,
however glorious, fulfilment on the day of Pentecost,
and continues t<> be a prediction of copious effusions of
the Spirit, and so the teniple-srivicts which bear upon
the same continuous impartation of his grace may be
86 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH 'WORSHIP.
legitimately employed until the consummation shall be
reached. What is true of the prophecies may be true
of the types.
But, in the first place, the same would hold good
with reference to the continued prosecution of Christ's
intercessory work in heaven. Now, that was certainly
typified by the high-priestly offering of incense in the
Jewish holy of holies. The argument, if worth any-
thing, would avail to show that the typical representa-
tions of Christ's intercession may still be retained in
the church. What would be the consequence ? This :
that so much of the temple-service as typified the sac-
rificial death of Christ was abrogated and has vanished,
and so much as pertained to his intercession, as not yet
completed, may still be legitimately employed. That
is to say, a service which God made one great whole,
may now, at the discretion of the church, be divided in
twain — a part discarded and a part retained. No sober
Protestant mind could possibly entertain such a view.
No more, for like reasons, could it tolerate a retention
of those typical services which foreshadowed the con-
tinuous effusion of the Holy Ghost. Either the whole
temple-service or none : these are the alternatives to
which the Christian church was reduced. It elected
the latter, and it has been reserved for Rome and the
high-church Prelatists who agree with her to pursue a
middle course, and not presuming to retain bloody sac-
rifices, to divorce what God had joined together, and to
perpetrate the solemn mockery of a mutilated temple
ritual.
In the second place, the temple itself was a type of
Christ and his mediatorial work. But it has fulfilled
ABGUMENT PROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 87
its typical office, and has ceased to exist. To retain a
pari of its services is to suppose the continued exist-
ence of the temple, for God never authorized the em-
ployment of those services except in immediate con-
nection an itli that particular structure, after the taber-
naele bad given way to it by his inspired direction.
The force of tins consideration is acknowledged by the
Jews themselves, who do not pretend to offer bloody
sacrifices elsewhere. If the cathedral takes the place
of the temple, we would have many sacred edifices, in
many different places, substituted for the only temple
which existed by divine appointment, to which the
tribes of Israel and proselytes from distant countries
repaired to celebrate the great typical festivals. If w r e
may have but one substitute for it, which one? Shall
it be St. Peter's? And must all the world go to that
mountain to worship, when Jesus Christ has said that
neither at Mount Gerizim nor at Mount Moriah will men
be obliged to worship ? Jesus has thus declared that the
positive enactment which required ceremonial worship
at the Jewish temple is abrogated; and the New Tes-
tament is utterly silent in regard to any transfer to the
Christian church of the services peculiar to that edi-
fice.
In the third place, although the prophecies contained
in the Old Testament taught a continuous communica-
tion of the Spirit until the complete establishment of
Chii^t'^ mediatorial kingdom on earth, yet they them-
Belves were finished when they were uttered. So with
the types foreshadowing the same thing. We might as
warrantably add to those prophecies new predictions
because they have not had a consummate fulfilment, as
88 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
continue to employ the types because they have not
had an exhaustive realization. Both sorts of prospec-
tive representations were limited by God's will, and the
attempt to reinstitute either, or to continue either, by
the will of man, would be to invade God's prerogative
and to disobey God's authority.
In the fourth place, the effusion of the Holy Spirit has
already in the past been in part enjoyed by the church,
and is in part now enjoyed by the church, and to per-
petuate services which typify it, would be at one and
the same time to confound a type which has reference
to the future with a symbol commemorating the past,
and to observe the type at the very time that the anti-
type is actually manifested. In either case contradic-
tion and absurdity would result. The truth is, that the
glorious, though partial, fulfilment of the prophecies
and types alike of the old dispensation constitutes a
pledge, definite and sufficient, of their exhaustive ful-
filment in the future. If it be said that the New Tes-
tament contains prophecies of its own touching the
future progress of Christ's kingdom, the reply is easy,
that they were finished and sealed up with the comple-
tion of the sacred canon, and that unless the church
has the right, furnished by fresh inspiration, to create
substantive additions to the Scriptures which God pro-
nounces perfect, she has no authority to utter prophe-
cies, in the strict sense, any more ; and it may be asked,
where are the types peculiar to the New Testament?
Are we pointed to baptism and the Lord's supper?
Let it be proved that they are types at all ; and if that
could be proved, all that would be established is that
the church is restricted to them alone, and the plea for
.
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 89
a sacerdotal ritual of typical services would be cut up
by the roots.
To all tins it may be answered, that what is con-
tended for is that the Christian church is warranted by
the observance of services analogous to those of the
Jewish temple to commemorate the past illustrious
events of her history. Where is the warrant? We
have a divine warrant for the observance of the Lord's
day. We have a divine warrant for the observance of
the two sacraments of baptism and the Lord's supper.
What other days are we enjoined to keep holy? What
other symbolical ordinances are we commanded to ob-
serve? To take the ground that the church has a dis-
cretionary power to appoint other holy days and other
symbolical rites is to concede to Rome the legitimacy
of her five superfluous sacraments and all her self-de-
vised paraphernalia of sacred festivals. There is no
middle ground. Either we are bound by the Lord's
appointments in his Word, or human discretion is logi-
cally entitled to the full-blown license of Rome.
Sixthly, The speech of Stephen before the Jewish
Council. This speech of the illustrious proto-martyr of
the Christian church must ever be regarded as one of
the strongest scriptural proofs of the abolition of the
temple- worship ; but as it will come to be considered as
one of the elements in the direct argument against the
use of instrumental music in public worship, its exami-
nation will for the present be deferred.
Seventhly, The decree of the Synod of Jerusalem.
Certain Judaizing teachers who went from Jndea to
Antioch "taught the brethren, and said, Except ye !»<•
circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be
90 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
saved." This raised the whole question about con-
formity to the institutions of the ceremonial law by the
Christian church. That question was referred to the
decision of the apostles and elders at Jerusalem. Paul
and Barnabas were the commissioners. They laid the
case before an assembled synod. The decree of that
body, which was sent to the Gentile churches, was :
" That ye abstain from meats offered to idols, and from
blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication :
from which if ye keep yourselves, ye shall do well.
Fare ye well." The significant absence of any allusion,
explicitly made, to the question about the ceremonial
law was manifestly equivalent to a decision that it was
not necessary that the churches should conform to the
requirements of that law. It was tantamount to a judg-
ment that the Mosaic institutions, so far as they were
ceremonial and typical, were no longer binding. Of
course, it follows that the venerable synod regarded the
observance of the temple-worship as no longer obliga-
tory, and discharged the Gentile churches from the
duty of adhering to any of its elements which were dis-
tinctive of the old dispensation. 1 To suppose that
those churches, after such a discharge, had discretion-
ary power to retain the services of the ceremonial code
is to suppose that they might, at discretion, forsake the
liberty they had in Christ and resume the yoke of
Moses. The supposition is absurd. As the great body
1 This was afterwards expressly asserted to Paul by the apostles at
Jerusalem as the sense of the synod's decision. "As touching the Gen-
tiles," said they, "which believe, we have written and concluded that
they observe no such thing. " Acts xxi. 25.
AlUilMKXT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 91
of the Christian church has been gathered from the
Gentiles, the inference is obvious.
Eighthly, The speeches of Paul at his last visit to
Jerusalem. The charge which was brought against
him was this: "This is the man that teacheth all men
everywhere against the people, and the law, and this
place." If the charge had been even partly false that
he taught against the law and the temple, Paul's first
step in his defence would evidently have consisted in
denying it. This denial he did not make. How can
the fact be accounted for, except upon the ground that
Paul was well aware that both the temple and its pecu-
liar services were doomed? He knew the prediction
of Jesus that the building would be destroyed, and he
had special reason for remembering the defence of Ste-
phen before the Council, in which that servant of Christ
contended that the whole typical ritual would give way
to the sublime simplicity of worship which would char-
acterize tlie new dispensation. That Paul himself oc-
casionally worshipped at the temple was a mere matter
of expediency. That lie took part in its ceremonial
and typical observances there is no proof to show. In-
deed, without any assertion upon the subject, may not
the question be raised, whether, after the day of Pen-
tecost, when the Christian dispensation was inaugura-
ted, the apostles did not, as men, commit a mistake in
worshipping at all at the temple. It is difficult to be-
that Stephen worshipped there.
Ninthly, The argument in the Epistle to the Hebrews
is decisive. Tu the first place, it shows that the Anionic
priests and Levitical ministers have vanished, having
been superseded by a priest after the order of Melchi-
92 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
zedek, who has offered a perfect sacrifice, and lives for-
ever to intercede for his people and consummate the
work of redemption. If there be no priests and Levites
to officiate, how is it possible to continue the services
of the temple ? To say that they are succeeded by
Christian ministers is flatly to contradict the argument
of the inspired writer. In the second place, the argu-
ment expressly proves that the temple-worship has
been abolished. After stating the fact that the first
covenant [that is, the Jewish dispensation 1 ] had " ordi-
nances of divine service and a worldly sanctuary," and
specifying the things contained and the offices per-
formed in the latter, it declares that " the first taber-
nacle" — and by this term the temple, as well as the
tabernacle proper, was designated — "was a figure for
the time then present ; " but that Christ had come, " a
high priest of good things to come by a greater and
more perfect tabernacle." The figure had been realized
in that which was figured, and consequently there was
no longer any necessity for its teaching ; indeed, its
teaching would be utterly false and misleading. In the
third place, the argument shows that the ceremonial
law, as a mere shadow of good things to come, was in-
efficacious to provide for the removal of guilt from the
conscience and the sanctification of the soul. But these
ends are now secured by Christ through the sacrifice of
himself. Now there is no need to approach God by
1 The allusion here cannot be to the covenant of works as histori-
cally preceding the covenant of grace. It is to that special form in
which God administered the covenant of grace in the Jewish dispensa-
tion which gave way to another form of administration under the
Christian economy.
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 93
the old way of the temple-worship. We are at liberty
to approach him by a new and living way, which Christ
hath consecrated for us through the veil; that is to say,
his flesh. His atoning death lias cancelled the neces-
sity for the temple and all its ceremonial and typical
observances.
3. The i 'l'ovidence of God settled this question. It
effectually abolished the temple and its services. The
Lord Jesus, before his death, predicted the destruction
of the temple itself. Forty years after his death the
Romans destroyed it. This, it may be urged, proved
nothing as to the legitimacy of continuing its services :
it may, for aught we know, be restored. It is true that
the temple was rebuilt after the Babylonish captivity.
This was accomplished upon the expiration of seventy
years only, and then by God's direction. The Messiah
had not come, and the typical office of the temple might
still be fitly discharged. But he did come, and the
rending of the veil, when he expired, was the patent
signal of the temple's doom. More than eighteen hun-
dred years have elapsed since its destruction, and it is
not yet rebuilt. God has never directed its reconstruc-
tion, but on the contrary has by his providence pre-
vented it when it has been attempted. The Emperor
Julian, commonly called the Apostate, made the effort.,
and was battled in a most extraordinary way. In speak-
ing of what he terms "the miraculous interposition of
heaven, which defeated Julian's attempt to rebuild the
Jewish temple of Jerusalem," Bishop Warburton says:
constituting the essentials of their [the
worship, their religion could not be said to exist
longer than that celebration continued. But sacrifices
9
94 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
were to be performed in no place out of the walls of
their temple. So that when this holy place was finally
destroyed, according to the prophetical predictions, the
institution itself became abolished. Nor was anything
more consonant to the genius of this religion, than the
assigning such a celebration of its principal rites. The
temple would exist while they remained a people, and
continued sovereign. And when their sovereignty was
lost, the temple-worship became precarious, and sub-
ject to the arbitrary pleasure of their masters. They
destroyed this temple : but it was not till it had lost its
use. For the rites, directed to be there celebrated,
were relative to them only as a free-policied people.
" So that this was, in reality, a total extinction of the
Jewish worship. How wonderful are the ways of God!
This came to pass at that very period when a new rev-
elation from heaven concurred with the blind transac-
tions of civil policy, to supersede the law by the intro-
duction of the gospel : the last great work which com-
pleted the scheme of human redemption.
" To confound this admirable order of providence was
what induced the Emperor Julian to attempt the re-
building of the Jewish temple of Jerusalem. The van-
ity of the attempt could only be equalled by its impiety ;
for it was designed to give the lie to God, who, by the
mouth of his prophets, had foretold that it should never
be rebuilt. Here, then, was the most important occa-
sion for a miraculous interposition, as it was to defeat
this mad attempt. And thus in fact it was defeated, to
the admiration of all mankind.
" But as a large and full account of the whole affair
hath been already given to the public, in a work en-
ABGUMENT WBOM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 95
tituled — Julian, or a Discourse concerning the Earth-
quake and Fiery Eruption which defeated that Em-
peror's attempt to rebuild the Temple at Jerusalem;
thither will I refer the learned reader, who will there
inert with all the various evidence of the fact, abun-
dantly sufficient to support and establish it; together
with a full confutation of all the cavils opposed to its
certainty and necessity."
It may be pleaded, that although the temple may be
irrevocably destroyed, its priestly services may, in some
Bense, be transferred in a modified form and under new
conditions to the Christian church: that the New Tes-
tament itself authorizes the offices of a priesthood.
Y« s. it declares all believers to be made priests in Christ
to God, but priests, as offering eucharistic sacrifices —
sacrifices. of themselves, of their prayers, and of their
substance. Nothing more need be said in rebuttal of
this wretched perversion of Scripture than that the
•word priest i fepevs) is never, in the singular, applied in
the New Testament to any merely human officer of the
church. He who assumes to be officially a priest usurps
the prerogative of Jesus Christ, and audaciously invokes
his judgment. This is sufficient in reply to sacerdotal-
Lstfl who, if not already within the pale of Rome, need
only to push out their views to a legitimate conclusion
in order to reach the popish outrage of the Mass.
We must concur with Waxburton in holding that the
destruction of the temple, after the death of Christ, in-
volved the "extinction" of all that was peculiar and
characteristic in the temple-worship.
The abolition of the temple-worship, so far as it was
peculiar to the Jewish dispensation, has now been
96 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
proved by an appeal to the nature of the case, to the
statements of the New Testament Scriptures, and to the
awful providence of God ; and as it was before incon-
testably shown that instrumental music was employed
alone in that worship, so far as the public religious ser-
vices of God's people were concerned, it follows that
that kind of music is, with those limitations, abolished,
and that its use in the Christian church is contrary to
the Word and will of God.
2. The second argument will be derived from the re-
production by the Christian church, under New Testa-
ment conditions, of the essential principles of polity and
worship which obtained in the Jewish synagogue.
Let us pause to indicate briefly the elements of dif-
ference and of similarity between the church of the new
dispensation and that of the old.
The prominent elements by which the Christian
church was obviously distinguished from the Jewish
were :
(1.) The actual advent, death, resurrection, exalta-
tion, intercession, and mediatorial reign, of Christ ; with
all the consequences which flowed from those stupen-
dous events. The old church looked forward to them
all; the new looks backward to some of them, contem-
plates others as continuing to exist, and looks ever for-
ward to the second coming of the Saviour to complete
the redemption of his people and judge the quick and
the dead. Jesus is more distinctly, than was possible to
the Old Testament, saints, recognized and worshipped
as the King and Head of the church, and as the Media-
torial Sovereign to whose hands God the Father has
: MINT PROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 97
committed dominion over all things in heaven, earth
and hell.
_ I The influence proceeding from the copious effu-
sion of the Holy Spirit, and the results attending it,
upon the disciples and their fellow-believers in wonder-
fully increasing their gifts and graces, and upon the
mass of unbelievers in the conviction of their minds
and the conversion of their souls.
(3.) The elimination of all that was ceremonial and
typical in the old dispensation. Only two symbolical
ordinances are commanded by Christ to be observed:
tln> sacraments of baptism and the Lord's supper.
Simplicity is the reigning genius of worship, only such
external instrumentalities being allowed as are neces-
sary to constitute the media of its expression. All else,
Bave baptism and the Lord's supper, is swept away.
(4.) The exaltation, accentuation and extension of
the preaching function : evangelism is made dominant
in contradistinction to the dominant conservatism of
the Old Testament church, — dominant, let it be ob-
served, for the Jewish church was not merely and ab-
solutely conservative, as provision was made for the
admission of proselytes from the Gentile nations; and
the Christian church is very far from being simply
evangelistic, since it is an important part of her duty
t«> preserve, maintain and defend the truth, and to
train the sons of God for service on earth and glory in
heaven.
5. The emphasizing of the singing of praise in
public worship. There is reason to believe that the
apostles made singing, as a distinct and articulate part
of worship, more prominent in the Christian church
98 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
than it had been in the services of the Jewish syna-
gogue. The reason would seem to be plain. It is the
most fitting vehicle for the utterance of gratitude and
joy; and the Christian is peculiarly called upon to ex-
press these sentiments in worship, in consequence of
the finished atonement of Christ and the out-poured
influence of the Holy Ghost.
The question next being, what elements of similarity
there are between the church under the new dispensa-
tion and that under the old, it is obvious from what has
been said in regard to the typical and temporary char-
acter of the Jewish temple, that it could not have con-
stituted the pattern or model in conformity with which
the Christian church was organized. We must look
elsewhere, if anywhere, for such an ideal. We find
that in the Jewish synagogue, as an organized institute,
there existed those essential elements of polity and wor-
ship which possess the character of permanence, ele-
ments which were destined to form the abiding attri-
butes of the visible church through all dispensational
changes. We might, therefore, conclude, from the very
nature of the case, that such elements would pass over
by an easy transition, without the jar of dislocation and
a wholly new construction, to the church of the new
dispensation. This antecedent presumption we dis-
cover to be confirmed by facts.
The synagogue, according to those authors, both
Jewish and Christian, who are best entitled to speak
on the subject, had, as to its polity, elders, deacons,
and — I am disposed to believe — preachers. At least,
there was the germ of the preaching function which
only needed expansion to make it complete. Here
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 09
were the essential elements, which only required to be
modified by New Testament conditions to become the
constituents of the polity and order of Christian con-
gregations. When, accordingly, the majority of a Jew-
ish synagogue were converted to the Christian faith, it
became at once, simply by a profession of Christianity,
without any marked outward change, a Christian church,
with its officers already in existence, and consequently
not needing to be elected and ordained. In a word,
there was no necessity to create new offices. The old
might need to be modified and extended in consequence
of the new relations and conditions involved, but not to
1m- vacated so that new offices, another kind of offices,
should be substituted for them. Hence, in the accounts
given in the Acts of the Apostles of the first gathering
of Christian churches, we have no notice of the institu-
tion of the office of elder ab initio. The Jewish elders
of the synagogue became the Christian elders of the
church. The same, with the exception of the apostles
and other extraordinary officers, would seem to have
been true of all the offices of the Christian church— of
preachers, and in all probability of deacons. There is
do positive proof thai the appointment of the Seven was
a creation of the diaconal office. The evidence tends
to an opposite conclusion. The narrative leads natu-
rally to the conclusion that there were, under the su-
perintendence of the apostles, Hebrew deacons who
attended to the distribution of the common fund con-
tributed by the church; and that the Seven (whose
names are Hellenistic), were added to the already ex-
isting corps of deacons, in order to still the murmurs
of the Hellenist converts and adequately meet their
100 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
wants. As this is a point only subsidiary to the argu-
ment in hand, it will not be elaborately discussed. A
considerable mass of testimonies might be collected
from learned writers who, although characterized by
different types of theological and ecclesiastical thought,
have contended that the Christian church was organized
after the analogy of the synagogue. It may be suffi-
cient to cite the frequently quoted remarks of one who,
in view of his church relations and official position,
must be regarded as having spoken with distinguished
candor upon this subject. " It is probable," says Arch-
bishop "Wliately, 1 "that one cause, humanly speaking,
why we find in the Sacred Books less information con-
cerning the Christian ministry and the constitution
of church-governments than we otherwise might have
found, is that these institutions had less of novelty than
some would at first sight suppose, and that many por-
tions of them did not wholly originate with the apostles.
