The Glorious Psalms (1)
This article was published in Issue No. 24,
October-December 2001.
SINGING PRAISE is an integral part of the worship of
God. And God
has not left his Church without a manual for such adulation. In the
book of Psalms we have God's glorious volume for prayer and praise.
Within the Psalms the principles of true religion are expounded, and
Christ - the head of the Church - is portrayed in all His glory. The
very words and deepest spiritual experiences of the Lord, experiences
that no other human could relate let alone write, are set before us.
The book of Psalms contains the only guaranteed infallible and
legitimate material of praise for the worship of God. Only they can
fully meet all the spiritual needs of man. They alone, as God's Word,
can give true comfort to a dying man. History shows how individuals and
nations alike have proven just how invaluable and glorious the Psalms
are.
Biblical Times
The Psalms, divinely-inspired and divinely-appointed, were supplied
to the Church in the Old Testament. From the time of Jonah through to
the close of the Old Testament the Psalms were given a time-honoured
place. The Jews divided the Old Testament into three parts: the first
division is the Law; the second is the Prophets; and the third, the Hagiographa
or Holy Writings. This last division, however, is designated 'The
Psalms' by Christ (Luke 24:44) because the book of Psalms stands aloft
within the division.
The Psalms were used exclusively by Israel in her worship of the
Most High. They were not only sung at the daily and Sabbath worship,
but at all the great Jewish festivals e.g. Psalm 118 concludes the
great 'Hallel' or hymn sung at the feasts of tabernacle and the
Passover.
During times of trouble psalms were sung for encouragement. For
example, it was in the cave of Adullam, when persecuted by Saul, that
David penned Psalms 57 and 142. And it was with equivalent sentiments
that Jonah cried from the belly of the whale, "When my soul fainted
within me I remembered the Lord…" (Jonah 2:7 cf. Psalm 142:3).
Even the common people were acquainted with the Psalms and
associated them with the joyous coming of Messiah. For example, when
Christ entered into Jerusalem, the common people and the children in
the temple took their 'hosanna' from the book of Psalms: "Blessed be he
that cometh in the name of the LORD: we have blessed you out of the
house of the LORD." (Psalm 118:26 cf. Matthew 21:9).
The Church in the New Testament embraced the Psalms as God's manual
of praise. This, no doubt, was encouraged by the fact that the Lord
Himself died with the words of a psalm on His lips. The first martyr,
Stephen, also died with a psalm on his lips. Paul and Silas at Philippi
encouraged themselves by singing psalms throughout the night. We have
no record of fresh man-made compositions being employed either by the
Lord or by His disciples.
The Early New Testament Church
The Psalms held a special place for the early Church Fathers,
particularly those who suffered for the faith. It was with the words of
Psalm 115:4-5, "Their idols are silver and gold" that Christians defied
the imperial order to sacrifice to Ceasar, and it was with a Psalm on
their lips that they met their deaths. For instance, in the
persecutions of 288 A.D., Crispin and Crispinian were tortured for
their faith. During the prolonged agony they were sustained by the
words of Psalm 79:9-10, "Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory
of thy Name…Wherefore do the heathen say, Where is now their God?"
When Augustine's mother (Monica) died, he found his greatest comfort
in the words of Psalm 101, "My song shall be of mercy and judgement:
unto thee, O Lord, will I sing." Forty-three years later, Augustine
himself died with his eyes fixed on the Psalms. "The seven Penitential
Psalms" says his biographer Possidius "were, by his orders, written
out, and placed where he could see them from his bed. These he looked
at and read in his days of sickness, weeping often and sore." When he
had prepared for his baptism, Augustine had withdrawn to the hills
above Milan and had read and reread the Psalms. "How, O God," he says,
"did I cry unto Thee, as I read the Psalms of David, those hymns of
faith and songs of devotion, which fill the heart against all swellings
of pride." He later chose for the motto of his work on The City of
God the words, "Very excellent things are spoken of thee, thou city
of God" (Psalm 87:2), and began his Confessions with a
quotation from Psalm 145:3 "Great is the Lord, and marvellous; worthy
to be praised."
