00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
Turn with me to Psalm 78 and
verse 5. Psalm 78 and verse 5. in which we read the words, for
he that is the Lord established a testimony in Jacob and appointed
a law in Israel, which he commanded our fathers that they should
make them known to their children. The 78th Psalm opens with words
that concern the passing along, the faithful passing along of
the fear of the Lord, the right worship of God, the doctrine
that had been revealed to the people of God from one generation
to another. It is, as we have not too terribly
long ago considered, the way of the Lord to deal through generations. Yes, he saves individuals, and
there is none who are saved but individuals. And yet individuals
find themselves planted by the hand of God more oftentimes than
not within families. Indeed, we are all children of
fathers and mothers. And so it pleases the Lord that
by and large within his church, there should be families, one
generation succeeding the other. Well, it was commanded Abraham
that he should teach his children in the ways of the Lord. And
the Lord said, I know, Abraham, that he will command his children
after him, that they may keep the way of the Lord, that God
might fulfill his promise that he had for them. Joshua, that
courageous and valiant man, He had become old and gray headed.
And he stood before the congregation of the Lord at a crossroads when
one generation was to succeed the other, and he charged them. If the Lord be gone, then serve
him. Or if these other gods of the
nations, if they be true, then go your ways. But as for me and
my house, we will serve the Lord. Well, Psalm 78 is a psalm in
which these themes are captured, the concept of the receiving
of the truth and passing that along to the next generation.
We have a responsibility, fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters in
Jesus Christ, to hold on to what God has given us. in the words
of Psalm 78, five, that testimony, that witness to the truth and
to pass it along to the next generation, which means two things. We must maintain what we have
received, not let it slip through our fingers, not grow lax and
careless. and we must then impart them
to the next generation that they may be faithful in the Lord. Now, I would like with God's
help to consider our testimony within our congregations, the
Presbyterian Reformed Church. Now, generally speaking, our
testimony is that of the old Reformed faith, which is, we
believe, accurately summarized in the Westminster Confession
of Faith, the larger and the shorter catechisms. But it is
oftentimes the case that that is not simply enough in order
to maintain a clear testimony because there are many that do
not hold on to those time-honored biblical principles and truths
which have become somewhat unique within our congregations. And
I'd like us to spend some time not going into exceedingly great
depth. We're not going to be abundantly
exhaustive, but we are going to, with God's help, treat various
aspects of the testimony that God has given to us as the Presbyterian
Reformed Church, and which we would seek to maintain and pass
on faithfully to the next generation. For he established a testimony
in Jacob and appointed a law in Israel, which he commanded
our fathers that they should make them known to their children. The first dimension of our testimony,
the first principle, not necessarily that this is the first in all
importance, but it is one that marks us out from many other
churches, and that is psalm singing, the practice of psalm singing. No doubt you will notice, if
you haven't already, that we are different from other churches
in that the particular songs that we sing in praise to God
are these 150 psalms that are found in the midst of our Bible. which for convenience sake have
been placed in meter and in rhyme for us to sing. Well, is this
biblical? Because we don't want to be doing
anything in the worship of God and the church of God that does
not have a biblical foundation. So what we want to do is we want
to go to the source of all truth, to the law and to the testimony
And to try this question, why is it that we sing psalms in
the worship of God? Well, first, we're going to answer
that question, why we sing psalms. And second, more narrowly, why
we sing the psalms exclusively. So first, why we sing Psalms
as a part of our testimony that we have become convinced of and
which we seek to maintain and to pass on. And second, why we
sing them exclusively. For he established a testimony
in Jacob and appointed a law in Israel, which he commanded
our fathers that they should make them known to their children.
