Our
Savior did not use any means which might enlist man's lower nature on his side.
When I have heard of large congregations gathered together by the music of a
fine choir, I have remembered that the same thing is done at the opera house
and the music-hall, and I have felt no joy. When we have heard of crowds
enchanted by the sublime music of the pealing organ, I have seen in the fact
rather a glorification of St. Cecilia than of Jesus Christ. Our Lord trusted in
no measure or degree to the charms of music for the establishing his throne. He
has not given to his disciples the slightest intimation that they are to employ
the attractions of the concert room to promote the kingdom of heaven.
I
find no rubric in Scripture commanding Paul to clothe himself in robes of blue,
scarlet, or violet; neither do I find Peter commanded to wear a surplice, an
alb, or a chasuble. The Holy Spirit has not cared even to hint at a surpliced
choir, or at banners, processions, and processional hymns. Now, if our Lord had
arranged a religion of fine shows, and pompous ceremonies, and gorgeous
architecture, and enchanting, music, and bewitching incense, and the like, we
could have comprehended its growth; but he is "a root out of a dry
ground", for he owes nothing to any of these.
Christianity
has been infinitely hindered by the musical, the aesthetic, and the ceremonial
devices of men, but it has never been advantaged by them, no, not a jot. The
sensuous delights of sound and sight have always been enlisted on the side of
error, but Christ has employed nobler and more spiritual agencies. Things which
fascinate the senses are left to be the chosen instruments of Antichrist, but
the gospel, disdaining Saul's armor, goes forth in the natural simplicity of
its own might, like David, with sling and stone. Our holy religion owes nothing
whatever to any carnal means; so far as they are concerned, it is "a root
out of a dry ground".
Charles
Spurgeon
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