It appears highly probable — I might say, morally cer-
tain — that, wherever a Jewish synagogue existed, that
was brought, the whole, or the chief part of it, to em-
brace the gospel, the apostles did not there so much
form a Christian church (or congregation, ecclesia), as
make an existing congregation Christian, by introducing
the Christian sacraments and worship, and establish-
ing whatever regulations were requisite for the newly-
adopted faith; leaving the machinery (if I may so
speak) of government unchanged; the rulers of syna-
gogues, elders and other officers (whether spiritual or
ecclesiastical, or both) being already provided in the
1 Kingdom of Christ, pp. 83-85. Am. Ed., pp. 84-86.,
ARGUMENT PROW THE NEW TESTAMENT. 101
existing institutions. And it is likely that several of
the earliest Christian churches did originate in this
w;i v ; that is, that they were converted synagogues,
which became Christian churches as soon as the mem-
bers, or the main part of the members, acknowledged
Jesus as the Messiah.
"The attempt to effect this conversion of a Jewish
synagogue into a Christian church seems always to have
been made, in the first instance, in every place where
there was an opening for it. Even after the call of the
idolatrous Gentiles, it appears plainly to have been the
practice of the apostles Paul and Barnabas, when they
came to any city where there was a synagogue, to go
thither first and deliver their sacred message to the
Jews and 'devout Gentiles' ; according to their own ex-
en --ion (Aetsxiii. 17), 'to the men of Israel and those
that feared God;' adding that 'it was necessary that
the Word of God should first be preached to them.'
And when they founded a church in any of those cities
in which i and such were, probably, a very large major-
ity i there was no Jewish synagogue that received the
1, it is likely they would still conform, in a great
measure, to the same model." In these view T s such
men as Grotius, Vitringa, Selden and Lightfoot concur.
If this lie so, if the Christian church adopted its
polity and its ordinary officers from the Jewish syna-
gogue, it is almost unnecessary to argue that it appro-
priated its mode of worship from the same source. It
was that to which in the past the people of God had
been accustomed in their stated meetings on the Sab-
bath. Why Bhould it not have continued for all the
future? This would have been the almost inevitable
102 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
result, unless the Head of the Church had autho-
ritatively directed a change to be made, and had pre-
scribed another and a different method of worship which
he willed to be observed. There is not the slightest
proof to show that he did, except in the instances of
baptism and the Lord's supper; and this silence of
Christ, and the absence of inspired direction to that
effect by the Holy Ghost, are entitled to be construed
as an approval of the continuance by the church of the
long-standing and venerable mode of worship of the
Jewish synagogue. This probable argument amounts
to certainty, in view of the significant fact, that the ele-
ments of public worship actually enumerated in the
New Testament are precisely those which existed in the
synagogue. As, then, the use of instrumental music
was unknown in the worship of the synagogue it was
not introduced into the Christian church.
To this two considerations may be added : first, that
the analogy between the synagogue and the Christian
church is sustained by the fact that the LXX. frequently
use the term ecclesia as convertible with synagogue;
and secondly, that as the temple stood and its worship
continued for many years after the first Christian
churches were constituted, the introduction into them
of a kind of music which every Jew knew to be pecu-
liar to the temple would have furnished in itself a rea-
son for intense hostility to Christianity, and have called
forth a special opposition which would have left its im-
press upon the records of the times, both sacred and
profane. But we hear nothing of such a conflict, and
the inference is well-nigh irresistible that the ground
for it did not exist ; instrumental music had no place in
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 103
the early Christian churches. This particular consid-
eration is, moreover, enhanced when we reflect that the
Jewish synagogues themselves passed by an easy transi-
tion into Christian congregations. But that the con-
verted .Tew should, without difficulty, have admitted
into the synagogue, even though christianized, an ele-
ment which belonged to the temple as peculiar and
typical, or that the Christian should have adopted part
of a worship the abolition of which he knew to be cer-
tain, is either of them a supposition too violent to be
entertained.
3. The third argument against the employment of in-
strumental music in the Christian church will be drawn
from the great speech of Stephen before the Jewish
Council.
He was altogether an extraordinary man. Endowed
with great intellectual abilities, full of faith and power
and of the Holy Ghost, he disputed with such vigor
against the Libertines, Cyrenians and Alexandrians,
and them of Cilicia and Asia, that "they were not
able to resist the wisdom and the spirit by which he
spake." The reference to Cilicia makes it highly pro-
bable that in' these public discussions he had Saul, the
scholar of Tarsus and the disciple of Gamaliel, as one
of his antagonists; and it maybe that the defeat in ar-
gmnent t<> which the gifted and aspiring zealot was
subjected may have armed him with the acrimony
which found so conspicuous expression at the execution
of the martyr. Not being able to cope with him on tin;
field of honorable debate, his adversaries resorted to
the expedient which discomfited malice is wont to sug-
104 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHUECH WOKSHIP.
gest — they prosecuted him before the supreme judica-
tory. The charge against him was : " We have heard
him speak blasphemous words against Moses and
against God ; this man ceaseth not to speak blasphe-
mous words against this holy place, and the law : for
we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth
shall destroy this place, and change the customs which
Moses delivered us." As is apt to be the case, this
charge is partly true and partly false. It was false, so
far as it alleged blasphemy against Moses and against
God. So far as it affirmed Stephen's declaration, that
the temple would be destroyed, and the customs or
rites, as ceremonial and typical, of the Mosaic code,
would be changed, it must, for two reasons, be con-
sidered true — in the first place, because the defendant
never denied that allegation ; and in the second place,
because his defence itself proved its relevancy. This
construction of the charge has strong support. " This
charge," says Prof. Joseph Addison Alexander, 1 "Avas
no doubt true, so far as it related to the doctrine that
the new religion, or rather the new form of the church,
was to supersede the old." "Down to this time," ob-
serves Dr. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, 2 " the apostles and
the early Christian community had clung in their wor-
ship, not merely to the holy land and the holy city, but
to the holy place of the temple. This local worship,
with the Jewish customs belonging to it, he [Stephen]
now denounced. So we must infer from the accusa-
tions brought against him, confirmed as they are by the
tenor of his defence. The actual words of the charge
may have been false, as the sinister and malignant in-
1 Comm. on Acts, Chap. vi. 2 Art. Stephen, Smith's Diet, of Bible.
AEGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 105
tention which they ascribed to him was undoubtedly
false. 'Blasphemous, 1 that is, 'calumnious' words,
'against Moses and against God' he is not likely to
have used. But the overthrow of the temple, the ces-
sation of the the Mosaic ritual, is no more than St.
Paul preached openly, or than is implied in Stephen's
own speech : ' against this holy place and the hw — that
- of Nazareth shall destroy this place, and shall
change the customs that Moses delivered us.'"
The speech, in conformity with a tendency of the
oriental mind, is cast in the framework of an historical
statement, and to the cursory reader does not present
the features of an argument. It is nevertheless a pow-
erful argument. There are two great principles the
assertion of which it involved, and upon which it pro-
ceeded : first, the spirituality of God ; secondly, his in-
finite immensity. From the first the great speaker ar-
gued that it would be folly to hold that God could be
adequately worshipped by material emblems and cere-
monial rites. From the second he derived the conse-
quence that as God could not be confined to one place,
neither could his worship. These positions he sus-
tained by an appeal, in the first place, to the history of
Israel, and, in the second place, to the doctrine of the
prophets. He shows that the church-state of the He-
brews had undergone great changes — changes which
rendered it impossible that they could have worshipped
always in one particular mode, in one particular locality,
and at one particular sanctuary. The church, as organ-
ized in the family of their great ancestor, Abraham,
worshipped without the temple. The church, while in
bondage in Egypt, worshipped without the temple.
10
106 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHUECH WORSHIP.
The church, in its migrations for forty years in the
wilderness, worshipped without the temple. The church,
after it had found rest in the land of promise, through
the whole period of the Judges, and through the reigns
of Saul and David, worshipped without the temple. It
was not until Solomon that the temple was built, and
its peculiar services were inaugurated as supplementary
to, and perfective of, those which had belonged to the
tabernacle. Here Stephen reaches the conclusion of
the first branch of his argument — namely, that the his-
tory of the Hebrew church proved that the temple in
which his judges gloried had not been, in the past, a
necessity to the spiritual worship of God, and therefore
it involved neither absurdity nor impiety to hold that
the church would again worship without it.
He then proceeds to confirm this lesson from the
Israelitish history by the doctrine of the prophets,
which teaches the greatness, majesty, infinity of God:
" Howbeit the Most High dwelleth not in temples made
with hands ; as saith the prophet, Heaven is my throne,
and earth is my footstool: what house will ye build
me ? saith the Lord : or what is the place of my rest ?
Hath not my hand made all these things ? " Evidently
the argument went to show the unreasonableness of so
localizing the worship of the infinite Being as to tie
him to a single house of worship. It implicitly affirmed
the temporary character of the temple, and would, in
all probability, have made the assertion explicit had
not some manifestation of anger and pride on the part
of the Council interrupted the speaker. This led the
fearless and impassioned witness for the gospel directly
to indict his judges : " Ye stiff-necked and uncircum-
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 107
d in heart and ears, ye do always, resist the Holy
Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye." It is clearly
implied that as their fathers had resisted the Holy
Ghost in respect to the matter of worshipping accord-
ing to God's appointments, so they resisted him in the
same manner. When, for example, the Spirit directed
their fathers to worship ar the temple, they worshipped
on high places and in groves. Now that a new dispen-
sation had been introduced, and the Holy Ghost di-
rected them to abandon the temple-worship as having
discharged its typical and temporary office, they dis-
obeyed him, and insisted upon continuing that wor-
ship. This outburst of holy eloquence cut them to the
heart and drew from them expressions of rage. Aud
when he declared that he saw Jesus, whom he had
charged them with having murdered, standing on the
right hand of God, it became intolerable, and resolving
themselves into a furious mob, they rushed upon him,
dragged him outside the gate of the city, and pitilessly
stoned him to death.
In this speech it is clear that Stephen erected a tes-
timony which cost him his life in favor of the abroga-
tion of the temple-worship ; and as instrumental music
was peculiar to that worship, we have an independent
line of proof from the New Testament that it was not
introduced, and was not designed to be introduced,
into the Christian church.
There is, besides, another aspect of this immortal
speech which must not be overlooked. Stephen, en-
dowed with extraordinary penetration of mind, and
with a wonderful inspiration of the Holy Ghost, seemed
to be in advance of the apostolic college itself in his
108 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
estimate of the genius of gospel- worship. He con-
tended, as the Lord Jesus had before declared, that the
spirituality of God demanded spiritual worship, and
delivered a testimony sealed with blood in behalf of
the absolute simplicity of gospel institutions. Stripped
of all the burdensome though splendid ritual of the
temple, they would reproduce the simple and unosten-
tatious services of the synagogue, and interject nothing
which was not expressly prescribed by divine authority,
or required by necessity, between the living worshipper
and the living God. TJie spirituality and simplicity of
gospel-worship, — this was what the illustrious deacon
insisted upon in burning words and with dauntless
spirit before that bigoted and furious bench of zealots ;
this was the principle which he saturated with martyr
blood at the very beginning of the Christian dispensa-
tion. Would that every officer of the church would
imitate the glorious example, and in the face of popu-
lar clamor and the demands of this world's princes,
bear an unwavering testimony against the introduction
into the public worship of the church of every abro-
gated element of the ancient temple-services !
4. The next proof is based upon the teaching of Christ
and his apostles — a teaching enforced by their practice.
(1.) The teaching of the Lord Jesus excluded instru-
mental music from the public worship of the New Testa-
ment church. He declared that God is vainly wor-
shipped when the doctrines and commandments of men
are substituted for his own. "We have seen that, by
divine direction, by the doctrine and commandment of
God, instrumental music in the Old Testament church
DMENT PROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 109
was excluded from the ordinary, stated worship of his
people on the Sabbath day in the synagogue, and was
confined to the Bervices of the temple. "We haye also
n that the Christian church in its polity and worship
was, under the conditions and with the modifications
necessitated by the new dispensation, modelled after
the Jewish synagogue. No entirely new element of
worship was incorporated into the services of that
church. Jesus did not authorize the effectuation of
such a change. Consequently the introduction of in-
strumental music, which God had not sanctioned, or
rather had prohibited, in the worship of the synagogue
would have been the substitution of a doctrine and
commandment of men for those which proceeded from
God.
In his conversation with the Samaritan woman at
Jacob's well, our Saviour enounced the great principle
of the spirituality of worship : " God is a spirit, and
they that worship him must worship him in spirit and
in truth." While he acknowledged that the Jews, in
contradistinction to the Samaritans, paid intelligent
worship to God, for the reason that it involved the
knowledge of salvation — a salvation to be accomplished
by One who, according to tin- hVsh, would spring from
tin' Jewish stock, and while he virtually admitted that
they had complied with divine direction in conducting
a ceremonial and typical worship with its seat at Jeru-
salem, he added the significant words: "Believe me,
the hour Cometh, when ye shall neither in this moun-
tain, nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father
The hour Cometh and now is, when the true worship-
pers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth:
110 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
for the Father seeketh such to worship him." In these
words, which adumbrated the genius of gospel- worship,
our blessed Lord clearly taught two things : first, that
the ceremonial, typical, ritualistic worship of the Jewish
temple was designed to be temporary, and that the
hour was swiftly approaching when it would be entirely
abolished; secondly, that even that stated worship
which had been devoid of a ceremonial, typical and
ritualistic character, would, under the influences to be
exerted upon the people of God in the dispensation
about to be inaugurated, become more spiritual than
ever. These lessons the Lord Jesus manifestly incul-
cated, and they justify the inferences: that as instru-
mental music was a peculiar appendage of the temple
it would pass away with it ; and that, as it was absent
from the synagogue, the Christian church, which was
destined to be more spiritual in its worship than was
even that unceremonial and untypical institute, could
not consistently with its advanced nature and office in-
troduce it into its services. It would suppose in the
church of the New Testament a lower degree of spirit-
uality in worship than was possessed by that of the Old.
Furthermore, our Lord, in issuing to his apostles, just
before his ascension to glory, the great commission
which contemplated the evangelization of the world, im-
posed upon them this solemn obligation: "Teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have com-
manded you." This injunction of the Prophet and
King of the church involved three things : first, that
the apostles, in their oral communications and in their
inspired writings, were to teach all those things which
Christ commanded ; secondly, that they were to teach
A 1 U I DM -XT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. Ill
nothing but what Christ commanded; and thirdly, that
the church to be organized by them was to obey their
teaching, originated and enforced by the authority of
Christ, and to introduce nothing into her doctrine,
polity and worship which was not either expressly or
impliedly warranted by the command of Christ as re-
flected by apostolic inculcation and example. This left
the church no discretion in regard to these elements of
doctrine, government and worship. She is absolutely
bound by Christ's commands, enounced originally by
the lips of the apostles, and now permanently recorded
in his inspired Word. She is obliged to do all that he
lias commanded; she is forbidden to do anything which
he has not commanded. She can construct no new
doctrine, institute no new element of government, and
decree no new rites and ceremonies — introduce no new
mode of worship. The inquiry, what discretionary
power the church possesses in the sphere of worship,
will be reserved to another part of this discussion. It
is sufficient now to say, that it is a discretionary power
which she is never entitled to use as the church, but
simply as an organization acting under secular and tem-
poral conditions belonging to all human societies. It
is only where there is no need, perhaps no room, for a
command of Christ — in the sphere in which human
wisdom, the natural judgment of men, is competent to
act, in which indeed it must act, it is only here that the
church is, from the very necessity of the case, invested
with discretionary power.
The qu< «tion now being, Did Christ command the
of instrumental music in Ids church? the answer
must be. He did not. There is certainly no such
112 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
command on record. Nor can it be presumed. The
Lord Jesus knew the divine decree by which the tem-
porary services of the temple were destined to be abol-
ished. He himself predicted the utter destruction of
the temple. He knew perfectly that instrumental music
was an attachment to the peculiar and distinctive ser-
vices of the temple, and therefore he knew that it must
share the wreck to which the temple with all those
services was doomed. Did he authorize his church to
save instrumental music from the ruins, and employ it
in her worship ? He did not. Is she then warranted
to do it? Assuredly not.
Our Lord, as a man, was perfectly familiar with the
worship of the synagogue. It is said that there were
in his day at least four hundred and fifty synagogues
in the great city of Jerusalem itself, churches in which
the population worshipped from Sabbath to Sabbath,
just as a Christian people now worship in theirs. His
custom was to attend the synagogue wherever in his
blessed itinerancy he chanced to be. He full well knew
the absence of instrumental music from its services, and
he knew that his church, when established as such,
would follow the precedents of stated Sabbath worship,
which reached immemorially back through the history
of his ancient people. Did he leave a command to his
church to depart from that order, and introduce instru-
mental music into its stated Sabbath worship? He
did not ; and the defect of such a command is sufficient
to settle the question.
These considerations, did they need confirmation,
would find it in the actual practice of our Lord. We
are informed that he sang psalms with his disciples.
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 113
On tlu i fatal night in which he was betrayed, he closed
the affecting solemnity of instituting the sacrament of
the supper with singing. "And when they had sung
an hymn," say two of the evangelists in identically the
same language, "they went out into the Mount of
Olives;*' and the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews,
in the wonderful chapter in which he argues the neces-
sity of the incarnation — the community of nature be-
twixt Christ and his brethren, touchingly portrays him
as discharging the office of their preacher and of their
precentor, saving, "I will declare thy name unto my
brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praise
unto thee." Nothing do we hear of instruments of
music; but. as Justin Martyr, or the pseudo-Justin,
>ays <»f the psalmody of the early church, only "sim-
ple singing." De Quincey 1 has contemptuously repre-
sented the singing of the English Dissenters "as a
howling wilderness of psalmody." He might have
spared his ridicule, had he reflected that one of the
clerks who have led that kind of singing was Jesus
Christ himself. But "vain man would be wise, though
man be born like a wild ass's colt." He has, with mag-
nificent rhetoric, described "the swell of the anthem,
the burst of the hallelujah chorus, the storm, the tramp-
ling movement of the choral passion, . . . the tumult
of the choir, the wrath of the organ." Perchance he
wrote better than he knew, when he represented the
organ as bringing forth wrath; and his prelatical scom
for Christ's humble and obedient people, as well as his
splendid rhetoric in glorifying the pomps of cathedral-
1 Writings, Vol. i. p. 224; Boston: Tiekuor, lteed and Fields, 1851.
114 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
service, may be offsetted by the following passage from
the coryphaeus of British liberty: 2 "In times of oppo-
sition, when either against new heresies arising, or old
corruptions to be reformed, this cool unpassionate mild-
ness of positive wisdom is not enough to damp and
astonish the proud resistance of carnal and false doc-
tors, then (that I may have leave to soar awhile as poets
use) Zeal, whose substance is ethereal, arming in com-
plete diamond, ascends his fiery chariot drawn with two
blazing meteors, figured like beasts out of a higher
breed than any the zodiac yields, resembling two of
those four which Ezekiel and St. John saw ; the one
visaged like a lion, to express power, high authority and
indignation, the other of countenance like a man, to cast
derision and scorn upon perverse and fraudulent se-
ducers : with these the invincible warrior, Zeal, shaking
loosely the slack reins, drives over the heads of scarlet
prelates, and such as are insolent to maintain traditions,
bruising their stiff necks under his flaming wheels."
