Page Date:
02/23/2007
From: Web Article, Used by Permission
See Also
Girardeau's
Discretionary Power of the Church
Elsewhere on the Web
Organ
Grinding Circa 1849: More by Dabney on Organs, 40 years earlier.
(FPCR
web site)
Broad
Churchism (PRC web site)
An Anthology of R.
L. Dabney (Phil Johnson's web site)
Gospel Idea
of Preaching (Max Randel)
The Public
Preaching of Women (FBS Online)
A
Guide to the Robert Lewis Dabney Papers (University of
Virginia)
The Attractions
of Popery (CRTA)
Christ Our
Penal Substitute (Sola Scriptura) |
 |
Robert L. Dabney
Dr. Girardeau's Instrumental Music in Public Worship.
Copyright © 1996 The Blue Banner. Used
with Permission |
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC IN THE PUBLIC WORSHIP OF THE CHURCH. By John L. Girardeau, D. D.,
LL.D., Professor in Columbia Theological Seminary, South Carolina. Richmond: Whittet
& Shepperson. 1888. The Presbyterian Quarterly, July 1889.
The author in his eloquent conclusion anticipates that some will meet his arguments
with sneers rather than serious discussion, which he proposes to endure with Christian
composure. It is a reproach to our church, which fills us with grief, to find this
prediction fulfilled in some quarters. Surely persons calling themselves Presbyterians
should remember that the truths they profess to hold sacred have usually been in small
minorities sneered at by the arrogant majorities. So it was in the days of the Reformers,
of Athanasius, of the Apostles, and of Jesus himself.
The resort to this species of reply appears the more ill-considered, when we remember
that Dr. Girardeau is supporting the identical position held by all the early fathers, by
all the Presbyterian reformers, by a Chalmers, a Mason, a Breckinridge, a Thornwell, and
by a Spurgeon. Why is not the position as respectable in our author as in all this noble
galaxy of true Presbyterians? Will the innovators claim that all these great men are so
inferior to themselves? The ideal seems to be that the opposition of all these great men
to organs arose simply out of their ignorant old-fogyism and lack of culture; while our
advocacy of the change is the result of our superior intelligence, learning and
refinement. The ignorance of this overweening conceit makes it simply vulgar. These great
men surpassed all who have succeeded them in elegant classical scholarship, in logical
ability, and in theological learning. Their deprecators should know that they surpassed
them just as far in all elegant culture. The era of the Reformation was the Augustan age
of church art in architecture, painting and music. These reformed divines were graduates
of the first Universities, most of them gentlemen by birth, many of them noblemen,
denizens of courts, of elegant accomplishments and manners, not a few of them exquisite
poets and musicians. But they unanimously rejected the Popish Church music; not because
they were fusty old pedants without taste, but because a refined taste concurred with
their learning and logic to condemn it.
Dr. Girardeau has defended the old usage of our church with a moral courage, loyalty to
truth, clearness of reasoning and wealth of learning which should make every true
Presbyterian proud of him, whether he adopts his conclusions or not. The framework of his
arguments is this: it begins with that vital truth which no Presbyterian can discard
without a square desertion of our principles. The man who contests this first premise had
better set out at once for Rome: God is to be worshipped only in the ways appointed in his
word. Every act of public cultus not positively enjoined by him is thereby forbidden.
Christ and his apostles ordained the musical worship of the New Dispensation without any
sort of musical instrument, enjoining only the singing with the voice of psalms, hymns,
and spiritual songs. Hence such instruments are excluded from Christian worship. Such has
been the creed of all churches, and in all ages, except of the Popish communion after it
had reached the nadir of its corruption at the end of the thirteenth century, and of its
prelatic imitators. But the pretext is raised that instrumental music was authorized by
Scripture in the Old Testament. This evasion dr. Girardeau ruins by showing that God set
up in the Hebrew Church two distinct forms of worship; the one moral, didactic, spiritual
and universal, and therefore perpetual in all places and ages that of the synagogues; the
other peculiar, local, typical, foreshadowing in outward forms the more spiritual
dispensation, and therefore destined to be utterly abrogated by Christ's coming. Now we
find instrumental music, like human priests and their vestments, show-bread, incense, and
bloody sacrifice, absolutely limited to this local and temporary worship. But the
Christian churches were modeled upon the synagogues and inherited their form of government
and worship because it was permanently didactic, moral and spiritual, and included nothing
typical. This reply is impregnably fortified by the word of God himself: that when the
Antitype has come the types must be abolished. For as the temple-priests and animal
sacrifices typified Christ and his sacrifice on Calvary, so the musical instruments of
David in the temple-service only typified the joy of the Holy Ghost in his pentecostal
effusions.
