HomeNotesDoes Silence Mean Prohibition or Permission?

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Does Silence Mean Prohibition or Permission? — 10 Comments

  1. The central question in the “instrumental question,” while often discussed in terms of “permissive silence,” is more centrally understood in asking if instruments are inherently allowed in “making melody to the Lord in your hearts.” This is a positive precept, not silence.

    If silence is permission, we may pretty much do as we wish — popes, saints, Mariology (Roman view), incense, etc.

    Even within acapella groups, there is a minority position that certain “types” of singing are not authorized — 4 part choral harmony, Stamps-Baxter, etc.

    Having read some 30 + debates, this question will not likely be settled in web site postings.

    For me, the spiritual worship of the church in song should appeal to our spiritual mature, not the fleshly nature. Those who compose music should keep this in mind. Too often, the music of the church becomes entertainment or exhibition.

  2. If the question is: How to worship God in a why that is pleasing to Him?

    I would contend that the holy scriptures provide complete instructions for Christian worship.

    If worship is something we must do. How then would the Righteous God of heaven withhold information that would prevent us from carrying out something that He instructed us to do? That ideal goes against the very nature of God.

    So if God has written in is word all requirements for worship, what need is there for anything else?

    So: 1. Scriptural worship can be fulfilled without instrumentation 2. We have received no authority from God for instrumental worship 3. To do anything other than what God has commanded, is to operate outside of His will.

    • The Holy Scriptures do indeed provide instruction for Christian worship. Since the Holy Scriptures have one Author ultimately, resulting in fact that they are therefore a unity under that one Author, the instruction we find in the Old Testament psalms regarding worship (including instrumental praise) are just as applicable to Christian gatherings.

      If we followed the line of reasoning in #2 and #3, we wouldn’t even allow singing when we gather for public worship, since God hasn’t commanded it, either.

  3. Thanks for sharing this Dr. Cottrell. When I was in Bible College several of my fellow students were disappointing me with their lack of involvement in local churches. I would often try to recruit people to assist me with my weekend ministry just so that I could get them to be active within a local church context. One day on my way to the church where I worked I decided to stop at one of the many Restoration churches in that area that I had not heard of before. Being from the north I wasn’t thinking about the fact that there may be a reason that I had not heard of them because they were acapella and therefore did not wish to have a relationship with the instrumental college I was attending. My goal was to see if the church could use a youth minister or children’s minister that I could hope to recruit for them from the college. I was surprised when the minister offered a couple of hours of explanation as to why our school was apostate. I became more familiar with some of the common arguments through my encounter with this well-meaning minister. When I inquired as to why silence would be interpreted as prohibition he brought up the Old Testament story of Nadab and Abihu and noted that the “strange fire” that God killed them for using was something that He had only “not approved.” I felt that this argument was a weak example partly because we know so little about the events in that story and also because there seems to be a biblical pattern throughout that suggests that silence and prohibition should not be assumed. To me the issue becomes much more clear when we realize that indoor plumbing, carpet, pews, and air-conditioning all must be drawn into question. The issue becomes even more difficult once we start thinking about the church as actual people and stop wondering just how this influences the actual “worship service” and the building within which the church is meeting.”

      • This is a good example of the very view that my essay refutes. The last sentence is patently false. Many if not most of the things we do every day have not been commanded by God (nor forbidden). Even if we limit this to worship, the same is true.

  4. While it’s not the main point of this post, I want to thank you for the remark, “In Christendom as a whole, ‘liberalism’ is any view that rejects the inspiration and authority of the Bible.” The “L” word is applied too freely these days to those who affirm biblical authority but differ with some on how the Bible ought to be understood and applied in certain instances.

    When I have been called “liberal,” I have wanted to reply, “I believe in the inspiration and authority of the entire Bible. I believe in and affirm the inerrancy of the Bible. I am committed to believe whatever the Bible teaches. How much more theologically conservative can a person be? Do you want me to affirm the inspiration of the Old Testament Apocrypha too?”

    Also, I happen to vote Republican, but that’s a different kind of “conservative.”

    • Thanks for the comment, Jon. I agree with what you are saying, and am very glad to read your informal statement of faith on Biblical authority. When I talk about liberalism, I do make a distinction between “liberalism” (small “l”) and “Liberalism” (capital “L”). The former (as defined in my post) is the generic kind, while the latter is the historical movement spanning the late 19th and early 20th centuries (Ritschl, Fosdick, etc.).

  5. One reasoning point made once by a non instrumental book demonstrated to me silence is prohibitive. This may sound “hokey” at first, but I give it credence

    If I send my son to the grocery store and tell him to buy bacon, eggs and milk, I expect him to return with bacon, eggs, and milk. If he comes back with a candy bar, I would be upset. By going further than what I said, he took liberties with my money that were not his to take.

    That little example has always stuck with me. It is implied that when I am being specific I expect a specific response. I guess what it comes down to with instruments: Is God being specific or just teaching about the joys of singing when writing of pubic worship?

    • I think you are putting too much weight on this “illustration.” If you think about it, you can make up an illustration that agrees with any viewpoint you want to believe. The illustration proves nothing; it just explains or represents your belief about something. I could make up another illustration that represents the opposite view. E.g., if I send my son to the store with MY $20 and tell him to buy bacon, eggs, and milk, then I will expect him to return with bacon, eggs, and milk, along with my change. But while he is at the store he is free to buy anything else he wants with his own money, since my instructions did not include a prohibition against buying something else. Of course, my illustration does not PROVE my viewpoint, anymore than your illustration “proves” the opposite. We could just keep on making up illustrations tailored to our viewpoints, to no real avail.