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A47407 The breach repaired in God's worship, or, Singing of psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, proved to be an holy ordinance of Jesus Christ with an answer to all objections : as also, an examination of Mr. Isaac Marlow's two papers, one called, A discourse against singing, &c., the other, An appendix : wherein his arguments and cavils are detected and refuted / by Benjamin Keach ... Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704. 1641 (1641) Wing K50; ESTC R21273 133,739 273

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should and ought to sing And as we are not tied up by the Lord in Preaching to do no more than barely read the Scripture or quote one Scripture after another which would be rather Reading than Preaching but may use other Words to edify the Church provided they agree with or are congruous to the Word of Christ or the Sacred Scripture and yet we call that the Word of God which is preached and so indeed it is so when that which we sing is taken out of God's Word or is Scripture absolutely congruous truly and exactly agreeing thereunto it may as truly be called the Word of Christ as our Sermons are and may be so called Obj. But you add words to your Hymns that are not in the Text you refer to So we do in Preaching but if those words agree with the Text 't is still the same Word and may be opened thereby the better to the understandings of the People Besides let it be considered that we have not the Holy Scriptures in those words in which they were written by the Pen-Men of the Scripture for they wrote the Old Testament in Hebrew words and the New-Testament in Greek words Also the Translators differ much in words in giving the true sense of the Original so that this Objection is a mere contentious Cav●● Moreover there are in our Bibles all Learned Men know a multitude of Suppliments or words added to make good the sense the Originals being too short to express it in our Language Now you may as well nay if not with more colour of reason say part of the Scripture is Human and not Divine as to call our Sacred Hymns so And so you may by the same Argument call our Sermons likewise 'T is evident as Mr. Barton observes in his Epistle to his Book of Hymns That Justin Martyr Tertullian and many others have signified the Primitive Church used not only David's Psalms but other Portions of Scripture to put in Songs for edification Hymns may as he saith be plainer than Psalms and more suitable to Gospel-occasions such in which Christians may truly say they do teach and admonish one another in such saith he as inculcate our Duties and reprove our Vices out of most piercing Passages of Holy-Scripture and such as may answer or suit with all Sermons and accommodate all Occurrences and are no Innovations but reduction to primitive Use and Order Remarkable is that passage in Eusebius concerning the Christians practice in singing of Hymns to Christ as to God Plinius Secundus to clear the Christians to Trajan adds this viz. Only that they held early Assemblies in Singing of Hymns to Christ as unto God Euseb lib. 3. cap. 33. Doubtless they were compiled by some among them out of the New-Testament as the Spirit of God might enable them in the same manner as they did and we do compile our Sermons and I see no other objection lies here against our Hymns than lies or may be made against our Doctrine Thus as to the general Direction the Holy Ghost has given about what we should sing viz. the Word of Christ But then Secondly we have particular Directions as to the Matter we ought to sing expressed in the Texts viz. Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs I know some do conclude that all these three allude to the Book of Psalms because these three are the Titles they say of Davids Psalms Though that were granted that some of David's Psalms are called Hymns and Songs yet I see no reason that all other spiritual Hymns and Songs should be excluded 1. Because we often find in the New-Testament the Psalms of David or Book of Psalms mentioned as comprehending all those Hymns and Songs contained therein without calling them the Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs of David see Luk. 20. 42. 24. 44. Act. 1. 20. Moreover this seems to exclude other Scripture-Songs that they themselves own may be sung as Moses's Deborah's Isaiah's Habakk●k's Simeon's Zachariah's Mary's c. However by Psalms we are assured is intended the Book of Psalms or those called the Psalmes of David because we read not in all the Scripture of any called Psalms but them only so that the Form of these are contained in God's Word I hope these will not be called Human● The Holy Ghost hath enjoined the Singing of Psalms particularly and many of the Psalms of David are 't is evident pure Gospel i. e. Prophecies and Promises that relate or refer wholly unto Gospel-times and divers excellent Psalms there are that be filled full of the High Praises of God for Christ and the Blessings and Priviledges Christians receive by him tho I do not judg all the Psalms of David are so sutable to our days nor can be so properly sung as some others to the Edification of the Church But I do not find any Man giving any convincing Argument that no Hymns that are made out of God's Word or putting other Scripture-Songs as the Canticles c. into Verse or proper Measure to be sung are excluded in those words Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs I am of the same Mind with those Learned Men that Mr. Wilson in his Dictionary and others speak of that Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs comprehend all kinds of Spiritual Songs whereby the Faithful sing to the Glory of God and the Edification of the Church provided they are taken out of the Word of Christ Moreover I have met with a Piece written by a very Learned Man who after he hath given the Sense of some Men about the Titles of the Psalms and various Acceptation of the words Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs speaks thus Yet I must tell you by the way that these words in the Hebrew do not make such a precise difference For Tehillim is the general Title of all the Psalms Mismor the particular Title of most Psalms as well as of the Psalms of Degrees Nor do the Greek Words make such a distinguishing difference for a Psalm is of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sing and a Hymn of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sing Praise And 〈◊〉 Odo called a spiritual Ode or Song by 〈◊〉 Translators is of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that it seems to me saith he that the Apostle useth many words to signify that all 〈◊〉 Singing should be of Divine Things and not vain things to glorify God and not to please our foolish Fancies But whether we distinguish the one way or the other 〈◊〉 see saith he the Apostles press the Duty of spiritual Singing whether of this kind or that viz. whether Psalms of David 〈◊〉 other spiritual Hymns whether called of Men of this Name or that Name in which Injunctions the Apostles are so clear that very few since the coming of Christ that I know of have made scruple of the thing and if any have of late they never mention these places as if either they did not remember them or could not answer them And to close this
Chapter take what worthy Mr. Wells minds in his late Sermon about su●● who neglect this Ordinance either about endless Scruples or Objections concerning the matter or manner of Singing Let us says he not disturb our selves with these groundless Objections but let us pursue and imbrace this holy Duty which is the very Subu●●s of Heaven And observe what a Reverend Person notes upon this occasion I observe saith he they never thrive well who neglect or scruple singing of Psalms they commonly begin at this Omission but they do not end there but at last come to be above all Ordinances and so indeed without them whose Condition is not sufficiently to be deplored Suppl to Morning Exercis p. 189. To which let me add my Thoughts without offence I am perswaded for several reasons since this is so clear an Ordinance in God's Word that the Baptized Churches who lie short of the Practice of singing Psalms c. will never thrive to such a degree as our Souls long to see them to the Honour of the Holy God and Credit of our sacred Profession and Joy and Comfort of those who are truly spiritual among us for tho many things as the Causes of our sad witherings have been inquired into yet I fear this and the neglect of the Ministry are the two chief which are both holy Ordinances of Jesus Christ and yet our People that is some of them do not love to hear of either of them CHAP. XIV Shewing who ought to sing Psalm● Hymns and spiritual Songs whether it ought to be done in the publick Congregation and in a mixt Assembly or no. 'T IS strange that any should doubt whether it be the Duty of the Church to sing as well as private Families or Persons since our blessed Saviour with his eleven Disciples upon the closing of the holy Supper sung together an Hymn in that solemn Assembly if we may not ought not to follow them in the Practice of Singing an Hymn from thence what ground is there to break Bread in our publick Assemblies from that Example This is the Institution of that Ordinance and as he took Bread and blessed it and took the Cup after the same manner c. so 't is said when they had done they sung an Hymn and went out c. 'T is observable 't is not said Do this in your publick Assemblies and therefore some may say we will break Bread or celebrate that Ordinance in our own private Families in an upper Chamber as Christ and his Disciplies did and sing an Hymn when we have done and so exclude publick Assemblies for that part of God's Worship But to proceed we read as I have again and again shewed you that the Apostle injoins Singing on the Churches Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. Object But he doth not bid the whole Church to sing c. Answ The Apostle injoins the Lord's-Supper on the Church of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11. 23 24. But some may say he doth not bid every one of them to break Bread how doth it follow every Member ought so to do there would be no end of such Objections But by this Rule any Precept injoined on the Churches may be restrained to a few Persons only and so it would open a Door to Men to excuse themselves from being concerned in other parts of Gospel-Duties and Worship therefore where a Duty is injoyned by the holy Spirit on the Churches without the least hint or intimation that it concerns only some of them nay and an Ordinance in which there is the same parity of Reason why one should be found in it as well as another that Duty concerns the whole Church or every Member but it is so in the case of singing of Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs pray what ground has one Man to sing from hence more than another Are not all equally concerned to praise God nay and having received equal Mercies Blessings and Priviledges to sing his Praises since 't is required of all without the least exemption of any one Object But what ground is there to sing thus in the Church before or after Sermon Answ 1. As much surely as there is to pray before or after Sermon nay 't is evident if we do not take our Rule to pray before and after Sermon from those general Precepts that injoyn Prayer then I do declare I know no Rule at all for it in all the New Testament for we have neither Precept nor Example in the case but where we read of Duties that concern only some Persons and not the whole Church the Holy Ghost mentions the Persons 1. Either by their Relations they stand in one to another Or 2. Else by their Condition in the World Or 3. By their Office or Place they stand in As there are particular Duties that concern Parents Children Masters Servants Ministers Members Also Kings Subjects rich Men poor Men Men in Adversity or Men in Prosperity all sorts and conditions of Men. But here this Duty comes under no such particular Consideration but as 't is the Duty of all to hear God's Word and to pray with united Hearts so to sing together with united Voices there being no other manner or way prescribed as I have shewed for the discharge of that Duty or Ordinance of God But I would fain be resolved by my Brethren or any other what Ordinance of God or Duty it is that appertains to his Worship which ought to be performed in private that may not be performed in publick Take what famous Mr. Cotton of New-England speaks as to the Answer of this Objection 't is thus stated by him viz. Object Scarce any Example can be given of any intire Congregation that sung together mentioned in the Scripture Answ Tho no Example could be given for it yet it is a sufficient Warrant for the Duty if there be a Precept and saith he the Precept is plain Col. 3. 16. where the whole Church of Coloss is exhorted to have the Word of Christ dwell in them richly and to admonish one another in Psalms c. to sing with Grace or holy Melody to the Lord. If God saith he had reserved this Duty to some select Choristers he would have given some Directions in the New Testament for their Qualification and Election but since he speaketh nothing of any such c. he commandeth this Duty to the whole Church 2dly The Practice of God's Israel of old i. e. Moses and the Children of Israel is a further Solution to this Objection for there is an Example of singing together and besides that there was a mixt Multitude with them too is evident who no doubt sung with them having received the like Mercies they did See Exod. 12. 38. In the Manuscript I have by me before cited which seems to be wrote by a Man of Parts and good Ability who speaking to this Objection says much to the same purpose First That we have a Precept which is more than a Precedent
all she must not in the Church give an account of her Conversion or declare how the Lord was pleased to work upon her Heart for I have shewed in that Act there is much instruction nay 't is so full of teaching to others that what some pious Women have spoke in the Church upon this account God hath blessed to the Conversion of Sinners as well as it has refreshed and sweetly comforted divers Believers and therefore herein you abuse the sense of the Holy Ghost and indeed are not I fear fit to be a Teacher of others but to learn in silence your self 2. The way therefore to understand this as well as other Scriptures is to have recourse to the main drift or purport of the Spirit of God therein And evident it is the main thing the Apostle drives at in both these places or doth intend is this viz. That Women ought not to be allowed to take part in the ordinary Ministration of preaching the Gospel or ministerially or authoritatively to preach the Word because he that has received a just Call so to do may and ought to exhort and command in the Name of our Lord Jesus with all Authority Tit. 2. 15. and this Work therefore Women should not take upon them because they must be in Subjection and not usurp Authority over the Man To take the bare letter of the Text without shewing the scope and drift of the Spirit of God in it would make sad work as I might shew from many Scriptures and has occasioned many abominable Errors nay Heresies to abound in the World 3. As to that teaching which is in Singing it doth not lie in a Ministerial way and therefore not intended by the Spirit of God here Preaching or Teaching is not Singing nor Singing Preaching or Teaching though there is a Teaching in it You must learn better to distinguish between different Duties and Ordinances before you take upon you to teach others Read what I have before said and also what Mr. Cotton Sidenham c. have said as you will find it repeated in this Treatise in respect of the Nature of Teaching and Admonition that is in the Ordinance of Singing and you may further see how you miss and abuse these Scriptures for he or she that reads the Scripture may be said in some sense to teach there is much teaching in it yet sure a Woman may be suffered to do this as a case may present it self both in the Church or at home either in her Husbands presence and not be deemed to usurp Authority over him for the Usurpation the Apostle speaks of respects a Womans own Husband if not chiefly as well as others and therefore if she must not sing in the Church so by your Argument she must not sing nor read the Scripture at home in the presence of her Husband because there is a kind of teaching in both those Duties and if she should as you intimate she would not only break Silence but usurp Authority over the Man i. e. her Head and Husband which is forbid The Lord deliver poor Women and Men too from such kind of Doctrine as this 4. 'T is evident the Apostle lays no other restraint upon Women than what the Law laid them under they are to be silent or 't is not saith he permitted unto them to speak but they are commanded to be under Obedience as also saith the Law 1 Cor. 14. 34. And 't is as clear they were always under the Law suffered to sing in the Congregation as well as the Men therefore it was not such a Speaking or Teaching as is in Singing that Paul intends in those Scriptures 5. Whereas you affirm that Women were not admitted to pray nor prophesy in the Church neither in the Old nor New Testament is doubless false as our late Annotators well observed on 1 Cor. 14. 34. which is the very Text you mention take their words This Rule must not say they be restrained to ordinary prophesying for certainly if the Spirit of Prophesy came upon a Woman in the Church she might speak Anna who was a Prophetess in the Temple gave Thanks to the Lord and spake of him to all them that looked for the Redemption of Israel and I cannot tell how Philip's Daughters prophesied if they did not speak in the presence of many The reason given why Women should be silent is because they are commanded to be in Obedience A Woman say they might say Amen to the publick Prayers and also sing with the Congregation to the Honour and Glory of God but for her to speak in an ordinary course of Prophesy to instruct People c. she is forbidden The Apostle saith a Friend in a Manuscript doth not prohibit all manner of speaking for that is directly contrary to 1 Cor. 11. 5 6. where Women are admitted to pray and prophesy for Prayer they may say Amen to the publick Prayers of the Church and for Prophesy they may sing Psalms the Apostle using the Expression according to the Ideum of the Jews 1 Sam. 19. 20 21. 1 Sam. 10. 5. they shall prophesy and for they shall prophesy the ●ald Paraphras reads they shall sing● and thou shalt praise with them Vid. Wilson's Dict. Dr. Hammond's Annotat. on 1 Cor. 11. 5. and so it 's used 1 Chron. 25. 1 2 3. The Prohibition saith he is not restrained only to Church-Assemblies but holds good in all places and at all times and intends a Subjection of Women to their Husbands as plainly appears by comparing 1 Cor. 14. 35. with 1 Tim. 2. 12 13. with the occasion and scope of the Text and is of no greater Restraint now than lay on them under the Law 1 Cor. 14. 34. where they were permitted to sing Object But say you If we should say such a vocal Singing together is for a Teaching then where are the Hearers if all be Teachers c. Appendix p. 35. Answ We have shewed you Singing is a distinct thing from that which is called Teaching or Preaching tho in Singing there is a Teaching but chiefly we speak to our own selves as the Apostle exhorts in Psalms c. and the matter of the Psalm or Hymn is full of Teaching and Admonition yet 't is the Matter ●ung which teaches rather than the Singers may ●e said to do it nor is it any Contradiction to say when I teach others yet I am thereby taught and admonished my self So that if it were admitted to be a common or ordinary Teaching which must not be allowed and all might be said to teach c. yet nevertheless all are Hearers also and are in a sweet manner taught admonished and instructed in singing the Word of Christ in Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs as elsewhere I have shewed Nor is it any Contradiction to say according to the sense of the Apostle Women must keep silence in the Church and yet suffer them to sing c. no more than 〈◊〉 contradicts their Silence when they
