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A34693 Singing of Psalmes a Gospel-ordinance, or, A Treatise wherein are handled these particulars 1. Touching the duty itselfe, 2. Touching the matter to be sung, 3. Touching the singers, 4. Touching the manner of singing / by John Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1650 (1650) Wing C6457; ESTC R37666 58,343 75

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whether the Psalmes of David and Asaph and such other Hymnes and spirituall Songs endited by the Prophets and recorded in Scripture be appointed by God to be ordinarily sung in Christian Churches or whether laying aside Scripture-Songs we are to sing onely such spirituall Songs as shall be endited by the personall but ordinary gifts of any ordinary Officer or member of the Church The former wee hold to be the Truth others the latter The Reasons of our Faith and Practise are these 1. Taken from the Commandement or exhortation of the Apostle Ephes. 5.19 Be you filled with the Spirit saith he speaking to your selves that is one to another in Psalmes and Hymnes and spiritual Songs singing and making melody in your harts to the Lord To the like purpose is his Cōmandement and exhortation to the Colossians Chap. 3. ver. 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdome teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord In both which places as the Apostle exhorteth us to singing so he instructeth us what the matter of our Song should be to wit Psalmes Hymnes and spirituall Songs Now those three be the very Titles of the Songs of David as they are delivered to us by the Holy Ghost himselfe some of them are called {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is Psalmes some {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is Hymnes some {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is Songs spirituall ●ongs Now what reason can be given why the Apostle should direct us in our singing to the very titles of Davids Psalmes if it were not his meaning that we should sing them Yea either we must exclude the Psalmes of David from the name of Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs or else we must be forced to acknowledge that we are exhorted to sing them as well as any other CHAP. V. BEfore we proceed to any further Reasons of the point let us first by the helpe of Christ cleare the Objections against this The Objections are many and some of them seeme more weighty and some more light let us unpartially and evenly by the Lords guidance weigh them all in the Ballance of the Sanctuary Object 1. If Paul had meant Davids Psalmes or Scripture-songs it had been an easie matter to have named Davids Psalmes or Scripture-songs as David himselfe named his songs the Psalmes or Songs of David when he delivered them to the chiefe Musitian and to his company to be sung Answ. 1. It may as justly be said if Paul had meant to exclude Davids Psalmes or Scripture-songs it had been as easie to have excluded them by name and to have limited them onely to such Psalmes and Songs as the Spirit should suggest unto their hearts Answ. 2. The Apostle expresly nameth Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs and they three are the very expresse Titles of the Psalmes in the Psalme-Booke Now why he should direct them to the very Titles of Davids Psalmes yet not meane the Psalmes that beare those Titles can a good conscience give a good reason for it Answ. 2. When David gave his Psalmes and Songs to the Musitians in Israel it was meete he should set his name to them or by some other marke make it appeare that the Psalmes were inspired and delivered by a Prophet of God But after the Book of Psalmes was generally knowne and received to be of divine inspiration as other Oracles of God the Psalmes are as usually alledged in the New Testament without the name of David as with it Luk. 24 44. Asts 13.33 Object 2. The Psalmes here committed to the spirituall Singers to be sung are the words of Christ which are to dwell richly in us Col. 3.16 But the Psalmes dedicated to the sonnes of Corah were the words of David and Asaph And so the Holy Ghost calleth them Not but that the words spoken by the mouth of David and Asaph where the words of Christ but that the words which are to be the spirituall songs of the Saints wherein they are to teach one another and to sing unto God they are words spoken to the heart by the voyce of the Spirit of Christ Besides the word of Christ is properly the Gospel by way of eminency in way of opposition to the Law given by Moses Answ. 1. The words of David and Asaph as they were the words of Chtist in the mouth of David and Asaph so they were the words of Christ also in the mouths of the sonnes of Corah or any other Singers in the Temple If any of them did not sing them with the Spirit of Christ as well as David and Asaph spake and penned them by the Spirit of Christ it was a sinfull defect in them but not in the word it selfe nor in the godly Singers of the Temple such as Heman and Jeduthun and others who were spirituall and holy men and sang them with melody in their hearts as well as in their voyces And it will be alike sinfull defect in the New Testament in such as sing the Psalmes of David to sing them without some measure of the Spirit of David For the Apostle expresly requireth that wee should sing with grace in our hearts But if the words of David and Asaph be the words of Christ and be sung of the Church with grace in the heart wee demand whether this act of the Church be not an act of Faith and of the obedeince of Faith to the word of Christ in that Text of the Appostle Answ. 2. It is an unsafe and unsavoury expression to speake of the words of David and Asaph as if they were onely the words of Christ in the mouths of spirituall Singers For if they were not the words of Christ in the mouths of carnall Singers also then the holy Scriptures were not the word of Christ if they be read by a carnall reader So the unbeliefe of man sh●ll make the faith of God of none effect yea the word of God not to be the word of God Answ. 3. Let it be considered in the feare of God whether the words of David and Asaph sung with grace in the heart unto God be not as truly and properly in the Apostles sence the word of Christ as any Song endited by the private gift of any Saint of God now living If so then the Apostle encourageth us to sing the Psalmes of David and Asaph with their Spirit If not then there be Christians now that are carried by a more infallible Spirit then the Prophets were in old time And yet Paul speaketh of the Saints now as led by the Spirt of God Rom. 8.14 But Peter speaketh of the Prophets then as carried {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} by the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 Which putteth this difference that such as are led by the Spirit may erre but such as are carried by the Spirit are carried and lifted
