I think Matthew Henry disagrees with you, too.
I think your presuppositions lead you to misunderstand the uninspired commentator Matthew Henry in the same way they lead you to misunderstand the inspired apostle Paul.
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I think Matthew Henry disagrees with you, too.
So does John Calvin:
Fishing and catching, apparently...
Seaweed!
BTW: John Gill tends to follow your exegesis.
"Fishing and catching, apparently..."
"Seaweed!"
"Is that some odd Aussie cuss word?"
I've got a question, JD, just to see if I'm following you. Are you objecting to the EP argument that, whereas prayer and preaching are an element of worship that require circumstantial utterances, song on the other hand is an element of worship that does not require circumstantial utterances? That is, you can pray and preach about things that are about the present circumstances, but songs may only take the form of what has been written in the Word; is this basically what you're objecting to? Is this still related to the idea of "new song", or is this entirely about the context of the Eph. and Col. texts?
So you are saying that "new song" and "in the Spirit" are necessarily tied together?
JD, sometimes the hooks will snag onto batches of seaweed, which may bend the pole and feel like a fish on the line, but prove to be nothing.
Maybe I am misunderstanding your point - are you asserting that the ordained elders would have been EP and assumed that Paul would have been referencing the 150 Psalms in his letter when he commanded psalms and hymns and spiritual songs?
dcomin said:I don't know what Joshua was asserting, but that would certainly be my understanding of the historical context.
And how would you substantiate this assertion?
There are several matters that must be defined before we begin. First, it is important that we define who bears the responsibility of proving in any intellectual contest. The participant in a persuasion dialogue with an obligation to prove has the burden (or obligation) to carry out his task. Simply, he who asserts must prove.
Second, a persuasion dialogue, often called a critical discussion, can be of two basic types. In an asymmetrical persuasion dialogue, the type of obligation of one participant is different from that of the other. In the symmetrical persuasion dialogue, both participants have the same types of obligation. Let us look at examples of both types.
Asymmetrical dialogue
Tom is committed to the pro-choice abortion position and is trying to convince Bob about the validity of his position. Bob is not convinced by Tom's arguments and raises many doubts, although Bob is not committed to either pro-choice or pro-life.
Here it is Tom who is asserting; therefore it is Tom who who has the burden of proof. Bob is a doubter. He is not trying to prove one position or the other. His only obligation is to raise questions that reflect his doubts about the acceptability of Tom's arguments.
Symmetrical dialogue
Tom is committed to the pro-choice position and again is arguing for the validity of his position. Joe is committed to the pro-life position and is arguing for the validity of his position. Each person is trying to refute the thesis of the other.
Not only Tom is assserting but Joe is asserting as well. Therefore, both have an obligation to prove their respective positions. Both have a burden to prove.
Psalms and Hymns - who proves?
It is often thought in the debate between the exclusive psalmodist and the uninspired hymnist that the dialogue is a symmetrical persuasion dialogue: in other words, both participants have the same type of obligation. This is not the case. The dialogue is really an asymmetrical persuasion dialogue.
How can this be so? Both sides must appeal to a heritage born out of Scripture as a standard for faith and practice. What was the practice of the apostles and the early church?
Now, someone will say that the exegesis of Colossians 3:16 and Ephesians 5:19 is unclear, therefore we canot know the practice of the apostles and the early church regarding the singing of Psalms in worship. It is not my task to develop an exegesis of these two passages here. Nevertheless, if it can be shown that the practice of the early church was to sing the Psalms exclusively, then the heritage of the Apostles born out of Scripture is established. In other words, if it can be shown that the early church from the time of the apostles exclusively sang the Psalms in worship, then the burden of proof is on the hymnodist.
How can this be so? Because if we can show that we are simply coming from a heritage established by the apostles, then we are asserting nothing. However, the hymnodist is asserting that he may sing uninspired hymns in opposition tot he established heritage. Therefore, the burden of proof is on the hymnodist as the one who asserts.
The evidence
Men more able than I have established this heritage born out of Scripture, but I will give a brief smattering of the evidence.
First, usually all parties will concede that the Psalms, as well as other Scriptures, were an essential part of the religious worship of the early Church. Note Eric Werner's comment: "The paramount importance of the Psalter for the evolution and structure of Christian as well as Jewish liturgy is too well known to warrant elaboration. Private devotions, monastic rituals, special religious occasions, such as consecrations, dedications, exorcisms, etc., were no less replete with Psalmody than the regular worship of the synagogue and church".
Tertullian, in the second century, and Jerome in the fourth, both testify that "reading the Scriptures and singing the Psalms" were essential features of religious worship. Because of their universal use in the early church there was also a universal love for the Psalms, as noted by Robinson: "Wherever the Psalms came to be known at all, they were sung at all times; not only in Christian assemblies, but by people generally; not only as acts of worship, but as men laboured at their tasks, in hours of pleasant recreation and aon festal and funeral occasions alike".