THE Breach Repaired in God's Worship OR Singing of PSALMS HYMNS and Spiritual Songs proved to be an Holy Ordinance of JESUS CHRIST With an Answer to all Objections AS ALSO An Examination of Mr. ISAAC MARLOW'S two Papers one called A Discourse against Singing c. the other An Appendix Wherein his Arguments and Cavils are detected and refuted BY BENJAMIN KEACH Preacher of God's Word and Pastor of the Church of Christ meeting on Horselydown Southwark Job 6. 25. How forcible are right words but what doth your arguing reprove Isa 52. 8. Thy Watchmen shall lift up the Voice with the Voice together shall they sing London Printed for the Author and sold by John Hancock in Castle-Alley on the West side of the Royal-Exchange and by the Author at his House near Horselydown in Southwark 16●● THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO ALL THE Baptized Congregations In England and Wales Who are in God the Father and in our Lord Jesus Christ Grace Mercy and Peace be multiplied Particularly to the Church of Christ meeting on Horslydown Holy and Beloved IT cannot but rejoice my Soul when I consider of the exceeding Grace and abounding Goodness of the Holy God towards you his poor and despised Churc● and People in respect of that clear Discovery he hath given you of most of the glorious Truths of the Gospel and of the true Apostolical Faith and Practice thereof You have not made Men General Councils nor Synods your Rule but God's Holy W●●d your Constitution Faith and Discipline is directly according to the Primitive Pattern God hath made you in a most eminent manner to be the Builders of the old Wastes and Raisers up of the former Desolations and Repairers of the waste Cities the Desolations of many Generations Isa 61. 4. You have laboured to sever the Gold from the Dross and to build with proper and fit Gospel-Meterials viz. Spiritual and L●●●ing Stones well hewed and squared by the Hammer of God's Word and Spirit and will not take one Stone of Babylon for a Corner you will go forth as far as you have received Light by the Footsteps of the Flock and feed your Kids beside the Shepherds Tents Cant. 1. 8. And God of a small People hath graciously made you a Multitude you have been helped and so born up by everlasting Arms that you have held fast your Holy Profession in the Day of Trial and exposed all that you have had in the World to spoil and loss for the sake of Jesus Christ when many turned their Backs and exposed the Holy Name of God to Reproach and to our further Joy many of you have of late more especially in your General Assemblies shewed your great Zeal for the Name of God and Care of his Church in a more than usual manner and particularly you have endeavoured to revive our hopes for the continuation of a faithful and laborious Ministry for the time to come by striving to promote such Learning and Studies as God's Word directs to and not require like Israel's Task-Masters poor Ministers as I may so say to make Brick and allow them no Straw but you do now more fully see that Gospel-Ministers ought to have a Gospel-Maintenance even such as God hath ordained that so they might not be intangled with the Affairs of th●● Life but wholly give themselves up to that great Work they are called to Go on and prosper Holy and Beloved Let not your Hands be weak nor Satan obstruct or hinder so hopeful a Beginning let it appear you do love Jesus Christ more than Father or Mother more than Son or Daughter and labour to reform what is amiss as to those great Evils that abound too much in the Churches of the Saints tho I hope not so much amongst you as among some others particularly in respect of Pride and Covetousness or that base Worldly and Earthly Spirit that is the Bane of Religion and makes the Lor'd People of so ill a savour in the World let your Lives declare whose you are and to what Countrey you belong and as you have a good Doctrine so labour for a suitable Conversation and then Brethren what can or will be wanting to make you compleat in the whole Will of 〈◊〉 Truly according to my small Light I know not unless it be a restoration of this lost and neglected Ordinance of Singing Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs which I fear and partly understand some of you want light in I have therefore made bold to dedicate this small Treatise to you all hoping you will take it from me in good part and well weigh what is here said before you judg and condemn it for an Errour I am afraid of some old Prejudice some of you have taken against this Sacred Truth of the Gospel for so I must call it you can't think you have as yet come to a full attainment or are already perfect in Knowledg Besides I hear you generally own Singing of Psalms c. an Ordinance of God and indeed I cannot see how any who own the Bible and New Tastament of Christ to be their Rule can deny it Why then consider whether you have this Ordinance at all or can be said to sing in any proper Sense Certainly many of you are wholly without it as will I hope appear fully if you read this Treatise quite through impartially Can ●t be thought the Churches should be enjoined by the Holy Ghost to sing Psalms and Hymns and yet there 's no coming at the practise of it● without an extraordinary Spirit or miraculous Gifts I have been provoked by our Brother who wrote against Singing to set Pen to Paper and not only by him and his Book but I have been induced by Multitudes for several Months to give him an Answer so that I hope you will not be offended with me in what I have done I have much Peace in the doing of it and truly Brethren the loss of this Ordinance doth I am afraid more obstruct the increase of our Churches than many are aware of What a Multitude are convinced of Christ's true Baptism and yet refuse to have Communion with our Churches when baptized because they say if they ●hould they must lose this Ordinance of ●inging which they have an equal Esteem ●or And how doth it open the Mouths of ●ur Godly Brethren of other Perswasions ●o speak against us for being so zealous for ●ne Gospel-Ordinance and so careless about ●nother that very few Christians who have ●ad the greatest Light Zeal and Piety in ●ny Age of the Church ever doubted of 〈◊〉 grieves me to think there should be a ●reach made in God's Worship among you ●o whom God hath given so much Light in other Cases And O that what is here said might through the Blessing of God prove a Means to repair it In a Word Singing is injoyned Some ●hing it is If we have it not but 't is with ●ou we would willingly know what your Singing is or what you call Singing
For we do say and testify we believe you are wholly without Singing in any proper Sense at all The Lord give us Moderation don't let us be bitter one against another I shall beg a part in your Prayers and intreat you to look over what Weakness you may see in this small Tract for I am you know but a Babe in Christ's School and know but in part And now to you my Beloved Brethren and Sisters who meet on Horselydown whom I hope I may say are my Joy and my Crown whose Souls are most dear to me and whom I can say I truly love and long after it rejoices my Spirit to see how generally you are inlightned into this Gospel-Duty but 't is no small grief to me to see since the Church in such a solemn manner agreed to sing the Praises of God on the Lord's Day to find some of you so much offended I am perswaded 't is for want of Consideration for you have no new thing brought in among you Hath not the Church sung at breaking of Bread always for 16 or 18 Years last past and could not nor would omit it in the time of the late Persecution And have not many of the honest Hearers who have stayed to see that Holy Administration sung with you at that time and yet none of you ever signified the least trouble And have we not for this 12 or 14 Years sung in mixt Assemblies on Days of Thanksgiving and never any offended at it as ever I heard What is done more now 't is only practised oftner and sure if it be God's Ordinance the often practising of it by such who find their Hearts draw out so to do cannot be sinful And on that Solemn Day when the Church would have it put up to see 〈◊〉 the Members stood affected about Singing almost every ones Hand was up for it or to give Liberty to the Church at such times to sing And when put up in the Negative but about 5 or 6 at most as I remember were against it Did any one of you at that time say if we did proceed to sing at such times you could not have Communion with us which if you had I perceive the Church nay every one of us who had born our Burden for many Years would have born it a little longer Besides did not the Church agree to sing only after Sermon and when Prayer was ended And if those few Brethren and Sisters who were not satisfied could not stay whilst we sung they might freely go forth and we would not be offended with them so far was the Church or my self from imposing on the Consciences of any But is it not hard that some of us should so long be laid under a Burden when the Church generally was against Singing at that time and you cannot bear it now it is come to be your Lot I am afraid the noise of these things are misrepresented abroad and therefore I thought it might not be amiss to rectify Mistakes in you or any other Brethren The matter of Difference that is at present between the Church and some few of our dear and beloved Brethren and Sisters is not about Singing it self nor singing with others for that has been all along the practise of the Church for many Years as before I hinted but only about singing on the Lords Day unless it be one Member except the Judgments of any other are lately changed But my Brethren will I hope seriously consider of the Matter and labour after that Christian Love Tenderness and Forbearance the Gospel calls for We are exhorted to bear one anothers Burdens and so to fulfil the Law of Christ For the Lord's sake let us not fall out by the way and lay things grievous on one anothers Spirits for we are not Lords over one anothers Faith but Helpers of each others Joy O my Brethren pray let us all watch against Satan and strive to keep the Vnity of the Spirit in the Bond of Peace I must confess divers of you did much desire me to answer Mr. Marlow's Book before this time but I hope you will excuse my neglect for some of you know the occasion of it ●tis done now and in the fear of God recommended to your perusal And O that the Lord would be pleased to bless it to your Satisfaction then shall I have cause to praise the Lord that I undertook the Work I can ●●y you lie near my Heart and I would do any thing I am capable of to promote Truth and Peace amongst our selves and in all the Churches of Christ If any of you should say How can we be satisfied to have Communion with the Church when we believe 't is an Innovation that 's a hard word Ar● you Infallible Is there not ground for you to fear you are mistaken or to think in the least 't is a doubtful case since so much is to be said for it and has been so generally received from the beginning by most enlightned Saints and you your selves with the Church for so long a time been in the Practice of ●t at other times Besides can you find any ground from God's Word that will warrant you to separate your selves from the Church upon this account and also may not the same or like Scruple rise in our Spirits against having Communion with you who we be●ieve lie short of a plain Gospel-Ordinance ●nd so through want of light diminish from God's Word as you say we add thereto by doing of it But far be it from us to have a thought to act that way towards any of you Moreover will not such a practice of a Separation from the Church upon this account justify other Godly Christians who are Members of such Churches who do not sing that are convinced as well as we it is their Duty to separate from those Congregations to joyn with such Churches as are in this practice Doubtless that Door that will let you out of this Church will let others out of those Churches I mentioned before and there are not a few such in this City There is one thing I think good to note here to prevent any mistake that tho I call Preaching a moral Duty yet to preach the Gospel only appertains to such whom God particularly hath gifted for that Work and who have a lawful call to it I shall conclude with the words of the Holy Apostle Finally Brethren farewel be Perfect be of good Comfort be of one Mind live in Love and Peace and the God of Love and Peace shall be with you 2 Cor. 13. 11. Which is the Prayer of him Who is Your unworthy Brother fellow Servant and poor Labourer in God's Harvest B. Keach From my House near Horselydown Southwark April 3d 1691. The Contents of the chief Things contained in the insuing Treatise WHat it is to sing Page 5. That there can be no proper Singing without the Voice pag. 6. 'T is not simple Heart-joy or inward rejoicing without
〈◊〉 Voice p. 7. A Metaphorical Singing mentioned in Scripture p. 7. No mental Singing as there is no mental praying p. 12. The Essence of Singing no more in the Heart or Spirit 〈◊〉 the Essence of Preaching c. p. 14. Singing is a musical melodious Modulation or timing of 〈◊〉 Voice p. 15. 'T is not praising of God in Prayer p. 16. Wherein Singing and other praisings of God differ p. 16 17. Several distinct Noises of the Tongue or bodily Organ 19 20. They that 〈◊〉 not with the Voice sing not at all p. 21. Singing th● Praises of God proved our Duty from the Anti●●● of that Practice of the Angels singing at God's bringing 〈◊〉 the first visible Creation The Angels sung also at the ●●nging in the second Creation or Work of Redemption 22 23 24. Singing an Act of the Voice and also an Act of God's ●●rship p. 24. The Devil a great Enemy to the singing of God's Praise 〈◊〉 sing to Christ p. 25 26. An Argument to prove Singing part of God's Worship p. 27. Singing a Moral Duty proved by four Demonstrations ● 30 to p. 40. An Argument to prove it our Duty to sing Praise to God ●●ken from its being a part of Natural Religion p. 41. Singing our Duty from the Practice of God's People be●re the Law under the Law and under the Gospel p. 41 〈◊〉 p. 45. Singing of Psalms c. our Duty proved from Scripture-Precepts p. 45 to p. ●2 Singing under the Law with Instruments of Musick typical p. 53. Singing the Praises of God proved to be our Duty because instituted under the Gospel and injoyned on the Churches p. 54 to p. 56. An Argument from thence p. 59. Obj. We cannot tell how to come at Singing answered p. 85. Singing God's Praises c. confirmed by a Miracle as other Gospel-Ordinances were p. 60. Obj. Singing was done by an extraordinary Gift therefore we must not sing now answered p. 62 146 147. The direful Consequents of such an Assertion p. 63. An Argument drawn from the extraordinary Gift in the Apostolical Church in bringing in a Psalm c. p. 64 65. Proving Singing of Psalms our Duty from the Practice of the Churches next after the Apostles Times p. 65 66 67. Shewing the form or manner of singing and that it ought to be with united Voices p. 70 71 72. Singing together with united Voices proved from the Practice of the Saints under the Old Testament p. 74 75. Proving Singing together in publick Worship our Duty from Scripture-Prophecies that relate to Gospel-days p. 75 76 77 78 79 80. Proving 'tis our Duty to sing God's Praises with united Voices from the great Noise singing in the Scripture is said to make p. 83. Four Sylogistical Arguments to prove singing together with united Voices the true manner of performance of this Duty p. 85 86 87 89. Shewing what Matter it is we should sing that the Matter in general must be the Word of Christ What is meant by Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs p. 90. Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. distinctly opened p. 91 92 93 94. Other Hymns may be sung besides David's Psalms p. 95 96 97 98. p. 154 160 161. Shewing who ought to sing God's Praises and that the whole Church ought so to do p. 10● Obj. What ground to sing before or after Sermon Answered pag. 102. Obj. What ground for the Church to sing with Vnbelievers Answered p. 105 106 107 108 120. Mr. Marlow's Book exami●● and answered p. 111. No Apostacy or going back to sing God's Praises p. 112. Speaking and Admonishing one another in Psalms c. what plainly opened p. 113 114. The speaking to our selves in Psalms Ephes 5. 19. and Admonishing one another in Psalms mean● one and the same thing p. 114 115. Paul speaks not to Ministers in those words but to the whole Church p. 117 118. The folly of Mr. Marlow laid open about what be speaks of the Essence of Singing p. 122. His Notion about the Essence of Singing c. tends to destroy all External Duties and Ordinances p. 123 124. It confirm Quakerism and their Silent Meetings p. 125 126. Obj. No Institution for Singing till David's Time Answered p. 127 128. Obj. Singing of David's Psalms only suited to Levitical Ceremonies and Temple Worship answered p. 129 130. Objections about the Matter of David's Psalms Answered p. 131. Mr. Marlow's Objections and Cavils against precomposed Hymns Answered p. 134 135. Like Rule for precomposed Spiritual Hymns out of God's Word as for precomposed Sermons largely proved p. 136 137. Obj. Women must not speak in the Church therefore must not sing in the Church Answered p. 139 140 141. Obj. 1 Cor. 14. 20 to 34. about an extraordinary Gift to sing Answered p. 142 143 144. What meant by Winter and time of the singing of Birds Cant. 2. opened p. 147 148. Obj. Singing in the Temple by an Extraordinary Gift Answered p. 146 147. Mr. Marlow's Reply to Isa 52. 8. about the Watch●●● singing together Answered p. 149 150. The Antitype of Solomon's Temple not the Church in the 1000 Years Reign p. 150. Mr. Marlow's Reply to Christ's singing an Hymn with ●is Disciples p. 151. His Objections from Acts 4. 24. Answered Dr. Du-Veil's sense of the Greek word Hymnos p. 151. Mr. Marlow's Reply to Paul and Silas's singing Answered p. 153. Obj. Moses's Song by Inspiration Answered p. 160. Obj. Prayer under the Law differs from Prayer under the Gospel and so singing differs also There were Shadows and Legal Rites used in them then largely Answered p. 162 163. Jewish Temple-Worship Jewish Day of Worship Jewish M●sick in Worship the Levites Maintenance all Legal Rites and Shadows yet to meet together to worship God a time of Worship a Maintenance for Gospel-Ministers and Singing all moral and perpetual Duties p. 165 166 167 168. Obj. A greater Measure of the Spirit required to sing than to pray answered p. 170 171. Obj. None must sing but such who are Merry or have an extraordinary cause so to do Answered p. 172. Obj. No Command to sing in Publick Worship again answered p. 173. As much Rule to sing before and after Sermons as to pray at those times proved p. 173. The Cause of the Decays in Churches what p. 176. Obj. Precomposed Forms Carnal Answered p. 177. As much ground to object against precomposed Sermons p. 179. Obj. David's Psalms the Original not in Metre Answered p. 180. The dangerousness of Mr. Marlow's Cavils about the Form and Manner of performing Ordinances opened p. 181 182. Singing a piece of Art Answered p. 103. Obj. The Gift for Singing not continued in the Church Answered p. 185. Mr. Marlow's unchristian Conclusion of his Book answered with Reflections thereupon p. 186 187. Singing God's Praises an Vniversal Duty done by all sorts of Men at all times in Affliction and at Martyrdom p. 189 190. The Vse and excellent Profit of singing God's Praises p. 190 191 192. The Contents of our Answer