above themselves by the Holy Ghost and cannot erre and so was David and Asaph 4. Though the words of Christ be the Gospel yet the words of David are not to be shut out of the Gospel for the Gospel was preached to Israel when David and the other Prophets were preached yea and some parts of Moses also Heb. 4.2 Joh. 5.46 Object 3. But if the Apostle had intended to commend to the Churches the singing of the Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs of David and Asaph what need was there for him to exhort either the Ephesians to be filled with the Spirit or the Colossians to have the word of Christ dwell richly in them for such a service For any small measure of the Spirit and of the Word will suffice to sing the Psalmes of David and Asaph in their words and in the meeter and tunes accustomed But to invent new spirituall Songs fit to teach and admonish the Church would require a full measure of the Spirit and a rich treasure of the word to dwell in us And therefore Paul biddeth the Ephesians to be filled with the Spirit in singing the spirituall songs of the New Testament as drunkards are filled with wine and in the strength and spirits of their wine invent and sing their wanton Sonnets Answ. 1. Paul did exhort them to be filled with the Spirit as drunkards be with wine not that they might invent and sing spirituall Songs as drunkards doe wanton Sonnets for neither doe drunkards filled with wine usually invent Sonnets but sing such as they learned before when they were sober nor doth the Apostle speake of inventing Songs at all either wanton Songs by drunkards or spirituall Songs by the faithfull but onely to be filled with the Spirit as drunkards be with wine that so they might avoyd the riotous and excessive mirth of Drunkards and employ and improve their holy mirth and joy to the singing Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs for their own mutuall edification and consolation and for holy thankesgiving and praise unto the Lord Answ. 2. Though it doe not require such a full measure of the Spirit nor rich portion of the Word dwelling in us to sing a Psalme invented and penned to our hands yet a full and rich measure of the Word and Spirit will be needfull to performe all those duties which the Apostle in those Texts calleth for For the Apostle calleth to the improvement as of the whole word of Christ unto the teaching and admonishing of one another so of the Psalmes not onely unto those two heads but also besides those unto a further third end to wit unto the singing of them unto Gods praise Now to be able to improve the whole word of God to these two spirituall ends and the Psalmes to all those three spirituall ends doth require a full and rich measure both of Spirit and Word to dwell in us Answ. 3. It will require a full and rich measure both of Word and Spirit to dwell in us to direct and appoint a fit Psalme out of the Booke of Psalmes suitable to the present occasions of singing to Gods praise and to the instruction and admonition of the Church according to the present estate of their affections or afflictions their consolation or conversation in hand Answ. 4. It will require a fuller and richer measure of the Word and Spirit to dwell in us then a carnall heart would imagine even to utter a Song with such grace in the heart as might make melody to the Lord It requires a good measure of the indwelling Spirit and word of God to pray in the Spirit but much more to sing in the Spirit wherein our senses delighted with the melody are apt to steale away our hearts from spirituall fervency Deborah found her heart dull to be awakened so much as to utter the song which shee had prepared by the Spirit for her and Barak to sing together Judg. 5.12 Awake Awake saith shee Awake Awake Deborah utter a song that fourefold ingemination Awake Awake Awake Awake utter a song argueth in the best of Gods servants a deepe drowsinesse of spirit when wee should come to utter a spirituall Song spiritually like as that fourfold ingemination to the Church of Hierusalem to Returne Returne Returne Returne Cant. 6.13 argueth a deepe and strong aversenesse of the Spirit of the Jewes unto Conversion and returning to the Lord Object 4. The Apostle calleth the whole word of Christ dwelling in us Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs neither doth he limit us to one Prophet more then to another unlesse you will say that the words of Christ in the Gospel or which was prophecied by the rest of the Prophets were not spirituall songs But the Apostle calleth them all Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs as well as Davids if they dwell in the heart For the words of Christ there to wit in the heart are songs for the Spirit or else they are no songs to any man Therefore as yet to sing the Prophecies of David after our common manner is no worship commanded or taught us in holy Writ Answ. 1. It is a groundlesse Assertion to say that Paul calleth the whole word of God dwelling in us Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs For why then should the Holy Ghost give that style and Title of Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs onely to the Booke of Psalmes and to none else of all of the Bookes of the Prophets or Apostles Againe if Paul called the words of all the Prophets Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs why then did not the Prophets in their own language pen them with musicall accents as well as the Psalmes of David and Asaph Besides if the words of all the Prophets were spirituall Songs why then did the Prophets themselves finde the Bookes of their own Prophecies bitter in their bellies Rev. 10.10 There be many words of the Prophets that are more fit matter for humiliation and mourning before the Lord then fit to be sung as spirituall songs●nto the Lord But suppose there be many words of Christ and of his Prophets that are fit matter for spirituall re●oycing as indeed all the Doctrines and promises of Grace be yet what warrant have wee to sing them as in some Cathedrall Churches and Colledges the Bible-Clerks doe sing their Chapters out of the old and New Testament Answ. 2. Whether the words of Christ in the Gospel or in the Prophets be spirituall Songs or no yet if the Psalmes of David be also the words of Christ if they likewise dwell in our hearts and if they be spirituall Songs too then it will unavoydably follow That the same word of the Apostle that commandeth us to sing Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs commandeth us also to sing the Psalmes of David and Asaph unto the Lord unlesse you will say that the Psalmes of David and Asaph though dwelling in the heart are neither Psalmes nor Hymnes nor spirituall Songs howsoever the Holy Ghost