Hence when the advocates of innovation quote such words as those of the Psalmist,
"Praise the Lord with the harp," etc., these shallow reasoners are reminded that
the same sort of plea would draw back human priests and bloody sacrifices into our
Christian churches. For these Psalms exclaim with the same emphasis, "Bind your
sacrifice with cords, even unto the horns of the altar." Why do not our Christian
æsthetics feel equally authorized and bound to build altars in front of their pulpits,
and to drag the struggling lambs up their nicely carpeted aisles, and have their throats
cut there for the edification of the refined audience? "Oh, the sacrifices, being
types and peculiar to the temple service, were necessarily abolished by the coming of the
Antitype." Very good. So were the horns, cymbals, harps and organs only peculiar to
the temple-service, a part of its types, and so necessarily abolished when the temple was
removed.
If any addition can be made to this perfectly compact argument, it is contained in this
suggestion of an undoubted historical truth: that the temple-worship had a national
theocratic quality about it, which cannot now be realized in Christ's purely spiritual
kingdom. Israel was both a commonwealth and a church. Her political government was a
theocracy. Her human king was the viceroy representing on earth her true sovereign, God.
Hence, in the special acts of worship in the temple, in which the high priest, Messiah's
type, and the king, God's viceroy, combined, they represented the State Church, the
collective nation in a national act of homage. This species of worship could not lawfully
exist except at one place; only one set of officials could celebrate it. It was
representatively the nation's act. It is to be noted that, when at last musical
instruments were attached to those national acts of homage to Israel's political king,
Jehovah, it was not by the authority or intervention of the high priest, the religious
head of the nation, but by that of the political viceroy. David's horns, harps and organs
were therefore the appointed instruments of the national acts of homage to Jehovah. The
church now is not a nation, but purely a spiritual kingdom, which is not of this world.
Hence there is no longer room in her worship for the horns, harps and organs, any more
than for swords and stonings in her government, or human kings and high priests in her
institutions.
Let the true inference from this partial use of instruments of music in the typical,
national worship be fairly and perspicuously stated. It is but this: since God saw fit to
ordain such an adjunct to divine worship for a special object, it proves the use of it not
to be sin per se, like lying or theft, for a holy God would not ordain an unholy expedient
for any object, however temporary. The same argument shows that incense, show-bread and
bloody sacrifices in worship cannot be sin per se. But how far short is this admission
from justifying the use of any of them in worship now? Just here is the pitiable confusion
of thought. It is not enough for the advocate of a given member of the church's cultus to
show that it is not essentially criminal. He must show that God ordained it positively for
our dispensation.
Dr. Girardeau's opponents stubbornly forget that the burden of proof rests on them; he
is not bound to prove that these instruments are per se criminal or that they are
mischievous or dangerous, although he is abundantly able to prove the latter. It is they
who must prove affirmatively that God has appointed and required their use in his New
Testament worship, or they are transgressors. Doubtless the objection in every opponent's
mind is this: That, after all, Dr. Girardeau is making a conscientious point on too
trivial and non-essential a matter. I am not surprised to meet this impression in the
popular mind, aware as I am that this age of universal education is really a very ignorant
one. But it is a matter of grief to find ministers so oblivious of the first lessons of
their church history. They seem totally blind to the historical fact that it was just thus
every damnable corruption which has cursed the church took its beginning; in the addition
to the modes of worship ordained by Christ for the New dispensation, of human devices,
which seemed ever so pretty and appropriate, made by the best of men and women and
ministers with the very best of motives, and borrowed mostly from the temple cultus of the
Jews. Thus came vestments, pictures in churches, incense, the observances of the martyrs'
anniversary days in a word, that whole apparatus of will-worship and superstition which
bloomed into popery and idolatry. "Why, all these pretty inventions were innocent.