since that time a corrupt People and false in their Church-Constitution and polluted with humane Innovation or Inventions of Men the abuse of an Ordinance is subject to raise Mens Spirits to a dislike of the thing it self But blessed be God I have for near twenty Years last past been fully convinced of the Truth of the Ordinance I now contend for and have an equal esteem for it through Grace as I have for any other Truth knowing every Word of God is pure and have found no little comfort in the practice of it publickly in the Church and in private also And that all may see upon what Authority we have received and do practise this Ordinance of singing of Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs I have wrote this Treatise and do hope with the Blessing of God it may tend to establish such who own it to be an Ordinance of Christ and convince others who either oppose it or through want of Light live in the neglect of it Singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs an Holy Ordinance of Jesus Christ CHAP. I. Wherein it is shewed what Singing is or what it is to sing or what the Word doth import IT may seem strange to some wise and learned Men that I begin here possibly they will say there is no need to speak a word about this for all the World are agreed in the Case all know what it is to sing as well as they know what it is to speak Though this be true yet I find a necessity to open this Act of the Bodily Organ as will appear by what follows for some Men it seems are so confounded in their Thoughts that they do not know what Singing is but think there may be a Singing without the Tongue taking the word Melody in the Heart to be all the Singing the Holy Ghost exhorts to in the New Testament and so would have us believe there is a mental Singing as well as mental Praying nay which is worse would wholly exclude all other Singing besides that which is very hard if they should do so by Prayer it would strangely amuse all good People viz. that we must have nothing but Heart-Prayer without a Voice Others say that one Person may be the Mouth in Singing as well as in Praying and so a multitude may be said to sing with him though there is none sings but that single Man as in Prayer A third sort there be I find who conclude Singing is wholly comprehended in the Ordinance of Prayer and from hence please themselves that they do sing when in Prayer they give Thanks to God or praise God But very remarkable it is to see how these Men are confounded by this last Assertion in respect of one Objection they bring against Singing Object What will you sing your Prayers you may as well go to Common-Prayer c. Thus I have heard one or two worthy Men speak not long since Why truly Brethren it appears you do sing your Prayers nay and that always too when you pray for I am perswaded you never pray to God for what you want but you see cause to praise him for what you have received All that ever wrote of Prayer that I have met with do jointly agree that praising of God or giving of Thanks is one part or branch of Prayer and that part it appears in your opinion you sing And if this be so pray allow us to sing some Prayers too and do not charge us with Common-Prayer unless David's Psalms be a Common-Prayer-Book And then it will appear that Common-Prayer is of Divine Institution nay and enjoyned on the Churches too in the New Testament for we know no Psalms I mean called so in God's Word but the Book of Psalms or Psalms of David Now these things being considered I shall shew you what it is to sing and so remove these Cavils and Mistakes about it I shall not in this Chapter shew you what 't is to sing with the Spirit or with Grace in the Heart that respects the right performance of ●inging but what it is to sing in our common Acceptation and in Scripture too First It may not be unnecessary to consider of those several distinct and internal Acts of the Mind and Heart of a Man Secondly Of those external Acts of the Tongue of a Man 1. To think muse or meditate is an inter●al Act of the Mind wherein the Excellency of the Soul is discovered unto a Man 's own ●elf as David saith I am fearfully and wonderfully made and that my Soul knoweth right-well Psal 139. 14. The Soul has its divers Passions as Fear Anger c. there lie the Desires Sense of Want or Fulness 't is the Seat of Joy and Sorrow But yet nevertheless there are several Acts that the Soul can't do without the bodily Organ 't is capable of praying or to joyn wi●● others in Prayer without the Tongue becaus● there are the Desires as I said before an● God hears and knows the Groans Sighs an● earnest Desires of the Soul as well as if the● were expressed by words yet ought the Tongu● to be imployed in that Service notwithstanding and not only for the sake of others who are 〈◊〉 joyn in with them in those servent breathings 〈◊〉 Man may put up to God but it may be expedient when a Man is alone verbally to express his Desires to the Lord for several reason● which I shall not mention here it being not 〈◊〉 our present business Yet nevertheless the So●● without the Tongue can't preach God's Word can't dispute for it c. nor do many othe● things neither can the Soul I say be said 〈◊〉 sing in a proper sense without the Tongu● True there is a Metaphorical Singing spok● of in the Scripture so by a Metonymie the Tre●● of the Wood and Mountains and Fields 〈◊〉 said to sing and thus in an improper Sense the Heart may be said to sing when it on● rejoices in God Many proper Acts of Me● are often in the Scripture ascribed to Veget●bles and Animal Creatures and many prop●● Acts of Men are attributed to God Fire and Hail Snow and Vapours Mountains and all Hills fruitful Trees and Cedars Beasts and all Cattel creeping things and flying Fowl are exhorted to sing and praise God Psal 148. 8 9 10. which all know they cannot truly and in a proper sense be said to do 'T is frequent as Mr. Caryl observes in Scripture to attribute Acts of Life to Lifeless Creatures and Acts of Reason to those which have no Sense the Earth is said to mourn Tsa 33. 9. the Trees of the Forest as the Hills and the Valleys are said to rejoice Isa 65. 12. 13. the Birds praise God saith he by their singing and the Stars by their shining Caryl on Job chap. 38. 7. Now in like manner if there be any such sort or kind of singing as these Men plead for viz. a mental singing i. e. a Heart-singing without the Tongue mentioned
we may do the Will of God on Earth as the Angels do it in Heaven i. e. do what is his Will and do it so viz. with all readiness Mr. Caryl tells us They are not worthy to be reckoned Sons of God who have not a readiness or present disposition in them to join with all or any of his true Sons in this Work to celebrate the Praises of God at his graciou● Appearances in his mighty Works of Mercy c. Secondly As the Angels sang at God's laying the Foundation of the first Creation so also they sang at the beginning or bringing in the second Creation as Mr. Caryl also observes even at the Birth of Christ they sang Glory to God on High and on Earth Peace good Will to Men. To teach us that as we should sing the Praises of God for the Works of Creation and so much the more for the Work of Redemption Shall they sing to see the good Will of God towards us and shall we be dumb Shall we who are thus raised to Glory and magnified by the mighty God not sing or imitate the Angels to join together with united Voices to sing and celebrate his Praises When the Disciples rejoiced and sang those Hosannahs to Jesus Christ Blessed be the King that cometh in the Name of the Lord Peace in Heaven and Glory in the Highest Luke 19. 38. the envious Pharisees saith Mr. Caryl did not like the Musick and therefore said unto him from among the Multitude Master Rebuke thy Disciples By this it appears that the Devil is a great Enemy to Singing he does not love such Hosannahs and Praises should be sung to Jesus Christ he it is that rules in the Hearts of the Children of Disobedience and 't was he no doubt that influenced and stirred up these Pharisees with Envy to have Christ's Disciples rebuked for singing and praising him in such a high and triumphant manner Take heed you that are God's People who do 〈◊〉 see it is your Duty to sing Hosannahs to Christ you do not forbid others so to do lest you are found in doing of it to degrade the Holy Jesus and take from him through the Temptation of Satan part of the chiefest Glory that is due to his glorious Name For pray observe the Answer of our Lord Jesus to those blind Pharisees Vers 10. I tell you if these should hold their Peace the Stones would immediately cry out as if he had said you labour in vain to suppress or hinder these to sing my Praises or to give Glory unto me for should they be silent the Stones would cry shame of them for neglecting their Duty and God would rather cause sensless Creatures to proclaim his Praise than to want it Object But some may say 'T is not said they s●ng Answ There is no doubt to be made but they sung all generally understand those Hosannahs were delivered in a Song Our Annotators hint that it might be the name of a Song that was used to be sung in Festivals Moreover they tell you that the Expressions seem to be taken out of Psal 118. 24 25 26. Also they were uttered as with one Voice The whole Multitude of the Disciples began to rejoice and praise God with a loud Voice Luke 19. 3● and uttered these words Hosanna blessed it he that cometh in the Name of the Lord Hosannah in the highest As God always was praised with Singing so now they seem to be raised with holy Triumph to express his Praise in the highest manner and therefore they sung But that I may close this take one or two Arguments Arg. 1. If Angels in Singing do the Will of God do that which is pleasing and acceptable to God and in so doing worship God then Singing or to sing is the Will of God well-pleasing to him and is acceptable in his sight and is a part of his Worship But Angels in Singing do the Will of God do that which is well-pleasing to him and acceptable in his sight ●and in so doing they worship him Ergo To sing is to do the Will of God 't is well-pleasing to him and acceptable in his sight and in so doing we worship him I never met with any that deny Angels to sing the Praises of Jehovah but all as one Man grant 't is part of their great Work and Business And this being so my Argument needs no Confirmation but is unanswerable Arg. 2. If Heaven and all the Host of Heaven or all that is therein and Earth and all that is in it are commanded by the Holy Ghost to sing the Praises of God then 't is the Duty of Men and Angels to sing his Praise But Heaven and all the Host of Heaven and all that is therein 〈◊〉 Earth and all that is in it are so commanded to do Ergo 'T is the Duty of Men and Angels to sing the Praises of God See Psal 148. There and in divers other places all in Heaven and Earth all are commanded to praise God in the Heights that is to sing Hallelujahs as the Hebrew word signifies Vers 1. CHAP. III. Proving Singing the Praises of God to be a Moral Duty OUR third Argument to prove Singing 〈◊〉 Ordinance of God shall be taken from the Nature of the Duty it self which generally worthy Men call a Moral Duty as well as it is brought under express Institution and so consequently a Branch of natural Worship And now because some weak Christians are offended at this Phrase viz. calling Singing a part of natural or moral Worship or Religion I shall explain what we mean when we speak thus First of all not but that 't is a spiritual Ordinance and a positively Law but we must distinguish between Precepts that are purely Moral and meerly Positive Breaking of Bread and Holy Baptism are meer positive Ordinances and they had never been known nor practised if there had not been a positive Institution to give being to them but to fear God to love God to pray to God and divers other Precepts of the same Nature had been the Duty of all Man-kind if there had been no written Law or Prescription positively to injoin them on the Creature and that by the Law or Light o● God in the Conscience of Men as Paul sheweth in Rom. 2. 14 15. For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law those having not the Law are a Law unto themselves which shew the Work of the Law written in their hearts All Mankind throughout the World know by that of God written in their Hearts they ought not to wrong their Neighbours they ought not to Steal nor commit Adultery nor Kill c. They are taught in a word the substance of the whole moral Law of God hereby if not wholly darkned and obliterated by their Sin and horrid Lusts Even so we say if there had been no written Law or positive Injunction to pray and sing the Praises of God
the outward Senses of Children under Age such as the Israelites were under the Old Testament Gal. 4. 1 2 3. yet now in the grown Age of the Heirs of the New Testament such external pompous Solemnities are ceased and no external Worship reserved but such as holdeth forth Simplicity and Gravity c. I might add and by the same Argument we may not sing because they used Instruments c. We must not pray or their praying is no Rule to us because they offered them up to God with Incense and divers such like Absurdities in other respects would follow therefore there is now no other Instrument to be used in singing but that of the Tongue well tuned with Grace from a holy and spiritual Heart But more of this hereafter 'T is enough to remove this Objection Singing is given forth a-fresh in the New Testament and no Instrument of Musick mentioned Which brings me to the sixth and main Argument to prove Singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs a Gospel-Ordinance CHAP. VI. Wherein it is proved that singing of Psalms and Hymns c. is a Gospel-Ordinance because instituted and required of the Churches by the Holy Ghost WE shall now shew you it is one of Christ's Institutions or that which the Holy Ghost doth positively require or injoyn the Churches of God in the New Testament to be found in the Practice of To make this fully to appear I shall direct you to Ephes 5. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psalmis Hymnis in Psalms and Hymns and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Canticis spiritalibus and in spiritual Songs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cantantes psallentes singing and psalming in your Hearts to the Lord. Col. 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all Wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing with Grace in your Hearts The holy Apostle in this Epistle to the Coloss●ans strenuously laboured to take off this Church from all Jewish Rites Shadowy-Ordinances and Ceremonies and yet injoyns the Duty of singing of Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs upon them by the Authority of the Holy Ghost as that which is the absolute Duty of the Saints and Churches of Jesus Christ in Gospel-days What a foolish thing is it for any to object against this Ordinance because in the performance of it under the Law it was with Musical Instruments since 't is to these Churches so plainly given forth as a Gospel-Duty and in them to all the Churches of the Saints to the end of the World For by the same Argument one may deny singing of Psalms c. to be a Duty notwithstanding so fully commanded or enjoyned by the holy Spirit another may object against any other Precept and so till they leave us not one Gospel-Ordinance I must confess whatsoever was given forth under the Law or injoyned as an Ordinance unless a Moral Precept that is not given forth anew under the New Testament there being neither Precept nor Precedent for it I never believed it doth in the least concern us Hence we object against the Jewish Sabbath for tho a time of Worship is Moral yet the Seventh Day which was co●manded to the People of the Jews and prosely●● Stranger that was within their Gates yet it ●●ing not given forth in the Gosp●l by 〈◊〉 nor his Apostles nor ever observed as we 〈◊〉 find by any Gospel-Church it concerns us 〈◊〉 in the least especially considering that 〈◊〉 Gospel Churches observed another Day in 〈◊〉 Worship and not that viz. the first Day of 〈◊〉 Week But as touching this of Singing there 〈◊〉 remain certainly no doubt about its being 〈◊〉 Duty since as I have already proved it 〈◊〉 observed before the Law and under the 〈◊〉 and in the Gospel and given forth here 〈◊〉 these Churches as an absolute Institution 〈◊〉 if these words don't contain a Precept we 〈◊〉 be at a great loss to find a Precept for 〈◊〉 other Duties in the New Testament which are no otherwise expressed As for Example Only let your Conversa●●●● be as it becomes the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. Is any afflicted let him pray James 5. 1● Let no corrupt Communication proceed 〈◊〉 of your Mouth c. Ephes 4. 29. Let every one of you so love his Wife ● Ephes 5. 33. All these Precepts are injoyned in the very same form of Speech Let the Word of 〈◊〉 dwell in you richly in all Wisdom teaching 〈◊〉 another in Psalms and Hymns and Spirit●●● Songs singing with Grace in your Hearts to 〈◊〉 Lord. Is any merry let him sing Psalms James 5. 13. 'T is not left to our liberty whether we will sing or not or that we may or may not do it 't is as absolutely injoyned as Prayer or any Gospel-Duty and that not only on single Persons at special occasions but on the Churches also they are here required to sing Psalms and Hymns and Spirituals Songs likewise A Man may as well say any one of them who were Members of the Churches were not concerned in other Precepts as to say this doth ●ot concern them all generally as well as some in particular May not you as well say and stand by it too All are not to be filled with the Spirit or to desire the further influence and assistance of it or all are not required to pray nor to put on the whole Armour of God or all are not to let their Conversation be as becomes the Gospel nay what not Now since one Command or two at most for breaking of Bread is judged a sufficient ground for all Christians Obedience and we finding no mention made of the practice of it in divers Gospel-Churches Why is not this Command thrice repeated in the New Testament as binding on our Consciences as the other especially considering how it corresponds with the Practice of Christ and his Apostles as shall God willing be further evinced For we have in a word both Precepts for it and Examples too Tho if we had no Precedents for Singing in the New Testament yet these Precepts are sufficient and where we have the one we need not the other Besides where there is the like Ground or Reason of a Law one would think that might tend somewhat to satisfaction Have not we like cause to praise God and to sing forth his Praise as they had And doth not God deserve the like Glory and Honour from us as from them And do not our Souls need those sweet Soul-refreshing Comforts and Consolations which many meet with in that Ordinance as much as they did And is not every Word of God alike pure and righteous and equally to be esteemed Nor will that Objection some raise against it signify any thing viz. Why we cannot come at it we do not know how we should sing Ans How has Christ not been faithful then who is the Son over his own House in declaring the manner how we should sing hath he not