Referring to the Psalms in the daily life of the people, Jerome writes: "The Psalms were continually to be heard in the fields and vineyards of Palestine. The plowman, as he held the plow, chanted the Hallelujah, and the reaper, the vinedresser, and the shepherd sang something from the Psalms of David. Where the meadows were coloured with flowers, and the singing birds made their plants, the Psalms sounded even more sweetly. These psalms are our love songs, these instruments of our agriculture".
So loved were the inspired songs of the sweet Psalmist that in the morning, throughout the day, and in the evening they were sought after. The early church not only used the Psalms but delighted in them!
The songs of Zion were also upon the lips of those who suffered violent deaths for their faith. At Soissons, for instance, in the Diocletian persecution of 288, two brothers, Crispin and Crispinian, suffered torture and death In their prolonged torments 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 should the heathen say, Where is their God?'"' How different is this picture from that of today when men ridicule the Psalms and persecute the singer of these treasures.
Not only were the Psalms used and loved universally but, more importantly for our case, there is ample evidence to prove that they were used in both the Temple and the synagogue. "The church was cradled in Judaism, and borrowed many of its forms of worship from the temple and synagogue ... Christianity entered into the inheritance of an already existing pattern of worship, provided by the temple ritual and synagogue liturgy.'' This already-existing pattern of worship did not consist of singing uninspired hymns. In fact, a close examination will show that the early church took over from the synagogue the custom of chanting Psalms. Consequently, this "already existing pattern of worship" establishes the bridge between the Old Testament church, the apostolic church, and the early church in the 1st Century.
It is apparent from the above quotations that the Psalms were universally used and loved in public as well as in private devotions; however, it remains to be shown that the Psalms were used exclusively. Were the Psalms sung exclusively in the worship of the universal church? Let us permit the able scholar Phillip Schaff to answer that question: "So far as we are able to gather from our sources, nothing, except the Psalms and the New Testament hymns (such as the "Gloria in Excelsis," the "Magnificat," the "Nunc Dimittis," etc.), was as a rule sung in public worship before the fourth century."
As able and as scholarly as Schaff is, he has overlooked something integral to the argument. Schaff points to a few poetic fragments of the early church as compositions that possibly could be early hymns. However, there are two serious problems with that assumption. First, after giving a very hesitant assent to these poetic pieces being hymnic in nature, Schaff then says that the early church had "a decided aversion to the public use of uninspired songs." There are four possibilities: 1) Schaff has contradicted himself; 2) he means that the poetic fragments were only used in private; 3) these fragments found were not intended to be hymns used in public; or 4) these were written by folks on the fringe. Consequently, it seems that if the church had "a decided aversion" toward the use of uninspired songs it would not use them.
Second, Schaff did not mention that because the church had such an aversion ''to the use of uninspired songs, several church councils anathematized their use. The Council of Laodicea (c.381) prohibited the use of uninspired songs. The Council of Chalcedon in 451 affirmed this earlier decision. In 561 the Council of Braga, and the Synod of Toledo, in the 7th Century, upheld these resolutions. Therefore, because of this aversion to the use of uninspired hymns, it seems clear that these poetic fragments were just that-poetic fragments, not early hymns.
It must be remembered that our task here is not exegetical, but to demonstrate that exclusive psalmody is from the heritage of the apostles born out of Scripture. We have indeed shown that the apostles as well as the early church started out singing the Psalms of David exclusively. Interestingly, Werner writes, "Usually heretics composed new hymns, spurning the traditional Psalter. Hence heresy was often eager to replace the Psalms by new hymns."
To summarize, as we said early on, the burden of proof rests on the one who asserts. The exclusive psalmodist is asserting nothing. He is merely following the apostles and the early church, since they sang the Psalms of David in public as well as in private. It is the hymnodist who asserts. He, contrary lo the evidence, asserts that the church may indeed sing uninspired compositions. Therefore, the burden of proof is on the uninspired hymnodist to prove that he may sing his cherished man-made hymns.
hmm - sounds a lot like discussions we have had before...
I'll defer rebuttal until the debate, if I am still the one chosen for the non-EP side.
Not sure (and I guess "I'm" choosing); I'm working fast as I can. I have a tentative yes from a fellow I think would rep the nonEP side well (knows his Greek and is "ex" EP), but he hasn't seen the 'details' yet. If I haven't scared him off after we go over those, then we should be a lot closer. Mr. Winzer will rep the EP side.I would enjoy a debate between Rev. Winzer and Mr. Longmire.
Not sure (and I guess "I'm" choosing); I'm working fast as I can. I have a tentative yes from a fellow I think would rep the nonEP side well (knows his Greek and is "ex" EP), but he hasn't seen the 'details' yet. If I haven't scared him off after we go over those, then we should be a lot closer. Mr. Winzer will rep the EP side.
One question: Why would Douglas (dcomin) not be the pro-EP side? Isn't he published on the subject?
I appreciate the vote of confidence JD, but I hardly have time to keep up with the discussions we're already having... Plus, with my left hand in a cast, I think repping the EP side in a debate would probably set back my healing process
What? Me debate?