Who Drove The Wedge?

By Bill Cavender

A century and three decades ago, our brethren began discussing in earnest the use of mechanical instruments of music in worship to God. Most of the “reformers” of those days were brethren who had come out of denominationalism, especially the Presbyterian, Methodist and Baptist denominations. Presbyterians had used mechanical instruments in their services throughout their early history in this new country, bringing the practice with them from Europe. The Methodists and Baptists had gradually incorporated the use of the mechanical instruments into their worship services as they grew in numbers and in congregations in the “new world.”

The pioneer preachers, editors and brethren in general who discussed this issue and left us a legacy of their discussions in print, mostly in religious papers of those times and in a few debates, were themselves newly converted from denominationalism or were the children of parents who had been. As they searched for truth, desiring to restore all things religious according to the pattern in the New Testament, wanting to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ and to walk in “the old paths,” it was inevitable that there would be questions, problems and discussions. The nature of the problems and discussions of their times reflect their background.

Some of these problems were: the manner, subjects and design of baptism; whether people must be “re-baptized” when leaving denominationalism to join hands and hearts with the disciples in churches of our Lord; worship every Lord’s Day and especially the taking of the Lord’s Supper each Sunday; the Christian and his relationship to civil government and the bearing of arms in defense of one’s country (this problem being precipitated by the approach of the War Between The States, 1861-1865); the issue of “church cooperation” and how brethren and churches could cooperate to preach the gospel to the lost; and the use of mechanical instruments of music in the worship services of the church. These, and other vexing problems reflect the times, the people, and their religious history and background.

Mention of mechanical instruments of music in worship was made among the restorers even prior to 1851 but the subject began to be discussed in earnest in that year. The discussions continued until the beginning of the Civil War. Brethren who could publish papers in the war years were more intent upon trying to teach the disciples proper attitudes and relationships toward one another, to encourage brethren to continue to meet and worship, and to encourage brethren not to bear arms in the conflict (the majority of brethren then believed it wrong for Christians to engage in carnal warfare; there were some brethren who thought it was not wrong). In the years after the war, from about 1865 to 1890, congregations began to generally endorse the mechanical instruments in worship and bring them into their buildings. Mainly through the influence of David Lipscomb and his paper, The Gospel Advocate, and the men who wrote with him in the paper, churches in the south were slower to accept the instrument. The majority of churches did not do so in the south; the majority in the north did. Most of the churches, both north and south which embraced the instrument, were the larger city congregations at the first, then it was more gradually accepted by smaller, more rural churches.

By 1908, when the debate between brethren W.W. Otey and J.B. Briney on “Instrumental Music” and the “Missionary Societies” was held in Louisville, Kentucky, brethren generally were firmly established and divided in attitude and practice regarding the subject. Division among the brethren was about completed. Those practices of “missionary societies” and “mechanical instruments of music in worship” so propagated, pushed, endorsed and defended under the arguments of mere opinions, expedients, and later as the actual teaching of the scriptures, had, like the tidal wave, rolled over and engulfed the cause of Christ. It is not necessary here to detail the history of the “Disciples Movement,” called “The Christian Church,” and its continued departures from truth from those days until now. They have lost their identity as anything closely akin to the New Testament congregations of Christ. Their history is a continual one of doctrinal and organizational changes and innovations, into liberalism and complete denominationalism.

In brother Otey’s first speech in the Otey-Briney debate, he said;

The wedge of division began to be driven about the year 1849. From 1890 to 1900 the lines of separation were rapidly drawn. Today the lines are about as clearly drawn between the two bodies of disciples – one known as the Church of Christ and the other as the Christian Church – as the lines between any two Protestant bodies. The greatest brotherhood of believers in Christ since the apostolic days has been rent asunder. The heaven-born plea for unity has been rendered ineffective. The answer to the prayer of Jesus has been deferred.. Is this division well-pleasing to God? As certain as Paul was inspired when he wrote, “There is one body,” as certain as the Holy Spirit guided his pen when he condemned division and commanded unity, as certain as Jesus prayed the prayer recorded in the seventeenth chapter of John, just so certain it is that an awful sin has been, and still is, being committed in this division.

Who is responsible for this division? The Church of Christ? Or the Christian Church? The answer to that question is found in the answer to this question, “What has caused the division?” The answer is, “The use of instrumental music in the worship and the use of various religious organizations in the work and worship to supplant the church. ” These things constitute the wedge of division. Till they were introduced, unity prevailed. When this wedge was driven, the church was split. Who splits the log? The man who drives the wedge splits the log, and not the man who protests against its being driven.

Elder Briney and his brethren drove the wedge that split the church. Who did right in splitting the log, the man who drove the wedge or the man who protested? That depends upon whether or not the log ought to be split. If it was right to split the log, the wedge-driver did right. Follows it not, then, as clear as demonstration itself, that Elder Briney and his brethren have split the church? Till they drove the wedge the church was united. We protested against that wedge being driven, and warned them that it would split the church. Had they refrained from driving this wedge into the work and worship of the church, we would today be a united people. The hour that they will remove this wedge we will again be a united people.