in the next place to prove the Ordinance of Singing ought to be performed with united Voices pray consider the Practice of Moses and the Children of Israel in singing after their Deliverance at the Red Sea Exod. 15. 1. Then sang Moses and the Children of Israel this Song c. Moses did not sing alone but the whole Congregation sung with him Psal 106. 12. They believed his Word they sang his Praise but soon forgot his Works namely the most of them that sung at the Red Sea not Moses but the Children of Israel who sung with him they that sung his Praise soon forgot his Works Moses say our late Annotators composed the Song and he together with the Israelites sung it to the Honour of God Thus sung Deborah and Barak and indeed we find no other Singing generally throughout the Old Testament And therefore since we are commanded to sing and Christ hath given no other Direction about it but that of his own Practice with his Disciples after the Holy Supper and that of the Practice of Paul and Silas who sung together we may assure our selves there ●s no other manner of Singing to be brought into the Church but that with united Voices and he that should set up or bring in any other way or manner doubtless would be guilty of an Innovation Should one alone sing in the midst of the Congregation like a Ballad-Singer what Word of God is there to justify any such Practice I doubt not but to make appear when I come to it that that Refuge in 1 Cor. 14. will fail them CHAP. XI Proving that singing the Praises of God in Publick Worship with united Voices from the Prophecies of the Scripture that foretold how the Saints and Church of God should sing in Gospel-days OUR third Proof to demonstrate singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs in God's Publick Worship with united Voices shall be taken from those Prophetical Psalms and Passages in the Old Testament that clearly relate to the Practice of the Saints in Gospel-Times Take Dr. Roberts words here in the first place Singing of Psalms c. by Believers under the New Testament saith he is often-times prophetically fore-told 〈◊〉 fore-required in the Old Testament and therefore Singing of Psalms is clearly an Ordinance of Christ under the New Testament The Antecedent is evident in sundry instances of the Old Testament Wherein pray take notice that this Argument the Doctor brings doth not only prove that Singing is a Duty but shews the manner of it also how it should be used in our Congregations He then proceeds to mention some of those Prophetical Scriptures O sing unto the Lord a new Song sing ●●to the Lord all the Earth Sing unto the Lord bless his Name c. Psal 96. 1 2. Again Make a joyful Noise unto the Lord O all the Earth Serve the Lord with Gladness come before his Presence with Singing Both which places all the Earth saith he must needs refer to the Gentiles as well as the Jews at that present Time to the Gentile● afterwards when they should be called and converted to the Lord then the Gentiles also should worship the Lord with Singing of Psalms with a joyful Noise Which cann't be any other than Singing together with a melodious Voice But he goes on So that these Passages saith he are tacit Prophecies of calling the Gentiles and of their New-Testament-worshipping God by Singing forth his Praise Add hereunto that notable passage O come let us sing unto the Lord let us make a joyful Noise to the Rock of our Salvation Let us come before his Presence with Thanksgiving and make a joyf●l Noise unto him with Psalms Psal 95. 3. This Psalm is undoubtedly a Prophecy of Christ and of that Worship that shall and ought to be performed to him solemnly in Sacred Churches under the New Testament and especially on the Lord's-Day-Sabbath The Sabbatism or rest of the New Testament for the Apostle interprets this Psalm of Christ compare Psal 95. 7. to the end with Heb. 3. 6 7. 14. 15. as upon that Psalm I have noted This Psalm judicious Calvin thinks agrees to the Sabbath-day wherein Sacred Assemblies worship God And it is evident in the current Psalm that herein the Holy Ghost prophetically exhorts to that solemn Worship of God under the New Testament which was usual on Sabbath-Days viz. 1. Praising the Lord and Thanksgiving to him with Singing of Psalms with a joyful Noise or melodiously with united Voices Vers 12. urging the same with sundry Arguments Vers 3 4 5. 2. Solemn publick Prayer with the Reasons thereof Vers 6. 3. Willing believing and obedient attention to the Word of God then published without hardening their Hearts against it through unbelief To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your Hearts Vers 7 8. So that this Prophecy of Christ and of the New-Testament-Worship evidently shows that the Praises of God solemnly with Singing of Psalms solemn Prayer and solemn Preaching and hearing of the Word of God should be those Ordinances of Christ and in such manner as there mentioned as the Duties of Christians under the New Testament And it is here further added whereas the Apostle saith To day this day is interpreted by the Apostle to be meant 1. Not of the Seventh-Day-Rest from the Creation Heb. 4. 6 7 8. 2. Nor of the Typical-Re●● Joshuah gave them in the Land of Canaa● Heb. 4. 6 7 8. but of another certain Day limited in David's Psalms Heb. 4. 7. which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Sabbatism a keeping of a Sabbath remaining to the People of God Heb. 4. 9. And this Sabbatism is the Day of our Lord Jesus when he ceased from his Work of Redemption as God did from his of Creation Heb. 4. 10. And which is that Day of our Lord Jesus Is it not the Day of his Resurrection that 's our Lord's-Day-Sabbath which David so long before foretold should be celebrated with solemn Prayer Preaching and Hearing of the Word and with Singing of Psalms with a joyful Noise And thus what was written afore-time was written for our Learning and is full of Instruction to us and doth serve for Reproof and Correction likewise to such who do not hearken to every part of those Duties which are enjoined upon them therein but cavil themselves out of the practice of it with groundless and unnecessary Objections and childish Questions But further saith he our Spiritual and Eternal Sabbatism partly as with Christ from Sin and Misery both in this World and that which is to come Jesus our High Priest being passed into the Heavens Heb. 4. 15 16. Mr. Cotton speaks the same with this worthy Man pag. 10 11. 2ly The next Scripture-Prophecy that shews clearly how the Lord's People should sing now in Gospel-Days is that in Isa 52. 7 8. Thy Watchmen shall life up the Voice with the Voice together shall they sing It is worthy your noting to consider what
Time this Prophecy did refer to which you may soon see if you read the Context How beautiful upon the Mountains are the feet of them that bring good Tydings c. Which the Apostle absolutely applies to the Time of the Gospel and to Gospel-Ministers Rom. 10. 15. And the Prophet doth not only say The Watchmen shall lift up their Voice and with the Voice together sing but also calls upon the desolate and waste places to sing together which can refer to none but the Lord's People who in Gospel-Days shall be made a Praise to him who had been as a poor barren and waste Wilderness For saith the Prophet in the next words The Lord hath made his Arm bare in the Eyes of all Nations and the ends of the Earth shall see the Salvation of God Vers 10. Now this place directly declares the manner how we ought to Sing that is with Voices together And thus I find a most Reverend and Learned Man speak upon the place David's Psalms saith he were Sung together in Heart and Voice by the twenty four Orders of the Musicians who typed out the twenty four Elders which our Annotators and others say signify the Church and Ministers of Christ and so saith this Author viz. All the Members of Christian Churches Rev. 5. 8. who are made Kings and Priests to God to praise him as they did for if there had been any other Order of Singing besides the Body of the People to succeed those formerly used the Lord would doubtless have given directions how or what it was Not Moses only but all Israel sang and the Women as well as the Men also intimateth that that Song John speaks of Rev. 15. 3. which saith he the Protestant Churches getting Victory over the Beast with Harps in their hands and Singing the Song of Moses refers to that Song and manner of Singing Exod. 15. 1 2. And there is no doubt of it but it doth Moreover saith he Isaiah foretells in the days of the New Testament that God's Watchmen and dissolates lost Souls signified by desolate and waste places should with their Voice Sing together Isa 52. 8 9. The Song of the Lamb saith he was with many together Rev. 7. 9 10. And the Apostles expresly command the Singing of Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs not to any select Christians but to the whole Church Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. Paul and Silas sang together in Prison Act. 16. 25. and must the Publick hear only one Man Sang I must say it would be a strange sight to see and hear and without any Warrant from God's Word or Practice of any Church of Christ To all these saith he we may add the Practice of the Primitive Churches the testimony of the ancient and holy Basil is instead of many Epist 63. When one of us saith he hath begun a Psalm the rest of us set in to sing with him all of us with one Heart and with one Voice and this saith he is the common practice speaking of Basil of the Churches of Egypt Lybia Thebes Palestina Syria To the same purpose Eusebius gives witness Eccles Hist lib. 2. cap. 17. The Objections saith he made against this do most of them plead against joying to Sing in Heart as well as in Voice as that by this means others out of the Church will sing as also that we are not always in a suitable Estate to the matter Sung and likewise that all cannot Sing with understanding and are not all therefore who have understanding to join in Heart and Voice together Are not all the Creatures in Heaven Earth Seas Men Beasts Fishes Fowles c. commanded to praise the Lord and yet none of these but Men and Godly ly Men too can do it spiritually and with understanding The third Scripture Prophecy is Hos 2. 15. which clearly alludes to the Gospel-days 〈◊〉 Expositors shew viz. when God should make a New Covenant with his People and betr●●● them to himself for ever vers 19. I will all●●● her and bring her into the Wilderness and speak comfortably unto ber Vers 14. And 〈◊〉 give her Vineyards from thence and the Valey of Achor for a Door of Hope and she shal● sing as in the days of her Youth and as in the day when she came up out of the Land of Egypt which is clear has respect to that of Exod. 15. see our Annotators on this Text for it fully confirms Singing under the Gospel and such a Singing as was of Old I shall close this with what Dr. Roberts saith in his Key to the Holy Bible pag. 175. Finally that passage in the Prophet Thy Watchmen shall lift up the Voice with the Voice together shall they Sing is saith he prophetically spoken of the Times when the Feet of the Messengers of glad-tidings shall be beautiful who shall say unto Sion Thy God reigneth This is interpreted by the Apostle Paul of the Gospel-times under the New Testament I rather chuse to give my Understanding of this glorious Truth in the words of other Men such worthy and renouned Men as these than in my own thinking some may more readily incline to receive the Truth from them than from such a poor Nothing-creature as I am yet did not I verily believe as they did in this matter I should not have cited a word from their Pens Besides some of their Works ●ie in great Folio's that very few may meet ●ith and what they say which they prove from God's Word we ought carefully to receive though in some things they differ from us Therefore if any Answer me they must also answer them in what I have cited out of their Writings or I shall conclude I have no Answer at all CHAP. XII Proving 'tis our Duty to sing the Praises of God with united Voices from the great Noise such are said to make when they sing THis appears by that in Exod. 32. 17 18. And when Joshua heard the noise of the People as they shouted he said to Moses There is War in the Camp vers 17. And he said It is not the Voice of them that shout for mastery neither is it the Voice of them that cry for being overcome but the noise of them that sing do I hear vers 18. Certainly one Man's Voice could not have made such a Noise nothing can be more clear but that they sung with united Voices together Obj. But here it is objected This was in praise of the Golden Calf and so no rule Answ 'T is no matter to whom they sung it was their Sin and horrid Wickedness to give that Divine Worship and Praise to a molten●mage that belonged to God only but there is no question but they sung now to this false God as they had done cap. 15. to the true God of Heaven and Earth and therein lay part of their wicked and horrid Deed. The second Scripture is Psal 81. 1 2. Sing aloud unto God make a joyful Noise which cannot be apply'd to
one Man's Singing and divers others in the Book of Psalms before cited The third place is that in Rev. 19. which is a Prophecy of that triumphant Singing tha● shall be in the Church throughout the Earth or in all Nations at the downfal of Babyl●● And after these things I heard a great voice 〈◊〉 much People in Heaven saying Alleluj●● vers 1. And I heard as it were the Voice of 〈◊〉 great Multitude and as the Voice of many W●●ters and as the Voice of mighty Thundrings saying Allelujah for the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth Vers 6. That Singing that is represented to John by these kind of Noises can 〈◊〉 signify the Singing of one single Man in 〈◊〉 Congregation and though it is said to be 〈◊〉 at that time to such a degree and on that occasion extraordinarily performed yet it makes not against ordinary Singing which is a Gospel-Precept as hath been proved for as there are times of extraordinary Prayer so of extraordinary Praise and Singing to Jehovah Moreover it follows no more that we must not sing at all unless we have an extrordinary cause to be merry or rejoice in God then it doth follow we may not pray at all unless we are afflicted James 5. 13. I shall now shut up this with three or four Arguments and proceed to the next Chapter Arg. 1. If it was never commanded of God nor the Practice of his People under the Old Testament nor in the New in the ordinary Worship of God for one Man alone to sing by himself in the publick Congregation then for any to attempt to bring such a Practice into the Church would be a great Evil and an absolute piece of Will-worship or an Innovation But it was never the Practice of God's People under the Old Testament nor in the New nor commanded of God in the ordinary Worship of God for one Man alone to sing by himself in the publick Congregation Ergo For any to attempt to bring such a Practice into the Church would be a great Evil and an absolute piece of Will-worship or an Innovation The Major certainly every Man will grant that is resolved not to add to or diminish from God's Word or doth believe there must be no Additions nor Alterations to what is laid down in Christ's New Testament for by that Argument if one new Practice may be admitted others may As to the Minor if any can shew me in the Old or New Testament that any one Man in the ordinary Worship of God was allowed thus to do I must confess my Argument is lost but if they cannot do that 't is unan●swerable Arg. 2. If singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs be injoyned on or required of the Churches by the Holy Ghost in the New Testament and that there is no other way manner or 〈◊〉 prescribed than what was used by the S●●●ts under the Old Testament and by Christ and his Disciples in the New viz. a singing together with a melodious Voice then that way the 〈◊〉 sung under the Old Testament and Christ 〈◊〉 his Disciples under the New is to be our Rule 〈◊〉 Practice in Singing and there is no other 〈◊〉 singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual 〈◊〉 is enjoyned on or required by the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 the Churches in the New Testament and 〈◊〉 is no other way manner or mode prescr●●●d than what was used by the Saints under the Old Testament and by Christ and his Apostles ●●der the New Ergo To sing together with a melodious Voice is to be our Rule and Practice in singing and there is no other No body will surely deny my Major if any can find another way manner or mode prescribed let him shew it us As to the Minor that singing of Psalms c. is injoyned I know no body doth deny it Arg. 3. If whatsoever was writte● aforetime or given forth in the Old Testament by the Spirit especially which were moral Duties nay and given forth afresh in the New was as to matter and manner for our Instruction and Learning and singing of Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs which is a moral Duty was given forth aforetime nay and it is given forth afresh in the New then the matter and manner of Singing as practised in the Old and practised in the New was for our Learning and Instruction that we should do the same But whatsoever was written aforetime or given forth in the Old Testament by the Spirit especially which were moral Duties nay and given forth afresh in the New as to matter and manner was for our Instruction and Learning and singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs which is a moral Duty was given forth aforetime in the Old Testament and afresh in the New Ergo Singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs as to matter and manner as practised in the Old Testament and in the New was for our Learning and Instruction that we should so do and practise the same The Major cannot be denied the Minor is proved from that in Rom. 15. 4. For whatsoever was written aforetime was written for our Learning 2 Tim. 3. 16. and from what I have said in this Treatise wherein 't is evinced that Singing c. is a moral Duty and given forth both in the Old and New Testament If any object and say that then we must sing nothing but David's Psalms or the Songs contained in the Old and New Testament I answer The Matter that then was sung was God'● Word or Divine and Holy Songs and so must the Matter of our Songs be the Psalms of David or the Word of Christ i. e. such things that are certainly Divine and Sacred congruous with the Word of God or spiritual Songs If they object about the manner used under the Law with Musical Instruments I answer 〈◊〉 plead for no other manner than was practised in the New Testament as well as in the Old 〈◊〉 under the Old we read of singing together with united Voices without Instruments and the same in the New So that unless Instruments of Musick as Organs c. were used in the New Testament they are unlawful to be brought into the Worship of God and in vain is it for any to object against Singing because Musical Instruments were used under the Old Testament since the one is given forth in the New viz. singing Psalms without mention made of Instruments of Musick and so practised also But to that Objection I purpose to give a full Answer when I come to consider of Mr. Marlow's Book Arg. 4. If Christ and his Disciples never practised nor injoyned on the Churches any Ordinance or Duty but they left a sufficient Rule how such Ordinances or Duties should be performed and yet Christ and his Disciples did sing and injoyned singing of Psalms c. on the Churches then they left a sufficient Rule how singing of Psalms c. should be performed But Christ and his Disciples did practise and injoin singing of Psalms and Hymns