deliverances from Saul or the deliverance of the Church from Aegypt or Babylon or from other enemies may justly own and beare that Title For when David acknowledgeth and professeth that in his Songs the Spirit of the Lord spake by him and that his word was in his tongue 2 Sam. 23.2 What Spirit of the Lord was that but the Spirit of the Lord Jesus And what are then such Songs but the Songs of the Lambe through whose Redemption the Church and Saints enjoy all their deliverances And surely the Song of the Lambe recorded in Revel. 15.3 4. seemeth evidently to point at sundry Psalmes of David out of which it was compiled and collected and which therefore were suitable and fit to be sung upon occasion of their victory over the Beast especially with respect and reference to those speciall sentences which were fetched from thence though with some small variation such as is wont to be found in all the Scriptures of the New Testament quoted out of the old Rev. 15.3 Great and marvellous are thy works Lord God Almightie Just and true are thy wayes Thou King of Saints And ver. 4. Thou onely art Holy Who shall not feare thee O Lord and glorifie thy Name For all Nations shall come and worship before thee For thy Judgements are made manifest Psal. 86.10 Thou art great and doest wondrous things thou art God alone Ver. 8. Among the Gods there is none like unto thee nor any works like thy works Psal. 111.2 The works of the Lord are great Ver. 4. And Wonderfull Ver. 7. The works of his hand are truth and judgement Psal. 71.22 O thou Holy One of Israel Psal. 86.9 All Nations whom thou hast made shall come and worship before thee O Lord and glorifie thy Name Psal. 9.16 The Lord is knowne by the Judgement which he executeth Psal. 64.9 All men shall feare and shall declare the worke of God For they shall wisely consider of his doings In as much therefore as these who got the victory over the Beast are said to have sang the Song of the Lambe and this Song of the Lambe is expresly fetched from severall words of praise to the Lambe in severall Psalmes of David One of these two things if not both will from hence justly be deduced 1. Either this That any of those Psalmes of David may be sung to the praise of the Lambe out of which those words of praise are fetched as when the people of God are said to have praised God with such a word in a Psalme it is meant they sung the whole Psalme as 2 Chron. 5.13 20.21 Ezra 3.11 all of them pointing at Psalme 136. Or else secondly That it may be lawfull upon speciall and extraordinary occasions to compile a spirituall Song out of Davids words of praise dispersed in severall Psalmes of David and other Psalmists in Scripture and to sing them composed together as a Psalme of praise unto the Lord And both these willingly admit For these are still the divine Meditations and spirituall expressions of the holy men of God in Scripture which God hath prepared for the setting forth of his own glory Object 7. As the Apostle writing to Timothy about Prayer in generall and prescribing no forme of prayer it is therefore justly argued that we are to use no set formes of Prayer at all So the same Apostle exhorting the Churches to sing and not prescribing any formes of Psalmes hence it followeth that he alloweth not the singing of Davids Psalmes And whatsoever Arguments strike against stinted formes of Prayer strike against all formes of Psalmes also as stinting and quenching the Spirit c. Answ. 1. It is not true that the Apostle exhorting to Sing doth not prescribe any formes of Psalmes For in the same Texts where he doth exhort the Churches and people of God to sing he doth direct them also to sing Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs which are the expresse titles of the very formes of Psalmes endited by David and Asaph as hath been shewed above Neither can it be truly said that he alloweth not the singing of Davids Psalmes Unlesse it might be truly said that the Psalmes of David are neither Psalmes nor Hymnes nor spirituall Songs Answ. 2. The Scripture putteth a manifest difference between these two set formes of Prayer and set formes of Psalmes also between set formes devised and prescribed by men and set formes appointed by God Set formes of Prayer the Lord did never ordinarily prescribe unto his people neither in the old Testament nor in the New but set formes of Psalmes no man doubteth were ordinarily prescribed in the old Testament and wee suppose in the New also in the Texts alledged Againe set formes devised and appointed by men I will not deny to be justly rejected by the true meaning of the second Commandement but God that forbad us to make to our selves any Images or imaginations and inventions for worship did never forbid himselfe to devise and appoint for us what forme of worship himselfe pleased either in the old Testament or in the New And therefore what ever Arguments strike against set formes of Prayer invented and prescribed by men there is none of them strike against set formes of Psalmes appointed by God Neither can it with any colour be pretended that the Psalmes of David being devised and appointed by the Holy Ghost himselfe should either stint or quench the Spirit unlesse it might be thought that Gods own Ordinance to convey and quicken and enlarge the Spirit should become an impediment and restraint to the Spirit Object 8. The edification of the Church and body of Christ under the New Testament ought to be carried on by the personall and proper gifts of Gods Spirit Eph. 4.7 8.11 16. 1 Pet. 4.10 11. Rom. 12.4.6 1 Cor. 12. But in singing of Psalmes of David there is no more personall gift manifested then there is in reading a stinted forme of Prayer Answ. These Scriptures prove that God hath given the gifts of the Spirit for the edification of his Church and that they who have received the gifts of the Spirit should employ them to the edification of the Church And some of those Scriptures prove also that they who haue received any gifts though outward gifts of wealth and honour should improve and employ them to the good of the Church But none of them prove that all the edification of the Church should be carried on by the personall and proper gifts of the present members of the Church For then the Church should not be edified now in these dayes by the gifts of the pen-men of Scripture whether Apostles Prophets or Evangelists which is expresly repugnant to some of the Scriptures alledged by you For in Eph. 4.8 to 13. and in 1 Cor. 12. it is expresly said that God gave Apostles Prophets and Evangelists for the edifying of the Church till the whole body of Christ be perfected at the day of his comming And least you should dreame