As Christianity spread, the Psalms occupy a conspicuous place among
Christians. Augustine applied to the Psalms themselves the words of the
Psalter that Paul applies to the Gospel, "Their sound is gone out into
all lands, and their words into the ends of the world." (Ps.19:4).
Basil the Great entered his eternal rest with the words of a psalm on
his lips, "Into thy hands I commit my spirit" (Ps.31:5). Origen's love
for the Psalms is well recorded, and is testified to by his commentary
and notes on them. Both Paulinus (died 431) and Cyril of Alexandria
(died 444) passed into the eternal world with the words of Psalm 132:18
on their lips, "I have ordained a lantern for mine Anointed."
Athanasius had the Psalms as his constant companion: his Exposition
of the Psalms and his Titles of the Psalms are sufficient
proof of his attachment to them.
Later Times
While the Lutheran Church adopted original hymnody within divine
worship, Calvin and Zwingli - revolting against the human intervention
of the priesthood in prayer and praise, as well liturgies - rejected
original hymns and treated the Hebrew Psalter as the only inspired
manual of praise. The more complete and thorough the Reformation, the
greater was the reverence for the Psalms and the higher the place given
to God's Infallible Word. Thus, metrical Psalms were used exclusively
in the public worship of the Reformed Churches.
In September 1553, John Hooper was imprisoned. In his prison, he
wrote a letter (October 13th 1553) to his wife Anne Hooper who had
escaped to the continent. He requested her to read and study Psalm 77
because of the "great consolation that it contains for those who are in
anguish of mind", and Psalms 6, 22, 30, 31, 38 and 69 for their lessons
in "patience and consolation at times when the mind can take no
understanding, nor the heart any joy of God's promises."
Nicholas Ridley (1500-1555) recognised the value of the Psalms to
family life. He often, as Fox relates, read and expounded Psalm 101 to
his household, "being marvellous careful over his family, that they
might be a spectacle of all virtue and honesty to others." In France,
the chanting of the Psalms was proscribed. Yet this did not stop Colporteurs
carrying copies of the Psalms to the remotest parts of the country,
and it did not stop the Huguenots singing the Psalms. Francois Leguat
and six companions even made their home on the uninhabited Island of
Rodrigues in the Indian Ocean in order that there they could sing the
Psalms of David without hindrance.
As the Mayflower left with the Pilgrim Fathers for the new world,
they took the Psalms with them. The name of the first settlement, Salem,
is taken from Psalm 76:2, "At Salem is his tabernacle" At these first
settlements, the singing of unaccompanied Psalms characterised worship.
This set the pattern, and the Psalms were exclusively sung in the
churches and chapels in America until the end of the 18th century. In
1787, when speaking on the framing of the American Constitution,
Benjamin Franklin quoted Psalm 127:2, "Except the Lord build the house,
they labour in vain that build it."
In Scotland, the Psalms were the great inspiration of the
Covenanters. A description of the field-conventicles demonstrates their
place, "At Craigmad, between Falkirk and Moranside, the hills were
crowded with ghostly worshippers who were singing Psalm 121, when the
persecutors arrived." Alexander Peden took daily support from the
Psalms, as did the captives on the Bass Rock and in the dungeons of
Dunottar. It was while singing a Psalm that the Covenanters confronted
General Dalzell at Rullion Green. And Donald Cargill sang his favourite
psalm (Psalm 118:16-end) as he was put to death on the scaffold.
The Psalms continued for some considerable time to hold a unique
place within the Church in Scotland. The true descendants of the
Disruption of 1843 continue to this day in exclusive psalmody. The
Psalms are indeed glorious. They are, after all, nothing less than the
hymnody of a glorious God, and are most suitable for use by every
generation. |