it which is really their Duty as well as 〈◊〉 own I cannot sin in joining with any one in that Act to perform which is the Duty of another as mine though he may want the present Ability For Duties must be measured according to the Rule not the Ability of the Performer Now it 's no Duty for any Man to receive the Lord's Supper or be a Member of a Church in order to Communion without he find himself in some measure fitted by Grace these Sealing Ordinances of the Gospel suppose and require some other Qualification and are peculiar to visible Saints but where there is a natural Character or an Ordinance as to the Substance of it at least equally concerning all there is no Sin to join in the administration of it And if we consider of it warily unregenerate Men are great sharers in the Mercies of the Churches besides their own particular Duty that they may well join with them in setting forth God's Praises But more closely and particularly 1. When the Church and Saints of God are gathered together to worship him in Singing it is no more unlawful to sing with others that stand by and join their Voices than when in Prayer they stand by and give their Consent we do not so much join with them as they do own God's Actings among us It is no sin in them to join with us in such a Duty neither can it be any sin in us to sing though others very carnal will outwardly praise God with us 2. The Carriage of the Saints in their hearty and real Expressions of Praises may convince others in the coldness and lowness of their Spirit and stir them up to some spiritual Apprehensions Sidenham 〈◊〉 Singing pag. 213 214 215. 'T is evident the Church is not bound to worship God alone in the Administration of the Gospel and not suffer the People to come among them unless she intends to become no Church in a short time for how shall she increase or have Children born in her Is not Hearing the Word of God preached and Publick Prayer as Sacred Ordinances of Gospel-Worship 〈◊〉 Singing Why then may they be admitted to join with the Church in those Ordinances which they are no better able to perform acceptably to God than in Singing and be denied to sing By this Rule others must not be admitted to join with the Church in one part of Gospel-Worship you must not suffer them to join with us in any but even 〈◊〉 the Doors upon them and worship God alone And should we deny them to do this it might also lay a Stumbling-block in their way and give them a just offence against the Lord's People See more in Chap. 9. where we have spoken further to this Objection CHAP. XV. Wherein Mr. Marlow's Book and many other Objections raised against singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs are fully and plainly answered THough all that are impartial who shall read Mr. Marlow's Book against Singing and consider what I have already said in this Treatise will say He is answered Yet I shall now give a particular Reply to all that is any ways material contained in it which I have not detected and answered before That which he insinuates pag. 3 4. about the Weakness and Imbecility of some Christians about their reception of this Ordinance as a dangerous thing needs no Reply he would fain make his Reader think to receive singing of Psalms c. as an Ordinance is no less than a falling away from the Truth So clearly saith he manifested by the Holy Scripture and witnessed to by the Sufferings of the purest Churches in our Age who have born a lively Testimony not only against the humane prescribed and precomposed Forms of Prayer but against singing David ' s Psalms and other Hymns or Songs precomposed by Man Answ 'T is not a falling away from Truth to restore a lost or neglected Ordinance of the Gospel as you I perceive dare not deny but this of Singing is The main difference is about the Manner or what Singing is We say it is going forward i● the glorious Work of Reformation What though some Baptized Churches who I do believe have attained to greater Purity in some things than some others have born such a Witness against Singing of David's Psalms is it therefore no Ordinance of Christ must they needs know every Truth of Christ Is there any Church that is yet arrived to such a perfection of Knowledg that they need not the discovery of any Truth but what they have received I am afraid some of those Churches are yet short of the Knowledg and Practice of another Ordinance as well as this and speak against it as against this though it is one of the first Principles of the Doctrine of Christ Heb. 6. 1 2. Are they against the Singing of David's Psalms and Hymns do ye say God forbid since the Holy Ghost hath enjoyned the Churches to sing them pag. 3 4. But to pass over this you come to consider that Text Ephes 5. 14. Speaking to your selves in Psalms c. Object From these Words nor the Context relating to them is there any W●●for a vocal Speaking but otherwise it must be understood a speaking to your own Heart These are your words Answ 'T is well you do not affirm this Teaching is then a Preaching from Psalms c. in ordinary Gospel-Administration for some there have been and may be are now that assert that and I think we shall find you there too by and by however let the Speaking be what it will that is here meant it is evident 't is such a speaking that is used in Singing for so the following words explain it which you are not willing it may be to cite Singing and making of Melody in your Hearts to the Lord. You then mention Col. 3. 16. I confess say you that Vocal Singing is here to be understood otherwise it could not be Teaching and Admonishing to others in Word or Deed but yet here is nothing to prove Vocal Singing together for Teaching and Admonishing one another in Psalms c. is meant of the Ministring Brethren whose Work it was to teach and admonish the other Members according to the Gifts they had received and none can prove any more by these words one another than what must be understood from Heb. 3. 13. But exhort one another daily whilst it is called to day And therefore as the word Exhortation is not used in the Church but in an orderly ministerial way by one at once c. must be used also according to Gospel-Rule 1 Cor. 14. 26. How is it Brethren when you come together every one of you hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine c. be understood of a Vocal Singing all together for I think 〈◊〉 will say that those words Every one of you hath c. were spoken of all having those Spiritual Gifts which can't be though of euery Minister in that Church Vers 28 much
less of all the Members c. So 〈◊〉 cannot be supposed that all the Ministring Brethren had the Gift of Singing or 〈…〉 was any distinction of its universality in delivery more than of other Gifts in the 〈◊〉 Text besides the Context speaks of single Persons that must exercise in the Church 〈◊〉 therefore those words every one of you 〈◊〉 mean all c. Answ First of all I cannot but take notice how you contradict your self in Ephes 5. 19. you would have the Apostle by Teaching and Singing to mean only a silent Speaking in their Heart without a Voice But in Col. 3. 16. you confess that intends a Vocal Singing Do you think any Man who has the least Light or Knowledg in the Scripture can groundedly suppose that the Apostle doth in Ephes 5. 19. in these words Speaking to your selves in Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing and making of Melody in your Heart to the Lord. And in Col. 3. 16. in these words Teaching and Admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with Grace in your Hearts to the Lord mean two different things Surely there is not one Man to be found of your Opinion for all generally with one Mouth affirm the Apostle in writing to these two Churches intends the one and the same Practice Nor is ●here any thing said by you to convince us to the contrary for though the Duty seems to be ●id down in different words yet it implies the same thing speaking to your selves and teaching and admonishing one another are of the 〈◊〉 import on this occasion as expressed here for the Speaking is in Singing and so is the Teaching and Admonishing as the close of the Text opens it to every understanding Man 2. 'T is observable how you seem to confound this great Duty injoined in ordinary Worship on these two Churches with the exercise of those extraordinary Gifts mentioned 1 Cor. 14. 26. which hereafter I purpose to explain and shew the purport or main drift of the Spirit in that place in 1 Cor. 14 c. If any Man did sing in an unknown Tongue alone 't was because others were not capable to sing with him and he from thence was not to use such a Gift in the Church unless there was an Interpreter to give forth that Psalm or Hymn that so all might sing with him and be edified in that Ordinance as in others 3. In the third place which is yet worst of all you would have this of Teaching and Admonishing one another in Psalms c. singing with Grace in your Heart to refer to that Heb. 3. 13. which you apply to such who had the Gift to preach Ministerially and to sing too by the said Gift In answer to this in the first place I thought we should not have had you to affirm the Apostle means by Teaching and Admonishing here in this place to be Preaching according to that in your sense you refer to in citing Heb. 3. 13. Now as to the first part of your Assertion had you read Reverend Mr. Cotton it might have removed this Mistake and so prevented your pains to trouble the Reader with such an Exposition of the Text I find him answering an Objection that directly includes part of yours in these words following Object The Apostle to the Ephesians and Colossians doth not say Sing one to another in Psalms but speak or preach one to another or in other words Teach and admonish one another the Psalms dwelling in their Hearts they were to dispose them in a way of teaching and admonishing but as for singing he makes no mention of that until he came to teach them the manner of dispensing the words of Christ unto God in one Verse and then indeed he teacheth them to sing in the Spirit making Melody with Grace in the Heart If I do not mistake you this Objection contains part of what you say and pray take his Answer I do not doubt but he gives the true sense of the place Answ Such as tremble at the Word saith he as the framer of this Objection professeth himself to do they should rather bow their Judgments and Practice to Scripture-Language than bow the Sense of Scripture to their own Conceptions against the Language of Scripture it is one thing to speak one to another in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs as is done in singing and another thing to preach and teach one another out of the Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs 'T is true they were to teach and admonish one another out of the Psalms and the scope of Paul will teach that but if Paul had meant that to wit that they should teach and preach one to another out of the Psalms he would not have said Speak ye one to another in Psalms or with Psalms but out of the Psalms for such is the Language of the Holy Ghost in expressing this Duty Paul is said to have expounded and testified and persw●ded the Jews out of the Law of Moses and out of the Prophets Acts 28. 23. So Philip is said to do begin to preach to the Eun●●h from that Scripture in Isaiah Act. 8. 35. Thus Mr. Cotton 'T is evident my Brother that Paul is not a speaking here to Ministers but to the whole Church and he is not a laying down Directions to gifted Brethren how they should preach and exhort one another that way as sometimes he doth much less about the exercise of extraordinary Gifts but 't is to injoin and exhort the Churches to sing Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs how also they should perform this Duty to the Honour of God and their own Comfort in ordinary Gospel-Administration Dr. Roberts in his Key to the Bible pag. 176. saith on these words to this purpose But Christians should be filled with the Spirit not filled with Wine but with the Spirit and speak one to another in Psalms 〈◊〉 Hymns and spiritual Songs c. thus rejoicing with Heavenly Melody in your Hearts to the Lord and the latter words in both places Eph. 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. are saith he exegetical to those in the beginning of the Verses explaining what he means by speaking teaching and admonishing viz. thus edifying one another in singing Psalms c. And it 's an excellent way of speaking to themselves and to one another when Christians sing Psalms c. therefore saith he that speaking to themselves and teaching one another in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs is 〈…〉 singing As to singing with a vocal Voice you have granted 't is intended by the Holy Ghost in Col. 3. 16. which is as much as I desire What you hint or imagine of one singing alone has been fully answered that never having been the Practice of God's People in God's ordinary Worship neither in the Old or New Testament and as touching singing by an extraordinary Gift more of that anon And saith Mr. Sidenham many think there can be no such use of Singing as
because we have not those Gifts must we not be found in this Ordinance viz. to sing which is required in the New Testament we by the same Argument must lay all others aside likewise as the None-Churches have done from such a way of arguing as you use here the Lord deliver us But what you speak on this occasion doth not concern them that sing David's Psalms therefore if composed Hymns were not justified by God's Word as comprehended in Hymns and spiritual Songs Col. ● 16. then the Book of Psalms as our Brethren say are wholly intended and then they must be sung and them only but we see no reason so to believe Eusebiw speaks of the Christians singing of Hymns to Christ as to God in the first Century which shews it was the Practice of the Church in the Primitive Times to sing other Hymns besides those in the Book of Psalms As to Forms of Prayer the Lord hath left us a Form by which we are directed how to pray and so he has left us his Word and the Psalms of David that we may know how to compile our Hymns as well as our Sermons by the help and assistance of his Spirit there is no more a Form of Preaching left than there is a Form of Hymns and what tho Christians differ in their singing they also differ in their method or form of Preaching as much and your Argument say you what you will 〈◊〉 alike against the one as against the other But is it unlawful to premeditate what we design to ask of God in Prayer Have not some in Prayer and Fasting-days in Churches drawn 〈◊〉 several things as a Form of those Cases 〈◊〉 they agreed together to spread before the Lord and is this Form sinful think you But 〈◊〉 of this hereafter IV. Of Womens Singing Object You say Women ought not to sing in the Church because not suffered to speak in the Church and also because singing is teaching By the way then it appears the bare Melody in the Heart where you say is the Essence of Singing that is not Singing by your own Assertion Thus you destroy what you would build Answ But if Women may not speak nor ●●ach in no sense in the Church they must not be admitted to give an account of their Conversion in the Church or how God was pleased to work upon their Souls for that Practice is full of Teaching and Instruction and has been blessed to the Conversion of some other Persons that have been by But I will be at the pains to transcribe what worthy Mr. Cotton hath said to this Objection it appears others have brought it before you The second scruple about Singers is saith he whether Women may sing as well as Men for in this Point there be some deal with us as Pharaoh dealt with the Isr●●lites● who tho he was at first utterly unwilling that any of them should go to sacrifice 〈◊〉 the Lord in the Wilderness yet being 〈◊〉 length convinced that they must go then 〈◊〉 was content the Men should go but not 〈◊〉 Women Exod. 10. 11. So here some that were altogether against singing of Psalm●● at all with lively Voices yet being convinced that it is a Moral Worship of God warranted in Scripture then if there must be a singing one alone must sing not all 〈◊〉 if all the Men only and not the Women He then mentions your Objection to which he replies 1. One Answer saith he may at once remove both Scruples and withal clear the Truth it is apparent by the Scope and Context of both these Scriptures that a Woman is not permitted to speak in the Church 1. By way of teaching whether in expounding or applying Scripture for this the Apostle accounteth an Act of Authority which is unlawful for a Woman to usurp over the Man 1 Tim. 2. 13. And besides the Woman is more subject to Error than the Man ver 14. and therefore might sooner prove a Seducer if she became a Teacher 2. Yet nevertheless in two cases it is clear a Woman may speak in the Church ● In way of Subjection when she is to give account of her Offence thus Peter questioned Sapphira before the Church touching the price of Land sold by her and her Husband c. and she accordingly spake in the Church to give her Answer to the Question Acts 5. 8. 2. In way of singing forth the Praises of God together with the rest of the Congregation for 't is evident the Apostle layeth no greater restraint upon Women for silence in the Church than the Law put upon them before for so himself speaketh in the place alledged 1 Cor. 14. 34. it is not permited to a Woman to speak but to be under Subjection 〈◊〉 also saith the Law 2. The Apostle then requireth the same Subjection in the Woman which the Law put upon them Now it is certain the Law yea the Law-giver Moses did permit Miriam and the Women in the Song of Thansgiving to sing the Praises of God Sing ye to the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously the Horse and his Rider hath he thrown into the Sea which may be a ground sufficient to justify the lawfulness of Womens singing together with the Men the Praises of the Lord and accordingly in the Primitive Churches it was the ancient Practice of Women to sing the publick Praises of the Lord we read recorded in the Ecclesiastical History Socrates Chap. 18 Greek Copy and Chap. 16. of the Latin Theodoret's third Book Chap. 17. Obj. But say you there is no Institution for Womens Singing Answ No need 't is a Moral Duty You may ask whether they are to praise God as well and demand a word of Institution for their Breaking of Bread with the Church for you know some demand a Proof for that V. Of the Order of Singing What need you talk of Order about Singing or of Womens Singing when the Essence of it being in the Heart is sufficient though the Act or Thing it self be never done But to proceed This you say we have plainly and clearly delivered to us 1 Cor. 14. 20 to 34. How is it then Brethren when ye come together every one of you hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine hath a Tongue hath an Interpretation let all things be done to edifying That which you infer from hence is that this is the Rule for our Practice viz. one by one or one after another must speak and exercise their Gifts and not all together and so he that has the Gift of a Psalm he is singly or alone by himself to sing as in Prayer and Preaching Answ The Apostle directs that Church in the exercise of extraordinary Gifts There was 't is clear confusion about the exercises of those Gifts in the Church of Corinth it seems this was their practice some times viz. Every one of them who had a Doctrine and that had a Psalm and so of the rest would come forth with them together May be many