Why do we sing Psalms? Is it simply because we want
to be different? Because we like being the odd
man out? Well, there are some Christians
who are like that. Perhaps that's their predisposition. They are
contrarians. They simply like to swim against
the stream. They like to pick fights. Well,
and there is an awful lot of that kind of thing that happens
on the Internet. People who spend hours upon hours
simply engaging in debate. And there are some who would
sympathize with us, but they do it perhaps because they are
just simply interested in debate. Well, I trust that we can say
before God that that is not our desire, that we do not simply
desire to be different for the sake of being different, to be
difficult and awkward and strange. It is not easy to be different. And how much easier it might
be, one might reason, if we would just simply abandon this strange,
backward practice. Well, The reason that we do so
is because we are not interested in pleasing men, but God. And
it is our conviction biblically that we sing psalms because God
requires us to do so. That is a part of the testimony
that God has established in Jacob. that these very words, which
we are considering as our theme text, were meant to be sung along
with the rest of the Psalms in the canon of Scripture. Why do
we sing Psalms? First, because God has provided
His church a manual of praise, intending that we should use
it. It's rather obvious. rather obvious that the psalms
were meant to be sung. To the chief musician, says David,
and he gave these psalms that they should be sung. Indeed,
the very word psalm means to sing to a stringed instrument. Now we're going to address the
question in the subsequent message about the use of instruments,
which does in fact make us different as well. But it's very obvious
that when we open the Bible, yes, the Psalms are religious
poetry. Yes, they are inspired by the
Spirit for our comfort, our instruction, our guidance, but they are also
there and preeminently there that we should sing them. God has provided his church a
book of songs to sing, and he intends that these songs should
be sung. Second, and intimately related
to this, why we sing psalms is because God has clearly commanded
that we should sing psalms. When we go to the psalms themselves,
it's very obvious not only are they songs to be sung, but that
we are commanded within the psalms to sing. For example, Psalm 95,
one, O come, Let us sing unto the Lord. Let us make a joyful
noise to the rock of our salvation. Let us come before his presence
with thanksgiving and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms. Could that not be more clear? The Lord wants us to sing psalms. Psalm 105 in verse two from the
Psalter itself. Sing unto him, sing psalms unto
him, talk ye of all his wondrous works. Why was it that David
penned these things? Was it simply to get his religious
feelings off his chest? It was so much more than that. Under the inspiration of God,
David was a song leader for the people of God, intending that
these songs of praise should be sung in the church that would
follow him. Indeed, some of them coming long
before David himself. Such as Psalm 90, a song of Moses. Lord, thou hast been our dwelling
place in generations all before. Thou hast formed the earth and
mountains great and small." God has clearly commanded that
we should sing the Psalms. And the New Testament picks up
this thread. James clearly indicates that
there is something to be done for those who are merry in heart.
What should one do, a Christian, a Christian who has experienced
the joy of salvation, the Christian who knows that he has received
the Holy Spirit as the earnest of everlasting life, what should
he do when he's feeling full and to overflowing with the joy
of the Lord? Is any merry? Let him sing Psalms. So it's not just simply an Old
Testament practice. It's a New Testament ordinance,
singing Psalms. This is the testimony that God
has given to this congregation and to these bodies, these congregations
to which the Lord has called us. It is our testimony at a
time when the Psalms are not sung within churches, or they
are infrequently sung within churches. Ephesians 5, 18 through 20. And be not drunk
with wine wherein is excess, but be filled with the Spirit.
Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs,
singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord, giving
thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Again, God is clearly indicating
to us if these words mean anything, we must speak to each other using the psalms. Now we're going to address the
question about what do we understand by hymns and spiritual songs,
but it cannot be debated for a moment that very clearly the