Or, we may listen to the rolling thunder of a mightier
rhetoric than De Quincey or Milton wielded — a thun-
der that, like the angry growl of a coming storm, pre-
ludes the doom of that apostate mother from whose
fertile womb have crept the monstrous corruptions
which have slimed the purity of Christ's fair and glo-
rious bride : " Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and
is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every
foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful
bird. . . . Alas, alas, that great city, that was clothed
in fine linen, and purple, and scarlet, and decked with
2 Milton's Prose Works. Vol. i., p. 135; Philadelphia: John W. Moore.
1847.
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 115
gold, and precious stones, and pearls! . . . Rejoice
over her, tlion heaven, and ye holy apostles and pro-
plats; for God hath avenged yon on her. . . . And the
voice of harpers, and of musicians, and of pipers, and
trumpeters, shall be heard no more in thee. . . . And
after these things T heard a great voice of much people
in heaven, saying, Alleluia ; salvation, and glory, and
honor, and power, unto the Lord our God: for true
and righteous are his judgments: for he hath judged
the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her
fornication, and hath avenged the blood of his servants
at her hand. And again they said, Alleluia. And her
smoke rose up forever and ever."
% The teaching of the apostles excluded instru-
mental music from tin 4 public worship of the church.
Among the parts of that worship which are enu-
merated in the New Testament the singing of praise is
included, but not instrumental music. The passages
which are relevant are: 1 Cor. xiv. 26: "How is it
then, brethren? when ye come together, every one of
you hath a psalm, hath a doctrine, hath a tongue, hath
a revelation, hath an interpretation. Let all things be
done unto edifying." Eph. v. 11): "Speaking to your-
selves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, sing-
ing and making melody in your hearts to the Lord."
CoL iii. 16: "Teaching and admonishing one another
in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with
grace in your hearts t<> the Lord."
"The cause of all the contention/ 1 s;iy> the Rev. A.
Cromar, 1 ''is in the fact, that the word psalm and the
word translated making melody, suggest at once to the
1 Vi n dication of the Organ, pp. 93, 94.
116 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
mind the idea of instrumental music. A psalm is with
propriety defined, a sacred ode designed to be sung to
the accompaniment of the lyre, and the word rendered
making melody literally signifies, to strike the string of
the same instrument. Taking the words in their sim-
plicity, the passage, as far as music is concerned, seems
to consist of two parts — the one enjoining the general
duty of praise in compositions sung either with or with-
out an instrumental accompaniment ; and the other par-
ticularly stating that praise, whether it be with or with-
out instrumental guidance, must always be of true gos-
pel character, that is, must be an exercise of the heart. If
this, the most probable, be also the true, sense of the pas-
sage (Eph. v. 19) ; then we have in it what the Mends
of the organ believe to be the divine mind in the mat-
ter."
The weight of scholarly authority is certainly against
Mr. Cromar, and those who, like him, would twist these
passages to the support of instrumental music in the
public worship of the church. Dr. James Begg, in
noticing the exception taken by an anonymous writer
to our translation of the Bible, and his affirmation, with
others, that faXXao radically signifies playing on a
stringed musical instrument, has these remarks which
are worthy of attention : l " This attempt to fix the mean-
ing of the word as implying playing instead of singing,
as used by the New Testament writers, was thoroughly
set aside by Dr. Porteous, by a variety of evidence, one
part of which is thus concluded : ' From these quota-
tions from the Greek fathers, the three first of whom
flourished in the fourth century — men of great erudi-
l T7ie Use of Organs, p. 264, ff.
AKOUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 117
tion, well skilled in the phraseology and language of
Scripture, perfectly masters of the Greek tongue, which
was then written and spoken with purity in the coun-
fcries where they resided; men, too, who for conscience
sake would not handle the Word of God deceitfully, it is
evident that the Greek word faWco signified in their
time singing with the voice alone. Had they conceived
otherwise, we may be assure' 1 that they had both suffi-
cient firmness of mind and influence in the church to
have induced their hearers to have used the harp and
psaltery in the public worship of God.'
"It is curious to observe how constantly, and with
what pretence of learning, mistakes are repeated. In a
late discussion, the correctness of our authorized trans-
lation of James v. 13 was confidently called in question,
and it was affirmed that i^aWeTco meant to strike as on
the lyre, and that the passage ought not to have been
translated 'let him sing psalms,' but 'let him play on
an instrument.' The issue thus raised is a very broad
and important one, being neither more nor less than
whether instrumental music is divinely appointed in
Christian worship. It indicates, at all events, how far
some hymnologists are prepared to go. If this idea is
correct, the Christian church in the early ages had en-
tirely mistaken the meaning of inspired men, and so
has <>nr church [the Scottish | since the Reformation.
We affirm, however, that tpaXXirao in James can mean
nothing else than 'let him sing psalms.' The substan-
tive if-<• demanded, the
appeal is taken, first, to the preceding argument; and,
secondly , to the practice of the post-apostolic church.
120 INSTEUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
If the apostles had allowed the employment of instru-
mental music in the church, it is morally certain, from
the very constitution of human nature, that it would
have continued to be used subsequently to their time.
But it was not; and its absence can be accounted for
only on the ground that the New Testament Church had
never adopted it. If it had been in use under the apos-
tles, its ejection could only have been accomplished by
a revolutionary change which would have been a revolt
from apostolic practice. Such a supposition is on every
account absurd — indeed is impossible. The proof that
the early church knew nothing of instrumental music
it is proposed to furnish in a subsequent part of
this discussion. Its presentation is, therefore, post-
poned.
Even if the foregoing argument from the New Testa-
ment Scriptures had only a respectable degree of proba-
bility, it would seem to be preposterous to attempt its
refutation by a single ambiguous word — a word con-
ceded by those who take that position themselves to
have both an original and a secondary signification.
As, further, it is not pleaded that the words "hymns
and spiritual songs" imply the accompaniment of in-
struments, they who stand on the primary sense of the
word psalms would be obliged to admit that some of the
singing of the apostolic church was accompanied by in-
strumental music and some was not. When they suc-
ceed in proving that such was the case, they may with
some plausibility claim the surrender of their opponents.
Is it not evident that the argument which rests on the
single word psalms swings on a rickety hinge?
ARGUMENT FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT. 121
5. The only other argument from the New Testament
Scriptures will be derived from the condemnation which
they pronounce upon "will-worship." Will-worship is
that which is not commanded by God, but devised
by man. We have seen that God commanded instru-
mental music to be employed in connection with the
temple. It was, therefore, in that relation not an ele-
ment of will-worship. It was of course legitimate. But
had the Jew employed it in the synagogue, he would
have been guilty of the sin of will-worship. Why?
Because, without the divine warrant he would have
asserted his own will in regard to the public worship
of God. Now that the temple is gone, all that was
peculiar to it is gone with it. To revive any of its de-
funct services, and borrow them from its ruins for the
ornamentation of the Christian church, is an instance
of will-worship. The general principle is enounced by
Paul in the Epistle to the Colossians, although he ap-
plies it specifically to a certain class of cases. " Where-
fore," says he, "if ye be dead with Christ from the
rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the
world, are ye subject to ordinances, (Touch not; taste
not ; handle not ; which are all to perish with the
using ;) after the commandments and doctrines of men ?
which things have indeed a shew of wisdom in will-
worship, and humility, and neglecting of the body; not
in any honor to the satisfying of the flesh." Instru-
mental music, as has been proved, was one of the rudi-
ments of that ceremonial ami typical ritual by which it
pleased God to train the Israelites, as children in a pre-
paratory school, for the manhood of the Christian dis-
pensation with its glorious privileges and its expanded
122 instrumental Music in church worship.
responsibilities. This was the view of even Aquinas
and Bellarmin. He, therefore, who would import that
effete element into the Church of the New Dispensa-
tion would impugn the wisdom of God, assert his will
against the divine authority, and abandon the freedom
of Christ for the bondage of Moses.
IV.
Argument from the Presbyterian Standards.
In arguing against the use of instrumental music in
public worship from the Presbyterian standards — that
is, the formularies of doctrine, government and worship
of the Presbyterian Church — I desire it to be distinctly
understood that they are not viewed or treated as an
authority independent of the inspired Word of God.
All the authority which they possess — every whit of it —
is derived from that Word. Apart from it they have
none. In the first place, as human compositions they
may or may not exactly accord with the Scriptures and
faithfully represent their meaning. So far as they do,
and only so far as they do, they are clothed with the
authority of the divine Word itself, and as every Chris-
tian admits that the authority of that Word is binding
upon all men, they, to that extent, confessedly exercise
a controlling authority upon all men. In the second
place, the members, and especially the officers of that
church of which they arc a directory of faith and prac-
be governed by them as the consti-
tution of their ehurcli. It is, therefore, with reference
124 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
to them, not exclusively, but in a very special sense,
that, in the construction and development of this par-
ticular argument, the appeal is made to the Presbyte-
rian standards. I speak as unto wise men ; let them
judge what may be said in relation to this venerable
tribunal.
Let it be also noticed that, in pursuing this particu-
lar line of argument, it is by no means claimed that
new material proofs are derived from these formularies.
The proofs have already been presented from the Scrip-
tures, both of the Old Testament and of the New, and
the conclusion which they justify has already been
reached and enounced. The present appeal is to the
standards as clearly summing up the scriptural proofs
and definitely enforcing the conclusion, and as having
a peculiar authority for those who, in the conflict of re-
ligious opinions, have adopted them as, in their judg-
ment, a correct statement and exposition of the law of
the Lord. But in addition to this, let it be remarked,
these standards clearly define the limitations upon such
discretionary power in the sphere of worship, and in
every other sphere, as is to be conceded to the church.
They define it both negatively — declaring what it is
not ; and positively — declaring what it is ; and it is in
this especial regard that the reference to their author-
ity is invested with interest and importance.
1. Instrumental music is, by good and necessary
consequence, excluded from the public worship of the
church by the exposition which the Catechisms furnish
of the Second Commandment. In the citation of their
words, only such will be adduced as bear upon the sub-
ject of worship and are relevant to the question in hand.
AB6UMENT PROM THE PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 125
" What," asks the Larger Catechism, 1 "are the duties
required in the Beoond commandment?" "The duties
required in the second commandment are the receiving,
observing, and keeping pure and entire all such reli-
gious worship and ordinances as God hath instituted in
his Word. . . . Also, the disapproving, detesting, op-
posing all false worship, and, according to each one's
place and calling, removing it."
"What are the sins forbidden in the second com-
mandment V " " The sins forbidden in the second com-
mandment are : All devising, counselling, commanding,
using, and any wise approving any religious worship
not instituted by God himself; . . . all superstitious de-
vices, corrupting the worship of God, adding to it or
taking from it, whether invented and taken up of our-
selves or received by tradition from others, though un-
der the title of antiquity, custom, devotion, good intent,
or any other pretence whatsoever ; . . . all neglect, con-
tempt, hindering, and opposing the worship and ordi-
nances which God hath appointed."
""What are the reasons annexed to the second com-
mandment, the more to enforce it ? " " The reasons
annexed to the second commandment, the more to en-
force it, contained in these words, For I the Lord thy
God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the
fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth
generation of them that hate me: and showing mercy
unto thousands of them that love me and keep my
commandments; are, besid< - God's sovereignty over us
and propriety in us, his fen, nt zeal for his own wor-
ship, and his revengeful indignation against all false
1 Questions 108, 10», 110.
126 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
worship, as being a spiritual whoredom ; accounting
the breakers of this commandment such as hate him,
and threatening to punish them unto divers genera-
tions, and esteeming the observers of it such as love
him and keep his commandments, and promising mercy
to them unto many generations."
The Shorter Catechism 1 thus condenses these state-
ments of the Larger: "The second commandment re-
quireth the receiving, observing and keeping pure and
entire all such religious worship and ordinances as God
hath appointed in his Word." It "forbiddeth the wor-
shipping of God by images, or any other way not ap-
pointed in his Word." "The reasons annexed . . . are,
God's sovereignty over us, his propriety in us, and the
zeal he hath to his own worship."
Let us attentively consider the features of this com-
mandment which are signalized by these formularies :
(1.) The zeal and jealousy, fervent and lasting, which
God manifests touching everything that concerns his
worship. This is suited to arrest our notice, and to
alarm and restrain those who assert their right to de-
cree rites and ceremonies, and to regulate divine wor-
ship according to their own judgment and taste as to
what is fitting and decorous in the services of the Lord's
house. He himself stands guard over his own sanctu-
ary, and, armed with bolts of vengeance, threatens with
condign punishment the invaders of his prerogative, the
usurpers of his rights. We have seen how awfully this
lesson was enforced under the old dispensation, how
swiftly, like lightning, his judgments flashed against
rash and insolent assertors of their own will in regard
1 Questions 50, 51, 52.
ABGUMENT FROM Till'. PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 127
to the mode in which he was to be worshipped, and
how severely he dealt with his own choicest and holiest
servants for departures from his prescriptions in this
•matter. This vehement zeal and jealousy of God for
the purity of his worship should deter us from ventur-
ing out 4 step beyond the directions of his Word. Who,
for the sake of the ornaments of art and the suggestions
of fancy, would unnecessarily challenge the visitations
of his wrath? In this dispensation he is patient and
forbearing, hut who will coolly elect to go, with the un-
eipunged guilt of encroaching upon the sovereignty of
God over the worship of his house, to the tremendous
bar of last accounts?
(2.) The great principle is here brought out and em-
phasized, that not only is what God has positively
commanded to be obeyed, but what he has not com-
manded is forbidden. The law is, not that we are at
liberty to act when God has not spoken, but just the
contrary : we have no right to act when he is silent. It
will not answer to say in justification of some element
of worship that God has not expressly prohibited it ;
we must produce a divine warrant for it. The absence
of such a warrant is an interdiction. The exposition
of the second commandment enforces the obligation,
Dot "iily t<> receive, observe and keep pure and entire
all such religious worship and ordinances as God Ixith
instituted in his Word, but also not to devise, counsel,
Command, use and any wise approve any religious
worship not instituted by God himself. The instance.
already commented on, of Nadab and Abihu, the sons
of Aaron, God's venerable high priest, is exactly in
point. They were visited with summary judgment, as
128 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
we are explicitly told, for performing a function in wor-
ship which God had not commanded. We cannot
without guilt transcend divine appointments. No dis-
cretion is allowed the church to introduce into public-
worship what God himself has not instituted and ap-
pointed. He has not constituted her his vicegerent
or his confidsntial agent. She is intrusted with no
powers plenipotentiary. She acts under instructions,
and is required to adhere to the text of her commis-
sion.
The application to instrumental music in the public
worship of the church is plain. It was permissible, as
has been shown, only when God commanded it, and
he commanded it in connection with the typical and
temporary services of the temple. He did not com-
mand it to be used in the ordinary Sabbath worship of
the synagogue, and accordingly it was not employed in
that institute. The Jew obeyed the divine will in that
respect. God did not command it to be introduced
into the Christian church, and in conformity with his
will it was not employed in the apostolic or the early
church. It was not known in the church for centuries.
It was, as will be shown, a late importation into its
services — an importation effected without divine autho-
rization, and therefore in the face of the divine will.
If our exposition of the second commandment is valid —
and ice acknowledge it to be both valid and au-
thoritative — we violate that commandment when we
employ instrumental music in public worship, because
we devise, counsel, command, use and approve a mode
of " religious worship not instituted by God himself."
That God did not institute it, either in connection with
ABOUMENT PROM THE rRESBYTERIAX STANDARDS. 129
the Jewish synagogue or with the Christian church,
has been irrefragably proved.
These things being so, we cannot, in accordance with
the requirements of this commandment, acquiesce in
the employment of instrumental music in the public
worship of the church. No " title of antiquity, custom,
devotion, good intent, or any other pretence whatso-
ever." will justify or excuse us. It will not avail us to
plead that we found it in use, and are not called upon
to urge or enact revolutionary measures. We are bound
to disapprove, detest, oppose all false worship, and as
this is in that category, to disapprove, detest and op-
pose it. The argument to prove its want of divine
warrant must be overthrown before the position of in-
action and acquiescence can be conscientiously main-
tained. Nor will it do to say that we have not ex-
amined the question — that we do not know. We ought
to examine, we ought to know, for as Presbyterians our
standards plainly expound to us the divine law on the
subject, and as Christians we have no right to be igno-
rant of the teaching of Scripture in regard to it. " To
the law and to the testimony; if they speak not ac-
cording to them, it is because there is no light in
them."
The principle, thus strongly emphasized by the ex-
position of the second commandment, that a divine war-
rant is required for everything entering into the wor-
ship of God, is also enounced and enforced in the fol-
lowing utterances of the Confession of Faith: "God
alone is Lord of the conscience, and hath left it free
from the doctrines and commandments of men which
are in any thing contrary to his Word, or beside it in
12
130 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
matters of faith and worship." x "The acceptable way
of worshipping the true God is instituted by himself,
and so limited by his own revealed will, that he may
not be worshipped according to the imaginations and
devices of men, or the suggestions of Satan, under any
visible representation, or any otJter way not prescribed
in the Holy Scripture.'" 2 In these words the Confes-
sion declares, that the conscience is left free to reject
the teaching of any doctrines and the authority of any
commandments which are beside the Word of God in
the matter of worship ; and that it is not permissible to
worship him in any way not prescribed in the Scrip-
tures. If, as has been evinced, instrumental music in
public worship was in the Old Testament only pre-
scribed as an appendage of the temple, and was not pre-
scribed in connection with the synagogue, and is not
prescribed in the New Testament, it is obviously beside
the Word of God, destitute of his authority, and there-
fore to be rejected.
2. Instrumental music is excluded from the public
worship of God's house by the declarations of the Con-
fession of Faith and the Directory for Worship concern-
ing singing.
The Confession of Faith, in enumerating the "parts
of the ordinary religious worship of God," specifies
"singing of psalms with grace in the heart." The Di-
rectory for WorshijD thus speaks: "It is the duty of
Christians to praise God by singing psalms." "The
proportion of the time of public worship to be spent
in singing is left to the prudence of every minister."
(1.) These provisions of the Confession of Faith and
1 Chap, xx., sec. 2. 2 Chap, xxi., sec. 1.
AB0UMENT PROM THE PRESBYTERIAN BTANDABDS. 131
the Directory for Worship exclude Instrumental music
from the public worship of the church which acknow-
ledges them as its formularies, in accordance with the
legal maxim. Expressio unius est exclusio dUerivs : the
express statement of one alternative is the exclusion of
the other. If two men were supposed, upon probable
grounds, to be chargeable with the same offence, the in-
dictment of only one o\' them would be the exclusion of
the other from the indictment. No formal naming of
the person not included in the indictment is necessary.
If of two acts, which might be performed under given
circumstances, one only is commanded in a statute to
be done, the other is excluded — it is not commanded.
And so, if of two acts which might be done under given
circumstances, one only is by statute permitted, the
other is excluded from the permission — it is forbidden.