of new Apostles to be raised up in every age the Holy Ghost telleth us the Church of the Jewes at their last conversion shall be built upon the foundation of the Lambes twelve Apostles Rev. 21.14 The twelve Apostles of the Lambe shall have a fundamentall influence in the rearing and building of the Church of the Jewes not by their resurrection to life againe in those dayes but by the power of the Spirit breathing in their gifts and writings And as Abel being dead yet speaketh Heb. 11.4 and that to edification So the Apostles though dead speake also and David being dead speaketh and singeth likewise to the edification of the body of Christ till we come to sing Hallelujahs in heavenly glory Say not these writings of the Apostles and Evangelists of David and the Prophets doe not speake to the edification of the Church but as they are expounded and applyed by the spirituall gifts of the Ministers and people of God in each age For the very reading of them is an Ordinance of God and no Ordinance of God is empty and beggarly and destitute of the Spirit which is the vanitie of mens traditions and may not be imputed to any of Gods Ordinances Neither ought you to say That in singing the Psalmes of David there is no more personall gift manifested then there is in reading a stinted forme of Prayer For 1. in reading a stinted forme of prayer there is no gift of the Spirit at all manifested but rather as I conceive a manifest breach of the second Commandement of God which is a grieving of the Spirit But in singing of the Psalmes of David there is a gift of the Spirit manifested even the gift of obedience to the command of the Apostle And that is the personall gift of him that singeth And secondly all the treasures of the gifts of the Spirit breathing in the Psalmes of David are likewise manifested in the reverent and holy singing of them You might more truly have said there is no more personall gift of the Spirit manifested in singing the Psalmes of David then in reading the Psalmes of David because either of both those duties are alike acts of obedience to Gods Commandement But if you had so said your objection had answered it selfe Object 9. Many of Gods people now have gifts to compose spirituall Songs as well as carnall Poets to make carnall Sonnets or as drunkards that make Songs of Gods people Now every one that hath a gift is to administer it by Christs Command 1 Pet. 4.10 And if any for want of experience of such a gift in themselves should question it they may consider the promise of powring out the Spirit in a more plentifull measure now in the dayes of the New Testament then in the old Answ. 1. Though many of Gods people have gifts to compose spirituall Songs as well as carnall Poets carnall Sonnets and Drunkards prophane Sonnets yet that will not argue that the spirituall Songs which many of Gods people have gifts to compose are fit to be sung in the publique holy Assemblies of the Saints no more then the carnall and prophane Sonnets of drunken Poets are fit to be sung in civill Assemblies Let drunken carnall Poets sing their carnall Sonnets in their Tavernes and Ale-houses and such of Gods people as have received a gift to compose a spirituall Song fit for their private solace sing it in their private houses But every spirituall Song fit for private solace is not fit to be sung in the solemne Assemblies of the Church for publique edification no more then it is fit for every private Christian who hath a gift to compose a spirituall prayer to utter and powre forth the same in the publique Congregation of the Church Answ. 2. It is more then probable that many of the people of God in the old Testament had gifts to compose spirituall Songs besides David and Asaph and yet unlesse their gift were carried along by an infallible Spirit they were not received among the Songs of the Temple Answ. 3. Suppose that spirituall Songs composed by an ordinary gift might be received among the publique Songs of the Congregation yet will it thence follow that the Church shall be bound to sing onely such Songs and deprive themselves of the Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs of David and Asaph which were composed with a farre larger measure and power of the Holy Ghost Answ. 4. It is readily granted that as every man hath received a gift so let him administer and dispense it according to the Text alledged 1 Pet. 4.10 But yet in Christs way every private gift is not fit for publique Administration nor every publique gift fit to be administred to the shouldring out of a greater gift then it selfe Answ. 5. If such as want the experience of such a gift of spirituall Poetry in themselves should be encouraged to expect it from the promise of powring out the Spirit on all flesh in the dayes of the Gospel Acts 2.17 they might as well looke for the gifts of tongues and healing and miracles For it is the same Spirit though not the same measure which is there promised to be powred out upon all flesh Let every man administer the gifts of the Spirit according to the measure which he hath received within his own line Object 10. But the Lord is as full of the Spirit now to helpe us to endite Psalmes as in the dayes of David and Asaph And it seemeth a dishonour to Christ to dispense his word by reading and singing without the exercise of the glorious and various Administrations of the spirituall gifts of the New Testament Answ. 1. The Lord is as full of the Spirit now and as able to furnish us with a Propheticall Spirit now to endite Propheticall Scriptures as he did furnish the Prophets in the old Testament But yet God thought it no dishonour to Christ to leave us the Scriptures of the old Prophets for our edification in the New Testament as well as in the old It is the same Spirit of the same Christ that spake by the Prophets of the old Testament and speaketh in the Saints of the New And it is no dishonour to Christ to dispense his word and to guide the body of his Church as well by the unity of the same Spirit as by the variety of the divers gifts of the Spirit now And though we doe not exercise the glorious and various Administrations of the spirituall gifts of the New Testament in the enditing of New Psalmes no more then in the enditing of new Scriptures Yet wee can neither sing the old Psalmes of David nor read the old Scriptures of the Prophets acceptably to God nor comfortably to our selves without the exercise of the gracious and various spirituall gifts of the New Testament Object 11. Wee have examples in the New Testament of exercising personall gifts as well in singing as in praying and Prophecying 1 Cor. 14. Which Epistle is directed to all
