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WORSHIP THE BEST OUTLET AND REMEDY FOR EXCITEMENT—THE
CONNECTION BETWEEN WORSHIP AND CONDUCT.
Jas 5:13 THE subject of this verse was probably suggested by that of the
preceding one. Oaths are not a right way of expressing one’s
feelings, however strong they may be, and of whatever kind they may
be. There is, however, no need to stifle such feelings, or to
pretend
to the world that we have no emotions. In this respect, as in many
others, Christianity has no sympathy with the precepts of Stoicism
or
Cynicism. It is not only innocent, but prudent, to seek an outlet
for
excited feelings; the right and wrong of the matter lie in the kind
of outlet which we allow ourselves. Language of some kind, and in
most cases articulate language, is the natural instrument for
expressing and giving vent to our feelings. But we need some strong
safeguard, or the consequences of freely giving expression to our
emotions in speech will be calamitous. This safeguard is clearly
indicated by the rules here laid down by St. James. Let the
expression of strongly excited feelings be an act of worship; then
we
shall have an outlet for them which is not likely to involve us in
harmful results. By the very act in which we exhibit our emotions we
protect ourselves from the evil which they might produce. The very
mode of expressing them moderates them, and serves as an antidote to
their capacity for evil. Prayer and praise, or (in one word)
worship,
according to St. James, is the Christian remedy for "allaying or
carrying off the fever of the mind." In all cases in which the mind
is greatly agitated, whether painfully or pleasantly, whether by
sorrow, anger, regret, or by joy, pleasure, hope, -the wise thing to
do is to take refuge in an act of worship. Mental excitement is neither right nor wrong, any more than physical
hunger or thirst. Everything depends on the method of expressing the
one or gratifying the other. It will be easy in both cases to
indulge
a legitimate craving in such a way as to turn a natural and healthy
symptom into a disease. Neither a heated mind nor a heated body can
without danger be kept heated, or treated as if it was at its normal
temperature. The advice of St. James is that in all cases in which
our minds are agitated by strong emotion we should turn to Him who
gave us minds capable of feeling such emotion; we should cease to
make ourselves our own center, and turn our thoughts from the causes
of our excitement to Him who is the unmoved Cause of all movement
and
rest. We need not tie ourselves to the distribution of prayer and praise
expressed in the text. It is the most natural and most generally
useful distribution; but it is not the only one, and perhaps it is
not the highest. The precept will hold good with equal truth if we
transpose the two conclusions: "Is any among you suffering? let him
sing praise. Is any cheerful? let him pray." "In everything give
thanks," says St. Paul; which involves our frequently giving thanks
in suffering. This was what Job, to whom St. James has just directed
his readers, did in his trouble. He "fell upon the ground and
worshipped: and he said, Naked came I out of my mother’s womb, and
naked shall I return thither; the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
away; blessed be the name of the Lord" (1:20, 21). And the Psalmist
teaches much the same lesson as St. Paul: "I will bless the Lord at
all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth". {Ps
34:1} But if praise is as suitable as prayer for suffering, prayer
is as suitable as praise for cheerfulness. He who is cheerful has
indeed great reason to bless and praise God. He has a priceless
gift,
which is a blessing to himself and to all around him, a gift which
makes life brighter to the whole circle in which he moves. We most
of
us take far too little pains to cultivate it, to retain it when it
has been granted to us, to regain it when we have lost it or thrown
it away. Yet cheerfulness has its dangers. The light-hearted are apt
to be light-headed, and to be free from care leads to being free
from
carefulness. The cheerful may easily lose sobriety, and be found off
their guard. The remedy is prayer. Prayer steadies without dimming
the bright flame of cheerfulness; and just as thanksgiving sweetens
sorrow, so supplication sanctifies joy. "Is any suffering? let him
sing praise. Is any cheerful? let him pray." But there is another advantage in making religious worship, whether
public or private, the outlet for our emotions. It secures a real
connection between worship and life. Missionaries tell us that this
is a frequent difficulty in their work. It is a hard enough thing to
win converts from heathenism; but it is perhaps still harder to
teach
the newly converted that the worship of God has any bearing whatever
upon their conduct. This idea is quite strange to them, and utterly
alien to their whole mode of thought. They have never been taught
anything of the kind before. They have been accustomed to regard the
worship of the gods as a series of acts which must be religiously
performed in order to win the favor of the deities, or at least to
avert their Wrath. But it has never occurred to them, nor have their
priests impressed upon them, that their lives must be in accordance
with their worship, or that the one has any connection with the
other, any more than the color of their clothes with the amount that
they eat and drink. From this it follows that when the idolater has
been induced to substitute the worship of God for the worship of
idols, there still remains an immense amount to be done. The convert
has still to be taught that there can no longer be this divorce of
religion from conduct, but that prayer and praise must go hand in
hand with work and life. Converts from heathenism are by no means the only persons who are in
need of this lesson. We all of us require to be reminded of it. All
of us are apt to draw far too strong a line of distinction between
Church and home, between Sunday and week-day, between the time that
we spend on our knees and that which we spend in work and
recreation.