To apply the principle to the case in hand : the singing
of psalms or hymns and the performance of instru-
mental music are two distinct acts which may be done
at one and the same time. The ecclesiastical law com-
mands only one of these acts to be done in public wor-
ship. It follows that the other is excluded— it is not
commanded. But does this, it may be asked, rule out
the other? May it not be done, although not com-
manded? The answer is to be found in the great prin-
ciple, already established by scriptural proofs, that what
Christ has not commanded to be observed, men have no
right to introduce into the worship of his church: and
who acknowledge the ecclesiastical law which is
Appealed to. as correctly representing or rather re-
producing the divine law. are bound to hold that what
the ecclesiastical law does not authorize cannot be legiti-
132 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
mately introduced into the worship of the church. We
have seen that it is not true that what is not forbidden
is permitted, but on the contrary, what is not com-
manded is forbidden. It follows that, as the law in the
Presbyterian standards does authorize singing and does
not authorize instrumental music, the latter is excluded.
It is extra-legal, and therefore contra-legal.
(2.) This interpretation of the law in the standards
is confirmed by what we know of the mind and inten-
tion of its framers in regard to this matter. Before the
Westminister Assembly of Divines undertook the office
of preparing a Directory for Worship, the Parliament
had authoritatively adopted measures looking to the re-
moval of organs, along with other remains of Popery,
from the churches of England. On the 20th of May,
1644, the commissioners from Scotland wrote to the
General Assembly of their church and made the follow-
ing statement among others: "We cannot but admire
the good hand of God in the great things done here
already, particularly that the covenant, the foundation
of the whole work, is taken, Prelacy and the whole train
thereof extirpated, the service-book in many places for-
saken, plain and powerful preaching set up, many col-
leges in Cambridge provided with such ministers as are
most zealous of the best reformation, altars removed,
the communion in some places given at the table with
sitting, the great organs at Paul's and Peter's in West-
minster taken down, images and many other monu-
ments of idolatry defaced and abolished, the Chapel
Koyal at Whitehall purged and reformed ; and all by
authority, in a quiet manner, at noon-day, without tu-
AB0UMBNT FROM THE PRBSBWHMAN STANDARDS. 133
mult." ' So thorough was the work of Removing organs
that the " Eneyelopaxtia P>ritannica" says that Hal the
Revolution most of the organs in England had been de-
steoyed»" s
When, therefore, the Assembly addressed itself to the
task of framing a Directory for Worship, it found itself
confronted by a condition of the churches of Great
Britain in which the singing of psalms without instru-
mental accompaniment almost universally prevailed.
In proscribing, consequently, the singing of psalms
without making any allusion to the restoration of in-
strumental music, it must, in all fairness, be construed
to specify the simple singing of praise as a part of pub-
lic worship. The question, moreover, is settled by the
consideration that had any debate occurred as to the
propriety of allowing the use of instrumental music,
the Scottish commissioners would have vehemently and
uncompromisingly opposed that measure. But Light-
font, who was a member of the Assembly, in his " Jour-
nal <>f its Proceedings" 3 tells us: "This morning we
fell upon the Directory for singing of psalms; and, in
a short time, we finished it." He says that the only
point upon which the Scottish commissioners had
some discnssioE was the reading of the Psalms line by
line.
If anything were lacking to confirm these views, it
would be found in what is known of the state of opin-
ion in the Puritan party, the party represented in the
Westminster Assembly, as well before as during the
-ions of that body.
ett of Assembly of Church of 8eoUand, l'Ml. ' Art., Organ.
Work*, Vol. xiii., pp. 343, 344 : London, 1825.
134 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
"Her Majesty [Elizabeth] was afraid," says Neal,
"of reforming too far; she was desirous to retain
images in churches, crucifixes and crosses, yocal and
instrumental music, with all the old popish garments ;
it is not, therefore, to be wondered that, in reviewing
the. liturgy of King Edward, no alterations were made
in favor of those who now began to be called Puritans,
from their attempting a purer form of worship and dis-
cipline than had as yet been established." 1
" Drs. Humphreys and Samson," says the same his-
torian, "two heads of the Non-conformists, wrote to
Zurich the following reasons against wearing the
habits." After giving the reasons the writers continue :
" But the dispute is not only about a cap and surplice ;
there are other grievances which ought to be redressed
or dispensed with ; as (1) music and organs in divine
worship," etc. 2
He further says: "They [the Puritans] disallowed
of the cathedral mode of worship; of singing their
prayers, and of the antiphone or chanting of the Psalms
by turns, which the ecclesiastical commissioners in King
Edward the Sixth's time advised the laying aside. Nor
did they approve of musical instruments, as trumpets,
organs, etc., which were not in use in the church for
above 1200 years after Christ." 3
John Owen, the great Puritan divine, who was con-
temporary with the Westminster Assembly, says : 4
"Not only hereby the praising and blessing of God,
but the use of those forms in so doing became a neces-
l Hist. Puritans, Vol. i, p. 76,'Choules's ed., New York, 1863.
' 2 Md., p. 93. 3 lbid,, p. 107.
4 Wo?*ks, Vol. xv., p. 37, Goold's ed.
ABGUMENI PROli THE PRE8BYTEKULN STANDARDS. 135
sarv part of the worship of God ; and so was the use
of organs and the like instruments of music, which re-
spect that manner of praising him which God then re-
quired." He speaks here of the temple-service in the
Jewish dispensation. This venerable Bervant of Christ
also says: 1 "And he [David] speaks expressly, in
1 Ohron. xxiii. 5, of praising God with instruments of
music 'which,' says he, 'I made.' He did it by the
direction of the Spirit of God; otherwise he ought not
to have done it; for so it is said, 1 Ch. xxviii. 12, when
he had established all the ordinances of the temple,
•the pattern of all that he had by the Spirit.' And
10, 'All this,' said David, 'the Lord made me
understand in writing by his hand upon me, even all
the works of this pattern.' It was all revealed unto him
by the Holy Spirit, without which he could have intro-
duced nothing at all into the worship of God."
From what has been said, it is evident that the pro-
visions in the Confession of Faith and the Directory
for Worship touching singing in public worship were
intended to exelude the employment of instrumental
music ; and it follows that its use by those who accept
formularies is in violation of their constitutional
law.
3. Instrumental music is doctrinally excluded from
the public worship of the church by the Confession of
Faith.
The passage which is appealed to in support of this
position i^ as follows : "The whole conns,] of ( Jod con-
Work, Vol. ix., ],. n;;;.
136 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
cerning all things necessary for his own glory, man's
salvation, faith, and life, is either expressly set clown
in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence
may be deduced from Scripture : unto which nothing is
at any time to be added, whether by new revelations of
the Spirit or traditions of men. Nevertheless, we ac-
knowledge the inward illumination of the Spirit of God
to be necessary for the saving understanding of such
things as are revealed in the Word ; and that there are
some circumstances concerning the icorshij) of God and
government of the church common to human actions and
societies which are to he ordered by the light of nature
and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of
the Word, which are alioays to be observed." 1
(1.) The whole preceding argument clearly proves
that the Westminster Assembly could not have intended
to include instrumental music in those circumstances
concerning — not in, nor of, not implicated in the nature
of, but concerning — the worship of God, the ordering
of which it concedes not to be prescribed by Scripture,
but to depend upon natural judgment and Christian
discretion. Let us glance back at that argument. It
proved : that the prescriptive will of God regulates all
things pertaining to the kind of worship to be rendered
him in his house ; that nothing which is not com-
manded by him in his Word, either explicitly or im-
plicitly, can be warrantably introduced into the public
worship of his sanctuary ; that man's will, wisdom, or
taste can, in this sphere, originate nothing, authorize
nothing, but that human discretion is excluded, and
absolute obedience to the divine authority imposed ;
1 Chap. i. Sec. vi.
ARcll'MENT FROM THE PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 137
that instrumental music was not commanded of God to
be used in connection with the tabernacle during the
greater part of its existence, and consequently it was
not there employed ; that God expressly commanded it
to be used in the temple, and therefore it was employed
in its services ; that the temple itself, with all that was
peculiar and distinctive in its worship, was typical and
symbolical, and was designed to be temporary; that it
did pass away at the beginning of the Christian dispen-
sation ; that instrumental music was a part of its typi-
cal elements, and has consequently shared its abolition ;
that instrumental music was not commanded of God to
be used in connection with the synagogue, which ex-
isted contemporaneously with the temple, and w r as
therefore not employed in its services; that the Chris-
tian church was, in its polity and worship, conformed
not to the temple, but to the synagogue, as is admitted
even by some distinguished Prelatists, such modifica-
tions and conditions having been added as necessarily
grew out of the change of dispensations — the accom-
plishment of atonement, the copious effusion of the
Holy Ghost, and the evangelistic genius and office of
the new economy ; that instrumental music in public
worship was not one of these Christian modifications or
conditions; that the New Testament Scriptures exclude
that kind of music, and that it was unknown in the
practice <>f the apostolic church, as is evinced not only
by the teaching of the apostles, but also by the absence
of instrumental music from the church for more than a
millennium.
Now, this was the way in which the Westminster di-
vines, together with the whole Puritan party, were ac-
138 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
customed to argue, and in addition to this method of
argument from Scripture, they also condemned instru-
mental music as one of those badges of Popery from
which they Contended that the church should be purged.
To take the ground, then, that in the single clause in
regard to " the circumstances concerning the worship
of God . . . common to human actions and societies,
which are to be ordered by the light of nature and
Christian prudence," they meant to include instrumen-
tal music, is to maintain that in that one utterance they
contradicted and subverted their whole doctrine on the
subject. It would be to say that they made all their
solemn contentions and cherished views upon that sub-
ject what the wise woman of Tekoah represented hu-
man life to be, " as water spilt on the ground, which
cannot be gathered up again." The thing is prepos-
terous. It cannot for a moment be supposed. One
might, therefore, close the argument just here. What-
ever the Assembly meant to include in the category of
circumstances falling under the discretion of the church,
it is absolutely certain that it was not intended to em-
brace in it instrumental music. But inasmuch as, not-
withstanding this obtrusive fact, the clause in the Con-
fession of Faith touching circumstances concerning the
worship of God is unaccountably but commonly pleaded
in justification of the employment of instrumental music
in church services, I will endeavor to vindicate it from
that abusive construction.
(2.) Let us determine, in the light of the instrument
that we are interpreting, what tJie-se circumstances ere.
They are expressly defined to be such as are "com-
mon to human actions and societies." It would seem
,i MI.M PROM THE PEESBYTEBIAH STANDARDS. 139
aeedless to discuss the question. One feels thai he is
talking superfluously and triflingly in arguing that cir-
cumstances common to human actions are not and can-
not be peculiar to church actions. It is certain that
circumstances common to human societies cannot be
peculiar to church societies. But these circumstances
are declared to be common to human societies, to so-
cieties of all sorts -political, philosophical, scientific,
literarv, mercantile, agricultural, mechanical, industrial,
military, -and even infidel. Time and place, costume
and posture, sitting or standing, and the like, are cir-
cumstances common to all societies, and therefore per-
tain to the church as a society. 'But will it be seri-
ously maintained that instrumental music is such a
circumstance? Is it common to human societies?
These questions answer themselves. As instrumental
music is not a circumstance common to all societies, it
is not one of the circumstances specified in the Confes-
sion of Faith. It is excluded by the terms which it
It may be said that, as all human societies have the
right to order the circumstances in which their pecu-
liar acts shall be performed, the church possesses this
common right, and may appoint the circumstance of
instrumental music as an accompaniment to its peculiar
act of singing praise. How this relieves the difficulty
it is impossible to see. For the Confession defines the
circumstances in question to be common to human ac-
tions, and therefore common to the actions of all hu-
man societies. Hut it will not be contended that the
action of ringing praise in the worship of God belongs
to all societies as such. If that action does not belong
140 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
to them, no circumstances attending it can belong to
them. The community of the action infers the com-
munity of the circumstances attending it. The ground
of the objection is therefore swept away; there is no
such action common to all societies as the singing of
praise in God's worship, and consequently no such cir-
cumstance attending it as instrumental music. The
action and the circumstance vanish together. If the
action of singing praise belonged alike to the church
and all societies there might be some color of plausi-
bility in the plea that the church may determine the
circumstances which attend it as done by herself, so
far, at least, as the terms of this particular clause in
the Confession of Faith are concerned. If, however,
the action of singing praise m God's worship is pecu-
liar to the church as a particular kind of society, the
circumstance of instrumental music as attending it can-
not be common to human actions and societies. It is
therefore ruled out by the language of the Confession.
This argument is conclusive, unless it can be shown
that instrumental music is a circumstance necessary to
to the performance of the action — singing of praise. A
simple and complete answer to this is, that for a thou-
sand years the church sang praise without instrumental
accompaniment. How then can its necessity to the
singing of praise be maintained ? Can a circumstance
be necessary to the performance of an act, when the
act has been performed without it, and is now continu-
ally, Sabbath after Sabbath, performed without it? To
say that instrumental music assists in the performance
of the act is to shift the issue. The question is not, Is
it helpful? but, Is it necessary?
ARGUMENT FROM THE PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 141
To this it must be added that this particular pro-
vision of the Confession is to be interpreted in confor-
mity with its catholic teaching and that of its sister
standards. Both represent the singing of psalms as
prescribed. Both are silent about the prescription of
instrumental music. Now if it could be proved that
the latter is necessary to the former, the prescription of
one would logically imply the prescription of the other.
But v,e have seen that there is no such necessity. "We
are obliged therefore to exclude instrumental music as
illegitimate, in view of the express declaration of the
Confession and other standards that we are forbidden
to introduce anything into the worship of God which
is not prescribed. Here is a circumstance which is
neither necessary nor prescribed. It cannot, therefore,
be among the circumstances legitimated by the Confes-
sion.
We have now seen that the action of singing praise
in the worship of God is one peculiar to the church and
not common to it with all other societies, and that
instrumental music is a circumstance concerning this
peculiar ecclesiastical action which, therefore, cannot
be common to human actions and societies. Conse-
quently, it is not one of those circumstances which are
in the discretionary power of the church, precisely as
they are in the discretionary power of all societies. No
circumstance peculiar to and distinctive of the church,
as such, can be one of the circumstances mentioned by
the Confession of Faith.
The question then returns: What are the circum-
stances concerning the worship of God which the
church has the right to order according to the light of
*3
142 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
nature and Christian prudence ? Their proper defini-
tion is, that they are conditions upon which the actions
of all human societies are performed, — conditions ivith-
out which the actions of any society either cannot he pe?*-
formed at all, or cannot he performed decently and in
order.
First, They are conditions which are not peculiar to
the acts of any particular society, but common to the
acts of all societies. They cannot, consequently, be
peculiar to the acts of the church as a particular society.
But instrumental music is a condition peculiar to the
act of singing praise in some particular churches. The
conclusion is obvious. Let us take, for example, the
circumstances of time and place. They condition the
meeting and therefore the acts of every society. None
could meet and act without the appointment of a time
and a place for the assembly. This is true alike of the
church and an infidel club. In this respect they are
dependent upon the same conditions. Neither could
meet and act without complying with this condition.
This is a specimen of the Confession's circumstances
which are common to human actions and societies. It
is ridiculous to say that instrumental music is in such
a category.
It cannot be overlooked, as has just been intimated,
that instrumental music is a circumstance which is not
common to even particular churches. Some have it,
and some do not. How can it be common to all socie-
ties, when it is not common to churches themselves?
How can the conclusion be avoided, that it is not one
of the circumstances designated by the Confession of
Faith?
ARGUMENT FROM THE PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 143
v ondly, Tlio circumstances indicated by the Con-
fession are not parts of the arts of societies: they sim-
ply condition the performance of the acts. They are in
no souse qualities or modes of tin 1 acts. If the proof
of this position is required,it is found in the simple con-
sideration that some at least of the acts of various so-
cieties are different acts — they are not common between
them. It is therefore obvious that the parts of those
acts fall into the category of the acts of which they are
parts, But these circumstances are common to the acts
of all societies. To recur to the example of time and
place. These, it is needless to say, while necessary
conditions of the acts of all societies, are, from the na-
ture of the case, parts of the acts of none. The resolu-
tions adopted by any society surely do not embrace in
them time and place as integral elements, or qualities
or modes. But instrumental music, although some-
times employed in churches by itself as a distinct act —
in which case it stands confessed as not prescribed and
forbidden— is generally used along with singing as a
part of the act of church-worship. In these cases it
certainly qualifies or modifies the act. As, therefore,
it enters as an element into the acts of the church, as a
distinctive society, and does not into the acts of all so-
cieties, it i> ruled out by that fact from the class of cir-
stances indicated by the Confession.
7////v//y, These circumstances are conditions of ac-
tions as they are actions, and not as they are these or
particular kinds of actions. They condition all
sorts <>f actions of all sorts of societies. The debates
and votes of a secular deliberative body are as much
conditioned by them as the prayers and praises of the
144 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
church. It will scarcely be contended that instrumental
music is a circumstance which conditions the debates
and votes of a legislature or of a political meeting. But
if not, it is conceded to be excluded from those circum-
stances which are pronounced by the Confession com-
mon to human actions and societies.
Fourthly, These circumstances are conditions neces-
sary to the actions of all societies, — necessary either to
the performance of the actions, or to their decorous per-
formance. Let it be observed, that they are necessary
not to the performance or the decorous performance of
some peculiar actions of particular societies, but to all
the actions of all societies. To take the ground that
instrumental music is a circumstance in some way a
necessary condition of the singing of praise in church-
worship is to go outside of those circumstances which
the Confession of Faith contemplates. A condition of
this peculiar action of the church, however necessary
to the performance of the action its employers may
deem it, cannot possibly be a common condition of hu-
man actions and societies. It lies outside of that class,
and therefore outside of the circumstances which the
Confession has in view. Instrumental music is palpa-
bly such a condition, and cannot be justified by an ap-
peal to this section of the Confession.
Fifthly, These circumstances, as conditions upon
which the acts of societies are to be done, cannot be
religious in their character. The reason is perfectly
plain : they condition the acts of all secular societies,
and it would be out of the question to say that they
proceed upon religious conditions. But instrumental
music when employed in the worship of God's house is
ABGT7MJNT FROM THE PREsTUTFJiT AN STANDARDS. 146
religions. Hence the plea for organs, that they have
a solemn sound, and are on that account peculiarly
adapted to accompany the singing of praise as a reli-
gious act. If it be said that they are a secular accom-
paniment of religious worship, it may well be asked,
By what right is such an accompaniment to the wor-
ship of God employed, without a distinct warrant from
him '? And when the organ is played without the ac-
companiment of the singing of praise, is it then secular
or religious? If secular, will it be justified on the
ground that secular music may, by itself, be allowed in
God's house, and that he may be worshipped in a
worldly manner? If religious, the question is given
up ; and then we are compelled to return to the asser-
tion that the church has no discretion in appointing re-
ligious elements : they are not among the circumstances
which are common to human actions and societies.
The foregoing argument has shown that instrumental
music cannot, on any supposable ground, be regarded
as a circumstance common to human actions and so-
cieties, and that it is therefore excluded by the Confes-
sion of Faith from the discretionary control of the
church. Unless, then, it can be proved to be one of
the things commanded by Christ and his apostles, it
cannot be lawfully employed in connection with the
w< >rship of God's house. In order to meet the criticism
which may be passed upon the argument that it springs
from a singular and contracted conception of the doc-
trine as to circumstances stated in the Confession of
Faith, the views of a few eminent theologians will be
cited in its support.