But are they sinfully responsible for this division? That all depends upon by whose authority this wedge was driven. Who authorized the splitting of the log – the church? Was it right that it should be split? Did God want it split? By whose authority, then, are these things used in the work and worship of the church God’s or man’s? This is the pivotal point in this controversy. If God authorized the wedge to be driven and the log to be split, it must be done; it matters not who protests. But if God has not authorized the wedge to be driven, then those who protest against its being driven stand upon the side of God (Otey-Briney Debate, pp. 16-17).

Who drove the wedge of missionary societies and instrumental music in worship among our brethren? Those who advocated and defended them; those who fallaciously argued from and twisted the scriptures to try to make the scriptures uphold their innovations; and those who finally pushed the societies and instruments into congregations and meethinghouses over the protests, consciences and convictions of sincere and faithful brethren; these are the ones who drove the wedge, divided the body of Christ, alienated the brethren, and departed from the faith. Thus has it ever been true in religious innovations, whether in the firt century or in the nineteenth century, or in the twentieth century with our human institutional-centralized cooperation brethren. The infant steps of error and innovation, posing as opinions and expedients, become giant steps of destruction and departure from truth when the innovator and false teacher feels he has amassed the power and influence necessary to force the issue and to oust the faithful from their rightful place. Time and again those who love God and stand for His truth have had to begin again to build again that which error and humanism have swept away. I suppose it shall ever be this way. It is always, in every generation and place, that faithful “remnant according to the election of grace” (Rom. 11:4-5) who have not and will not “bow the knee to Baal,” whatever form Baal may take, who shall be eternally and everlastingly saved in that eternal kingdom of our God and Father.

It would do all of us good to read again such books as Memoirs of Alexander Campbell, by Robert Richardson; Lard’s Quarterly, by Moses E. Lard and other able writers of that day; The Search for the Ancient Order, and The Life and Times of David Lipscomb, by Earl Irvin West; Attitudes and Consequences in the Restoration Movement, by Homer Hailey; the Otey-Briney Debate, of 1908; and any or all of old books and papers written and published by our brethren in the years between 1800 and 1910. The above books should be in the library of every preacher, elder, teacher and brother in Christ, and should be used. Had brethren been acutely aware of these controversies, arguments and innovations of several generations ago, I personally believe the more immediate problems of our generation -centralized cooperation and oversight, church subsidization of human institutions, churchsponsored recreation and entertainment, and now the Ketcherside grace-faith-fellowshipping denominationalism theory – would not have been so readily embraced by so many. Incidentally, brother Bob Tuten of Huntsville, Ala., had three excellent, concise articles in Truth Magazine (Nov. 29, Dec. 6 and 13, 1979), entitled “Historical Study of Controversy Over Instrumental Music in Worship,” which would be well for all to read.

Who drove the wedge? Who always drives the wedge? Those who introduce into the worship, work and organization of the Lord’s churches in any generation that which is contrary to sound doctrine, that which is the doctrine and commandment of men, these are the wedge-drivers. Such ones are present in every generation and in most every congregation and place. Given the right circumstances and opportunities, they will teach their errors and divide the body of Christ. We should ever be on guard. Eternal vigilance is the price of freedom in Christ and in the truth of God.

Questions

  1. What was the religious background of brethren who both endorsed and opposed instruments of music in worship?
  2. What were some of the many problems and con troversites our brethren discussed in the 1800’s
  3. What great event in the history of our country diminished this controversy over instrumental music for several years?
  4. What were the crucial years of debate and division among brethren?
  5. Who was a great preacher and editor in the south who firmly opposed instrumental music in worship?
  6. What was one of the great debates held on this subject after the division over the societies and the instrument was about complete?
  7. What were brother Otey’s words regarding who splits the log and who drives the wedge, and who brought division into the church?
  8. What are some of the innovations in our generation which have followed the same principles and practices of those of the 1800’s?
  9. What are some of the books which still should be read regarding the division over the societies and the instrument in worship?
  10. What should be our attitude today toward error and innovation? What is the price of freedom?

Truth Magazine XXIV: 22, pp. 362-363
May 29, 1980

The Instrument and Unity

By Irven Lee

“Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity!” (Ps. 133:1). This is a clear statement of fact, for it is a very pleasant thing for brethren to work where unity and good will abound. David was not, and we are not, speaking of some sort of peace that is based on a lack of conviction that would allow for any type of innovation because none cares what is done or not done. We are referring to a group which is definitely dedicated to the effort of walking by faith so that each can find authority in the Scriptures for the things that are done.

Brethren who seek to please God in their worship and service to Him can work together in unity, and it will be both good and pleasant for all concerned in such cases. It is also possible for people to teach for doctrine the precepts of men and to have a type of pleasant fellowship in their activities. Having a “thus saith the Lord” for each and everything they do is not essential to their peace of mind. Some do many things for which they have no scripture and they freely admit that such is true in their worship.