SINGING OF PSALMES A GOSPEL-ORDINANCE OR A TREATISE WHEREIN Are handled these Particulars 1. Touching the Duty it selfe 2. Touching the Matter to be Sung 3. Touching the Singers 4. Touching the manner of Singing By JOHN COTTON Teacher of the Church at Boston in New-England LONDON Printed for J. R. at the Sunne and Fountaine in Pauls-Church-yard and H. A. at the Crowne in Popes-Head-Alley 1650. OF THE SINGING OF PSALMES CHAP. J. Propounding the severall Questions about it and handling the First TO prevent the godly-minded from making melody to the Lord in Singing his Praises with one accord J meane with one heart and one voyce Satan hath mightily bestirred himselfe to breed a discord in the hearts of some by filling their heads with foure heads of scruples about the Duty 1. Touching the Duty it selfe of singing Psalmes with lively voyce whether there be any such Worship at all now to be allowed and practised in the dayes of the New Testament 2. Touching the matter to be sung whether Scripture Psalmes penned by David Asaph Moses Solomon Hezekiah Habakkuk Zachary Simeon Deborah Mary Elizabeth or the like Or songs immediately indited by some personall spirituall gift of some Officer or Member of the Church 3. Touching the Singers If vocall singing may be allowed Who must Sing 1. Whether one for all the rest the rest onely saying Amen or the whole Congregation 2. Whether women as well as men or men alone 3. Whether carnall men and Pagans as well as Church-members and Christians 4. Touching the manner of singing Whether the Psalme may be sung either 1. In Meeter Devised 2. In Tunes Invented 3. In Order after the Reading of it For the first Question wee lay downe this Conclusion for a Doctrine of Truth That singing of Psalmes with a lively voyce is an holy Duty of Gods Worship now in the dayes of the New Testament When we say singing with lively voyce we suppose none will so farre misconstrue us as to thinke wee exclude singing with the heart For God is a Spirit and to worship him with the voyce without the Spirit were but lip-labour which being rested in is but lost labour Isa. 29.13 or at most profiteth but little 1 Tim. 4.8 But this wee say As wee are to make melody in our hearts so with our voyces also In opposition to this there be some Anti-psalmists who doe not acknowledge any singing at all with the voyce in the New Testament but onely spirituall songs of joy and comfort of the heart in the word of Christ 1. Proofe for the Truth The first proofe for the truth is taken from the Commandement of the Lord by Paul who instructeth and exhorteth the Ephesians To speake one to another in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} c. Ephes. 5.19 And so in Col. 3.16 Teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes Hymnes c. which cannot be done without lively voyce And so in 1 Cor. 14.15 16. The Apostle commandeth the Church of Corinth that such as sing in the Church should not onely sing in the Spirit but with understanding also that is not onely with their own understanding for all that sung with the Spirit did so but with the understanding of the hearers that so he that occupied the place of the unlearned might be edified and say Amen at such giving of thankes Whence it followeth unavoydably That singing of Psalmes is not onely a making of melody to the Lord with inward grace in the heart but also with lively and audible voyce which is the point in Question Ob●ect 1. This place in the Corinths maketh nothing to the cause in hand For these Corinthian Psalmes were not the Psalmes of David nor sung by the whole Congregation much lesse in Meeter and Tunes devised by men as ours be but they were spirituall songs immediately inspired and endited by the Holy Ghost and sung onely by him that received that gift as the Spirit gave him utterance Answ. Neither did wee alledge the place to prove the singing of Davids Psalmes by the whole Congregation in such like Meeter and Tunes as ours be These poynts doe all of them belong to the other Questions which follow to bee handled God willing ●n their place But to this purpose we alledge the place That singing of Psalmes in the New Testament is to be dispensed in Christian Churches not onely with inward grace in the heart making melody to the Lord but also with outward audible lively voyce which is the very point in hand and which this commandment of the Apostle doth clearely demonstrate 2. Object The Apostle to the Ephesians and Colossians doth not say Sing one to another in Psalmes but speake or preach one to another or in other word● Teach and admonish one another The Psalmes dwelling in their hearts they were to dispense them in a way of Teaching and Admonishing But as for singing hee maketh no mention of that untill he came to teach them the manner of dispensing the words of Christ unto God in the end of the verse And then indeed hee teacheth them to sing in the Spirit making melody with grace in the heart unto God Answ. Such as tremble at the word as the framer of this objection professeth himselfe to doe they should rather bow their ●udgements and practise to Scripture and language then bow the ●ence of Scripture to their owne conceptions against the language of Scripture It is one thing to speake one to another in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall songs as is done in singing another thing to preach and teach one another out of Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Songs It is true they were to Teach and admonish one another out of the Psalmes and the scope of Paul will reach that But if Paul had only meant that to wit That they should teach and preach one to another out of the Psalmes he would not have said Speake yee one to another in Psalmes or with Psalmes but out of the Psalmes or from the Psalmes for such is the language of the Holy Ghost in expressing such a duty Paul is said to have expounded and testified and perswaded the Jewes out of the Law of Moses and out of the Prophets Acts 28.23 So Philip is said to begin to Preach Jesus to the Eunuch {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} from that Scripture in Isaiah or at that Scripture Act. 8.35 He did not Preach Jesus to him in speaking that Scripture Object If that speaking of the Ephesians one to another in Psalmes did not hold forth their expounding and preaching in Psalmes one to another but onely the bare reading or singing the letter of the Psalmes This were such a service wherein there in nothing of Christ held forth externally I speake not of the matter of the Psalmes which is full of Christ as other Scriptures but of the outward manner of dispensing it There is nothing held forth in the singing of it after the usuall