Dr. John Owen, in arguing against a liturgy, enounces
146 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
the principles contended for in these remarks. " Cir-
cumstances," he says, 1 " are either such as follow actions
as actions, or such as are arbitrarily superadded and
adjoined by command unto actions, which do not of
their own accord, nor naturally nor necessarily attend
them. Now religious actions in the worship of God
are actions still. Their religious relation doth not de-
stroy their natural being. Those circumstances, then,
which do attend such actions as actions not determined
by divine institution, may be ordered, disposed of, ami
regulated by the prudence of men. For instance, prayer
is a part of God's worship. Public prayer is so, as ap-
pointed by him. This, as it is an action to be per-
formed by man, cannot be done without the assignment
of time, and place, and sundry other things, if order
and conveniency be attended to. These are circum-
stances that attend all actions of that nature, to be per-
formed by a community, whether they relate to the
worship of God or no. These men may, according as
they see good, regulate and change as there is occa-
sion ; I mean, they may do so who are acknowledged
to have power in such things. As the action cannot be
without them, so their regulation is arbitrary, if they
come not under some divine disposition and order, as
that of time in general doth. There are also some
things, which some men call circumstances also, that
no way belong of themselves to the actions whereof
they are said to be the circumstances, nor do attend
them, but are imposed on them, or annexed unto them,
by the arbitrary authority of those who take upon them
to give order and rules in such cases ; such as to pray
1 Works, Vol. xv., pp. 35, 36, Goold's Ed.
ARGUMENT PBOM THE PRESBYTERIAN STANDARDS. 1 17
before an image or towards fclie east, or to use this or
that form of prayer in such gospel administrations, and
do other. These are not circumstances attending the
nature of the thing itself, but are arbitrarily superadded
to the things that they are appointed to accompany.
Whatever men may call such additions, they are no less
-parts of the whole wherein they serve than tin 4 things
themselves whereunto they are adjoined." He then
goes on to prove from Scripture that "such additions
to or in the worship of God, besides or beyond his own
institution and appointment" are not "allowable, or
lawful to be practised."
In another place the same great theologian says : ]
w> Whatever is of circumstance in the manner of its per-
formance | worship], not capable of especial determina-
tion, as emerging or arising only occasionally, upon the
doing of that which is appointed at this or that time,
in this or that place, and the like, is left unto the rule
of moral prmJence, in whose observation their order
doth consist. But the superaddition of ceremonies ne-
cessarily belonging neither to the institutions of wor-
ship nor unto those circumstances whose disposal falls
under the rule of moral prudence, neither doth nor can
add any thing unto the due order of gospel worship ;
so that they are altogether needless and useless in the
worship of God. Neither is this tin 1 whole of the in-
convenience wherewith their observance is attended ;
for although they are not in particular and expressly in
the Scripture forbidden — for it was simply impossible
that all instances wherein the wit of man might exer-
cise its invention in such things should be reckoned up
1 Works, Vol. xv., pp. 4C9, 471, Goold's ed
148 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
and condemned — yet they fall directly under those se-
vere prohibitions which God hath recorded to secure
his worship from all such additions unto it of what sort
soever. . . . The Papists say, indeed, that all additions
corrupting the worship of God are forbidden, but such
as further adorn and preserve it are not so, which im-
plies a contradiction, for whereas every addition is
principally a conniption because it is an addition, un-
der which notion it is forbidden (and that in the wor-
ship of God which is forbidden is a corruption of it),
there can be no such preserving, adorning addition,
unless we allow a preserving and adorning corruption.
Neither is it of more force, which is pleaded by them,
that the additions which they make belong not unto the
substance of the worship of God, but unto the circum-
stances of it; for every circumstance observed reli-
giously, or to be observed in the worship of God, is of
the substance of it, as were all those ceremonious ob-
servances of the law, which had the same respect in the
prohibitions of adding, with the most weighty things
whatsoever."
"There is nothing," says George Gillespie, 1 "which
any way pertaineth to the worship of God left to the
determination of human laws beside the mere circum-
stances, which neither have any holiness in them, for-
asmuch as they have no other use and praise in sacred
than they have in civil things, nor yet were particularly
determinable in Scripture, because they are infinite;
but sacred, significant ceremonies, such as [the] cross,
kneeling, surplice, holidays, bishopping, etc., which
have no use and praise except in religion only, and
1 Works, in Presbyterian's Armoury, Vol. i. , Pref . p. xii.
ABOUMENT FROM THE PBE8BTTERIAM STANDARDS. 149
which, also, were most easily determinable (yet Dot de-
termined) within those bounds which the wisdom of
God did set to liis written Word, are such things as
God never left to the determination of any human
law."
He speaks more explicitly to the same effect in the
following words:'- "I direct my course straight to the
ting of the true limits within which the church's
power of enacting laws about things pertaining to the
worship of God is bounded and confined, and which it
may not overleap nor transgress. Three conditions I
rind necessarily requisite in such a thing as the church
has power to prescribe by her laws :
"1. It must be only a circumstance of divine wor-
ship ; no substantial part of it ; no sacred, significant,
and efficacious ceremony. For the order and decency
left to the definition of the church, as concerning the
particulars of it, comprehendeth no more but mere cir-
cumstances. . . . Though circumstances be left to the
determination of the church, yet ceremonies, if we
speak properly, are not . . . circumstances which have
place in all moral actions, and that to the same end
and purpose for which they serve in religious actions —
namely, for beautifying them with that decent demeanor
whichj;he very light and law of natural reason requireth
as a thing beseeming all human actions. For the
church of Christ, being a society of men and women,
must either observe order and decency in all the cir-
cumstances of their holy actions, time, place, person,
form, etc., or else be deformed with that disorder and
confusion which common reason and civility abhorreth.
: Works, in Presbyterian's Armoury, VoL L, p. 130.
150 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
" 2. That which the church may lawfully prescribe
by her laws and ordinances, as a thing left to her de-
termination, must be one of such things as were not
determinable by Scripture on that reason which Camero
hath given us, namely, because individua are infinita.
. . . We say truly of those several and changeable cir-
cumstances which are left to the determination of the
church, that, being almost infinite, they were not par-
ticularly determinable in Scripture But as for
other things pertaining to God's worship, which are
not to be reckoned among the circumstances of it, they
being in number neither many nor in chauge various,
were most easily and conveniently determinable in
Scripture. Now, since God would have his Word
(which is our rule in the works of his service) not to
be delivered by tradition, but to be written and sealed
unto us, that by this means, for obviating satanical
subtility and succoring human imbecility, we might have
a more certain way for conservation of true religion,
and for the instauration of it when it faileth among
men, — how can we but assure ourselves that every such
acceptable thing pertaining any way to religion, which
was particularly and conveniently determinable in
Scripture, is indeed determined in it ; and consequent-
ly, that no such thing as is not a mere alterable cir-
cumstance is left to the determination of the church ?
"3. If the church prescribe anything lawfully, so
that she prescribe no more than she hath power given
her to prescribe, her ordinance must be accompanied
with some good reason and warrant given for the satis-
faction of tender consciences."
"As a positive institution, with a written charter,"
ARGUMENT FROM THE PBESBYTERIAH STANDARDS. 151
remarks Dr. Thornwell, 1 "she [the church] is confined
to the express or implied teachings of the "Word of
God, the standard of her authority and rights, ... as
in the sphere of doctrine she has no opinions, but a
faith, so, in the sphere of practice, she has no expe-
dients, but a law. Her power is solely ministerial and
declarative. Her whole duty is to believe and obey.
Whatever is not commanded, expressly or implicitly,
is unlawful. . . . According to our view, the law of the
church is the positive one of conformity with Scripture ;
according to the view which we condemned, it is the
negative one of non-contradiction to Scripture. Ac-
cording to us, the church, before she can move, must
not only show that she is not prohibited, she must also
show that she is actually commanded, she must pro-
duce a warrant. Hence we absolutely denied that she
has any discretion in relation to things not commanded.
She can proclaim no laws that Christ has not ordained,
institute no ceremonies which he has not appointed,
create no offices which he has not prescribed, and
exact no obedience which he has not enjoined. She
not enter the wide domain which he has left in-
different, and by her authority bind the conscience
where he has left it free.
•• But does it follow from this that she has absolutely
no discretion at all? On the contrary, we distinctly
and repeatedly asserted, that in the sphere of com-
manded things she has a discretion -a discretion de-
termined by the nature of the actions, and by the di-
vine principle that all things be done decently and in
order. . . . We only limited and defined it. We never
1 Cvll. Wl :.iv., p. 241, ff.
152 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
denied that the church has the right to fix the hours of
public worship, the times and places of the meetings of
her courts, the numbers of which they shall be com-
posed, and the territories which each shall embrace.
Our doctrine was precisely that of the Westminster
standards, of John Calvin, of John Owen, of the Free
Church of Scotland, and of the noble army of Puritan
martyrs and confessors."
After quoting the statements of the Westminster
Confession of Faith on the subject, he goes on to say :
" Here the discretion is limited to some circumstances,
and those common to human actions and societies. Now,
the question arises, What is the nature of these cir-
cumstances ? A glance at the proof-texts on which the
doctrine relies enables us to answer. Circumstances
are those concomitants of an action without which it
either cannot be done at all, or cannot be done with
decency and decorum. Public worship, for example,
requires public assemblies, and in public assemblies
people must appear in some costume, and assume some
posture. Whether they shall shock common sentiment
in their attire, or conform to common practice ; whether
they shall stand, sit or lie, or whether each shall be at
liberty to determine his own attitude — these are cir-
cumstances ; they are the necessary concomitants of
the action, and the church is at liberty to regulate
them. Public assemblies, moreover, cannot be held
without fixing the time and place of meeting; these,
too, are circumstances which the church is at liberty
to regulate. Parliamentary assemblies cannot trans-
act their business with efficiency and despatch — in-
deed, cannot transact it decently at all — without com-
AIKH.Ml M FROM THE rRESBYTERlAN STANDARDS. L53
mittees. Committees, therefore, arc circumstances
commoD to parliamentary societies, which the church,
in her parliaments, is at liberty to appoint. All the
details of our government in relation to the distribution
of courts, the number necessary to constitute a quorum,
the times of their meetings, the manner in which they
shall be opened, — all these, and such like, are circum-
stances, which, therefore, the church has a perfect
right to arrange. We must carefully distinguish be-
tween those circumstances which attend actions as <<<■-
that is, without which the actions could not be,
and those circumstances which, though not essential,
are added as appendages. These last do not fall within
the jurisdiction of the church. She has no right to
appoint them. They are circumstances in the sense
that they do not belong to the substance of the act.
They are not circumstances in the sense that they so
surround it that they cannot be separated from it. A
liturgy is a circumstance of this kind, as also the sign
of the cross in baptism, and bowing at the name of
Jesus. Owen notes the distinction."
These great men concur in showing that the circum-
stances of which the Confession of Faith speaks as
falling under the discretionary control of the church in
the sphere <>f worship are not superadded appendages
to the acts of worship, which may or may not accom-
pany them as the church may determine, but are sim-
ply conditions necessary either to the performance of
the acts or to their decent and orderly performance —
conditions not peculiar to these acts of the church as a
distinctive society, but common to the acts of all so-
cieties. Particular attention is challenged to the views
14
154 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
cited from Gillespie, for the reason that he was a mem-
ber of the Westminster Assembly, and of course accu-
rately knew and expounded the doctrine of that body
on this subject. He draws a clear distinction between
what was determinable by Scripture and what was not.
What was not so determinable was left to be determined
by the church ; what was so determinable was excluded
from her discretion. Now it is certain that instrumen-
tal music was, under the Jewish dispensation, actually
determined by the revealed will of God as an element
in the temple worship. Need it be said that it was,
therefore, not indeterminable ? It might have pleased.
God to determine it as an element in the worship of
the synagogue, and in like manner it might have pleased
him to determine it as an appendage to that of the
christian church. He did not, and consequently it is
prohibited. This conclusively settles the doctrine of
the Westminster Assembly. It intended to teach that
instrumental music was not one of the circumstances
indeterminable by Scripture and committed to the dis-
cretion of the church. As the question here is in re-
gard to the meaning of the circumstances of which the
Confession of Faith treats, this consideration is abso-
lutely decisive. Instrumental music cannot, without
violence to the Confession, be placed in the category
of circumstances determinable by the church. As,
then, it is not commanded it is forbidden ; and they
who justify its employment in public worship are liable
to the serious charge of adding to "the counsel of God"
which is " set down " in his Word.
V.
Historical Akoimknt.
I hope to prove to anv candid mind that the histori-
cal argument is overwhelmingly against the use of in-
strumental music in the public worship of the Christian
church. It has already been shown that it was not em-
ployed, under the Jewish dispensation, in the taberna-
cle until it was about to give way to the temple, or in
the stated worship of the synagogue, and that, having
been by divine direction limited to the ritual of the
temple, it was, along with the other distinctive elements
of that temporary institute, abolished at the inaugura-
tion of the Christian economy. It has also been evinced
that the Christian church, by an easy transition, car-
ried over into the new dispensation the simple worship
as well as the polity of the synagogue, modified by the
conditions peculiar to that dispensation ; that the em-
ployment of instrumental music in Christian worship
was not one of those modifications; for such a modifi-
cation would have had the effect of conforming the gos-
pel church to the temple, with its symbolical and typi-
cal rites a conformity from which even the synagogue
was free; and that the apostles, as the divinely com-
missioned and inspired organizers of the New Testa-
ment church, so far from authorizing the use of instru-
mental music in its worship, excluded it. The Chris-
tian church, it is clear, was started without it. What
has been tin- subsequent history of the case? In
156 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
answering this question, reference will be made to the
practice of the church and to the testimony of some of
her leading theologians during the successive periods
of her development.
There is no evidence, but the contrary, to show that
instrumental music was commonly introduced into the
church until the thirteenth century.
The church historians make no mention of it in their
accounts of the worship of the early church. Mosheim
says not a word about it. Neander makes the simple
remark : " Church psalmody, also, passed over from the
synagogue into the Christian church." l Dr. Schaff
observes: "He [Christ] sanctioned by his own prac-
tice, and spiritualized, the essential elements of the
Jewish cultus." 2 They were historians, and could not
record a fact which did not exist.
Bingham, deservedly held in high repute as a writer
on Christian antiquities, and as a member of the Angli-
can church certainly not prejudiced in favor of Puri-
tan views, says :' 3 "I should here have put an end to
this chapter, but that some readers would be apt to
reckon it an omission, that we have taken no notice of
organs and bells among the utensils of the church.
But the true reason is that there were no such things
in use in the ancient churches for many ages. Music
in churches is as ancient as the apostles, but instru-
mental music not so."
In regard to the doctrine of the fathers upon the
subject I cannot do better than give an extract from a
'Hist. Vol. i., p. 304.
* Hist. Apos. Ch., p. 345; see also Hist. Chris. Ch., Vol. i., pp. 120, 12],
3 Works, Vol. iii., p. 137.
H8T0BICAL \l;<:r.MKNT. 157
learned and able work of the Rev. James Peirce, 1 enti-
tled "A Vindication of the Dissenters" "I come
now," Bays he,* "to say somewhat of the antiquity of
musical instruments. But that these were not used in
the Christian church in the primitive times is attested
by all the ancient writers with one consent. Hence
they figuratively explain all the places of the Old Tes-
tament which speak of musical instruments, as I might
easily show by a thousand testimonies out of Clement
of Alexandria, Basil, Ambrose, Jerome, Augustin,
Chrvsostom, and many others. . . Chrysostom talks
more handsomely: 'As the Jews praised God with all
kinds of instruments, so are we commanded to praise
him with all the members of our bodies, our eyes,' etc. 3
And Clement of Alexandria talks much to the same
purpose. 4 Besides, the ancients thought it unlawful to
use those instruments in God's worship. Thus the un-
known author of a treatise among Justin Martyr's
works : ' Quest. If songs were invented by unbelievers
with a design of deceiving, and were appointed for
those under the law, because of the childishness of
their minds, why do they who have received the perfect
instructions of grace, which are most contrary to the
aforesaid customs, nevertheless sing in the churches
ju>t as they did who were children under the law?
Ans. Plain singing is not childish, but only the singing
with lifeless organs, with dancing and cymbals, etc.
Whence the use <>f such instruments and other things
fit for children is laid aside, and plain singing only re-
tained."
■ANon-Canfonnist; died l~-l<>. »Pt iii., eh. iii. ; London. 1717.
3 In Ps. cL 4 PiNlag., Lib. ii., C. 4. Bap. ad Orthodox., <«>. 107.
158 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
" Chrysostom seems to have been of the same mind,
and to have thought the use of such instruments was
rather allowed the Jews in consideration of their weak-
ness,- than prescribed and commanded. 1 But that he
was mistaken, and that musical instruments were not
only allowed the Jews, as he thought, and Isidorus of
Pelusium (whose testimony I shall mention presently),
but were prescribed by God, may appear from the texts
of Scripture I have before referred to. Clement . . .
thought these things fitter for beasts than for men. 2
And though Basil highly commends and stiffly defends
the way of singing by turns ; yet he thought musical
instruments unprofitable and hurtful. 3 . . . He says
thus : ' In such vain arts as the playing upon the harp
or pipe, or dancing, as soon as the action ceases the
work itself vanishes.' So that, really, according to the
apostle's expression, 'the end of these things is de-
struction.' 4 Isidore of Pelusium, who lived since Basil,
held music was allowed the Jews by God in a way of
condescension to their childishness: 'If God' says he,
' bore with bloody sacrifices, because of men's childish-
ness at that time, why should you wonder he bore with
the music of a harp and a psaltery ? ' 5 . . . From what
has been said, it appears no musical instruments were
used in the pure times of the church."
2. With reference to the time when organs were first
introduced into use in the Roman Catholic Church, let
us hear Bingham : 6 "It is now generally agreed among
1 In Ps. cl. '-' Pcedag., Lib. ii., C. iv., p. 163.
3 Comm. in Isa., 0. v., pp. 956, 957.
4 P. 955. 5 EpisL, Lib. 2, ep. 176.
& Works, Vol. iii., p. 137, ff.
HI8T0RTCA1 \l;«,f MKNT. 159
learned men that the use of organs came into the
church since the time of Thomas Aquinas, Anno 1250;
for he, in his SummSy lias these words: 'Our church
docs not use musical instruments, as harps and psalt-
eries, to praise God withal, that she may not seem to
Judaize.' From which our learned Mr. Gregory, in a
peculiar dissertation that he lias upon the subject, con-
cludes that there was no ecclesiastical use of organs in
his time. And the same inference is made by Cajetan
and Navarre among the Romish writers. Mr. "Wharton
also has observed that Marinus Sanutus, who lived
about the year 1290, was the first who brought the use
of wind-organs into churches, whence he was surnamed
Torcellus, which is the name for an organ in the Ital-
ian tongue. And about this time Durantus, in his
Rationali , takes notice of them as received in the
church ; and he is the first author, as Mr. Gregory
thinks, that so takes notice of them.