judgment for it it be you contend against that which all Christians say they do own and perform But to proceed There may be 't is plain an extraordinary Spirit of Prayer at some times and an extraordinary Influence in Preaching and an extraordinary Occasion to perform those Duties likewise and so in Singiug But must not we therefore be found in the performance of each of these Duties at any other time And have not all true Christians always in themselves the chiefest cause or ground of Singing forth the Praises of God that can be viz. the consideration of Redeeming and Regenerating Grace though sometimes to such degrees they do not find that liveliness in their Spirits to do it Moreover we ought to strive to be filled with the Spirit that we may both Pray Preach and Hear also But sometimes we have not those fillings of the Spirit in such a measure as at other times yet must Pray Preach Hear and Sing also for the Argument or Motive of Singing as of our other Duties doth not lie in our being so exactly qualified to do it or in our extraordinary fitness for the Duty but in the requirement of God 't is his Ordinance and may be our Sin if we are not so fit to praise God as we should be nor are no more fit to pray and hear the Word preached Object But some may object Doth not James only injoin Singing of Psalms when People are merry or find great cause of inward Joy in the Lord Answ No by no means this must not be granted for if so then People must never pray but when they are afflicted Do but read the Text Is any among you afflicted let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalms Jam. 5. 13. Sure 't is the Duty of the Lord's People to pray as well when they are not afflicted but are in Health and in Prospirity 't is always on fit and proper Occasions to be done but when afflicted more especially then in a more than ordinary manner to be in the Duty of Prayer So and in the like manner 't is our Duty to rejoice and sing the Praises of God always on all proper Occasions but when any are more then ordinarily lifted up with the Goodness of God or filled with the Comforts of the Holy Spirit which is intended doubtless in that phrase Is any Merry then they should in an especial manner sing Psalms or Hymns of Praises to God Also from hence we may argue that as it is the Duty of one afflicted Person thus by himself to pray so when the whole Church is afflicted they in an especial manner should keep days of Prayer together and so they oftentimes do on such an account Yet it is the Duty of the Church to pray at other times notwithstanding Why so it is in the case of Singing when the whole Church of God hath received some signal Mercies in an especial manner they ought together to give Thanks to God and sing his Praise but yet notwithstanding they ought to sing the Praises of God at other times as well as pray at other times and nothing is in the least hinted here in this place by the Apostle James to the contrary Object But we have no Command to sing in our Publick Assemblies either before or after Sermon nor any Precedent that any Gospel-Church did so Answ You must take heed and avoid needless Questions and Contentions We have no Command to pray in our Publick Assemblies either before or after Sermons nor no Precedent that any gospel-Gospel-Church did so Must we not use that Practice therefore I am sure this Argument is as strong against the one as 't is against the other Obj. But we are commanded to pray always and that is a very convenient time when the Word of God is preached every thing is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer Answ So we are commanded to rejoice evermore 1 Thess 5. 16. and in every thing to give thanks to God Phil. 4. 4 6. And to sing his Praises is the highest way or manner of rejocing and giving Thanks to God we are capable of attaining to as it appears in all the Scripture And also by the example of the Holy Angels who this way rejoice and give Thanks to God Besides the Preacher may pray before he comes out of his Closet or secretly in his Heart when in the Pulpit and answer those general Precepts so that you may see what such kind of Cavilings will bring us to 'T is evident we read of several Sermons the Apostle Peter preached and Paul too and some of them in Church-Assemblies but no more mention is made of praying before or after their Sermons than is of their Singing And is it not as convenient a time when we hear the Excellencies of Jesus Christ and the infinite Love of God and the Happiness of Believers opened then to sing and praise God as it is a proper Season to pray to God for a Blessing upon the Word there is the like parity of Reason for the one as there is for the other If any has the advantage 't is the Ordinance of Singing for two Reasons the one is a Precept the other a Precedent The Precept is given us by David containing a Prophecy of the Gospel-days and Gospel-Church Psal 100. 1. Make a joyful Noise unto the Lord all ye Lands Come before his presence with Singing So Psal 95. O Come let us sing unto the Lord let us make a joyful Noise to the Rock of our Salvation And vers 2. Let us make a joyful Noise unto him with Psalms This all People i. e. the Gentile-Churches are required to do as well as others and to do it too when they come into the Presence of God which 〈◊〉 Expositors say intends our coming into God's Presence in his Publick Worship Moreover the Watch-men and desolate Places or Souls who have been like desolate Places saith 〈◊〉 Prophet shall lift up the Voice with the Voice together shall they sing Isa 52. 7 8. And these Watch-men are those whose Feet are beautiful 〈◊〉 the Mountains who preach the Gospel of Peace and bring glad-tidings of good things And this very Text the Apostle applies in ge●●●al to Gospel-Ministers in their publick Preaching of Christ in Christian Assemblies see Rom. 10. 15. But we having so largely in this Treatise opened this we shall say no more to it here As touching Examples we have the Church of God viz. Israel of old who sung together in Exod. 15. 1. and in many other places 〈◊〉 always generally when they came together to worship God as they prayed to him so they sang Praises to him which we have proved is no Ceremony of Moses's Law but a Moral Duty and so a Perpetual Ordinance And in the New-Testament we have the Example of Christ himself with his Disciples who after that part of Publick Worship viz. celebrating the Holy Supper sung an Hymn together O how sad a thing is it
that Men should go about to restrain or withhold Praises from the Lord which are due to his holy Name and wherein we are said to glorify him Psal 50. 23. I am perswaded they will have but little Thanks from him one day for their thus doing And truly that want of God's Presence or liveliness of Spirit or that cause of Complainings that are in our Churches of which you speak may partly arise from hence i. e. from the general neglect of this great Duty in which God of old appeared amongst his People like a cloud to fill his House with his glorious Presence 2 Chron. 5. 13. owned also by God's gracious Testimony in giving his People 〈…〉 such eminent Victories over their Enemies 2 Chron. 20. 21 22. And when they had consulted with the People and appointed Singers unto the Lord that they should praise the Lord in the Beauty of Holiness they went out before the Army and to say Praise the Lord for 〈◊〉 Mercy endureth for ever And when they began to sing and to praise the Lord set Ambushments against the Children of Ammon Moab and Mount Seir which came against Judah and they were smitten Israel's Success saith Mr. Wells follows Israel's Singing If the Lord's People will be found in their Duty they shall not want God's Presence To this I might add that glorious witness of his Presence in delivering Paul and Silas out of Prison upon their Praying and Singing Praises to him Act. 16. There may 't is true be a natural Joy or false Rapture by an erring Spirit but that Joy and Presence of God we meet with in his own Way and Ordinance nay in the same Ordinance in which he met with his People of old we may be sure is to be prized and esteemed as no natural or counterfeit Joy say you what you please If in singing Psalms Hymns c. there is no other Rule or Directions given in the New Testament differing from the Practice of the Saints before the Law under the Law and in Gospel-days performed by Christ and his Disciples Then no Christian has cause in the least to doubt but so we are to sing since 't is a Duty and injoyned on the Churches in the New Testament Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. But this I have spoken largely to already likewise See Chap. 9. In Pag. 47. of your Book you say As to Forms of Prayer and Singing you have sufficiently treated of them before and that the sufficient Gifts of the Spirit shall continue for the Worship of God in the gospel-Gospel-Church to the end of the World and therefore your Business here you say is only to shew that the using a Form of Preaching is no Example for a Form of Singing Because say you there is reason for a Form of Preaching from God's Word and Example of Christ himself who read a Text and then preached from it though as he was not so others are not limited to that or any particular Forms yet it is lawful for them and required of them to compare Spiritual Things with Spiritual and to give themselves to reading and meditation and to hold fast the form of sound Words rightly dividing the Word of Truth So that where the Scripture gives us a liberty we may use it but it is our Sin to take it where it is forbidden as you say you have shewed in a form of Prayer and Singing Answ In vain is all this for all the Saints and Ministers of Christ in all the World know there is no one form of Preaching laid down in all the Scripture We have no direct Precept nor Example to preach in the form of taking a Text of Scripture and to raise a Doctrine from it and then Generals and Particulars with Application 't is left to the faithful Servants of God to make use of such a Form or Manner as the Spirit of God may help them to and the best Form or Method they ought and do make use of which they judg may most tend to the profit of the People That place you mention of our Saviour taking a Text and then preaching from it is scarcely true however 't is a greater proof for a Form of Reading the Scripture in our Publick Assemblies than for taking a Text to preach from it The Text saith He went into the Synagogue of the Jews on the Sabbath-day and stood up to read Aud there was delivered to him the Book of the Prophet Isaias and when he had opened the Book he found the place where it was written The Spirit of the Lord is upon me c. Luk. 4. 17 18. And he closed the Book so do not we and gave it again to the Minister vers 20. And began to say unto them This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your Ears vers 21. We read of no more he spake unto them from that Scripture And as touching those general Directions you mention of comparing spiritual Things with Spiritual c. 1 Cor. 2. 13. the Apostle doth not prescribe a Form of Preaching but shews as our Annotators observe how they did disclaim those Orations of the Athenian Philosophers using a plain and spiritual Stile giving the naked Truths of God without any paint of gawdery Phrase speaking the Oracles of God as the Oracles of God fitting Spiritual Things to Spiritual Persons or opening one Scripture by another But certain it is they preached by an Immediate and extraordinary Spirit or Inspiration And so do not we but by an ordinary Spirit from the mediate Word and therefore must study and are left to use what Method we think may be as I said before most profitable for the Edification of the People so that although the Matter of our Sermons are God's Word and so Divine and Sacred yet the Form or Method you may as well call Formal and Human as so to call our Sacred Hymns c. God hath graciously owned nevertheless this form of Preaching and daily doth for the conversion of many Sinners and so he doth our way of Singing to the comforting and refreshing the Souls of many Saints We have matter to be sung plainly expressed viz. the Word of Christ in Psalms and they are well known and also Hymns and Spiritual Songs which are also easily known by such who are Spiritual whether they be the Sacred Word of Christ as to the Matter of them or not as it may be known that the Doctrine is so which we hear preached As touching David's Psalms they are formally God's Word as well as materially so and since we are exhorted to sing Hymns and Spiritual Songs I ask whether those Hymns and Spiritual Songs could be without a Form either immediately or mediately precomposed by the Spirit and whether the Spirit of God doth not may not assist God's Servants now in precomposed Hymns as he did of old Object But may be you will say They are not in Metre in the Scripture but other words are added to make them fit to be
as they suppose which was used in the Primitive Time in Singing was not continued and successively handed down to us Answ By the same manner they might object against the Bible and say We ought not to receive it because God did not continue the Gift of Tongues in the Church that by virtue of those Gifts the Old and New Testament without Humane Art might be delivered to us Nay and against Preaching too c. for those Gifts in the Apostolical manner of Preaching was not continued nor handed down to us nay what Ordinance had not lost its Primitive Form under the Apostacy The Conclusion AND now Brother suffer me to make a little Improvement likewise as well as you and notwithstanding your Conclusion savours of much Bitterness I would fain have mine end with all Sweetness if there is any Tartness I cannot well help it First Whereas you infer singing together of David's Psalms or any humane precomposed Forms is a corrupting the pure Worship of God in mingling Law and Gospel or humane and divine things together First I infer That to sing David's Psalms and Scripture-Hymns and sacred Songs taken out of the Word of Christ together in the publick Worship of God is an holy Ordinance of Christ and not in the least to mingle Law and Gospel together any otherwise than the Holy Ghost hath done it for Moral Duties are the same in the Law and Gospel Secondly Whereas you say This will lead us to return from whence we came at a Dog to his Vomit and as a Sow that was washed to her wallowing in the Mire I say 1. You do not write like an humble and trembling-hearted Christian but shew too much Gall and Worm-wood in your Spirit And 2. I say to sing the Psalms of David and other sacred Scripture-Hymns and spiritual Songs is to build up the old waste places and restore the ancient Paths to dwell in and a going forward and not backward Thirdly You would you say have the Leaders among us seriously consider that are for such formal Singing as you call it whether they will be able to plead at the Bar of Christ for this Practice tho they may urge it on their fellow-Brethren here c. and you put up a kind of Prayer that God would give us a true sight and sense of the evil Consequences of this Error as you are pleased to call it that we may not cause his People to sin but that with sound Doctrine we may strengthen the weak Hands and feeble Knees c. Answ I must intreat you to consider whether you will be able to give a good account at the Bar of Jesus Christ for endeavouring to diminish from God's Word nay from Christ's New Testament for sure we are singing of Psalms Hymns and spiritual Songs is one Ordinance found therein which you strive to take way and foolishly plead only for a thing called the Essence of it without the Act or discharge 〈◊〉 the Duty according to the nature of the Ordinance and so contrive a new kind of singing out of the dark Imagination of your Heart and add that in the stead of it which is not understood by the generality of Mankind and so make us to believe if you could that Christ hath left an Ordinance that there is no way to come to any Certainty how it should be performed and hereby also lay a just occasion of Offence or a Stumbling-block in the way of weak Christians to think they may practise Ordinances acceptably to God which requires the bodily Organs without the Body and so deny the Body to glorify God tho redeemed to that end and expose our Glory viz. our Tongue to Reproach and Shame and consequently rob God of some part nay one great part of his glorious Praise and his poor Church of much sweet Comfort and Soul-Refreshment in his blessed Ordinance as I have shewed in the first Chapter Moreover consider what an account you will have to give to the Judg of the Quick and Dead for saying when the Scripture saith they sung viz. Christ and his Disciples they did but give Thanks or say Grace from the remote and indirect Signification of the Greek Word or else sung alone and not his Disciples with him See what Reverend Mr. Cotton hath said in Pag. 14. of his Book in Answer to such a kind of Objection as you make mentioning that place of David Psal 3. 4. Psal 77. 1. I cried to the Lord with my Voice Shall a Man detract from his meaning and say saith Mr. Cotton he cried to God only with his Heart So when David exhorteth the Gentile Churches to make a joyful Noise unto the Lord you do detract from his meaning when you make his meaning to be not that we should sing unto him with our Voice but that we should only make Melody to him in our Hearts such 〈◊〉 ●aith he from the Word is alike disallowed and accursed of God as adding to his Word or otherwise say I a diminishing from it Object But saith he you object singing of Psalms with the Voice is but a Type of that Melody in the Heart or to that purpose I find he speaks Answ 1. No Scripture saith he speaketh of it as a Type nor doth any Evidence of Reason declare it 2. You might as well say that praying with the Voice was a Type of praying with the Heart and so it is abolished 3. If singing of Psalms with a loud Voice had been a typical Worship David would not have exhorted us to the Practice of it on the Lord's-Day under the New Testament Psal 95. 1 2 7. 4. Christ and his Apostles would not have used it in the Lord's-Supper which is a Feast of the New Testament nor would Paul and Silas have used it in Prison among the Gentiles nor would the Apostle have injoyned it on the Churches 5. The Light of Nature is never wont to teach us Types and Shadows doth it not as well teach us to praise God in singing with our Tongues in times of our rejoycing as to cry to God with our Voices in times of distress Fourthly Whereas you would have us to consider that if we err from the Rule in offering Praises to God contrary to his Appointment whether we do not worship God in vain I say to you whilst we thus offer Praises to God it appears we worship him according to his Appointment and so acceptable to him and to his Glory and our Comfort Strange ours is not right and spiritual Singing and yet you can find no other way according to the Rule to perform that sacred Duty and Ordinance Thus I have answered your Book as well as the Lord hath been pleased to help me according to your Request for I was 〈◊〉 by you to do it you well know before several Witnesses But did not I think the Name and Honour of God lay at stake and the Information of man● of his dear Saints and People in order to
