This question often comes from honest people, wondering why some of us
do not use such mechanical instruments in the worship of the Lord. It is
a fair question that demands a fair answer.
All
worship of God is limited by whatever divine instructions have been
given for our guidance. God has always prescribed what constitutes
acceptable worship of Him under every dispensation that He has made with
mankind. We must conform our efforts to His will and seek never to
impose our own wills upon His. A lesson learned from the very first
instance of worship recorded in the Old Testament—that of Cain and Abel
in Genesis 4—is
that we must act by faith in God, based on what He has spoken, if our
worship is to please Him
(Heb. 11:4).
The same lesson can be learned from the Mosaic dispensation, in the case
of Nadab and Abihu offering strange fire to the Lord in
Leviticus 10.
Whatever God has not sanctified as acceptable to Him in worship is
unauthorized and constitutes will worship.
We
also learn from the New Testament that worship can be will
worship—worship established by one’s own will (self-directed worship).
Paul spoke about this in
Colossians 2:23.
The Lord himself declared that worship based upon the doctrines and
commandments of men is offered in vain (Mt. 15:8-9). Because no
instruction from God under the New Testament shows the use of any music
besides singing to be acceptable in worship, a person adding any other
kind of music is doing so on the basis of human desires and pleasure,
not the expressed will of God. Will worship fails to meet God’s
approval, as seen in Colossians 2:23.
New
Testament regulations for worship are those that apply to God’s people
under the new covenant of Jesus Christ
(Col. 3:17).
Old Testament regulations like those during David’s day have no
relevance or application to people in the Lord’s church. To use the Old
Testament is to burden oneself with the entire Mosaic Law, according to
Gal. 5:1-4,
including its insistence upon animal sacrifices and the Levitical
priesthood. To accept part of the Old Testament practices but refuse
others, in the absence of any such direction from the Lord to do so, is
to make one’s own thinking superior to God’s
thinking.
In
spite of David’s use of the instrument or the encouragement to use such,
as in Psalms 150,
the New Testament instructs the Christian to sing and make melody in his
heart to the Lord. The heart of the worshipper is the instrument that is
employed in acceptable worship, and its melody is the only melody that
the Lord stresses
(Eph. 5:19;Col. 3:16).
In
view of Biblical teaching along the lines discussed in this study, it is
important to ask for New Testament teaching that authorizes the use of
the mechanical instrument of music in worship to God. Where is that
teaching found in the New Testament? If it can be produced, then we
should all practice it and stop condemning its use. If it can not be
found, then all should omit its use in order to please the Lord, which
is the very essence of worship.
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