Spirit so he alloweth and blesseth no worship but what is dispensed in Spirit and Truth Answ. God was a Spirit in the old Testament as well as in the New nor did he then allow and blesse any worship but what either was performed in Spirit and Truth or did convey Spirit and Truth Albeit more externall rites in worship were then appointed then in the New Testament are now continued for which end Christ alledgeth those words in the place in John to which you allude But neverthelesse though Christ have not limited his worship to any certain place now as then which was the point Christ there speaketh to nor doth he rest in externall performance yet evident it is God hath appointed in these dayes of the Gospel sundry externall worships now as well as then and the same in both Testaments to be performed in Spirit and Truth as hearing and reading the Word kneeling in Prayer and saying Amen All which Nature and Art may performe as well as the singing of Psalmes with vocall melody CHAP. II. Propounding and clearing the second Proofe for singing Psalmes with lively voyce THe second Proof is taken from the examples of Christ himself and of his Saints and Disciples in the New Testament Christ himselfe with his Disciples sung a Psalme or an Hymne together in the end of the administration of the Lords Supper Math. 26.30 And Paul and Silas are said to have sing a Psalme in the Prison so as the Prisoners heard them Acts 16.25 Now if in singing they had onely spiritually rejoyced and not expressed their joy and their song in audible and lively voyce the Prisoners could not have heard them The stranger doth not know nor meddle with the spirituall joy of the heart Pro. 14.10 Object 1. The place in Math. 26.30 may as well be translated They praysed God as they sung an Hymne Answ. Though the meaning be they praised God yet the word implyeth they praised God with an Hymne for it is improper in that language to translate the word to Praise whether God or man but either with a Song or with a Poeme I● is more probable then any reason can wave that Christ and his Disciples did shut up the Lords Supper with singing one of their Hebrew Psalmes as the Jewes were wont to shut up their Celebration of the Passeover as their own Records tell us with singing Psalme 111. with the five other Psalmes next following together But all that I now intend is to shew that Christ and his Disciples sang together and therefore with the voyce as well as the heart Object 2. They might be said to sing together if one alone sing and the rest said Amen in the close as men may be said to pray together where one alone speaketh and the rest consent Answ. 1. True but then one at least speaketh with an audible and lively voyce though the rest doe not And that 's enough to cleare the point in hand that singing in the New Testament consisteth not onely in making melody with grace in the heart but also in singing to the Lord with lively voyce Answ. 2. If the Disciples did not joyne in singing that Hymne but onely by silent consent they might as well be said To have taken the bread and blessed it and broken it and distributed it and so the wine for all this Christ did with their silent consent But what Christ did alone is expresly recorded as done by himselfe when it cometh to the singing of the Psalme that is recorded as done by them in the Plurall number When they had sung an Hymne they departed into the Mount of Olives They that departed into the Mount of Olives they sung the Psalme Now it was not Christ alone but the whole eleven Disciples with him that departed into the Mount of Olives And therefore it was Christ with his Disciples that sung the Psalme together Object 3. Against the proofe from Acts 16.25 It is not said say some that Paul and Silas sung the Psalmes of David or Asaph much lesse with Meeter and Tunes devised by men Had they so done the Prisoners that heard them might have sung for the outward dispensation such a song of praise to God as well as they Answ. Wee doe not alledge this Example of theirs as hath been often said in like case before to prove they sang any Psalme of David though it stand with good reason that they joyning together in singing did rather sing a Psalme or Hymne knowne to them both then any new Song devised by either of them But what Psalmes are to be sung is another Question which by the helpe of Christ wee shall speake to in the sequell Neither doe we alledge their Example to prove they sang in a devised Meeter or Tune For themselves being Hebrewes it is likely they sang the Hebrew Songs in the tunes of the Sanctuary but that also is another Question of which we are to speake in his place when wee come to it All that we gather from this place now is no more then the words doe plainly hold forth that they sung an Hymne to God not onely with inward melody of grace in their hearts but also with outward melody of the voyce for else the Prisoners could not have heard them Against this it is of no force to object as some doe that if they had sung any of the Psalmes of David or Asaph with an audible voyce then the other Prisoners also might have joyned with them and have worshipped externally at least as well as they For the answer is plaine and ready First the Prison was in Philippi a City of Macedonia consisting partly of a Colony of the Romans partly of the Grecians no Jewes at all are mentioned to be Inhabitants there much lesse Prisoners at that time And for Pagans to joyne in singing Hebrew Songs in Hebrew verses and tunes it seemeth to be farre beyond either their skill or devotion Secondly suppose the Prisoners had been Jewes of which there is to hint at all in the Text and suppose those Prisoners hearing the melody of Paul and Silas and knowing the Song had joyned in the outward singing of it and that without any grace in their hearts none of all which things appeare in the story yet suppose all this shall the unbeliefe of those Jewes make the holy worship of these Apostles and their faith to God or the faith of God to them of none effect Paul renounceth and abhorreth such carnall reasonings Rom. 3.3 CHAP. III. Propounding and clearing the third Proofe for singing Psalmes with a lively voyce A Third proofe of this truth is taken from the Prophecies of the old Testament foretelling and perswading such a duty in the New Isa. 52.8 with the voyce together shall they sing And that is foretold of the times when the feet of the Messengers of glad tydings shal be beautiful who shall say unto Zion Thy God reigneth Which Paul explaineth of the times of the Gospel Rom. 10.14 Psal.
