Alastair's Adversaria - Psalm-Singing and Our Encounter with Scripture
Episode Date: December 5, 2024The following was first published over on The Anchored Argosy Substack: https://argosy.substack.com/p/14-coronation. Within it, I mention a talk I gave at a Shrewsbury Psalm Roar event: https://www.yo...utube.com/watch?v=CS3SftXtXnU&ab_channel=StGeorge%27sChurch. Sign up for my forthcoming Davenant Hall course on the Psalms here: https://davenanthall.com/course/psalms-bible-miniature/. Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.substack.com/. See my latest podcasts at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following reflection is entitled
Psalm Singing in Our Encounter with Scripture.
It was first published on the Anchored Argosy a year and a half ago.
However, as I'm about to teach a course on the Psalms for Dabnant Hall,
I thought it would be good to record a version of it
and to encourage those of you who are interested in thinking more about the Psalms
to take the upcoming course.
The link to that will be in the show notes below,
as will be the link to the original article.
On account of the psalm roar in Shrewsbury, psalm singing has been at the forefront of my mind.
I shared some thoughts on the Psalms and psalm singing in my talk at the event,
but many further thoughts occurred to me during the event and afterwards.
Christians can easily think of scripture as a collection of texts,
containing moral precepts, doctrinal instruction, historical information,
random devotional nuggets, and other such things.
Scripture is imagined principally as inert words.
on a page whose informational content needs to be extracted by the mind of the reader in an activity
typically termed interpretation. Indeed, some might be surprised by the implication that there might
be other ways to think about it. This can function as a set of constraining expectations,
greatly limiting our engagement with it. A frequent consequence of such an approach to the
scriptural text is inattention to or even disregard for the form of scripture, believing that some
suppose doctrinal, ethical, or devotional content is thoroughly extricable from the form of
scripture, the degree to which the revelatory end of scripture is achieved through literary
structure, artistry and rhetoric, for instance, or through scripted forms of engagement, can be
missed. For any who regard them chiefly as containers or vehicles of meaning to be extricated,
the notion that much of their meaning is discovered through attention to the form of scriptural texts
and submission to their direction can be strange and disorienting.
In such cases, one often won't encounter strong resistance to alternative postures towards the text,
mostly because their possibility has not really been considered.
When a reader is narrowly concerned to discover and abstract the all-important propositional theological content of a scriptural text,
they can easily lose sight of the text as a specific form of speech act and the significance of that.
The form of the scripture can be regarded as if it were a disposable husk,
containing a theological kernel for the detached mind,
rather than as a means of directing the hero or reader's meditations upon
or internalization of the text,
a means of conscripting and forming, not merely informing, its addresses,
or as the scripting of authorized performances.
This posture towards the scripture can also render it inert for us,
as we have subconsciously filtered out all the activity implied in its form.
The book of Psalms is a good example to consider here.
The Psalms don't primarily inform us of doctrine.
Although they can be powerfully formative of ethics,
they do not principally instruct us in ethical ideas.
And while they contain a great deal of a devotional nature,
much of this doesn't really fit many Christians' expectation of devotional material,
expectations which remain strongly didactic in character.
Psalms, for instance, are not helpfully considered as containers of moral or doctrinal truth.
Such a way of imagining texts tends to spatialise them,
to treat them as if they were objects that belonged in the immediacy and present of the mind's speculation
in a largely timeless space.
However, Psalms are principally written to be sung in the assembly,
something that takes time and practice.
and that time is frequently integral to their meaning.
To understand a piece of music, you can't merely quickly read the score.
You must listen to, or better perform it, submitting your attention to its playing out over time.
Many Psalms narrate a movement of the heart and mind in which the singer is invited to participate.
The psalmist commonly ends up in a different state of soul at the end than he was in at the beginning of the Psalm,
and his words can lead the worshipper into a similar journey of the soul.
Rather than containers of truths to be extricated and held in the atemporal immediacy of some internal realm of thought,
Psalms are chiefly external and collective performed texts,
whose movements we are both called to enter and to take into ourselves, being formed by them.
Our ways of conceiving of Scripture can also dull us to it as something to be treasured and repeatedly performed,
This is likely in part a consequence of the printed word, mass production of texts,
and the weakening of many habits characteristic of oral society.
Our Bibles are not physically valuable objects,
and, as printed texts of scripture are readily available to us,
practices of memory, meditation, and public reading are greatly diminished.
Learning and singing the Psalms can greatly deepen our sense of God's words' relationship to us.