Apostle Paul intends psalm singing as an ordinance of the Christian
Church. And that doesn't mean just simply
the Psalms that are so very precious and valuable to us, although
it does include them, the Psalms 23 and Psalm 100. But all the Psalms, the different
varieties of Psalms, Colossians 3 16 reiterates the
very same thing let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly
in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and hymns
and spiritual songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord
the New Testament Christian Church must maintain This testimony,
and we must maintain it and pass it along to our children, that
God commands his people to sing the Psalms. So why do we sing Psalms? Because
God has obviously provided his church a manual of praise, intending
that we should use it. Second, because God is verily
explicitly commanded that we should sing Psalms. Third, because
the Psalms are a perfect pattern of Christian doctrine. Athanasius said it well, when
he said that the Psalms are an epitome of the whole scripture. Or Luther, the Psalms are a little
Bible and a summary of the Old Testament. They condense, do
they not? The great themes and truths of
God's sovereignty, his power, his majesty, his holiness, his
goodness, his love, the covenant that he has made, the grace that
he has chosen to show unto his people, the remission, the forgiveness
of sins does not pull. In order to defend the great
doctrine of justification go where? to Psalm 32. What about God's great purpose
for the nations? that God should bless not only
the Jews, but all nations. Psalm 67, let all the people
praise thee. Or Psalm 100, all people that
on earth do dwell, sing to the Lord with cheerful voice, him
serve with mirth, his praise forth tell, come ye before him
and rejoice. The Psalms are a perfect pattern
of biblical doctrine, but they are also so very perfect for
the Christian church because they so accurately reflect Christian
experience. They so accurately give voice
to the ups and downs, the twists and turns, the highs and lows
of Christian experience. Can we find better words than
the Lord's my shepherd, I'll not want. He makes me down to
lie. For I waited for the Lord, my
God, and patiently did bear. At length to me he heard my voice,
my voice and cry to hear. He took me from a fearful pit
and from the miry clay, and on a rock he set my feet, establishing
my way. He put a new song in my mouth,
our God to magnify. Many shall see it and shall fear
and on the Lord rely. Do these words not express Christian
experience? Or also the experience of not
only praise, but also the agony of being desolate. feeling as though I'm a pelican
in the wilderness all alone. Or I am persecuted, I am separated
from the people of God, and I long to go back into the courts of
the Lord. One day in the Lord's courts
is better than a thousand. I'd rather be a doorkeeper in
the house of my God. When shall I go back to the house
of God? Oh, dear brothers and sisters,
are not the Psalms meant not just for the triumphs and the
glories of the church, but for the seasons of her great hardship
and affliction. Indeed, the Psalms were meant
to be the Psalms of a persecuted church. The French Huguenots, when they
were condemned to death by the Roman Catholic Church, They would
sing the Psalms as they were burning at the stake. And their enemies would take
knives and cut out their tongues so they could not sing the Psalms. Or what about the two Margarets
in Scotland? The older godly woman, the younger
Christian daughter of Sarah. and they sing Psalm 25 to each
other as they are tied to those poles and as the water begins
to rise. The Psalms are a perfect pattern
of Christian experience. There are Psalms of praise to
be sure. I joyed when to the house of God,
go up, they said to me. Psalm 24, Psalm 148, Psalm 68,
Psalm 89. Messianic Psalms, as we shall
consider. Psalms of Thanksgiving, Psalm
136. Give thanks to the Lord for he
is good, for his mercy endures forever. Psalms of instruction. How do we make sense of the fact
that the wicked prosper and the godly, it seems as though they
are stuck in neutral at the very best. If not suffering hardship,
well, there's Psalm 37. Fret not because of the prosperity
of the wicked. Don't envy the wicked for there
will be a day when you will seek his place and you shall not find
it. So rest in the Lord, wait patiently
for him. God will visit you. The meek
shall inherit the earth. The very words of Christ from
Psalm 37. Or what about the wisdom Psalm of
Psalm 49? Give ear all people that dwell
on the earth, both young and old, both rich and poor. My mouth
shall teach unto you wisdom. Know that your days are limited.