Tabernacle God forbid any Christian soule should please it selfe in comparing the Praises of the holy and glorious God to the golden calfe for though the Singing of the praises of God by carnall men may be compared to the employment of Aegyptian Jewells to that end for which they are used yet that end being the praising of God and in such a way as God hath enjoyned to all men it is not an employment of Aegyptian Jewels to the making of a golden calfe but to the Praises of the living God who is the Saviour of all men especially of all them that beleeve Nor is there any resemblance between putting the Arke upon a Cart to be carried by Oxen which should have been carried by Levites and the permitting of men out of the Church to joyne in singing the Praises of the Lord For neither doe the members of the Church to whom the Lord hath chiefly committed the singing forth of his praises lay aside this dutie and leave it to Non-Members as the Levites laid aside the carrying of the Arke and left in the Cart and Oxen neither are Non-Members as a Cart and Oxen upon whom this dutie was never laid But are all of them enjoyned as to heare his Word and to call upon his Name so to sing forth the praises due unto his Name from all his creatures There is much more just cause of feare lest this new opinion of Rejecting of singing of Davids Psalmes and disallowing any Psalmes to be sung but such as are invented by ordinary common gifts and the same to be sung onely by them that invent them least this new Opinion I say be worse then the new Cart of the Philistims for that was to carry the Arke of God to his place but this new Opinion tendeth to carry this Ordinance of singing Psalmes out of the Countrey And there is the like cause of feare least this over-prizing our personall spirituall common gifts and the Psalmes endited by them above the Psalmes of David be not indeed the erecting of a golden calfe in stead of the Cherubims of the Tabernacle Object 5. If Pagans and prophane persons may sing they may prophecy also in Christs spirituall Temple Answ. It hath been shewed above that Prophecy is taken two wayes in Scripture 1. More properly for preaching the Word that is expounding and applying Scripture to edification 2. More generally for speaking or publishing the holy things of God to the glory of God In the former of these wayes it is not for Pagans or prophane persons ordinarily and allowably to Prophecy in Christs spirituall Temple which is his Church But in the latter way it is not unlawfull as to say Amen to the publique prayers of the Church and thereby to expresse their joyning in prayer which is one act of Prophecy so to joyne with them in singing Psalmes which it hath been shewed above is a dutie common to them with the Church as well to joyne with them in hearing the Word Wherein whether they edifie the Church or no certain it is it tendeth to the glory of God that Gods praises should be set forth by all the sonnes of men And it is a further glory to God that such Pagans and prophane persons should sing the word of God to their own conviction and confusion of face And from both some edification and comfort redoundeth to the Church to see the wicked convinced and Gods Name to be glorified For it is an honour to God and a comfort to his Church that our God is not as their God our enemies being judges and witnesses Object 6. The godly Jewes would not suffer the Samaritans to build the Temple with them though they offered themselves Ezra 4.2 3. And if singing be Prophecying in any sence and any way tending to the comfort or edification of the Church why should we suffer prophane persons to sing with us Answ. That the godly Jewes did reject the Samaritans from building with them it was not out of morall consideration as if it were unlawfull for Heathens to contribute their assistance to the worship or Ordinances of God but out of a ceremoniall respect because no Heathens or unclean persons might be allowed to come into the Temple of the Lord Act. 21.28 2 Chron. 23.19 But by the death of Christ the Partition wall of Ceremonies is broken downe and wee may allow Heathens and prophane persons to come into our holy Assemblies 1 Cor. 14.24 which they would not admit Certain it is the godly Jewes themselves did receive liberall contributions and oblations from the Kings of Persia towards the building and maintenance of the Temple Ezra 7.21 to 24. and Chap. 8.24 to 30. which was a morall acknowledgement of the honor due to the God of Israel as wel by Gentiles as Jewes If therefore the Jewes would accept acknowledgment of morall homage and service from Heathens and prophane persons to the God of Israel why may not Christians accept from Pagans and prophane persons their acknowledgement of morall homage and service to our God in singing forth his praises amongst us Object 7. Such carnall and prophane people are not worthy to take the Name and Praises of God in their mouthes nor are they able to make melody to the Lord by singing to him with grace in their hearts as is required Col. 3.16 Answ. 1. If we speake of the worthinesse of desert John Baptist was not worthy to loose the latchet of Christs shooe much lesse to sing forth his glorious praise But if we speake of the worthinesse of fitnesse though it bee true their uncleane lips are not fit to take the holy word of God into their mouthes yet the holy word of God is fit to come into their minds and mouths also to convince and reprove them of their Apostasie from God and rebellion against him Deut. 31.19 And howsoever they be unfit and unworthy to take Gods Name and Praise into their mouths yet surely the Lord is worthy of all Praise and Glory Blessing and Thankesgiving from them and all the Creatures which he hath made Answ. 2. It is true carnall and prophane persons are not able to make melody and sing to the Lord with grace in their hearts yet that defect doth no more excuse carnall persons from singing then it doth excuse them from Prayer which they cannot performe acceptably to God without a Spirit of grace and faith To Pray and so to Sing without Faith is a sinne but not pray at all is a greater sinne the one is Hypocrisie the other Atheisme Object 8. Though the Scribes and Pharisees joyned in the Temple-Songs upon the words of David in the worldly Sanctuary yet the melody made by such carnall and cleane mouths was farre more beautifull and glorious then ours in the Assemblies made with a multitude of all manner of Singers upon the same words of David and Asaph For although they that sang in the Temple in those dayes were carnall yet they were appointed to sing