"The use of the instrument indeed is much more an-
cient, but not in church-service, the not attending to
which distinction is the thing that imposes upon many
writers. . . . Nor was it ever received into the Greek
churches, there being no mention of an organ in all
their liturgies, ancient or modern, if Mr. Gregory's
judgment may be taken. But Durantus, however, con-
tends for their antiquity, both in the Greek and Latin
churches, and offers to prove it, but with ill success,
first, from Julianus Halicarnassensis, a Greek writer,
Anno 510, whom he makes to say that organs were
used in the church in his time. But he mistakes the
sense of his author, who speaks not of his own times,
but of the time of Job and the Jewish temple. For,
160 INSTRUMENTAL "MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
commenting on these words of Job, xxx. 31, ' My harp
is turned to mourning, and my organ into the voice of
them that weep,' he says : ' There was no prohibition to
use musical instruments or organs, if it was done with
piety, because they were used in the temple.' By which,
it is plain, he speaks of the Jewish temple in the singu-
lar, and not of Christian temples or churches in the
plural, as Durantus mistakes him. Next, for the Latin
church, he urges the common opinion which ascribes
the invention of them to Pope Vitalian, Anno 660 ; but
his authorities for this are no better than Platina and
the Pontifical, which are little to be regarded against
clear evidences to the contrary. That which some urge
out of Clemens Alexandrinus I shall not answer as
Suicerus does, (who, with Hospinian and some, wholly
decrying the use of instrumental music in Christian
churches, says it is an interpolation and corruption of
that ancient author,) but only observe that he speaks
not of what was then in use in Christian churches, but
of what might lawfully be used by any private Chris-
tians, if they were disposed to use it; which rather
argues that instrumental music (the lute and harp of
which he speaks) was not in use in the public churches.
The same may be gathered from the words of St. Chry-
sostom, who says : ' It was only permitted to the Jews,
as sacrifice was, for the heaviness and grossness of
their souls. God condescended to their weakness, be-
cause they were lately drawn from idols ; but now, in-
stead of organs, we may use our own bodies to praise
him withal.' Theodoret has many like expressions in
his Comments upon the Psalms and other places. . . .
So that, there being no use of organs till the twelfth
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT. 161
[thirteenth ? | century, I could not speak of them as
utensils in the ancient churches."
Let us pause a moment to notice the fact, supported
by a mass of incontrovertible evidence, that the Chris-
tian church did not employ instrumental music in its
public worship for 1200 years after Christ. It proves,
what has been already shown from the New Testament
Scriptures, that the apostolic church did not use it in
its public services, and surely the church ought now to
be conformed to the practice of the apostles and of the
churches whose usages they modelled according to the
inspired direction of the Holy Ghost. It deserves se-
rious consideration, moreover, that notwithstanding the
ever-accelerated drift towards corruption in worship as
well as in doctrine and government, the Roman Catho-
lic Church did not adopt this corrupt practice until
about the middle of the thirteenth century. This is the
testimony of Aquinas, who has always been esteemed
by that church as a theologian of the very first emi-
nence, and who, of course, was perfectly acquainted
with its usages. When the organ was introduced into
it- worship it encountered strong opposition, and made
it- way but slowly to general acceptance. These as-
suredly are facts that should profoundly impress Pro-
testant churches. How can they adopt a practice
which the Roman Church, in the year 1200, had not
admitted, and the subsequent introduction of which
opposed by some of her best theologians? For
example, Bellarmin, as we have already seen, condemns
it as not belonging to the church perfected in the new
dispensation, and Cardinal Cajetansaid: "It is to be
observed the church did not use organs in Thomas's
162 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
time ; whence, even to this clay, the Church of Rome
does not use them in the Pope's presence. And truly
it will appear that musical instruments are not to be
suffered in the ecclesiastical offices we meet together to
perform for the sake of receiving internal instruction
from God ; and so much the rather are they to be ex-
cluded, because God's internal discipline exceeds all
human disciplines, which rejected this kind of instru-
ments." 1 The great scholar, Erasmus, who never for-
mally withdrew from the communion of the Church of
Rome, thus forcibly expresses himself : " We have
brought into our churches a certain operose and thea-
trical music; such a confused, disorderly chattering of
some words, as I hardly think was ever heard in any
of the Grecian or Roman theatres. The church rings
with the noise of trumpets, pipes and dulcimers ; and
human voices strive to bear their part with them. . . .
Men run to church as to a theatre, to have their ears
tickled. And for this end organ-makers are hired with
great salaries, and a company of boys, who waste all
their time in learning these whining tones [Ames trans-
lates, ' this gibble -gabble.'] Pray now compute how
many poor people, in great extremity, might be main-
tained by the salaries of those singers." 2
In spite of this opposition, the organ, during the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, steadily made its
way towards universal triumph in the Romish church.
Then came the Reformation ; and the question arises,
How did the Reformers deal with instrumental music
in the church ? Did they teach that the Reformation
1 Hoffin. Lex. , wee Musica, quoted by Peirce.
2 In 1 Cor. xiv. 19, cited by Peirce and Ames.
HISTORIC. VL ARGUMENT. 103
ought to embrace the expulsion of that kind of music
from its services?
I will not appeal to Luther. Eckhard ' is referred to
as Baying: "Lvtkerus organa rrmsica inter Baalis in-
signia refert" "Luther considers organs among the en-
signs of Baal." But the German reformer expresses a
different opinion in his commentary on Amos vi. 5.
Zwingle has already been quoted to show that in-
strumental music was one of the shadows of the old
law which has been realized in the gospel. He pro-
nounces its employment in the present dispensation
"wicked pervicacity." There is no doubt in regard to
his views on the subject, which were adoped by the
Swiss Reformed churches.
Calvin is very express in his condemnation of in-
strumental music in connection with the public worship
of the Christian church. Besides the testimonies which
have already been adduced to prove that he regarded
it as one of the types of the Old Testament which is
fulfilled in the New, other passages from his writings
may be added. In his commentary on the thirty-
third Psalm he says: "There is a distinction to be ob-
served here, however, that we may not indiscriminately
consider as applicable to ourselves everything which
was formerly enjoined upon the Jews. I have no doubt
that playing upon cymbals, touching the harp and viol,
and all that kind of music, which is so frequently men-
tion,, 1 in the Psalms, was a part of the education — that
i^ to say, the puerile instruction of the law. T speak
of the stated service of the temple. For even now, if
1 A German theologian. He argued in favor of instrumental music
against ( 'alvin.
164 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
believers choose to cheer themselves with musical in-
struments, they should, I think, make it their object
not to dissever their cheerfulness from the praises of
God. But when they frequent their sacred assemblies,
musical instruments in celebrating the praises of God
would be no more suitable than the burning of incense,
the lighting up of lamps, and the restoration of the
other shadows of the law. The Papists, therefore,
have foolishly borrowed this, as well as many other
things, from the Jews. Men who are fond of outward
pomp may delight in that noise; but the simplicity
which God recommends to us by the apostle is far
more pleasing to him. Paul allows us to bless God in
the public assembly of "the saints, only in a known
tongue (1 Cor. xiv. 16). The voice of man, although
not understood by the generality, assuredly excels all
inanimate instruments of music ; and yet we see what
Paul determines concerning speaking in an unknown
tongue. What shall we then say of chanting, which
fills the ears with nothing but an empty sound ? Does
any one object that music is very useful for awakening
the minds of men and moving their hearts ? I own it ;
but we should always take care that no corruption
creep in, which might both defile the pure worship of
God, and involve men in superstition. Moreover, since
the Holy Spirit expressly warns us of this danger by the
mouth of Paul, to proceed beyond what we are there
warranted by him is not only, I must say, unadvised
zeal, but wicked and perverse obstinacy."
On Psalm cl. 3-5 he says : " I do not insist upon the
words in the Hebrew signifying the musical instru-
ments ; only let the reader remember that sundry dif-
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT. 165
ferent kinds are here mentioned, which were in use
ni,,l, ,- tin legal economy" etc. On verse 6, "Let every-
thing that hath breath praise the Lord," he remarks :
"As yet the psalmist has addressed himself in his ex-
hortations to the people who were conversant with the
8 under ih< law; now he turns to men in
general," etc.
In his homily on 1 Sam. xviii. 1-9, he delivers him-
self emphatically and solemnly upon the subject: "In
Popery there was a ridiculous and unsuitable imitation
[of the Jews]. While they adorned their temples, and
valued themselves as having made the worship of God
more splendid and inviting, they employed organs, and
many other such ludicrous things, by which the Word
and worship of God are exceedingly profaned, the peo-
ple being much more attached to those rites than to the
understanding of the divine Word. We know, how-
ever, that where such understanding is not, there can
be no edification, as the apostle Paul teacheth
What, therefore, was in use under the law is by no
means entitled to our practice under the gospel; and
things being not only superfluous, but useless, are
to be abstained from, because pure and simple modu-
lation is sufficient for the praise of God, if it is song
with the heart and with the mouth. We know that our
Lord Jesus Christ has appeared, and by his advent lias
abolished these legal shadows. Instrumental music.
we therefore maintain, was only tolerated on account
of the times and the people, because they Were as boys,
as the sacred Scripture speaketh, whose condition re-
quired these puerile rudiments. But in gospel times
we must not have recourse to these unless we wish to
*5
166 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
destroy the evangelical perfection, and to obscure the
meridian light which we enjoy in Christ our Lord."
In these views of his illustrious colleague Beza con-
curred. 1 "If," says he, "the apostle justly prohibits
the use of unknown tongues in the church, much less
would he have tolerated these artificial musical perform-
ances which are addressed to the ear alone, and seldom
strike the understanding even of the performers them-
selves."
The French Protestant Church, which was organized
mainly through the influence and counsels of Calvin,
naturally adopted his views in regard to worship as
well as doctrine and government. Consequently, as the
Reformer did not oppose the use of a moderate and
evangelical liturgy, that church following his lead em-
ployed one that was permissive, that is, not imposed by
authority. One may wonder that Calvin, who unequiv-
ocally enounced the great principle that whatsoever is
not commanded is forbidden, did not see the applica-
tion of that principle to liturgical services, at least did
not make that application practically. It would be ir-
relevant to the design of this discussion to consider that
question as one of fact. We know that the French Re-
formed Church acted in accordance with his views on
that subject ; and it may be said, in passing, that it has
been a matter of observation that the use of a liturgy
by the Huguenot immigrants to this country has been
a snare, which has had influence in leading many of
them to abandon the church of their fathers that was
so definitely opposed to prelacy, and identify themselves
with a prelatic communion. Reading the case back-
1 In Colloq. Mompelg., Pars 2, p. 26.
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT. 1(>7
want, we can Bee that whatever may have bees the rea-
sons which governed the Reformer in declining to apply
the mighty principle mentioned to a liturgy, they have
not been sustained by events. And it is somewhat
curious, at least it is a striking circumstance inviting
attention to its causes, that the Scottish and American
churches which are now generally opposed to a liturgy,
as Calvin was not. are more and more adopting instru-
mental music to which he was opposed.
But the fact here emphasized is that the French Re-
formed Church, in its day of efficiency and glory, ex-
cluded instrumental music from its services. Nor is
the example a mean one. It was that of a great church,
as illustrious an exponent of the principles of Presby-
terianism, with the exception which has just been in-
dicated and its alliance with the state, as has existed
since the days of the apostles. These principles were
not worn as a uniform on parade, but were maintained
through blood and flame. A few extracts from Quick's
valuable work, Synodicon in Gallia JReformata, will illu-
minate this point as with a lurid glare. "Whilst," says
he, 1 "Mystical Babylon, spiritual Sodom and Egypt
( where our Lord hath been in his most precious truths
and ordinances, and in his dearest saints and members,
for many ages successively crucified), did swim in the
calm ocean of worldly riches and grandeur, in the
pacific seas of peculiar felicities and pleasures, poor
Zion in that bloody kingdom of France hath been in
the storms and flames, hath passed from one fiery trial
to another, from cauldrons of boiling oil into burning
furnaces heated with fire seven times hotter than before ;
1 Epistle Dedicatory.
168 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
she hath been driven from populous cities and the pleas-
ant habitations of men unto the cold, snowy Lebanon,
to the high craggy tops of Amana and Shenir, to the
frightful dens of lions, and to the horrid mountains of
dragons and leopards." Is this extravagant declama-
tion ? Let us glance at some of the facts.
" In the national Synod of Rochelle, in the year 1571,
Mr. Beza presiding in it, the Reformed could count
then above two thousand one hundred and fifty churches ;
and in many of these above ten thousand members, and
in most of these two ministers, in some they had five,
as in the year 1561 there served the church of Orleans
(which at that time had seven thousand communicants)
Anthony Chanoriet, Lord of Meringeau, Robert Macon,
Lord des Fontaines, Hugh Sureau, Nicholas Fillon,
Lord of Vails, and Daniel Tossane, who afterwards
died at Heidelberg in the Palatinate. When the Col-
loquy [our Presbytery] of Poissy was held, they had in
the one only province of Normandy three hundred and
five pastors of churches, and in the province of Pro-
vence three-score. And I remember the author of Le
Cabinet du Boy de France, a book printed in the -year
1581, and dedicated to Henry the Third, makes a com-
putation of their martyrs to have been in a very few
years at least 200,000 cut off for the gospel, and he
makes up his account thus : ' Allow,' saith he, ' but a
hundred martyrs to every church, and you have the
sum ; and yet 'tis as clear as the sun at noonday that
the sum is vastly more. For 'tis a truth incontestable,
that there have been cut off by the sword and massa-
cres for religion from the church of Caen above 15,000
or 16,000, from the church of Alencon 5,000, from the
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT, 169
church of Paris 13,000 from the church of Rheims
12,000, from the church of Troves 12,000, from the
church of Sens 0,000, from the church of Orleans 8,000,
from the church of Angiers 7,000, and from the church
of Poictiers 12,000 persons, etc.' Livre premier, pp.
274-277." "
Quick makes this remarkable statement, 2 which I can-
not forbear quoting, concerning the powerful influence
exerted by the simple singing of psalms upon the French
people at the beginning of the Protestant Reformation :
"Clement Marot, a courtier and a great wit, was ad-
vised by Mr. Yatablus, Regius Professor of the Hebrew
tongue in the University of Paris, to consecrate his
muse unto God; which counsel he embraceth and
translateth fifty of David's psalms into French meter.
Mr. Beza did the other hundred and all the Scripture
songs. Lewis Guadimel, another Asaph or Jeduthun,
a most skilful master of music, set those sweet and
melodious tunes unto which they are sung even unto
this day. This holy ordinance charmed the ears, hearts
and affections of court and city, town and country.
They were sung in the Louvre, as well as in the Pres-des-
Clercs, by ladies, princes, yea, and by Henry the Second
himself. This one ordinance only contributed mightily
to the downfall of Popery, and the propagation of the
gospel. It took so much with the genius of the nation,
that all ranks and degrees of men practised it in the
temples and in their families. No gentleman profess-
ing the Reformed religion would sit down at his table
without praising God by singing. Yea, it was a special
part of their morning and evening worship in their sev-
1 Introduction, pp. lix., lx. 2 Ibid., p. v.
-X^StiJ
170 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
eral houses to sing God's praises. The Popish clergy
raged, and, to prevent the growth and spreading of the
gospel by it, that mischievous Cardinal of Lorraine,
another Elymas the sorcerer, got the odes of Horace
and the filthy, obscene poems of Tibullus and Catullus
to be turned into French and sung at the court. Ri-
balclry was his piety, and the means used by him to
expel and banish the singing of divine psalms out of
the profane court of France."
Whatever may be the practice in recent times of the
churches of Holland, the Synods of the Reformed
Dutch Church, soon after the Reformation, pronounced
very decidedly against the use of instrumental music in
public worship. The National Synod at Middleburg,
in 1581, declared against it, and the Synod of Holland
and Zealand, in 1594, adopted this strong resolution :
" That they would endeavor to obtain of the magistrate
the laying aside of organs, and the singing with them
in the churches, even out of the time of worship, either
before or after sermons." The Provincial Synod of
Dort also inveighed severely against their use.
Some testimonies are added from distinguished con-
tinental theologians. Pareus, commenting on 1 Cor.
xiv. 7, says : "In the Christian church the mind must
be incited to spiritual joy, not by pipes and trumpets
and timbrels, with which God formerly indulged his
ancient people on account of the hardness of their
hearts, but by psalms and hymns and spiritual songs."
" Instrumental music," remarks Zepperus, 1 " in the
religious worship of the Jews, belonged to the ceremo-
nial law, which is now abolished. It is evident that it
1 Be Lege Mosaica, Lib. iv.
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT. 171
is contrary to the precept and rule of Paul, who (1 Cor.
xiv. i wills that in Christian assemblies everything should
be done for edification, that others may understand
and be reformed ; so even that of speaking in unknown
tongues should be banished from the church ; much
less should that jarring organic music, which produceth
a gabbling of many voices, be allowed, with its pipes
and trumpets and whistles, making our churches re-
sound. Day, bellow and roar. ... In some of the Ke-
forrned churches these musical instruments are retained,
but they are not played until the congregation is dis-
missed, all the parts of divine worship being finished.
And they are then used for a political | civil | purpose,
to gratify those who seek pleasure from sound and har-
mony."
Molerus, on the 150th Psalm, observes : " It is no
wonder, therefore, that such a number of musical in-
struments should be so heaped together ; but although
they were a part of the Pcedagogia Legalis | the instruc-
tion of the law |, yet they were not for that reason to be
brought into Christian assemblies. For God willeth
that, after the coming of Christ, his people should cul-
tivate the hope of eternal life and the practice of true
piety by very different and more simple means than
these." l
Gisbertus Voetius argues at length against the use
of instrumental music in churches in his Ecclesiastical
Polity, a work which is held in high estimation among
Presbyterians. 1 The argument is characterized by the
1 The three foregoing testimonies are extracted from the report of a
committee to the Presbytery of Glasgow in 1808.
Part i. Oap. iii., De Organuet <'f instrumental music in her
public* services. Would that she now retained this
primitive purity of worship! But within a half-cen-
tury back, in consequence of the agitation persistently
pursued by some who clamored for a more artistic
''celebration" of worship, the Established Church re-
laxed its testimony, and consented to make the ques-
tion of instrumental music an "open" one — that is, the
matter was left to the option of individual congrega-
tions. Meanwhile the Free Church stood firm, and has
so stood until recently. Dr. Begg, in his work on
organs, could express his gratitude for the conservative
attitude of his church on the subject, and Dr. Candlish
deprecated the discussion of the question as fraught
with peril. But they have fallen asleep, and the
church of their love is now, by the action of her Pres-
byteries, making it an "open question." The flood-
gates are up, and the result is by no means uncertain :
the experience of the American Presbyterian Church
will be that of the Scottish.
The Irish Presbyterian Church has for years seri-
ously debated the question in her General Assembly.
So far she has refused to make it an open one; but
the pressure of a heavy minority, it may almost with
certainty be expected, will prevail in breaking through
the dykes of scriptural conservatism. The fact, how-
ever, that to the present hour that noble church main-
tains its opposition to instrumental music contributes
no unimportant element to the historical argument
against its use. It is likely that the question has never
been subjected to so thorough-going an examination as
it has met in the protracted discussions of her supreme
16
178 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
court. She is now almost the last great witness for the
simple singing of praise in public worship. Should
the standard of her testimony go down, it must be left
to small, seceded bodies, or to individuals, to continue
the witness-bearing and the contest for a simplicity of
worship from which the majority in the church have
apostatized.
The non-prelatic churches, Independent and Presby-
terian, began their development on the American con-
tinent without instrumental music. They followed the
English Puritans and the Scottish Church, which had
adopted the principles of the Calvinistic Reformed
Church. How the organ came to be gradually intro-
duced into them it were bootless to inquire. They be-
gan right, but have more and more departed from the
simple genius of Christian worship. On what grounds
they have done this it would be well for them to stop
and inquire. For if there be any force in argument,
their present position cannot be maintained. It is a
clear departure from the practice of the church, both
early and reformed. The United Presbyterian Church
has but recently given way. A respectable minority
opposes the defection, but what the issue will be events
do not yet furnish sufficient data to determine. The
Associate Reformed Church has not yet receded from
the- pure principles and practice of their forefathers.