the● further Comfort and Establishment in his whol● Mind and Will I should not have answered yo● in the matter and if you or any body else shall see cause to reply I shall be ready to return an Answer if I find it do deserve or nee● one if God is pleased to spare my Life and t● enable me in the Work And now one word to you my dear Brethren and Sisters whose Souls are established in thi● sweet and heavenly Ordinance First Consider how universally this Ordinance hath been practised of singing the Praise● of God 1. By variety of Persons as Kings and godly Princes as Moses who was a King in Jesurun Deut. 33. 5. David Joshaphat Solomon c. By worthy Governours as Nehemiah c. by Prophets by the whole Congregation of God's People by Christ and his Apostles by the holy Martyrs of Jesus in the Primitive Times 2. In all places by Moses in the Wilderness Exod. 15. by David in the Tabernacle by Solomon in the Temple by Jehoshaphat in the Camp by Christ and his Disciples at the holy Supper by Paul and Sila● in Prison 3. In almost all Conditions in times of Imprisonment in Persecution and Martyrdom 4. By all Sexes both Men Women and Maidens old Men and Children 5. Nay and how all Creatures in Heaven and in Earth are called upon by the Holy Ghost to sing forth the Praises of God 6. Consider how God hath honoured it with his Presence and gracious Acceptance 2 Chron. 5. 13. with Victory over Enemies 2 Chron. 20. 21 22. 7. Confirmed by Miracles Act. 16. 25 26. Secondly Consider that Singing is 1. The Musick of Nature as Mr. Wells observes the Trees and Woods by a Metonymy are said to sing And what sweet Musick do the pretty Birds make in the Air and Woods 2. 'T is the Musick of Ordinances as appears by our Saviour's singing with his Disciples at the Celebration of one of the highest and most sublime Ordinances of the Gospel 3. Singing is the Musick and Melody of Saints 4. 'T is the Musick and Melody of Angels 5. 'T is and shall be the Musick and Melody of Heaven the glorious and glorified Saints and Angels send up their Praises this way But my Brethren be intreated to cry to God that you may pray and sing with the Spirit and with Vnderstanding also 1 Cor. 14. 15. and with Grace in your Hearts labour after Holy and Heavenly Frames We must sing with Affections let your joyful Noise be from the sense of God's Love in a dear Redeemer to your own Souls Let it be by exciting your Graces let Faith be in exercise in this Duty as well as in Prayer and under the Word Let it be with inward Joy remember it is your Duty to rejoice evermore and what then can hinder your Singing God's Praises at any time Let it be for Spiritual Mercies and Blessings chiefly more for deliverance from your Sin than from your Suffering You have found that Singing is not only sweet and raising to the Spirit but also full o● Instruction nay I have heard how God has blessed it to the Conversion of some Souls as well as to the Consolation of others Austis is very excellent to this purpose Quantu● flevi in hymnis canticis suavè 〈◊〉 Ecclesiae tuae voces ill● influebant 〈◊〉 eliquabatur veritas tua in cor meum ex ea effluebat inde effectus pietatis currebant lachrymae benè mihi erat cum eis How sweetly saith he have I wept in Hymns and Songs at the sounding of thy Church the Voices flew into mine Ears and thy Truth melted into mine Heart and from thence flew forth the Effects of Godliness the Tears ran down mine Eyes and it was well with me when I was with them Aug. in his Preface to the Psalms Cap. 6. FINIS AN ANSWER TO Mr. Marlow's Appendix Wherein his Arguments to prove that Singing of Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs was performed in the Primitive Church by a Special or an Extraordinary Gift and therefore not to be practised in these Days Are Examined and clearly Detected Also some Reflections on what he speaks on the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hymnos And on his undue Quotations of divers Learned Men. By a Learned Hand Psal 119. 141. I am small and despised yet do not I forget thy Precepts 1 Cor. 14. 22. Wherefore Tongues are for a Sign not to them that believe but to them that believe not but Prophesying serveth not for them that believe not but for them that believe By B. KEACH London Printed for the Author and sóld by John Hancock in Castle-Alley on the West side of the Royal-Exchange and by the Author at his House near Horselydown in Southwark 1691. To all the Saints and Churches of Jesus Christ Christian Salutation Honoured and Beloved IT grieves me I have further occasion to trouble you after this manner I know not what should move Mr. Marlow to write his Appendix just at a time when he was told I was writing an Answer to his first Discourse he might have had a little Patience and have staid till my Treatise was published whereby he might the better have perceived whether what he wrote the last Year would abide the Test or Trial of God's Word or not This is therefore his second Attempt in publick against God's holy Ordinance of singing of Psalms Hymns c. before any body appeared visibly to oppose or put a stop to his undue Proceedings For what Call he had to begin this Controversy at such an unseasonable time I know not but since he has done it certainly● none can see any just cause to blame me for standing up in the Defence of that Truth of Jesus Christ which I am so well satisfied about and established in and that too as it is practised by the Church to whom I am related as an unworthy Member and above twenty Baptized Congregations besides in this Nation Tho before I went about it I offered my Brethren him or any other a sober and friendly Conference in the Spirit of Meekness which I could not obtain tho I did not give such a publick Challenge as my Brother intimates in that strange Epistle he hath wrote to me but upon the coming forth of his Book I was troubled and would have had it been discoursed in the General Assembly but that was not consented to and then I told my honoured and Reverend Brethren my purpose was to give an Answer to his Book but did not enter upon it till I was urged by several and particularly by Mr. Marlow himself before divers Witnesses in such kind of words as these i. e. Answer me like a Man Whether he is answered like a Man or but like a Child is left to your Consideration 't is done according to that Light and Ability God hath been pleased to bestow upon me But if he or any of his Helpers do see cause to reply they must answer such
strive to pull down that which the Church and themselves too have been a building for so many Years Can there be a Man so left of God as to countenance any Persons to make a Schism in a Congragation because they cannot forgo a Duty they have so long been satisfied in the practice of and so the whole Body to submit to the Sentiments of a few Persons as if they had Power over our Faith We do not say our dissatisfied Brethren shall sing with us or we will have no fellowship with them no God forbid we should impose on their Consciences We do not look upon Singing c. an Essential of Communion 't is not for the being but for the comfort and well-being of a Church We have told our Brethren since we sing not till after our last Prayer if they cannot sing with us nay nor stay with the Church whilst we do sing they may go forth and we will not be offended Should any countenance through a hot and unaccountable zeal such a Schism it would make strange Confusion in our Churches And since he thus publickly hints at this private Case amongst us I had I thought a clear Call to open the matter plainly as it is to clear my self and the Church to all who may read his Epistle and this my Answer for we have done nothing we have the least cause to be ashamed of or unable to justif●● in the sight of God or Man I shall add one word to the consideration of the Brethren of our Church I doubt not but they will consider it 1. If they look upon us equal in Knowledg and Uprightness towards God with themselves they may see we have the same ground to be offended with them in diminishing from God's Word as they may be with us for adding as possibly they think to God's Word 2. And let them consider 't is a horrid Evil to break the Bond of Spiritual Union and unawares to wound the Body of Christ Whose Work is it thus to do but the Devil's and what a reproach doth it bring upon the Truth and how grievous is it to all truly Godly Ones and grateful to the Enemies of our Sacred Profession Besides upon such a trifle can it be so hainous a Crime to be found often in that Duty which they with us have so often and long been in the practice of and in a mixt Assembly too many and many times Besides brought in by almost an unanimous Agreement in a solemn Church-Meeting there being not above five or six that shewed any publick dissent nor they neither signifying any such dissatisfaction i. e. that if we sang at such Times they could not bear it nor do I hear they do desire us now to decline the said practice Love will cover a greater Fault than this for they may see cause to believe 't is not Self-Interest but the Glory of God we wholly aim at● But to return The truth is I wonder any should be taken with his Book for I never saw any thing come out in Print upon any controvertible Truth that has less of Argument in it or more of Confidence And 't is not my Thoughts alone nor more destruct●● Mediums made use of to the whole of the external Parts of Religion Nay one told me very lately that one of our dissatisfied Members intimated to him as if our Bible was not truly or rightly-translated and it seems to rise from what Mr. Marlow hath asserted in his Book about the word Hymnos I fear'd that would be the Effect of his Attempt if any Body regarded what he hath said upon that account But pray what Call has he to rebuke me after this publick manner especially before the whole World If I had done any thing amiss in his Judgment in that Matter I could wish he had had more Wisdom and Prudence or else left the Controversy to some more discreet and abler Pen. I cannot forget the two Brethren that oppoposed Singing the Praises of God and would not comply with the Church though they did not separate themselves from the Church when first the practice of it was received amongst us near twenty Years ago One of them soon after brought a great Reproach upon Religion by immoral Actions and came to nothing and the other sometime after turned Quaker and to my Face denied the Resurrection of his Body c. As to that way Mr. Marlow speaks of praising of God in Prayer without singing of Praises as being more suitable as he thinks to the ordinary Gifts of the Spirit I must tell him God's Word● our Rule and since God doth require his People to celebrate his Praises by singing Psalms Hymns c. doubtless that suits as well with the ordinary Gifts of the Spirit as such Gifts suit with Prayer Preaching c. And I fear one day he will not be found able to give any good account of himself in his bold Attempt in seeking to rob God of his glorious Praise by singing to him as he hath enjoined us to do nor do I fear but through the Help and Authority of God's Word I shall in the Day of Christ stand with Joy and Confidence before him upon this respect when possibly he may be ashamed if he has not sincere Repentence for what he has done Is it not a false Assertion for him to say as he doth in his Epistle to me That as to our way of Vocal Singing together● there is neither Command nor Example for it either in the Old or New Testament I shall leave it to the Consideration of all wise and sober Men. Certainly all will conclude the Man is strangely left of God especially considering he builds his main Confidence from a remote and indirect signification of a Greek Word and yet as I am told understands not that Language neither My Portion is I perceive to undergo hard Censures from Men but 't is no more than my Blessed Master met with and what am I that I should complain One said He was a good Man but others said Nay but he hath a Devil and deceiveth the People John ● 12 20. The Lord increase Love among all the Saints and a bearing and forbearing a gentle and Christian Spirit We all know but in part And O that the Lord would be pleased to deliver Men who profess the Gospel from that horrid Sin of backbiting of their Neighbours and from that bitter and unaccountable Spirit of Prejudice that seems to be gotten into the Hearts of some from whence they seem to tear the Names of their Brethren to pieces through undue Offences These thnigs are matter of Lamentation and I fear the forerunner of a dismal Hour that is coming upon us Cannot Christians have the Liberty of their Consciences from their Brethren to practise a Truth according to their Light without being charged and censured after this manner with Carnal Forms and mischievous Error c. I shall not retain you longer but desire you whoever
you are impartially to read and well weigh my sober Reply to my Brother's Appendix I am glad it came forth before all my Treatise was printed off though it is true it makes the Price more than I intended There is a Reverend and Learned Friend who meeting with Mr. Marlow's Appendix finding him quoting learned Authors in an undue and unaccountable manner to little purpose which because it might possibly amuse the Unlearned and more unwary Reader he has in love to this Sacred Truth and to deliver the Souls of Men and Women from Mistakes made some Reflections on what he has wrote on that account at the close of this Reply If the Lord please to bless what I and my Reverend Friend have said to the further clearing up the Truth I shall not be troubled at my Pains nor Charge I have been forc'd to repeat some things twice or thrice by reason of his leading me in such an unusual Path. This is all at present From him who is your unworthy Brother in the Gospel and Service of Jesus Christ B. Keach AN ANSWER To Mr. Marlow's APPENDIX FIrst of all you tell us That to praise God or praising of God is not confined to Songs of Praise but that there are other ways and manner of praising of him than such melodious Singing Answer We never yet asserted there was no other way or manner to praise God than by singing of his Praise Nor is there a Man who affirms any such thing that I know of but it is one thing to own those other ways of praising of God and another thing for you utterly to deny this way or the way we use in singing his Praise But I must tell you most Learned Men nay all that I have met with do conclude the Disciples or those Children you speak of Matth. 21. 16. Luke 19. 37. did sing those Hosanna's to the Son of David as I have shewed in the first Chapter of the foregoing Treatise I perceive you have now at last raised the Auxiliaries against this Blessed Truth of Jesus Christ But as a worthy Brother hinted the other day Dr. Owen is a press'd Man and as forced in so he doth you no service at all as will appear by what follows but more especially by what my worthy Friend has wrote at the close of this our Answer The Doctor from Heb. 2. 12. from the Greek word Hymneso se I will hymn thee i. e. I will praise thee saith 1. what Christ will do viz. He will sing Praise to God 2. Where he will do it i. e. in the midst of the Congregation The expression of both these he saith is accommodated unto the Declaration of God's Name and praising of him in the Temple The singing of Hymns of Praise unto God in the great Congregation was then a principal part of ' ●is Worship c. 2. The chearfulness and alacrity of the Spirit of Christ in this Work he would do it with Joy and Singing These are the Doctor 's words as cited by you Appendix pag. 4. And thus did Christ sing with his Disciples in that great Representative Church as our Annotators call it Now what is this to your purpose the Doctor tells you that Hymneso se is Singing Praises to God And how do you know but Christ might also often sing in the Temple and in other great Congregations though we do not read of it since 't is said that many other things did Jesus that are not written Joh. 21. 25. 1. Especially considering since it was prophesied of him that in the great Congregation he should sing God's Praise 2. Because as the Doctor observes Singing in the Temple was one great part of God's Worship from whence 't is not likely our Saviour should neglect that part Moreover he positively affirms Christ did with chearfulness and joy give Praise to God by Singing 'T is well known Dr. Owen owned no other Singing than what we do he doth nowhere talk of the Effence of Singing in our Spirit and so exclude vocal or proper Singing 1. He acknowledges Singing is Praising of God so do we and say 't is one of the highest ways of Praising him too 2. He intimates there are other ways of praising of God besides Singing his Praise though it clearly holdeth forth that our Saviour would praise God that way namely by Singing And you would do well to observe what our late Learned Annotators speak upon that of Heb. 2. 12. these are are their words Christ and they are of one Father that is the Saints are here called his Brethren he by Nature and they by Grace and from one Humane Parent Luke 3. 23 38. and both of one Flesh He solemnly sung and Praised his Father with them say they at his Supper Matth. 26. 30. in that Representative Church Mark 14. 26. Yet we as I said before do readily grant as the Doctor intimates those other ways of Praising of God and that Prayer the Word of ●aith and the Fruits of Obedience hath a tendency to the Praise of God But if the Doctor and some other Learned Men should intimate that that Greek word Hymnos should in a remote sence signify Praising of God without Singing we ask Whether any o● them say those ways of Praises without Singing is the immediate genuine direct and primary signification of the word All your Helpers will fail you here There are other Greek words to express those other ways of Praise to God besides Hymnos You are upon a dangerous Rock you make it you● Business to trouble our People with the signification of the Greek word Hymnos a Hymn though you understand not that Language just after the same manner that the Ped●baptists do with the word Baptiz say they i● signifies washing as well as dipping which learned Fisher grants But how Take his words 'T is saith he so taken improperly indirectly collaterally by the by or remotely it so signifys viz. a washing But saith he the direct immediate genuine and primary signification of the word Baptizo is Immersion Dipping or to dip c. You it seems take the same way to destory the Ordinance of Singing God's Praises as they take to destory the Ordinance of Baptism But this will do your business no better than that will do theirs Dipping is Washing but every Washing is not Dipping Theirs is as Mr. Fisher observes an improper remote or indirect Baptism that they infer from the improper Signification of the Greek word Baptizo and so no true Baptism it all So you asserting from those Learned Men that the Greek word Hymnos signifies a 〈◊〉 or common praising of God in Prayer 't is say I but an improper indirect and remote sort of Singing of God's Praise that the Word will admit of in that sense and so no Singing at all If you discourse with learned Persons they will tell you that some Greek words do in an improper or remote sense bear several Significations but the direct genuine