Do not be as the beasts that perish." And so we sing to each
other these Psalms of wisdom to give us what? The wisdom of
the Holy Spirit. They're Psalms of devotion. As
the deer pants after the water brook, so my soul pants after
you, O God. When shall I come into your presence? Or Psalm 63. There's such a rich pattern of
Christian experience that John Calvin could write that it is
an anatomy of all the parts of the soul. For he says, there
is not an emotion of which anyone can be conscious that is not
here represented as in a mirror, or rather the Holy Spirit has
here drawn to the life of all the griefs, sorrows, fears, doubts,
hopes, cares, perplexities, in short, all the distracting emotions
which the minds of men want to be agitated. The Lord knows how
you feel. and he knows that you need this
book of Psalms. Above all, we sing the Psalms
because they uniquely testify of Christ. The Psalms were on the lips of
the apostles when they first preached the gospel. Why rage
the heathen And the nations imagine a vain
thing. The kings of the earth have gathered
themselves together against God and against His Christ, saying,
let us throw off their bands and their chains." What did Peter say concerning the Lord Jesus Christ
and His grave? Well, David testified, thou wilt
not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thine holy one
to see corruption. Go to the grave of David and
you shall find him resting there, but go to the grave of Christ
and he is not there because the Psalms must be fulfilled. What Psalms were on the lips
and flowing from the pen of the author to the Hebrews? Psalms
eight and 110. The Lord did say unto my Lord,
sit thou at my right hand until I make thy foes a stool whereon
thy feet may stand. And did not the Lord Jesus Christ
indicate ever so clearly that the Psalms spoke and testify
concerning him? Luke 24, 44. And he said unto them, these
are the words which I spake unto you while I was yet with you,
that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the law
of Moses and in the prophets and in the Psalms concerning
me. Now incidentally, and this is
a very minor point, but it's worth bearing in mind, I think
this helps explain in part why we do not ordinarily dance within
church, because our practice of psalm singing requires that
we fix our attention on these consecutive words, which cannot
very easily be done. unless we have just a few words
that we're saying over and over again, but that's not what we
have commanded for us in the Psalter. Well, this is why we sing Psalms,
because God has provided very obviously His Church a manual
of praise. Second, because He has clearly
commanded that we should sing the Psalms. Third, we find that
the Psalms are a perfect pattern of Christian doctrine and experience. And last, because the Psalms
uniquely testify of Christ. But second, why do we sing the
Psalms exclusively? Is this the testimony that the
Lord has established in Jacob and the law that he has appointed
in Israel? Well, we answer this, no other
material has been provided in the New Testament canon. No other material has clearly
been provided, nor is there any clear command for any other material
to be used in the praise of God. We don't have examples of other
human writings, There are no ancient hymns from the first
century, unarguably, and we cannot find any place in the New Testament
where such was either commanded or any example. However, one
might say, what about those passages in Ephesians and Colossians,
speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs? Does not the hymns and spiritual
songs refer to other songs that might be sung alongside the Psalms? Well, first of all, it's not clear
that the word hymn or song necessarily refers to songs that are other
than the Psalms. We have to be careful when we
encounter a certain word is not to read in our own ideas and
our own experience and tradition into those words. Furthermore,
a very good case can be made that all three of those terms
refer to the body of songs that are left for us in the 150 Psalms
of David. When one looks at the titles
of the Psalms, specifically the titles that are left to us in
the Greek translation of the Old Testament, the Septuagint,
that was the Bible, the translation that Paul and the other apostles
were using. And we find that all three of
these terms are used in the titles of these Psalms. For example,
Psalm 98 in verse one, we have simply a psalm. In Psalm 30 and verse 1, for
example, we have both of these words, psalm and song, occurring. Psalm 30, the title, a psalm
and song at the dedication of the house of David. Psalm 65
and verse 1 gives another instance in which Psalm 65 is a psalm
and song. The title reads to the chief
musician, a psalm and song of David. In Psalm 76, verse one in the
Septuagint, translated into English, we have all three terms, hymn,
song, and psalm. For the end among the hymns,
a psalm for Asaph, a song for the Assyrian. And so it seems quite likely
that Paul had in mind simply three different ways of expressing
the same material as sometimes happened in the Old Testament
scriptures. For example, in Psalm 119, what
words does David use for the word of God? Well, there are
many statutes, precepts, Commandments, ordinances, testimonies. Are these all discreetly different
things or are they so many different ways of saying the same thing? Furthermore. It's been contended
that spiritual song, the adverb spiritual, does not modify song,
but modifies all three terms, psalm, song, and hymn. That is spiritual hymns, spiritual
psalms, spiritual hymns. hymns, songs, psalms. Warfield writes that the appropriate
translation for the word spiritual in each case is spirit-given
or spirit-led or spirit-determined. That is, breathed out by the
Spirit of God. And that explains how Paul is
saying, let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly. speaking
to yourselves in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, or spiritual
psalms, hymns, and songs, because this is the word of Christ. Now, even if that case isn't
absolutely conclusive to you, It is not absolutely clear that
other material was meant to be sung in the praise of God, which
leads us to the final point, why we sing Psalms exclusively,
and that is the regulative principle of worship. Again, Deuteronomy 12, 30 to
32. Take heed to thyself that thou
be not snared by following them after they be destroyed from
before thee, that is the heathen. That thou inquire not after their
God saying, how did these nations serve their gods? Even so will
I do likewise. Thou shalt not do so unto the
Lord thy God for every abomination to the Lord which he hateth have
they done unto their gods. For even their sons and their
daughters have they burnt in the fire to their gods. "'What
thing soever I command you, observe to do it, "'thou shalt not add
thereto, nor diminish from it.'" So this is what he's saying.