The Psalms are presented to us as means of the endowment.
dwelling of Christ's word, for instance in Colossians 316, and of his spirits indwelling,
Ephesians chapter 5 verses 18 to 21. They are means of knitting bodies of God's people together
in common song. The Psalms are largely divinely inspired speech for us, much of them first
person in character. God is not merely speaking to us, but giving us words to express to him and to
each other. The words aren't chiefly about informing minds, but about conscripting hearts and
inscribing his word upon them and placing it upon our lips. The force of this should not be
missed. The psalmist speaks of the word of God as sweet like honey to his taste in Psalm 19
verse 10 and Psalm 119 verse 103 as stored up in his heart Psalm 119 verse 11 and as his meditation all the day
Psalm 119 verse 97 the promise of the new covenant is the law of the Lord placed in our hearts
Jeremiah chapter 31 verse 33 the psalmist described this experience from the very opening Psalm
his delight is in the law of the Lord and on his law he meditated
day and night. This is such a fitting beginning to the Psalms because the law in the renewed heart
is revealed by the words of the lips, and the rest of the book gives us wonderful words in which we can
delight and grow. He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God, Psalm 40, verse 3.
New covenant hearts will be hearts filled and overflowing with Psalms.
singing the Psalms teaches us to delight in God's words.
God's words are not merely disposable containers for ideas, information and directives,
but glorious things to be savoured, expressed beautifully, born in memory, and treasured within
in the deep meditations of the heart.
In singing the Psalms, we take inspired words of the Spirit as our words,
recognizing also that the words are ultimately of Christ, and that He leads us as we say.
We sing back to God the words that he has given to us, seeking to do so in a way that manifests our
close attention to, and internalization and treasuring of them. And in singing Psalms back to God,
we join with the assembly, taking God's words and glorifying them with our music and mouths,
our musical composition and performance, a form of loving attention to God's gift of such
voice to us as his children, that gift redounded to his glory.
Too often modern worshippers treat worship as if it were something chiefly to be consumed by them as individuals,
leading to a great concern that church music styles cater to their more general tastes in music consumption.
Yet worship is not chiefly to be consumed quasi-passively, but to be an act.
In the purposeful and practiced act of singing psalms together,
we joyfully and lovingly present our hearts and our assemblies to God,
and we take his word into us.
Because it is an act of worship,
we should want to take time to learn how to do it well.
Typically greater delight will follow.
A huge obstacle to good psalm singing
is the ingrained passivity that comes with a lifetime
of being consumers of music.
Great psalm singing is entirely achievable,
but we must approach worship more as an act of making music before the Lord,
demanding practice and effort. Indeed, the more the church's music is driven by the musical tastes of
religious consumers, the more divided it will be. The corporate act of making music has a power to unite
that exceeds the unity produced by the convergence of private tastes in its consumption.
Congregational psalm-singing is a form of expression of God's word by which, within the body of Christ,
we address each other and by which Christ's word and his spirit indwell us.
As we do it, the body can become self-aware in a new way,
as we don't merely sing along with performers at the front,
but sing in unison or in harmony as a congregation.
We take fuller ownership of the words that God has given us
as our own joyful and purposeful expression,
and also receive those words from the lips of our neighbours.
Along with responsive liturgy,
psalm singing as a congregation's service of the Lord and ministry to each other is a powerful way to practice, amplify and develop the voice of the laity.
The loss of this voice might be one reason we get so fixated on those speaking at the front.
There are great hymns, but only the Psalms are the very words of God, to store up in memory and treasure within,
to give ready channel to the expression of full hearts, to unite us with our neighbours in song,
and to gather the people of God for over 3,000 years in common praise.
I suspect much resistance to psalm singing arises from the impression it is dull and dower
and its advocates legalistic and joyless.
However, seeing many different ways it can be done well,
the question is not whether we have to sing Psalms,
but why ever we wouldn't want to?
If you are interested in thinking more about the book of the Psalms,
please consider taking my Davenant Hall course that's up come.
coming. The link to the registration page for that course will be in the show notes below,
as will a link to the talk that I gave at the Sarmor at Shrewsbury a year and a half ago.
As usual, if you'd like to support my work here and elsewhere, please consider doing so
using Patreon or PayPal links. Those are both below. And if you'll be interested in following
free material that I share on a regular basis, please consider subscribing to the anchored
Argosy, the substack that I share with my wife Susanna. God bless and thank you for listening.