out by the Spirit and enjoyned on the Churches which is enough to shake the Faith of our People in respect of other Ordinances which they have as much reason to say may not belong to us but shall be practised in time to come when the Church as the Seekers say shall attain its first or original Purity See Pag. 27. of his Discourse 5. And lastly like a wary and fore-seeing Man to be sure to carry his Cause he retires to his last Fort and Strong-hold and affirms That the Ordinance of singing of Psalms Hymns c. was only in the Primitive Time performed by an extraordinary Gift and unless we have such a Gift we must not sing the Praises of God now in these days Tho I have said enough to detect this 〈…〉 Conceit yet since he leads me in this Path I must I perceive reply again as I have already done that this Objection lies equally against Prayer Preaching and interpreting the Scripture c. sith all these Gospel-Duties and Ordinances in the Primitive and Apostolical Days were performed by the said extraodinary Gifts of the Spirit If he could make this appear there was no need for him to trouble us with the Greek word nor with any of his other Mediums he uses to exclude Gospel-Singing it cannot but appear by this last shift he acknowledges that Singing is somewhat more than that Praising of God he speaks of But these things betray the Man's Integrity or rather his Weakness and shew he doth not argue but plays the part of a Sophister though not a cunning One because his Nakedness plainly appears to the meanest Capacity through his pittiful threadbare Covering For if he had thought his other Mediums would have 〈◊〉 his turn or held the Test we should not have I am perswaded heard any of this But however we will come to examine his pretended Arguments he brings to prove this Affertion His first Argument to prove Singing was always performed from a special Gift is in Appendix pag. 14. For as the Grace of 〈◊〉 is the 〈◊〉 of the Spirit saith he and 〈◊〉 God had 〈◊〉 the Oil viz. the Spirit of Joy for Mourning so the primitive Church had some earnest of it and did rejoice in hope of the Glory of God and through the abundance of the Spirit wherewith she was baptized her Ministers delivered the Word of God in extraordinary ways and manners viz. by Prophesying T●●gues and melodious Singing Answ 1. Have not Believers now the Holy Spirit as well as they had it then though not in such an extraordinary manner And have not we the Fruit of it i. e. Joy Peace c. in believing Also you mistake your self Joy doth not appertain to the Gifts of the Spirit but 't is a ●ruit of the Graces of the Spirit Do not the Saints now rejoice in hope of the Glory of God as well as they did then There is no such cause or ground from the Reception of Tongues or the extraordinary Gifts of the Spirit as you intimate to sing the Praises of God For many our Saviour saith shall say in that Day We have prophesied in thy Name and in thy Name have cast out Devils and in thy Name have done many wonderful Works To whom he will say Depart from me I know ye not And the Apostle saith Though I speak with Tongues of Men and Angels and have not Charity I am become as sounding Brass or a tinkling Cymbal 1 Cor. 13. 1. From whence it appears that inward Joy and Peace of which you speak as the Cause of Singing in the Apostles Times did not flow from that extraordinary Gift of the Spirit but from the saving Graces of the Spirit either it flows from the consideration of common or external Mercies and Blessings wherein all are concerned to sing the Praises of God who gives them fruitful Seasons filling their Hearts with Joy and Gladness or else it flows from those special and internal Blessings which only concern the Saints viz. Union with God Communion with God Faith Love c. Tongues were for a Sign not for them who believe but for them who believe not 1 Cor. 14. 22. Extraordinary Gifts were to convince Unbelievers of the Truth and not for the Joy and Comfort of such who did believe Men that have the Gift of Tongues may be graceless and so without Christ and perish eternally in Hell therefore the extraordinary Gift of the Spirit fits not tunes not the Heart nor Tongue to sing the Praises of God You may as well deny the Saints may not ought not in these our Days rejoice in God nay not praise him in any other manner of ways as well as not fing from this Argument you make use of here on this account Therefore it follows that you strangely mistake pag. 15. Appendix in intimating when Paul exhorts the Saints to covet after the best Gifts he means the extraordinary Gifts of the Spirit for certainly those are the best Gifts that most tend to the edification of the Church which Tongues could not be said to do And in the very next words he speaks of a more excellent ways viz. that of Charity or Love which refers to the Graces of the Spirit And of so little use were those special or extraordinary Gifts to the Church that if there were no Interpreter they were to be silent and not use them in the Church at all who were that way gifted 2. You confound Tongues which did appertain to all sorts of Gifts with Prophecy and Singing He that had a Doctrine might have the Gift of Tongues to bring it forth so might he that had the Gift of Prophecy and he also that had the Gift to Interpret and so might he also that had the extraordinary Gift to bring forth a Psalm And pray why must ordinary praising of God be now admitted and Preaching Prophesying and Interpreting the Scripture by the ordinary Gifts of the Spirit be still allowed and yet Singing by the same ordinary Gifts must not be admitted What Reason do you give for this Is not this to darken Counsel with words without Knowledg I have demonstrated that the End of those extraordinary Gifts that were then in the Church in the Administration of every Duty and Ordinance was to confirm the ordinary practice of all those Ordinances and so to continue them in the Church to the end of the World And God hath equally honoured and confirmed Singing of Psalms c. to continue and the ●●●ctice thereof to abide as of any othe● Ordinance You need not therefore spend your time to prove the Apostles Prayed Preached Prophesied and also Sung by an extraordinary Gift we acknowledg it but say this is no mo●e against our Singing than against our Praying c. who have not now those special Gifts 2. He that had a Psalm of David might bring it forth in an unknown Tongue as well as he that had a Doctrine and so not to the Edification of the Church
Divine Worship as to know what Gospel-Worship is and also that we ought not to neglect one Ordinance more than another because we are not arrived to the height of Perfection I am sure the way you would lead poor Souls in is not to bring them forward towards perfection ●in Worship but to keep them back and hinder them in pressing on to that which some have not yet attained unto Moreover your folly appears too much in calling our Singing an Irregular way of Worship unless you had 〈◊〉 strength of Argument to convince your Reader what you say is true May be 〈◊〉 you had Truth on your side you might have 〈◊〉 like a Man But I am satisfied all wise Men will say there appears nothing less than Argument In both parts of your Book there are many words indeed but little else as I can see If what I have said have no more strength of Argument and Scripture and good Sense in it for Singing of Psalms c. than appears in your Book against it I do intreat my Reader to reject what I have said and 〈◊〉 it as worth nothing but if it be otherwise viz. upright even words of Truth O then ye Saints receiv● this Ordinance and let what I have said by the assistance of God's Spirit be as Go●rds and as Nails fastened by the Master of Assemblies which are given from one Shepherd Prov. 12. 10 13. One word more to those Texts in Paul's Epistles Ephes 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. where he enjoins those Churches to admonish one another in Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs c. Can any Man suppose 〈◊〉 these words the Apostle exhorts Ministers to preach and so sing in Preaching or to admonish one another to pray and so to sing in Prayer How absurd would it be to affirm either Why then say I he can mean nothing else but this Ordinance of Singing c. Object But say some Did not the Lord's People of Old in their Captivity say How can we sing one of the Lord's Songs in a strange Land Psal 137. 4. Answ 1. Under that Dispensation the Lord's People had a special and peculiar Right to Temporal Blessings and when they were deprived of them and in Exile they might not see they had that cause to sing the Praises of God But our Promises and Privileges are better ●nd more inward and Spiritual And therefore under the Gospel-Days we find the Saints sung in the midst of their greatest Sufferings for as ou● Sufferings do abound in us so our Consolation also aboundeth by Christ 2 Cor. 1. 5. 2. I know not but we nevertheless might see cause to refuse as they did to sing the Lord's Song at the taunting and reproachful ●●quests of an insulting Enemy the Lord's People are not to do the Lord's Work at the Devil's Instigation 3. But blessed be God we are not in Exil● we are delivered like Men that dreamed our Liberty and Mercies are great if we do not sin them away In the last place consider how acceptable and well-pleasing to God his Praises are in a Song read Psal 69. 30. I will praise the Name of God with a Song and will magnify him with Thanksgiving Vers● 31. This also shall please the Lord better than an Ox or Bullock that hath Horns and Hoofs Two things you may observe from 〈◊〉 1. That to sing God's Praises is acceptable to him 2. That 't is no Ceremonial Rite but in it self a Moral Duty Sacrifices appertained to the Ceremonial Law and though acceptable to God in their Nature and Design yet Moral Duties have always had the preference He hath shewed thee O Man what is good i. e. that excells that which God most delights in to do justly love Mercy c. Mic. 6. 8. And this of praising God in a Song seems from hence to be a Duty of the same Nature 't is not only acceptable but very acceptable it pleases God better than shadowy Ordinances or the Offering of an Ox or Bullock The● few things Brethren I thought good to add at the Close that you may stick close to this Heavenly Ordinance and not be removed by the subtil opposition of any Men whatsoever Remember there is no Truth of Christ but has met with its Opposers but though we can't as yet agree to sing the Praises of God together yet let us love one another and let not the practising or non-practising of this Duty for want of Light break our Communion one with another nor make a Breach in our Affections Let us walk as we have attained If any be otherwise minded God may reveal it to them Phil. 3. 15. Let us live holy Lives and not sing God's Praises and soon forget his Works that so though we can't all sing together on Earth yet may so walk to the Praise of his Glory that we may sing his Praises together in Heaven FINIS Some Reflections on Mr. Marlow's undue Citations of several Learned Men shewing the genuine and proper Signification of the word Hymnos By another Hand THE Foundation of Singing Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs in the Publick Assembly of the Saints is too firmly laid in Scripture and in the Judgment and Practice of Christians in general to be shaken by the New Notions of some few amongst us whom I hope the Lord in his time will lead into the knowledge of this Truth and make them sensible of their injurous Attempts to overthrow and remove it particularly Mr. Marlow in his late Book and Appendix which are answered in the preceding Tract and no more is intended in these few Pages but some short Remarks on the two first Sections of the Appendix In the first whereof he would not have Praising God con●●ed to Songs of Praise or Vocal and Melodious Singing For my part I know not where he will find an Antagonist in this Point for without Controversy it will be generally granted that all Creatures according to their Natures and Capacities are obliged to praise their great and bountiful Creatour and the allowance hereof doth not in the least injure the Duty which he strenuously pleads against As for his long Citation out of the Learned Dr. Owen on Heb. 2. 12. to me seems very little for his purpose for the Doctor after he had made some Reflections on the translation of the former part of the Verse saith in the rest of the words viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. in the midst of the Church I will sing Praise unto thee the Original Heb. Psal 22. 24. is expresly render'd for though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be render'd simply to Praise yet it s most frequent use when it respects God as its Object is to praise by Hymns or Psalms as the Apostle here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sibi hymnos canam I will sing Hymnes unto thee or te hymnis celebrabo I will praise thee with Hymns which was the principal way of setting forth God's Praise under the Old
Testament Here the Doctor shews the genuine and proper signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and although the Doctor in his Exposition of this place extends the sense of the word to its utmost latitude that it might include all ways whereby our blessed Mediator was to Praise the Father yet certainly he never intende● to exclude that particular way principally pointed at both in the Hebrew and Greek word which we find in the evangelical History so directly and expresly accomplished Mat. 26. 30. Mark 14. 26. as were also all other things prophesied concerning him yet I grant that the Prophecy had not its full and compleat accomplishment therein for the Design of Christ in the whole Administration of his Mediatorial Kingdom is to set forth the Praise and Glory of his Father and every Member of his Mystical Body should concur with him in this Work in all the Modes wherein it can possibly be performed because God is to be served with all our strength and might Moreover it is evident that the Doctor never intended to undermine or overthrow the Duty of Singing for herein he would have opposed his own Judgment which he hath published to the World in the account he gives of the several parts of Gospel-Worship where he makes Singing one though he terms it a fond Imagination for any to think that God cannot be praised in the Church without it and I doubt not but that all sober Christians agree with the Doctor therein I shall now pass to the second Section and consider some parts of it which I was desired to take notice of Mr. Marlow begins with the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which whatever he pretends concerning the generality of its signification most properly denotes a Song of Praise And what he cites out of the Learned Ainsworth on Psal 3. to favour his Purpose will not serve it at all for he there intends nothing less than a Song of Praise which is fitly composed to be sung as will appear to any one who considers the whole Paragraph without Prejudice and this import of the word is agreeable to the common sense of Learned Men notwithstanding what is cited to the contrary His first Citation is out of Constantin's Lexicon whence he tells us that Hymenaeus is a Nuptial Song And what if it be it is altogether impertinent in the present Enquiry for this is a word of another Family and descends from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word well known amongst Learned Anatomists And if he consults any of them he may soon know the full meaning of it and also the reason why Hymenaeus is used for a Nuptial Song This word being thus dismist as foreign to our present Purpose we may consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which according to Constantine as cited by him primarily and chiefly signify an Hymn or Copy of Verses made to Praise and to sing such an Hymn or Verse And as for the latter word he says also it is used for saying or pronouncing such an Hymn and the reason may be because saying or pronouncing is necessarily included in Singing for Singing is but a particular Mode of saying or pronouncing And if it was not thus I might say it is the common fate of all Words to be stretched beyond their prime and most proper Signification and who can help it seeing that the Wit and Fancy of Men are such luxuriant things that will make bold sometimes not only with Words but Persons too The Object of an Hymn and Hymning according to their usage in prophane Authors hath been extended with the like liberty both to Men and Things though the primary Object was their Gods Now I shall pass by two or three lines of unintelligible stuff Viz. Hymno etiam Kateuphemismon pro conqueror i. e. hymno also Kateuphemismon is put for Conqueror to complain Only with this Caution to the Author that when he makes his next Essay to shew his Scholarship in Print he would take better care lest he meet with a more severe Observator As to what he further saith of the use of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to reproach to accuse to complain c. ● readily allow but then he must take notice that all this was done in Verse composed and ●ung to these ends and the use of the word to these ends doth not at all prejudice its primary signification which is to Praise with Songs And whatever the quick-sighted Author thinks he sees in Constantine or Sympson concerning its signifyng simply to Praise for my part I can see no such thing either in them or other Authors which I shall now inspect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is render'd by Scapula Carmine celebro ● praise in Verse Hymnis decanto I sing in Hymns and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 celebratio quae fit hymnis ●el carmine i. e. praising by Hymns or Verse decantatio laudum a singing of Praises Greg. ●az 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is render'd by Scap. Hymnus Carmen i. e. Hymn or Verse and sometimes ●eculiarly signifies carmen in honorem Dei Verse composed for the honour of God Thus we find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. a Hymn to the Praise of Apollo Hymnus est cantilena conti●ens laudem Dei i. e. an Hymn is a Song containing the Praise of God Minsh The same Author derives it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Hesych varies by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifies to sing Vid. Mart. Lex Gl. Cyril Isid lib. 6. 19. Now I shall enquire into the usage of this Word in the holy Scripture and shall follow his Method therein The first Instance which he gives as serviceable to his Design is Psal 78. 63. where he supposes the LXXII Translators were not acquainted with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a Song of Praise or Marriage-Song which is more than he can tell for it is very probable they mistook the Radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he grieved or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he lamented for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did not lament Of this you see more in Musc on the place But such as took the Radix 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have translated the words otherwise as Jun. and Trem. Non Epithalamiocelebratae sunt i. e. were not honoured with a Wedding-Song and to this sense the words are render'd in six or seven Translations more Here the Antecedent is put for the Consequent viz. Praising or honouring with a Nuptial-Song for Marriage it self Hence appears the unskilfulness of this Author and his Ignorance in imposing upon his Reader Next he comes to Mr. L. in his Critic● Sacra where you will find Mr. L. giving this sense of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it is carnem se● peculiariter in honorem Dei i. e. Verse but peculiarly designed for the Honour of God This is agreeable to