On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
doubt , that in the Alexandrian church , young women sang in public worship , accompanying their voices wiih instrumental music . But Clemens has spoken of musical instruments as being fitter for beasts than men . * I he passage mu ^ t be considered somewhat at large * It is in his Paedagogus , lib- ii . c . 4 , where he treats of [ he
conduct proper at social meetings . After reprehending the dissolute manners of the profligate at their banquctings , and their riotous music and ^ dancing , and quoting the apostle ' s words , Rom . xiii . 12 ,
13 , he goes on , " Let the pipe then be given to the shepherd , and the flute to the superstitious idolater ; for truly these instruments , more fit for beasts than men , ought to be banished from the sober entertainment . "t He
then goes on to mention some singular uses * to which these particular instruments had been applied , and which had probably contributed to his dislike of them ; and censures that kind of music which excites to intemperance and
disworil did take place before the time of Hesychius , ( See p . 45 of this volume . ) It had not however in the time of Au-Iu 8 Gellius . * Pierce ' s Vindication of the
Dissenters , Part III . Ch . 3 . This great and good man has not always treated his antagonist with perfect candour . In the chapter just referred to , which I believe constitutes his Tractate odu
Church Music , he quotes Clem . Alex , as against instrumental music in toto , ^ ben in the same chapter that Father Expresses himself at least without censure of instrumental music with the hymns of devotion
t The 'Athenians in the time of Plato prohibited all kinds of wind instruments , because they changed the liner aments of the countenance , and were also injurious to the organs © f respiration .
Untitled Article
order . He next proceeds to explain the instrumental music mentioned in the Psalms , of the organs of the body , and the body itself ; but I do not perceive that he means to intimate that those instruments were not employed ; but simply that the spirit of the directions given respecting them may be fulfilled without them .
" Man ( he goes on ) is a peaceful instrument : but if a person exa . mine attentivel y , he will find other instruments to be warlike , inflaming the mind to eager desires , or inkindling love , or rendering the
passions furious . " He then speaks of the various instruments
eraployed in war by different nations , and says , " We employ then one
instrument , ihe peaceful Word alone , with which we honour God ; and no longer use the anJ cient psaltery , and trumpet , and timbrels , and flute , employed among warlike peopl e &c . He
soon after adduces the apostle ' s words in Col . iii . 16 , 17 , and adds , " This is our grateful festivity ; and if you choose losing and play upon the harp or the lyrey
you will incur no censure ; % you will imitate the pious Hebrew king , who was well . pleasing to God . '' After quoting Ps . xxxiii . 1 , 2 , ( the decachord mentioned in which he seems to consider as
a type of Christ ) he says , " we ought to praise the Maker of all before we partake of food , so when drinking we ought to make harmony (^ socWeiv ) in his praise . " He recommends thanksgiving
before sleep overtakes us ; and again makes a reference to the Psalms .
X K < zv 7 tpo $ KiBapocv e § £ \ r < TYjS tq Xvpoiv a $ Ev Te xai fyaWsiv [^ ou ^ juos ouTL serriv-
Untitled Article
On the Use of Vocal and Instrumental Music in Public fVorship . 465
Untitled Article
VOL * VIII . 3 p
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 2, 1813, page 465, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2430/page/41/
-