The very best of people used them. They were so appropriate, so æsthetic! Where could the
harm be?" History answers the question: They disobeyed God and introduced popery, a
result quite unforeseen by the good souls who began the mischief! Yes, but those who have
begun the parallel mischief in our Presbyterian Church cannot plead the same excuse, for
they are forewarned by a tremendous history, and prefer Mrs. Grundy's taste to the
convincing light of experience. [Mrs. Grundy, The surname of an imaginary personage
who is proverbially referred to as a personification of the tyranny of social opinion in
matters of conventional propriety. OED]
That a denomination, professing like ours to be anti-prelatic and anti-ritualistic,
should throw down the bulwarks of their argument against these errors by this recent
innovation appears little short of lunacy. Prelatists undertake every step of the argument
which these Presbyterians use for their organ, and advance them in a parallel manner to
defend the re-introduction of the Passover or Easter, of Whitsuntide, of human priests and
priestly vestments, and of chrism, into the gospel church. "God's appointment of them
in the Old Dispensation proves them to be innocent. Christians have a right to add to the
cultus ordained for the New Testament whatever they think appropriate, provided it is
innocent; and especially are such additions lawful if borrowed from the Old
Dispensation." I should like to see the Presbyterian who has refuted Dr. Girardeau in
argument meet a prelatist, who justifies these other additions by that Presbyterian's own
logic. Would not his consistency be something like that pictured by the old proverb of
"Satan reproving sin"? Again, if the New Testament church has priests, these
priests must have sacrifice. Thus, consistency will finally lead that Presbyterian to the
real corporeal presence and the mass.
To rebut further the charge that Dr. Girardeau is stickling for an unimportant point, I
shall now proceed to assert the prudential and the doctrino-psychological arguments
against the present organ worship.
1st. Sound prudence and discretion decide against it. The money cost of these
instruments, with the damaging debts incurred for them, is a sufficient objection. The
money they cost, if expended in mission work, would do infinitely more good to souls and
honor to God. In our poor church, how many congregations are there which are today mocking
Dr. Craig with a merely nominal contribution to missions on the plea of an organ debt of
$1,800 to $3,600! This latter says it is able to spare $3,600 for a Christian's use (or
does it propose to cheat the organ builder?). I ask solemnly, Is it right to expend so
much of God's money, which is needed to rescue perishing souls, upon an object merely
non-essential, at best only a luxury? Does the Christian conscience, in measuring the
worth of souls and God's glory, deliberately prefer the little to the much?
Again, instruments in churches are integral parts of a system which is fruitful of
choir quarrels and church feuds. How many pastoral relations have they helped to disrupt?
They tend usually to choke congregational singing, and thus to rob the body of God's
people of their God-given right to praise him in his sanctuary. They almost always help to
foster anti-scriptural styles of church music, debauching to the taste, and obstructive,
instead of assisting, to true devotional feelings. Whereas the advocates of organs usually
defend them on grounds of musical culture and æsthetic refinement, I now attack them on
those very grounds. I assert that the organ is peculiarly inimical to lyrical taste, good
music, and every result which a cultivated taste pursues, apart from conscientious regard
for God. The instrument, by its very structure, is incapable of adaptation to the true
purposes of lyrical music. It cannot have any arsis or thesis, any rhythm or expression of
emphasis, such as the pulsatile instruments have. Its tones are too loud, brassy and
dominant; all syllabication is drowned. Thus the church music is degraded from that
didactic, lyrical eloquence, which is its scriptural conception , to those senseless
sounds expressly condemned by the apostle in 1 Corinthians 12-14. In truth, the selection
of this particular instrument as the preferred accompaniment of our lyrical worship
betrays artistic ignorance in Protestants, or else a species of superfluity of naughtiness
in choosing precisely the instrument specially suited to popish worship.
It so happens that the artistic world has an amusement the Italian opera whose aim is
very non-religious indeed, but whose art-theory and method are precisely the same with
those of scriptural church music. Both are strictly lyrical. The whole conception in each
is this: to use articulate, rational words and sentences as vehicles for intelligible
thoughts, by which the sentiments are to be affected, and to give them the aid of metre,
rhythm and musical sounds to make the thoughts impressive. Therefore, all the world's
artists select, for the opera-orchestras, only the pulsatile and chiefly the stringed
instruments.