Not, alas! that we are too scrupulous about allowing worldly
thoughts
to invade sacred times and places, but that we are very jealous
about
allowing thoughts of God and of His service to mingle with our
business and our pleasures, or at least take no pains to bring about
and keep up any such mingling. Our worship is often profaned by
being
shared with the world; our work is rarely consecrated by being
shared
with God. What St. James recommends here is a remedy for this. There can be no
wall of partition between conduct and religion if our feelings of
joy
and sorrow, of elation and despondency, of hope and fear, of love
and
dislike, are daily and hourly finding expression in praise and
prayer. Our emotions will thus become instruments for moving us
towards God. So much of life is filled with either vexation or
pleasure, that one who has learned to carry out the directions here
given of turning suffering into prayer, and cheerfulness into
praise,
will have gone a long way towards realizing the Apostolic command,
"Pray without ceasing." As Calvin well observes, St. James "means
that there is no time in which God does not invite us to Himself.
For
afflictions ought to stimulate us to pray; prosperity supplies us
with an occasion to praise God. But such is the perverseness of men
that they cannot rejoice without forgetting God, and when afflicted
they are disheartened and driven to despair. We ought, then, to keep
within due bounds, so that the joy which usually makes us forget God
may induce us to set forth the goodness of God, and that our sorrow
may teach us to pray." The word used by St. James for "to sing praise" (ψαλλειν) is
worthy of notice. It is the source of the word "psalm." Originally
it meant simply to touch, especially to make to vibrate by touching:
whence it came to be used of playing on stringed instruments. Next it came to mean to
sing
to the harp; and finally to sing., whether with or without a
stringed
accompaniment. This is its signification in the New
Testament; to Romans {1Co 14:15 Eph 5:19} sing praise to God.
St. James, therefore, regards music as a natural and reasonable mode
of expressing joyous feelings; and few will care to dispute that it
is so; and it is evident that he is thinking chiefly, if not
exclusively, of the joyous Christian singing by himself, rather than
of his joining in psalms and hymns in the public worship of the
congregation. A portion of Hooker’s noble vindication of music as a
part of religious worship may here with advantage be quoted. "Touching musical harmony, whether by instrument or by
voice, it being but of high and low in sounds a due proportional
disposition, such, notwithstanding, is the force thereof, and so
pleasing effects it hath in that very part of man which is most
divine, that some have been thereby induced to think that the
soul itself, by nature, is or hath in it harmony. A thing which
delighteth all ages and beseemeth all states; a thing as
seasonable in grief as in joy; as decent being added unto
actions of greatest weight and solemnity, as being used when men
most sequester themselves from action. The reason hereof is an
admirable facility which music hath to express and represent to
the mind, more inwardly than any other sensible mean, the very
standing, rising, and falling, the very steps and inflections
every way, the turns and varieties of all passions whereunto the
mind is subject; yea, so to imitate them that whether it
resemble unto us the same state wherein our minds already are,
or a clean contrary, we are not more contentedly by the one
confirmed, than changed and led away by the other…So that
although we lay altogether aside the consideration of ditty or
matter, the very harmony of sounds being framed in due sort, and
carried from the ear to the spiritual faculties of our souls, is
by a native puissance and efficacy greatly available to bring to
a perfect temper whatsoever is there troubled, apt as well to
quicken the spirits as to allay that which is too eager,
sovereign against melancholy and despair, forcible to draw forth
tears Of devotion if the mind be such as can yield them, able
both to move and to moderate all affections." "The Prophet David having therefore singular knowledge, not
in poetry alone, but in music also, judged them both to be
things most necessary for the house of God, left behind him to
that purpose a number of Divinely indited poems, and was farther
the author of adding unto poetry melody both vocal and
instrumental, for the raising up of men’s hearts, and the
sweetening of their affections towards God. In which
considerations the Church of Christ doth likewise at this
present day retain it as an ornament to God’s service, and a
help to our own devotion. They which, under pretence of the Law
ceremonial abrogated, require the abrogation of instrumental
music, approving nevertheless the use of vocal melody to remain,
must show some reason wherefore the one should be thought a
legal ceremony, and not the other" ("Ecclesiastes
Pol.," 5. 38. 1, 2). It hardly needs to be stated that it is not necessary to be able to
sing in order to observe this precept of St. James. The "singing and
making melody with our hearts to the Lord" of which St. Paul writes
to the Ephesians {Eph 5:19} is all that is necessary; "giving
thanks always for all things in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to
God, even the Father." The lifting up of the heart is enough,
without the lifting up of the voice; and if the voice be lifted up
also, it is of little account, either to the soul or to God, whether
its tones be musical, always provided that he who thus offers praise
is alone, and not in the congregation. Those who have no music in
their voices, and yet persist in joining aloud in the singing of
public service, are wanting in charity. In order to gratify
themselves, they disturb the devotions of others. And that principle
applies to many other things in public worship, especially to
details
of ritual other than those which are generally observed. There would
be much less difficulty about such things if each member of the
congregation were to ask, "By doing this, or by refusing to do it,
am I likely to distract my neighbors in their worship?" Ought not
the answer to that question to be conclusive as regards turning or
not turning to the East at the creed, bowing or not bowing the head
at the Gloria Patri, and the like? We come to church to be calmed,
sobered, soothed, not to be fretted and vexed. Let us take care that
our own behavior is such as not to irritate others. By our self-will
we may be creating or augmenting mental excitement, which, as St.
James tells us, worship, whether public or private, ought to cure. |