Don't introduce into my worship what I have not given you. So
if I give you bread and wine in the Lord's supper, you are
not free to add lettuce, asparagus, We laugh. It seems silly. And
yet the Roman Catholics will add to the ordinance of baptism,
the water, they will add holy oil. Well, that is not what God
commanded. That is adding to what God commanded. The Roman Catholics take away
the cup from the common Christian. In the Lord's Supper and their
Roman Catholic mass, they only give the wafer, the bread to
the believer. The cup of wine is reserved for
the priest. And so they take away something
that belongs to the people. When we baptize. Are we free
to subtract or add the words in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Ghost? No, we're not free to do that.
Whatever God commands we do in the worship of God and whatever
he doesn't command, we say we must not do it. So is it absolutely
clear that we should sing Psalms? Yes. Is it absolutely clear that
we should sing other material than the Psalms? I don't think
the case has been made. And if that's the case, then
we must abstain and we must stick to what the Lord has clearly
required of us. Well, this is the testimony,
a part of the testimony that the Lord has given to us. He
established a testimony in Jacob and appointed a law in Israel. Let us follow the good old paths
of our forefathers and sing the Psalms, to sing the word of Christ,
to be filled with the Spirit. that the word of Christ may dwell
in us richly in all wisdom. May we teach and admonish one
another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with
grace in our hearts to the Lord. Amen. Let us close in prayer. Please
rise. Oh, Lord, we rejoice in being
given this manual of praise. It does make us different. But,
oh, God, we would be faithful to the Lord. We would sing these
songs of praise inspired by the spirit of God. And we pray that
we might maintain this practice and that our young ones would
come to appreciate the rich heritage of psalmody, even as our forefathers
understood from scripture and sought to translate the Psalms
into singable material for us. And we pray, Lord, that thou
would spread these principles among brothers and sisters who
do not as yet see eye to eye with us. Grant us patience with
them, knowing that we also received light at a time when things were
not clear to us. Grant us now thy favor and thy
mercies, and continue to send us away with thy mercy and thy
blessing through Jesus Christ. Amen. Let us now sing from Psalm 95.
Psalm 95, verses 1 through 6, to the tune Irish, tune number
73. Psalm 95, verses 1 through 6, to the tune Irish, tune number
73. Oh, come, let us sing to the
Lord. Come, let us everyone. A joyful noise make to the rock
of our salvation. Let us before his presence come
with praise and thankful voice. Let us sing psalms to him with
grace and make a joyful noise. Verses one through six. I'm sorry. ♪ Come let us sing to the Lord
♪ ♪ Come let us everyone ♪ ♪ A joyful noise make to the rock of our
salvation ♪ Let us before His presence come with praise and
thankfulness. Let us sing songs to Him with praise
and make a joyful noise. ♪ Great God and great King of all
♪ of all gods he is. Deaths on the earth are in his
hand. The strength of hills is his. ♪ The spacious sea belongs ♪ ♪
For he the same did make ♪ ♪ The dry land also from his hands
♪ ♪ Bids for man to dwell ♪ Oh, come all ye faithful joyful and
triumphant, ♪ Let us worship him ♪ ♪ Let us
bow down with awe ♪ ♪ And on our knees before the Lord ♪ ♪
Our maker, let us adore him ♪ Please rise and receive the benediction
and go in peace. The Lord bless thee and keep
thee. The Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gracious
unto thee. The Lord lift up his countenance
upon thee and give thee peace. Amen.
Our Testimony, Part 1: Psalm Singing
Series Our Testimony
Psa. 100
OT Reading – Psalm 25
Psa. 131
NT Reading – Mark 9:30-50
| Sermon ID | 86171620142 |
| Duration | 42:31 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Psalm 78:5 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.