An organ has never been seen in a theater in Europe; only those instruments are
admitted which can express arsis and thesis. I presume the proposal to introduce an organ
into the Italian opera would be received by every musical artist in Europe as a piece of
bad taste, which would produce a guffaw of contempt. This machine, thus fatally unfit for
all the true purposes of musical worship and lyrical expression, has, indeed, a special
adaptation to the idolatrous purposes of Rome, to which purposes all Protestants profess
to be expressly hostile. So that, in selecting so regularly Rome's special instrument of
idolatry, these Protestants either countenance their own enemies or betray an artistic
ignorance positively vulgar. Consequently, one is not surprised to find this incorrect
taste offending every cultivated Christian ear by every imaginable perversity, under the
pretext of divine worship. The selections made are the most bizarre and unsuitable. The
execution is over-loud, inarticulate, brassy, fitted only "to split the ears of the
groundlings, capable, for the most part, of naught but inexplicable noise and dumb
shows." The pious taste is outraged by the monopolizing of sacred time, and the
indecent thrusting aside of God's holy worship to make room for "solos," which
are unfit in composition, and still more so in execution, where the accompaniment is so
hopelessly out of relation to the voice that if the one had the small-pox (as apparently
it often has St. Vitus' dance) the other would be in no danger of catching the disease,
and the words, probably senseless at best, are so mouthed as to convey no more ideas to
the hearers than the noise of Chinese tom-toms. Worshippers of true taste and
intelligence, who know what the finest music in Europe really is, are so wearied by these
impertinences that they almost shiver at the thought of the infliction. The holy places of
our God are practically turned into fifth-rate Sunday theaters.
I shall be reminded that there are some Presbyterian churches with organs where these
abuses do not follow. "They need not follow in any." I reply that they are the
customary result of the unscriptural plans. If there should be some sedate boys who are
allowed to play with fire-arms, but do not shoo their little sisters through the brain,
yet that result follows so often as to ground the rule that no parent should allow this
species of plaything to his children. The innovation is in itself unhealthy; and hence,
when committed to the management of young people, who have but a slim modicum of
cultivation, such as prevails in this country at large, has a regular tendency to all
these offensive abuses.
2nd. I find a still more serious objection to instrumental music in churches,
when I connect the doctrine of God's word concerning worship with the facts of human
psychology. Worship must be an act of personal homage to God, or it is a hypocrisy
and offense. The rule is that we must "glorify God in our bodies and spirits, which
are his." The whole human person, with all its faculties, appropriately takes part in
this worship; for they are all redeemed by him and consecrated to him. Hence our voices
should, at suitable times, accompany our minds and hearts. Again, all true worship is
rational. The truth intelligently known and intelligibly uttered is the only instrument
and language of true worship. Hence all social public worship must be didactic. The
apostle has settled this beyond possible dispute in 1st Corinthians. Speaking in an
unknown tongue, when there is not one to interpret, he declares can have no possible
religious use, except to be a testimony for converting pagan unbelievers. If none such are
present, Paul expressly orders the speaker in unknown tongues to be silent in the
congregations; and this although the speaker could correctly claim the afflatus of
the Holy Ghost. This strict prohibition Paul grounds on the fact that such a tongue, even
though a miraculous charism, was not an articulate vehicle of sanctifying truth. And, as
though he designed to clinch the application of this rule upon these very instruments of
music, he selects them as the illustration of what he means. I beg the reader to examine 1
Corinthians 14:7-9.
Once more: man's animal nature is sensitive, through the ear, to certain sensuous,
æsthetic impressions from melody, harmony and rhythm. There is, on the one hand, a
certain analogy between the sensuous excitements of the acoustic nerves and sensorium and
the rational sensibilities of the soul. (It is precisely this psychologic fact which
grounds the whole power and pleasure of lyrical compositions.) Now, the critical points
are these: That, while these sensuous excitements are purely animal and are no more
essentially promotive of faith, holiness, or light in the conscience than the quiver of
the fox-hunting horses' ears at the sound of the bugle or the howl of the hound whelp at
the sound of his master's piano, sinful men, fallen and blinded, are ever ready to abuse
this faint analogy by mistaking the sensuous impressions for, and confounding them with,
spiritual affections. Blinded men are ever prone to imagine that they have religious
feelings, because they have sensuous, animal feelings, in accidental juxtaposition with
religious places, words, or sights. This the pernicious mistake which has sealed up
millions of self-deceived souls for hell.
