cHost B 3 JBJ 3
Do this and report back. Could use Ps. 117 (Hebrew, Hebrew
Cadence) and Song of Whole Bible. But do this and report back.
His GREAT book 'Through New Eyes' is FREE at
http://www.garynorth.com/freebooks. I also recommend Theopolis Institute both
websit and Facebook. Also check out in Africa Elisha Nehemiah (
Facebook) and Adullam.
The Reformers were great guys, but they were guys after all
and they lived when they lived. They were all bookmen and they produced
churches oriented towards literate people, upper middle class people, like you
and me. People who lived in towns and who made money, so much money that they
could actually buy a personal family Bible and even a family singing psalter!!
Not the kind of people God was concerned about in the Bible, people who learned
through hearing not by reading.
We live in modern
times. The Authorized Version (King James) of the Bible was made at the turn of
these times. So one of the concerns of the translators was that it be cadential
for reading aloud. The original Hebrew was clearly written in such a way -- the
stories are not in paragraphs but in lines: and ... and ... and... and. If our
Bibles were set out in this way, we would all feel the music of the text more
easily. But when the AV was printed, paper and ink were dear, so it saved a lot
of space to put everything into one verse and leave out some of the
"ands" to make for "smoother English."
The Reformers,
except for the English, made the horrible decision to substitute metrical hymns
for the Divine psalms. Many of these early collections of metrical psalms are
wonderful and exciting, but they are not and cannot be (to any sane person)
substitutes for God's word. The English wound up setting the psalms to Anglican
Chant, which sadly entails harmonization and is largely impossible for whole
churches to do.
Now, I strongly
recommend churches set up quarterly or monthly Psalm Roars [Amos 1:2] using the
Genevan Psalter. Invite others to come. Do not allow Scottish psalms or the
Trinity Hymnal or Book of Psalms for Singing of anything else to creep in. You
will eventually wind up with a Psalm Meow instead of a Roar. Stick with the
tough stuff, the Roars. Your kids will thank you. Here again Psalm Roars are
for literate people, and that is only 50% of the American populace.
So what do we
need to do and what should the Reformers have done? We need to stop thinking of
liturgy as prayerbook worship and think of it as dictated worship. Call and
response. That is how it must have been in Bible times. At the Temple of course
the psalms would have been sung so often, all day long daily, that they would
have become memorized in a quick amount of time; only by one group of the total
Levites, that is. Likely also Levite
singers were among the people trained to read.
Out in the hills
and farmlands, however, things were different. There was no need for book
learning there; only knowledge of the symbols and marks needed for one's
profession. The only way people learned the stories in Genesis, Exodus and
Numbers, Joshua and Judges, and later in Samuel and early Kings, was from local
Levites who met with groups of people locally from time to time and read from
rare parchments and scrolls, or else just taught from memory. These Levites, we
hope, would have taught a few psalms to their local groups, obviously by
dictating them by singing them line by line and having the people sing after,
until they had them memorized.
Happily, we live
after the industrial revolution and both paper and ink are no longer as dear as
once they were. Books are possible, and the Reformation became overly bookish
without thinking about it. Reformation churches assume people who read
paragraphs, daily newspapers or occasional magazines, and who can come to
church and read a hymnal and a bulletin.
But the fact is
that a lot of people are not like this at all. When you take your automobile in
for repair, you see a book with 50,00 pages on the shelf, but what is in that
book is not paragraphs but diagrams and pictures, arrows and directions to
other pages. You can't read it, unless you learn this foreign language. Lots of people get off work and do not go
home and read a novel; they watch television or meet friends for a card game or
drink! Visit their home and you do not see a bookshelf in the living room lined
with Stephen King or anybody else.
These are half
the population of any society. They have been ignored by the Reformation
churches. That needs to stop. And now.
What could we do?
Well, dictate worship instead of having people read it. Let's assume you will
not have a bulletin at all. Nope. You are now crippled. No prayer-book. No
bulletin. What do you do? {shake, tremble} Let's see. Worship begins with
Confession of Sin. You read a line and then the congregation prays it after
you:
Let us pray:
Almighty God
Almighty God
I, a poor sinner,
I, a poor sinner,
Confess to You that I have grievously sinned against You
Confess to You that
I have grievously sinned against You
In word and deed,
In word and deed,
And in thought and attitude.
Not only in outward transgressions,
But also in secret thoughts and desires
That I am not able to understand,
But which are all known to You.
I am in need of salvation from my sin
And deliverance from Your enemies.
For this reason I flee for safety to Your infinite mercy,
Seeking and imploring your forgiveness and deliverance,
Through my Lord, Jesus Christ, Your Anointed Ruler. Amen.
And after this
you're going to have a psalm or three and you or a cantor will sing a line and
have the congregation repeat the line after. Imagine how quickly the psalms
will get into the bones of your people when they work through them this way.
Yes, they'll get them memorized pretty quick, but you have to keep the worship
friendly to new people that God is bringing in, so you have to keep dictating
the psalms.
Well, that's enough
for starters. Worship should be short and direct, not fluffy, not with a
variety of leaders. Prayers should be short and concentrated, and using
high-speech, not colloquial-speech. The same is true of Scripture reading,
intoned in phrases (hear that, Jim Jordan??).
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