May God grant them grace to continue in their main-
tenance ! The time may ere long come when those who
stand on these principles and refuse to yield to the de-
mands of a latitudinarian age will be attracted by ad-
herence to a common sentiment towards a formal union
with each other. It may be made a question whether
HISTORICAL ARGUMENT. 179
tlic retention of a pure gospel-worship does not consti-
tute a reason for the existence of a distinctive organi-
zation.
It lias thus beep proved, by an appeal to historical
facts, that the church, although lapsing more and more
into defection from the truth and into a corruption of
apostolic practice, had no instrumental music for twelve
hundred years; and that the Calvinistic Reformed
Church ejected it from its services as an element of
Popery, even the Church of England having come very
nigh to its extrusion from her worship. The histori-
cal argument, therefore, combines with the scriptural
and the confessional to raise a solemn and powerful
protest against its employment by the Presbyterian
Church. It is heresy in the sphere of worship.
VI.
Arguments in Favor of Instrumental Music
Considered.
In the preceding argument the appeal has been taken
to the Scriptures and to the Presbyterian standards as
interpreting them; and historical proofs of the prac-
tice of the church have, in addition, been presented
chiefly for the purpose of showing what was the usage
of the apostles and of the churches which they organ-
ized. Any arguments produced in favor of instrumen-
tal music in the public worship of the church must
profess to be grounded in the same considerations —
that is, they must assume to be derived from the same
sources as those from which the foregoing proofs have
been sought, or they are to be regarded as unworthy
of answers. Those founded upon human taste or wis-
dom trifle with the gravity of the subject. They refer
to a standard which can have no possible authority in
a question which concerns the public worship of God.
Such are the common arguments, for example, that
instrumental music assists devotion, that it stimulates
and exalts religious feeling, and that it imparts dignity,
grace and attractiveness to the services of the church.
They are all based upon expediency, and are therefore
irrelevant to the consideration of a question which can
only be legitimately decided by the expressed authority
of God. There is no middle ground between submis-
sion to God's revealed will and a worship dictated by
ABGUMENTS FOR INaTBUMENTAL BCUSIOt 181
the fancies of sinners. Only two sorts of argument
consequently, will now be examined:
1. Those which profess to be derived immediately
from the Scriptures.
(1.) It is urged that God himself has sanctioned the
use of instrumental music in public worship, and the
Scriptures are pleaded in proof of this assertion. Surely
what God has approved must be right; it cannot be
condemned by man. The fallacy here consists in the"
affirmation that what God approved at a certain place,
at a certain time, and in certain circumstances, he ap-
proves at all places, at all times, and in all circumstan-
ces. It is forgotten that there is a distinction between
moral laws founded in the eternal nature of God, which
are immutable, and positive enactments grounded in
the special determinations of his will, which may be
changed at his pleasure. He gave to Adam permis-
sion to eat of the tree of life in Paradise ; he revoked
it when he fell. He commanded his people in the old
dispensation to observe circumcision and the passover ;
he has in the new changed that enactment, and com-
mands them to observe baptism and the Lord's sup-
per. He once commanded them to offer bloody sacri-
fices, and to observe other special rites at the temple ;
he now commands them to refrain from what were at
that time binding duties. And even during the time
when it was obligatory to offer sacrificial and t\*pical
worship at a certain place — the temple, he forbade
them to present it at another place — the synagogue.
In like manner, there was a time when he positively
commanded the use of instrumental music at the tem-
ple and prohibited its use in the synagogue; and since
182 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
the temple with its distinctive services has passed away,
he forbids the employment of it now in any place.
God approved circumcision, the passover, the offering
of sacrifice, meat offerings, drink offerings, ablutions,
and the like. Therefore he approves them at all times,
and approves them now. Such is the logic of the argu-
ment under consideration. Will the Christian now
circumcise his children, eat the passover, offer sacrifices,
bloody and unbloody, and employ ablutions in his wor-
ship? Why not? Did not God once approve them?
The reed pierces the hand that leans upon it. The
argument proves too much, and is in many respects
confessed to be worthless. God did once approve in-
strumental music. Granted ; but does that show that
he approves it now? On the contrary, he condemns it
now. It was one of those positive enactments which
he has been pleased to change. It may be replied, that
when he has willed the disuse of an ancient ordinance,
he has substituted another in its place ; baptism, for
instance, in the room of circumcision, and the Lord's
supper in lieu of the passover ; but the same does not
hold in regard to instrumental music. But, in the first
place, this is not universally true. What has he sub-
stituted for sacrificial worship? In the second place,
he has substituted simple singing in the place of sing-
ing with the accompaniment of instruments. In a
word, God once approved the whole ritual of the tem-
ple. He disapproves it now ; and he who would intro-
duce any part of it into the Christian church turns Jew
and revolts from Christ to Moses. This is true of in-
strumental music, as has been already proved.
(2.) Instrumental music is not condemned or pro-
ARGUMENTS FOB [NSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 183
hibited in the New Testament Scriptures. This posi-
tion could be consistently taken only by a Prelatist of
the Ritualistic Bchool, who contends that the church is
clothed with a discretionary power to decree rites and
ceremonies; and we have seen that even the Convoca-
tion of the English Church that adopted the Thirty-nine
Articles did not incorporate into them such a principle.
To those who cherish a respect for the doctrines of the
Reformed Church, of the English Puritans, and of the
Church of Scotland the principle is of cardinal value,
that whatsoever is not commanded, either explicitly or
implicitly, in the New Testament Scriptures is forbid-
den to the New Testament church. It is enough to
them that those Scriptures are silent concerning any
practice, to secure its exclusion from the services of the
church. It has at the outset of this discussion been
shown, that under the Old Testament dispensation a
divine warrant was necessary to the introduction of
any element into the public worship of God's house.
Every thing was shut out in respect to which it could
be said that God "commanded it not;" and in those in-
stances in which his silence w T as taken advantage of to
inject into his worship what the will or wisdom of man
dictated, his anger smoked against the invader of his
prerogative. What proof is there that the same prin-
ciple does not prevail in the new dispensation? The
New Testament closes with the prohibitory statute, en-
forced in the Old Testament Scriptures, against adding
to or taking from the words of God. Nothing is left to
human discretion but those natural circumstances which
condition the actions of all human societies. The
Scriptures are sufficient for all the wants of the church.
184 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC In CHURCH WORSHIP.
Their prescriptions thoroughly furnish the man of God
for all good works. He who advocates the infusion
into the worship of the church of what God has not
authorized takes the ground that the Scriptures are not
sufficient, and that human wisdom is entitled to supple-
ment its defects ; he claims to be wiser than the Head
of the church himself.
Instrumental music is prohibited by the absence of
any warrant in the New Testament for its use ; it is pro-
hibited by the declaration that the temple- worship,
with all its peculiar appurtenances, is abolished ; it is
prohibited by the fact that it is not included in the in-
spired enumeration of the elements of public worship ;
and it is prohibited by the practice of the apostles,
which must be deemed regulative of the customs of the
church by all who revere the authority of inspiration.
(3.) Instrumental music is justified in the church on
earth by the consideration that it is represented as em-
ployed in the church in heaven. Are we not to be
heavenly-minded ? Whether the language of the Apo-
calyptic seer is to be interpreted literally or not,
whether harpers will harp on real harps in heaven or
not, it is not material to the present purpose to deter-
mine. If it be admitted that instrumental music will
be employed in heaven, this argument will not be
helped, It would be invalid, because it would prove
too much, All that the glorified saints will experience
in heaven cannot, from the nature of the case, be real-
ized on earth, They will not need to confess and de-
plore continually recurring sins, but we are obliged to
do so below, They will sing, but they will hardly chant
in mournful strains ;
ARGUMENTS FOR INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 185
" Show pity, Lord, O Lord, forgive,
Let a repenting rebel live ;
Are not thy mercies large and free,
May not a sinner trust in thee ?
" Should sudden vengeance seize my breath,
I must pronounce thee just in death;
And if my soul were sent to hell,
Thy righteous law approves it well."
Thus we sing, however, till our dying breath. One
of the holiest ministers I ever knew, at ninety-three
years of age, on the verge of his translation to glory,
wrote that he was constrained to sing those penitential
words. It is not likely that they wet the sacramental
bread with the tears of penitence, but this we do while
we obey the injunction of our Lord, "Do this in re-
membrance of me." They neither marry nor are given
in marriage, but it would scarcely be legitimate for us
to argue from their example to what our practice should
be. If we did, the church on earth would be, as Owen
says, in the condition of the kingdom of the Romans
when it consisted only of men, "it had like to have
been the matter of a single generation." They cannot
be conceived as beseeching sinners to be reconciled to
God, but we, should we imitate them in this regard,
would ill discharge our duty to the unconverted souls
around us. But enough. It is plain that the argument
proves too much, and is, therefore, nothing worth. It
tries to prove from the heavenly world what we have
seen some endeavoring to prove from the Jewish tem-
ple. Both arguments burst from their own plethora.
If God had commanded us to do what is done in heaven,
we might make the effort to obey, whatever might be
the success or failure attending it ; but until such a
186 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP
command can be produced, we are not warranted to
turn harpers and harp upon harps in the church on
earth.
(4.) The use of instrumental music in the church is
justified upon the scriptural principle that we ought to
consecrate every talent we possess to the service of
God. This argument is also futile, because it proves
too much. It would prove that the sculptor should
install his statues in the sanctuary, that the painter
should hang his pictures upon its walls, that the me-
chanic should contribute the products of his skill as
"object-lessons" for the elucidation of gospel truths,
and that the architect should, by massive piles, express
the greatness of God, and by the multiplicity of their
minute details the manifoldness of his works. Avaunt !
The argument is suited only to a Papist.
(5.) Instrumental music is among the Adiaphora —
the things indifferent. The law of liberty entitles us to
its use. The answer is easy. That law exempts us, in
things sacred, from obedience to the commandments of
men, and, so far as our individual consciences are con-
cerned, from compliance with their scruples and crot-
chets. But it cannot free us from the obligation to
obey God. Now, God commanded the Jews to use in-
strumental music at the temple, and did not command
them to employ it in the tabernacle for most part of its
existence, or in the synagogue. They obeyed him in
both respects. It is manifest that it was not a thing
indifferent with them. Neither is it with Christians.
The truth is, that it is an abuse of language to rank
among things indifferent any concomitant of public
worship which becomes a part and parcel of it. On
ABGUMENTS FOR INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 187
the contrary, it has in these remarks been shown that,
so far from being in that category, there is nothing
about which the living God expresses so vehement a
jealousy as the method in which men approach him in
worship. Indifferent ? Nadab and Abihu thought so,
but they made a dreadful mistake.
But if instrumental music is regarded as a thing in-
different, it is conceded that it is not necessary ; it may
or may not be used ; it is not required by duty. Here,
then, the law of charity comes in, and challenges obe-
dience. It is, of course, admitted that, on the suppo-
sition, the liberty of the individual is not bound, so far
as his views and his private acts are involved, but his
practice, in the presence of brethren whom he may
deem weak, is bound by the law of charity. Is not this
the principle asserted by the inspired apostle in regard
to the eating of meat offered to idols? He affirmed
the liberty of the believer to eat of it. But the law of
individual liberty was checked by the weaker conscience
of his brother, to which the law of charity required that
respect be shown. Paul maintained his perfect right
to eat, but declared: "If meat make my brother to
offend, I will eat no flesh while the world standeth, lest
I make my brother to offend." His private liberty
was, in the presence of a weak brother, not only re-
strained, but controlled by the higher law of love. If,
therefore, a believer chooses to regale himself with the
melody or harmony of instruments, he is not bound ;
but if instrumental music in public worship stumbles
the consciences of brethren, regarded, though they may
- entertaining groundless scruples about it, as, con-
dly, it is not a matter of obligation, should not tin;
188 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
law of charity lead its advocates to say : " If instru-
mental music in public worship make our brethren to
offend, we will not employ it while the world standeth,
lest we make our brethren to offend." There are those
who, when they hear it, pray that God will not hold
them responsible for its use in his sanctuary. They are
sincere ; and if it be a thing indifferent, why should it
not, for their sake, be discarded ? The law of brotherly
charity asks, Why? That law certainly takes prece-
dence of the liberty to gratify taste, and its infraction
cannot be unattended with guilt.
2. Arguments derived from the Confession of Faith :
(1.) It is not claimed, so far as I know, by the advo-
cates of instrumental music that it is necessary to any
performance at all of the act of singing praise, but it is
claimed that it is necessary to the " decent and orderly "
performance of that act. It is justified by an appeal
to the last clause of the following sentence of the Con-
fession of Faith, about which so much has been said
in the course of the foregoing argument: "There are
some circumstances concerning the worship of God
and government of the church, common to human ac-
tions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light
of nature and Christian prudence, according to the gen-
eral rules of the Word, which are alioays to he observed.''' 1
Among those general rules of the Word cited in the
proof -texts, supporting this whole statement, beginning,
" there are some circumstances," is the following : " Let
all things be done decently and in order." This, it
is claimed, warrants the use of instrumental music.
Among the "all things" to "be done decently and in
1 Chap, i., Sec. vi.
ARGUMENTS FOB I NSTBU MENTAL MUSIC. 189
order" is the singing of praise, and instrumental music
is necessary to this thing being "done decently and in
order."
First, It must be observed that the last clause of the
statement of the Confession, the clause which is used
in this argument for instrumental music, has reference
to the " circumstances " mentioned in that statement.
It is these circumstances, and not something else dif-
ferent from them, in regard to which "the general rules
of the Word," including this one, "Let all things be
done decently and in order," "are always to be ob-
served." Now it has already been clearly pointed out
that these circumstances are circumstances "common to
human actions and societies." It is precisely such cir-
cumstances concerning which the statement of the Con-
fession enjoins that they be ordered according to the
general rules of the Word. It is precisely such circum-
stanees, consequently, that that statement requires to
" be done decently and in order." The question before
us, then, is this : Is instrumental music one of those
circumstances ? It has, in a previous part of this dis-
cussion, by a somewhat pains-taking argument, been
proved that it cannot be one of them. Those circum-
stances have been shown to be undistinctive conditions
upon which the actions of all societies are performed.
They are common to them all. But instrumental music
is not common to the actions of all societies. It can-
not, therefore, be one of the circumstances indicated
by the statement in the Confession. The conclusion is
stable that; so far as that statement is concerned,
it is not necessary t<> the decent and orderly perform-
ance of the singing of praise as a part of church-wor-
17
190 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
ship. This particular argument in favor of instrumental
music will be still further considered as the discussion
draws towards its close.
Secondly, The argument takes on the aspect of pre-
posterous arrogance, as containing an indictment of the
true church of God in almost all the centuries of the
Christian era for an indecent and disorderly singing of
praise in its public worship, not to speak of the church
in the old dispensation in its ordinary Sabbath-day
services. It would be folly to test the question of the
decent and orderly, or the indecorous and disorderly,
singing of praise by a temporary standard, especially
one erected in a modern and corrupt condition of the
nominal church. Shall the standard by which the
practice of the Christian church — leaving out of ac-
count the Jewish — for twelve centuries is to be judged
be one in which the Church of Kome slowly and reluc-
tantly acquiesced as late as the middle or the close of
the thirteenth century? And by this standard will we
convict of indecorous and disorderly worship the Re-
formed churches of Europe, the Swiss, the French and
the Dutch, the churches of Scotland for centuries, the
English Puritans and the Presbyterian Church of Ire-
land? Has it been left to the church in these latter
days to discover the only decorous and orderly way in
which God's praises shall be sung? The supposition
is intolerable.
The same considerations avail against the plea that
instrumental music is a help in the singing of praise.
If the church of Christ has not felt the need of this help
during the greater part of its existence, it requires no
argument to show that she can do without it now. It
Ai;<;i.M i:\TS FOB INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 191
may be admitted that it is a help to such " rendering" (!)
of singing as is demanded by cars cultivated for the
enjoyment of Italian operas and the like artistic per-
formances. But that is quite a different tiling from ad-
mitting that it is a help to the singing of praise by hum-
ble and penitent sinners, by the afflicted people of God
passing as cross-hearing pilgrims through a world to
which they are crucified and which is crucified to them.
The discussion is gratuitous and needless. It is suffi-
cient to say, that that cannot be a true help to worship
which the Being to be worshipped does not himself
approve.
(2.) It is contended that instrumental music is to be
ranked among the circumstances allowed by the Con-
fession of Faith, and that this is proved by the fact
that it is on the same foot as other circumstances about
which there is no dispute : such as houses of worship,
reading sermons, the length of sermons, of prayers and
of singing, bells, tuning-forks and pitch-pipes, tune-
books, and the like.
One would be entitled to meet this argument upon
the general ground already so often and earnestly main-
tained, that all the circumstances remitted by the Con-
fession to the discretion — the natural judgment — of the
church are common to human actions and societies, and
are such as belong to the natural sphere in which the
acts of all societies are performed, and, therefore, can-
not be distinctively spiritual or even ecclesiastical. As
instrumental music, used in professedly spiritual and
actually ecclesiastical worship, cannot possibly be as-
signed to that category, it is for that patent reason ruled
out by the very terms of the Confession's statement.
192 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
This ground I hold to be impregnable. But inasmuch
as it is a fact that certain minds do consider instru-
mental music as saveable to the church for the reason
that it may be viewed as standing on the same foot with
the circumstances which have been mentioned, I will
endeavor to meet their difficulties, albeit at the con-
scious expense of strict logical consistency, by follow-
ing this argument into its minute details ; and I pray
that the Spirit of God may bestow his guidance in this
last step of the discussion.
First, It has been argued, that the use of instru-
mental music is a circumstance of the same kind with
the building of a house of worship and the selection of
its arrangements ; that it is not an absolutely necessary
condition of the church's acts that it should hold its
meetings in edifices : they might be held, as has often
in fact been done, in the open air. To this the obvious
reply is, that this circumstance is one common to the
acts of all societies. They must meet somewhere, and
it is of course competent to all of them to determine,
whether they shall be subjected to the inconveniences
of open-air assemblages, or avail themselves of the ad-
vantages afforded by buildings. So of the arrange-
ments and furniture of the edifices in which they con-
vene. Every society, even an infidel society, has this
circumstance conditioning its meetings and acts, either
as necessary to any performance of them or as neces-
sary to their decorous and orderly discharge. But in-
strumental music is not such a circumstance : it is not
common to human actions and societies. This destroys
the alleged analogy, and consequently the argument
founded upon it fails.
ARGr.MFATs FOB [NSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 103
s mdhfy Tlit> Bame disproof is applicable to the as-
sumed analogy between the alleged circumstance of
.instrumental music and that of reading sermons. It
is urged that a sermon must be delivered in one of two
ways : either with or without reading, and there is dis-
cretion left to the church to elect between them. If
she thinks reading the better way, she is at liberty to
employ it. So with the choice of instrumental music
as a mode in which praise shall be sung. There might
be, as there has been, some discussion in regard to the
legitimacy of reading sermons. But that question aside,
and the argument being considered on its own ground,
it is sufficient to reply that the analogy asserted does
not obtain. The delivery of discourses, speeches, re-
ports and resolutions is an act common to all human
societies. Now, it is competent to all societies to say
whether they shall be simply spoken or read, whether
the delivery shall be extemporaneous or from manu-
script. They can, each for itself, determine the circum-
stance of the mode in which an act common to all shall
be performed. But the singing of praise in the worship
of God is not an act common to all societies. It is
therefore not one in regard to which the Confession
grants the liberty to the church of fixing the circum-
stance of the mode in which it shall be done. 1
Thirdly, The same line of argument, it is contended,
holds good with reference to the discretionary power of
the church to order the circumstances of the length of
1 In addition to this, let it be noticed thai in preaching t<> men wor-
ship is not directly offered to God; in singing praise it is, at Least in
} 'art.