Rome encourages the delusion continually. She does this with a certain consistency
between her policy and her false creed. She holds that, no matter by what motive men are
induced to receive her sacraments, these convey saving grace, ex opere operato.
Hence she consistently seduces men, in every way she can, to receive her sacraments by any
spectacular arts or sensuous thrills of harmony. Now, Protestants ought to know that (as
the apostle says) there is no more spiritual affection in these excitements of the
sensorium than in sounding brass or in tinkling cymbal.
Protestants cannot plead the miserable consistency of Rome in aiding men to befool
themselves to their own perdition by these confusions, for they profess to reject all opus
operatum effects of sacraments, and to recognize no other instrument of sanctification
than the one Christ assigned, THE TRUTH. But these organ-grinding Protestant churches are
aiding and encouraging tens of thousands of their members to adopt this pagan mistake.
Like the besotted Papist, they are deluded into the fancy that their hearts are better
because certain sensuous, animal emotions are aroused by a mechanical machine, in a place
called a church, and in a proceeding called worship.
Here, then, is the rationale of God's policy in limiting his musical worship to
melodies of the human voice. It is a faculty of the redeemed person, and not the
noise of a dead machine. The human voice, while it can produce melodious tones, can also
articulate the words which are intelligible vehicles of divine truths. The hymns sung by
the human voice can utter didactic truth with the impressiveness of right articulation and
emphasis, and thus the pious singers can do what God commands teach one another in psalms,
hymns and spiritual songs. For his Christian church, the non-appointment of mechanical
accompaniment was its prohibition. Time will prove, we fear by a second corruption
of evangelical religion and by the ruin of myriads more of nominally Christian souls, how
much wiser is the psychology of the Bible than that of Mrs. Grundy.
The reader has by this time seen that I ascribe this recent departure of our
Presbyterian churches from the rule of their fathers in no degree to more liberal views or
enlightened spirit. I know, by an intuition which I believe every sensible observer
shares, that the innovation is merely the result of an advancing wave of worldliness
and ritualism in the evangelical bodies. These Christians are not wiser but simply more
flesh-pleasing and fashionable. That is exactly the dimension of the strange problem.
Other ritualistic adjuncts concur from time to time. Nothing is needed but the lapse of
years enough for this drift, of which this music is a part, to send back great masses of
our people, a material well prepared for the delusion, into the bosom of Rome and her
kindred connections.
This melancholy opinion is combined, in our minds, with a full belief in the piety,
good intentions and general soundness of many ministers and laymen who are now aiding the
innovations. No doubt the advocates of instrumental music regard this as the sting of Dr.
Girardeau's argument, that it seems to claim all the fidelity and piety for the anti-organ
party. No doubt many hearts are now exclaiming, "This unjust, and thousands of our
saintliest women are in the organ loft; our soundest ministers have organs," etc.,
etc. All this is perfectly true. It simply means that the best of people err and
unintentionally do mischief when they begin to lean to their own understandings. The first
organ I ever knew of in a Virginian Presbyterian church was introduced by one of the
wisest and most saintly of pastors, a paragon of old school doctrinal rigor. But he
avowedly introduced it on an argument the most unsound and perilous possible for a good
man to adopt that it would be advantageous to prevent his young people from leaving his
church to run after the Episcopal organ in the city. Of course such an argument would
equally justify every other sensational and spectacular adjunct to God's ordinances, which
is not criminal per se. Now this father's general soundness prevented his carrying
out the pernicious argument to other applications. A very bad organ remained the only
unscriptural feature in a church otherwise well-ordered. But after the church authorizes
such policy, what guarantee remains that one and another less sound and staid will not
carry the improper principle to disastrous results? The conclusion of this matter is,
then, that neither the piety nor the good intention of our respectable opponents is
disparaged by us; but that the teachers and rulers of our church, learning from the great
reformers and the warning lights of church history, should take the safer positi on
alongside of Dr. Girardeau. Their united advice would easily and pleasantly lead back to
the Bible ground all the zealous and pious laymen and the saintly ladies who have been
misled by fashion and incipient ritualism. |
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John L. Girardeau: The
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Robert L. Dabney: Review of Girardeau's
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