decent melody But otherwise for their prohibiting of singing of Psalmes composed by private men and the reading of any books in the Church but the writings of the Prophets and Apostles as they doe in Canon 59. that so they might establish the reading of Scripture-bookes and the singing of Scripture-Psalmes It is so farre from superstition that it tendeth rather to preferre divine Institutions above humane Inventions When they interdicted the Psalmes composed by private Christians whom they called Idiots or as we call them in our language simple fooles You are not ignorant that an Idoll in their language signifieth no more but a private man and in the same sence the Apostle himselfe useth it 1 Cor. 14.16 though the Translators turne it unlearned Neither doe Formes of Gods Praise stop the breathing of the lively Gifts of Gods Spirit when the Formes are no other but such as were indited by the immediate Inspiration of the Holy Ghost For when the Psalmes of David and of other holy men of God were commended to the Church of Israel and by them were ordinarily sung in the Temple and elsewhere would you say it did hinder the free passage of the breathing of the lively gifts of Gods Spirit either in the Ministery of the Priests or in the writings and Sermons of the Prophets Surely Elisha found it otherwise 2 Kings 3.15 and the whole Church of Judah As for 666 which you call the fatall figure of Antichrist judge you in your own soule before the Lord whether it doe more savour of an Antichristian spirit for the whole Church to sing the Psalmes of David with one accord or to sing Te Deum or some other Anthem devised by a private spirit one man alone Sure it is as we said before Antichristian Churches doe utterly reject the singing of Davids Psalmes in the Meeter of each Nation in their Mother Tongue yea and do reproach such Psalmes as Genevah jiggs so farre are they off from closing with singing of them as an Invention of their own Object 5. Let no man thinke that the singing of Davids Psalmes is an Ordinance of God because many Christians have found their affections stirred as Augustine also did in the singing of them This doth not justifie this practise no more then it doth Preaching by a false calling because some have found conversion by it no more then it doth the receiving the seale of the Supper in a false Church and that with the Idolatrous gesture of kneeling because some have found quickning and strengthening Grace therein For Gods goodnesse many times goeth beyond his Truth Answ. We cannot say That Gods goodnesse goeth beyond his Truth though sometime he shew a man mercy out of his way For we have the truth of Gods word to testifie that so sometime he doth as Saul found converting grace in going to Damascus to persecute the Saints But this we say that when God doth thus he either convinceth a man of the error of his way before he shew him favour in it as he did Saul or else the way it selfe or Dutie is of God though there be some falling in the circumstance of it Many of Israel that came to the Passeover in Hezekiahs time in their uncleannesse yet they found mercy with the Lord But it was because the Ordinance and Duty was of God the failing was onely in the manner of Preparation to it 2 Chron. 30.18 19 20. But if Micah set up an invention of his own in his house though he may promise himselfe a blessing in some orderly circumstance of it as he did Judg. 17.13 yet let him be sure he shall finde a curse in stead of a blessing according as God hath exprest it Deut. 7.26 It is granted and bewailed that there hath been found some sinfull failings in sundry circumstances of some Ministers callings And yet because the substance of the calling was of God many have found saving blessings in attending on their Ministery And the Lords Supper administred by them being of God though the gesture in which it was received was corrupt the Lord was pleased to accept and blesse what was his owne and to passe by sinnes of ignorance in his people But can it ever be proved that when any practise of Gods worship hath been but an humane and Antichristian invention that it hath been neverthelesse blessed with the communication of spirituall affections and that not seldome and rarely but frequently and usually not to one or two Saints but generally not to the weakest but to the strongest Christians We are verily perswaded no such instance can be given since the world began God is not wont to honour and blesse the wayes of superstition with the reward of sincere devotion But surely God hath delighted to blesse the singing of his holy Psalmes with gracious and spirituall affections not onely in Augustines time in Justine Martyrs before him but from age to age to his Saints usually generally and abundantly so that doubtlesse the servants of God defraud their soules of much spirituall good and comfort who defraud themselves of the Fellowship of this Ordinance But ●ere is the misery of the present age that those Ordinances that men have practised either without the knowledge of the true grounds thereof or without the life and sence of the comfort of them or without the sincere love of them they have therefore afterwards in the houre and power of Temptation cast them aside and so forsaken the holy Institutions of God to embrace please themselves in their own imaginations How much more safe were it for humble and sincere Christians to walke in Gods holy feare and in sence of their own ignorance infirmities and temptations to suspect their own private apprehensions and humbly to beg a Spirit of Light and Truth to lead them into all Truth and meekly to cons●lt with Brethren without setting up any Idoll or forestalled Imag●nation in their hearts before they resolve to runne a by-way to the griefe and scandall of their Brethren It is a Palsey distemper in a member to be carried with a different motion from the rest of the body The Lord heale our swervings and stablish us with a Spirit of Truth and Grace in Christ Jesus FINIS