194 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
sermons, of prayers, and of singing. But, it is replied,
all societies must, of necessity, fix the time allotted to
their several exercises, or their meetings would be fail-
ures. Nature itself dictates this. The church, there-
fore, has the natural right to order this circumstance in
connection with all her services. But the question o
determining the length of an exercise is a very different
one from that of introducing the exercise at all. There
is no analogy between the determination of the time to
be allowed to all acts, and the determination of the legiti-
macy of some special act. The adjustment of the length
of its exercises is a circumstance common to all socie-
ties. The employment of instrumental music, as a con-
comitant of worship, is a circumstance peculiar to the
church as a distinctive society. The analogy in every
respect breaks down.
Fourthly, If the church has bells, it is asked, why
may it not have organs? They are both instruments
of sound which serve an ecclesiastical purpose. The
answer is so obvious that one feels almost ashamed to
give it. The bell is not directly connected with wor-
ship ; the organ is. The bell stops ringing before the
worship begins, the organ accompanies the worship
itself. There is not the least likeness -between them,
so far as this question is concerned. A bell simply
marks the time for assembling. So does a clock ; and
we may as well institute a comparison between the
hands of the clock at a certain hour and instrumenta
music in worship after that hour, as between the sound
of the bell and it. The question is in regard to a con-
comitant of worship, not as to something that precedes
it and gives way to it.
Alinl'MI'Ms Foi: WSTBUMENTAL BCUSIC. 196
Fifthly, It is by some gravely contended that if
tuning-forks and pitch-pipes may be used, so may
organs. The same answer as was returned to the im-
mediately foregoing argument is pertinent here. Did
those who submit this argument ever notice the use
made of a tuning-fork or a pitch-pipe by a leader of
singing? It is struck or sounded in a way to be heard
by the leader himself, and when by means of it he lias
got the pitch of the tune to be sung, it is put into his
pocket, where it snugly and silently rests while the sing-
ing proceeds. It no more accompanies the worship
than does a bell. Like it, it stops sounding before the
act of worship begins. What analogy is there between
it and an instrument that accompanies every note of
tin- singing by a corresponding note of its own. As-
sign to the organ the same office as the humbler tuning-
fork or pitch-pipe, namely, merely to give the leader of
the simple singing the pitch of the tunes, and who
would object to it? The question of organs would be
as quiet as they would be. One toot before the singing,
and then they would be, what they ought to be during
the public singing of praise, as silent as the grave. One
cannot help wondering that the admirers of this "ma-
jestic instrument" would employ a comparison which
reduces it to a pitch so low !
Sixthly, There is only one other argument of this
minute class which will be considered. It is one which
I have known some brethren to maintain as men do a
last redoubt. It is argued that instrumental music is
just as fairly entitled to rank among the circumstances
indicated by the Confession of Faith as is a tune-book.
196 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IX CHURCH WORSHIP.
Does a tune-book assist the singing of praise? So
does an organ. If the church has discretion in em-
ploying one kind of assistance to singing, why not
another ?
Has it not occurred to the minds of those who in-
sist so strenuously upon this view that they may be
using a tune-book to accomplish an office to which it
may be inadequate, when they wield it to knock down
arguments derived from the Old Testament and the
New Testament Scriptures, from the old dispensation
and the new, from the practice of the Jewish synagogue,
of the apostles, of the whole church for twelve hundred
years, and of the Calvinistic Reformed Church for cen-
turies? Does it not occur to them also that there may
be a flaw .in the statement of their argument? Ex-
panded, it is this: Whatever assists the singing of
praise is a legitimate circumstance ; the tune-book and
the organ alike assist, etc., therefore they are alike
legitimate circumstances. The true statement would be,
whatever is necessary to the singing of praise is a legiti-
mate circumstance ; the tune-book and the organ are alike
so necessary ; therefore they are alike legitimate circum-
stances. It behooves them to show that the organ is
necessary to the singing of praise. It is not enough to
say that it assists it. They cannot prove its necessity.
Praise has been and is sung without the organ. But
it also behooves me to show that the tune-book is ne-
cessary to the singing of praise, that it is a condition
without which it could not be done. If this can be
evinced, as the organ is not necessary to singing, it
does not, as is assumed, stand on the same foot with
the tune-book, and the argument is unfounded.
ARGUMENTS FOR INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 197
It will be granted thai a tune is necessary to modu-
lated Hinging — that is, to singing which is not merely
the prolongation of a single note, and that could not
be denominated singing. But the tune-book gives the
tune. The tune is necessary to singing; the tune-book
is necessary to the tune ; therefore the tune-book is ne-
oessary t<> singing. Need this simple argument be
pressed ? Whence the tune, if not from the tune-book ?
Is it improvised by the leading singer? Suppose that
it may be, and he would be the only singer. It would
be impossible for others to unite with him.
It may be replied that the organ also gives the tune.
This is a mistake. The organ is as much indebted to
the tune-book for the tune as is a leading singer. If
the organist should improvise the tune, where would
be the singing ? It will hardly be contended that a solo
on the organ would be the singing of the congregation,
or that the organ sings at all.
It may still be said that the tune-book is not neces-
sary to singing, since it is a fact that singing is often
done without it. This is a mistake also. The tune-
book may be absent as a book, but the tune it contains
is present in the mind of the leading singer. He re-
members what he got from it. It is a necessity to him,
whether literally absent or present. He cannot sing
without the tune, and the tune is in the tune-book.
Finally \ the mighty contest may yet be maintained
on the ground that some leading singers do not know
the musical notes, and, therefore, cannot depend on the
tune-book for the tune. True, there are some who are
ignorant of the notes, but all the same they depend on
198 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
tlie tune-book, not immediately, but mediately and
really. For the tune is learned, in the first instance,
only from some one who does know the notes and got
the tune from the book. The tune-book is the first
cause of the tune, and is necessary to its existence. Of
course, tunes are learned by the ear. Most members
of a congregation so learn them. But these persons
acquire them from the leading singer, and he received
them from the tune-book. So that, look at the matter
as we may, the tune-book is necessary to the singing of
praise : it conditions its performance.
If, now, it be objected that the tune-book is a cir-
cumstance not common to human actions and societies,
and is equally, with instrumental music, according to
this argument, excluded from the discretionary control
of the church, I answer, That is true. It is circum-
stances in the natural sphere, those which attend ac-
tions as actions, and not this or that particular action
of a distinctive society, that fall within the discretion
of the church. Consequently both of these circum-
stances — the tune-book and instrumental music — fall
without that discretion. They both condition the per-
formance of an act peculiar to the church. But the
difference between them is this : One is necessary to
the performance of a commanded duty, namely, the
singing of praise, and the other is not. The singing of
praise is undoubtedly a commanded duty, and it follows
that what is a necessary condition of its discharge
comes also under the scope of command. It is, there-
fore, not discretionary with the church to employ it ; it
is obligatory. It must be employed, or the commanded
ARGUMENTS FOR INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. 199
duty fails to be done. It is not so with instrumental
music. It is not a condition necessary to the com-
manded duty of singing praise ; neither is it a natural
circumstance conditioning the acts of all societies. It
is, therefore, neither obligatory upon nor discretionary
with the church to use it. It is consequently ex-
cluded.
VII.
Concluding Eemarks.
The foregoing argument has proceeded principally
by two steps. The first is : Whatsoever, in connection
with the public worship of the church, is not com-
manded by Christ, either expressly or by good and ne-
cessary consequence, in his Word, is forbidden. The
second is : Instrumental music, in connection with the
public worship of the church is not so commanded by
Christ. The conclusion is : Instrumental music, in
connection with the public worship of the church, is
forbidden. If the premises are materially true, and if
they are logically connected in the argument, the con-
clusion is irresistible. The first premise, which is de-
nied by Romanists, Prelatists, and Latitudinarians, has
been established by proofs derived from the Scriptures.
The position that the church has power to decree rites
connected with the worship of God's house, rites not
prescribed in the divine Word, is confessedly a doctrine
of men, making a substantive addition to the only suffi-
cient, complete and infallible rule of faith and practice.
Of those who contend for this principle, the Romanist
alone is consistent. It is plain that such a -discre-
tionary power in the church could only be grounded in
her possession of continued inspiration. If she have
that gift her authority is equal to that of the inspired
organizers and instructors of the church themselves.
She can supplement the Scriptures. But the claim to
CONCLUDING REMARKS. 201
inspiration can only be substantiated by the working of
miracles. This Rome admits, and meets the require-
ment by appealing to her miracles. These professed
miracles are, however, of such a character as not to be
placed above impeachment. They may be accounted
for upon natural principles. They never rise to the
point of creative power, nor of the power that restores
life to the dead. The Protestant church, therefore, re-
jects the claim of Home to inspiration and infallibility,
and is consequently bound to deny the authority of
that church, or any other, to decree rites and ceremo-
oies not prescribed in the Word of God. For a church
theoretically to make such a claim is to confess itself,
to that extent, apostate. It is in flagrant rebellion
against the sole authority of Christ as expressed in his
Word. The past history of the church is a comment
upon the correctness of this indictment.
The second premise, namely, that instrumental music
is, in connection with the public worship of the church,
not commanded by Christ, either expressly or by good
and necessary consequence in his Word, is acknow-
ledged to be true by all consistent Presbyterians. One
would, therefore, argue that they would exclude it from
the public worship of the church ; and so, indeed, they
have done until a comparatively recent period. On that
very ground they have justly refused to employ it.
How is the amazing change to its employment to be ac-
counted for? How is it that in Scotland such a revo-
lution against the historic position of the Presbyterian
Church is now in full progress? How is it that in the
conservative Scotch-Irish Church so formidable an
effort is making to upset its testimony and its practice
18
202 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
in relation to this subject? How is it that such men
as Breckinridge and Thornwell, in the American Pres-
byterian Church, were hardly cold in their graves be-
fore, in the very places where they had thundered
forth their contentions for the mighty principle which
demands a divine warrant for every element of doc-
trine, government and worship, and where they had, in
obedience to that principle, utterly refused to admit in-
strumental music into the church, the organ pealed
forth its triumphs over their views ? How is this state
of things to be explained ?
There is a class who look with indifference upon the
question, who are willing that human opinions shall
prevail and human tastes shall be gratified in the ar-
rangements of public worship. It is needless to say
that, as they disregard alike the teachings of God's
Word and the testimonies of their forefathers, they are
countenancing a course which must, if not interrupted
by the extraordinary interposition of divine providence
or divine grace, land the church in open apostasy from
the gospel.
There is a second class who maintain the prelatical
theory, that whatsoever is not expressly — that is, in ex-
plicit terms — forbidden in the New Testament Scrip-
tures is permitted. Those who hold this view break
with the Westminster standards, play into the hands of
Eitualists, and convert the ordinances of the Presbyte-
rian Church, as the maintainers of the same principle
have those of the Anglican, into propaedeutics for the
cultus of Rome.
There is a third class who hold that, as instrumental
music was commanded of God in the Old Testament
COKOLUDING REMARKS. 203
church, it is justifiable in that of the New Testament.
It is one of tin 1 things which God himself has pre-
scribed. This is very extraordinary ground for Chris-
tians to take. It is hard to believe that they would
contend for the following positions, logically validated
by their view: That every positive enactment of the
divine will under the old dispensation passes over un-
changed in its authority to the new; that the Christian
church is the Jewish temple, or even modelled in con-
formity with it; that the types of the Old Testament
are continued in the new ; that what was not warrant-
able to the Jew in the worship of the synagogue is
justifiable to the Christian in that of the church; that
all the external elements of worship authorized in the
Psalms are allowable in the Christian church, for, upon
that ground, animal sacrifices would also be proper ;
and that the whole nominal church, from the apostles
to Thomas Aquinas, in 1250, was mistaken in regard
to this matter. Still, carrying with it these conse-
quences as it does, this view is supported by some in
the Presbyterian Church.
There is a fourth class — and it is believed to be the
largest — who hold theoretically to the great principle,
that whatsoever is not commanded is forbidden, but
deny its applicability to instrumental music in connec-
tion with the public worship of the church. They con-
tend that it is one of the circumstances which the Con-
f. 88 i<>n of Faith assigns to tin; discretionary control of
the church. This is probably the chief explanation of
the wonderful change that is passing over the Presby-
terian Church in the sphere of worship. It is to be
feared that very few of her ministers and ruling elders
204 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
have ever thoroughly studied the Doctrine of 'Circum-
stances. How many of them have ever expounded it to
the people over whom the Holy Ghost has made them
overseers? Nothing is more common than to hear it
said that this question is one concerning a "circum-
stantial detail" of subordinate value, and that the issue,
as one of minor importance, must give way to others of
more commanding interest which are pressing upon the
church. This confusion of thought would be surpris-
ing were it not so general. What a profound mistake
is couched in such remarks! Instead of the circum-
stances relegated by the Confession to the discretion of
the church being circumstantial details of worship, they
are not details of worship at all. Instead of their be-
ing of secondary importance, they are indispensable —
not as parts of worship, but as natural conditions of its
performance. Without them there would be, there
could be, no joint worship. The assemblies of the
saints would be a dream.
The change which is taking place more and more in
the worship of the Presbyterian Church is due to the
combined influence of the views held by all these
classes, but the chief peril results from that maintained
by the last which has been named. It is almost in-
conceivable that the majority of the officers and mem-
bers of the Presbyterian Church can have abandoned
the consecrated principle that a divine warrant is needed
for every element which enters into the worship of God's
house. Were that so, open apostasy in the depart-
ment of worship would be acknowledged. But of what
avail is the professed acceptance of the principle, if its
application be refused? How it happens that this
CONCLUDING REMARKS. 205
principle, which was construed by the Presbyterian
reformers and the Cramers of the Westminster stan-
dards as excluding instrumental music from public wor-
ship, and was so applied by the Presbyterian Church
almost universally for centuries after the Reformation,
is now interpreted in such a way as to admit this
Popish innovation into the once simple and evangelical
services of that church, defies comprehension except
upon one supposition. It is, that the Presbyterian
Church is slackening her grasp upon her ancient testi-
monies, broadening her practice in conformity with the
demands of worldly taste, and is therefore more and
more treading the path of defection from the scriptural
principles which she professes. The revolution in her
practice began in the American Church scarcely be-
yond the recollection of some now living, and certainly
in the Scottish Churches within that of those who are
not yet fifty years of age. But once begun, what rapid
progress it made! What would Gillespie and Calder-
wood now say, what Chalmers and Candlish, Cunning-
ham and Begg, what Mason, Breckinridge and Thorn-
well — what would they say, were they permitted to rise
from their graves, and revisit the scenes of their labors
—the churches for which they toiled and prayed?
It is evident that a great change has taken place.
Now, either it has been for the better or for the worse.
If it be contended that it is for the better, these great
men. and thousands who thought as they did, are pro-
nounced to have been ignorant of the Scriptures and
the principles of the Presbyterian system. Who are
they that will assume such a censorship? Let them
by argument prove their claim to this arrogated supe-
206 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
riority. If they cannot — and they certainly have not
yet done it — let them abandon the unwarrantable at-
tempt to revolutionize the long-standing and scriptural
practice of their church, and, ere it be too late, return
to the good old paths trodden by their fathers. We
are not bound to wear the yoke of human authority, it
will be said. No. But these men wore the yoke of
divine authority, and we ought to do the same. This
is your own human assertion, it will be replied. Yes.
But it is an assertion proved by irrefragable argument,
founded on the Scriptures, the Presbyterian standards
and the history of the true Church of Christ. The
burden of proof rests upon those who have made, or
who countenance, this change. They offer proof de-
rived from the principles of nature and from human
taste. What argument from Scripture is presented is
such as would make us turn Jews and worship at the
temple. It would not even convert us into Jews who
worshipped at the synagogue. It is an argument which
would take the Christian church over the ruins of the
synagogue back to the temple, and in effect re-enact
the madness of Julian by an attempt to construct again
that abrogated institute.
But whatever may be the want of satisfactory argu-
ment to ground this wide-spread and astounding de-
fection from the old, conservative position of the Pres-
byterian Church, the mournful fact is patent, that the
congregations which that church embraces are more
and more succumbing to its baleful influence. The
ministers who are opposed to the unscriptural move-
ment are, many of them at least, indisposed to throw
themselves into opposition to its onward rush. They
CONCLUDING REMARKS. 207
are unwilling to make an issue with their people upon
this question. They are reluctant to characterize the
employment of instrumental music in public worship
as a sin. But a sin it is, if there be any force in the
argument which opposes it. The people ought to be
taught that in using it they rebel against the law of
Christ, their King.
It bodes ill for the church that this subject is now
so often treated in a flippant and even jocular maimer.
The question of the use of instrumental music in the
public worship of God's house is, for example, some-
times placed upon the same foot with that in regard to
the use of tobacco. Both questions are scouted as
equally illegitimate and equally trivial. Is tobacco
ever mentioned in the Word of God? Is it forgotten
that a private habit of an individual is a vastly differ-
ent thing from an action which modifies the public,
solemn singing of God's praise by a congregation of
professed worshippers ? Such levity partakes of pro-
fanity. It makes a mock of holy things. The indul-
gence of this temper by our church courts will betoken
the departure of our glory. It is not less than shock-
big to suppose that the church can make light of a
subject about which God's jealousy has smoked, and
his anger has broken out into a consuming flame. If
she will employ instruments of music, let her at least
refrain from fiddling while many of her children are
mourning over what they feel to be the corruption of
her worship and the decay of her spirituality. Nero
fiddled while Rome was burning, and Belshazzar was
rating the vessels of God's sanctuary in the midst
208 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN CHURCH WORSHIP.
of revelry when the mystic hand wrote on the wall of
his palace the sentence of doom.
Those of us who protest against this revolution in
Presbyterian worship are by some pitied, by others
ridiculed, and by others still denounced as fanatics. If
we are, we share the company of an innumerable host
of fanatics extending from the day of Pentecost to the
middle of the nineteenth century. We refuse not to
be classed, although consciously unworthy of the honor,
with apostles, martyrs and reformers. But neither
were they mad, nor are we. We "speak the words of
truth and soberness." Mindful of the apostolic injunc-
tion, "Prove all things," we submit arguments derived
from Scripture, from the formularies of our church and
from the consensus of Christ's people, and respectfully,
invoke for them the attention of our brethren. We
call upon them to examine these arguments, and either
disprove or adopt them. But should they be dismissed
without notice, and our faithful remonstrances be un-
heeded, we humbly, but earnestly, warn the church of
the evil and bitter consequences which will, we verily
believe, be entailed by that corruption of public wor-
ship which has been pointed out ; and against it, in
the name of the framers of our venerable standards,
in the name of the reformers, divines and martyrs of
the Presbyterian Church, in the name of Christ's true
witnesses in the centuries of the past, in the name
of the inspired apostles, and, above all, in the name
of our glorious King and Head, we erect our solemn
PKOTEST.