Those who seek for a commandment, an approved apostolic- example, or a necessary inference for each doctrine or practice among them are restricted to much more narrow limits than are those who would direct their own steps. People who choose to limit themselves to things which clearly have heaven’s approval are those who are impressed by our Lord’s statement about the narrow way which leads to life and the broad way that leads to destruction (Matt. 7:13, 14). Those who are thus impressed are eager to walk in the way that leads to the proper destination. They are afraid to take liberties which would lead them out into the realm of God’s silence. (Please read Heb. 7:11-14 carefully. Also 2 John 9-11.)

Man is capable of many inconsistencies of his life. He can profess with his mouth that he walks by faith when, in reality, he is more impressed by the popular practices of religious people about him than he is by the limits of God’s plan. In a few decades a congregation of people can make several changes in their practices while they still claim special regard for Bible authority. It is a matter of drifting much like the contented fisherman in his little boat which has no anchor on a quiet afternoon when he is watching for the cork on his line to indicate that a fish has taken the bait. He may be surprised after a while when he notices how far he is from the place where he left his car. If he would fish near the car he must have a good anchor that will hold, or he will have to row back into position often.

Those who constantly examine themselves to see that they are in the faith constantly renew their minds by a careful study of the Bible (2 Cor. 13:5). They are aware of the tendency in man to conform to outside pressures so they “give diligence to make their calling and election sure” (2 Pet. 1:10; Heb. 2:1; Phil. 2:12; 2 Tim. 2:15). They are very different in attitude from those who are contented to drift and who assume that if a thing is a common practice it must be right (see Rom. 12:2). If the strict and the careless meet as one body in the same house regularly, it would not take much to bring their differences into the light.

Many times churches have been started after the pattern that is clearly revealed in the New Testament. All members believe and teach the same thing concerning the terms of entrance into the church, acceptable worship, proper church government, work of the church, and the standard of life by which the members should live. As the years pass the church grows, gets a larger building on a bigger lot, and comes to be respected by more people who have observed their dedicated lives and their respect for the Bible. By this time some who are not converted to the idea of walking by faith may literally “join” the church. Children of church members may not have been grounded in the truth, so they are influenced by the denomination about them and they are not so careful to contend for the faith. The situation becomes ripe for division even though things may be quiet and orderly and the danger may not be realized.

When a church comes to have a sizeable number of lukewarm members as well as a solid group of devout members, the devil can strike the match that will bring an explosion that will divide the church and cause some to blaspheme the holy name of God. Insistence upon using an instrument of music can be that match. Each member immediately takes his place with those who would abide in the narrow way or with those who would like to be more acceptable to the religious community about them.

The instrument of music in worship is condemned by the silence of the Scriptures. The Lord said nothing about it, so it is unscriptural or unauthorized. The master Teacher said nothing about using holy water, or the counting of beads in worship, neither did He say anything about sprinkling babies (please read Heb. 7:11-14). All of these things were left out of God’s perfect law of liberty and can be added only by human wisdom. Man is not to go beyond that which is written (Rev. 22:18, 19; 2 John 9; 2 Pet. 1:3; 2 Tim. 3:16, 17).

It is amazing how bitter former friends and brethren can become in a short time after something for which there is no scriptural authority is suggested and accepted by a large element in the church. Those who had been rather lukewarm now become very zealous for the innovation. They now see a vision of a very great church which will be free of the influence of the “anti’s,” the “mossback’s,” the “non-progressives,” who they say are “legalistic fanatics.” The strict and those who would take liberties in going beyond the doctrine of Christ accuse each other of bringing about the division. It would be a new thing under the sun for those who bring in the innovative practice to admit that they caused the division. Those who continue in the old paths, where is the safe way, could not with a clear conscience admit the guilt.

If an instrument of music is added where the devout and the lukewarm have been meeting together there will be two groups meeting. If some outsider in the community should ask what the difference is, he would be told that one group favors the instrument and the other does not. That answer would not be complete. There is a fundamental difference in attitude toward the Bible and the absolute authority of Christ. The one group would be ready to put the church into the field of recreation and other “good works,” as well as accept various inter-church and intra-church organizations. The other body would continue in the scriptural path which was diligently sought out by those who started the work years before the division.

When the instrument of music is added, causing a division in the church, the group with the instrument will be more acceptable to the denominations in the community. It will follow as night the day that a truce will be called and the preachers of the new group will no longer contend earnestly for the faith but will fraternize with the “clergy” in ministerial associations, Easter services, etc. This will not happen the day the instrument is added, but it will come in due process of time.

I am not a prophet or the son of a prophet, but I can read history and observe current events. The instrument was added in the last hundred years in almost every county in America where the church which is described in the New Testament existed and, in each such community, there came to be two groups. The group with the instrument added the kitchen and other facilities for recreation and entertainment as well as the unscriptural local and area wide church organizations. The church without the instrument added no such unscriptural practices, but it grew from the smaller group to become the larger and to multiply the number of such churches. This growing conservative group finally reached the point when it came to have an influential number among its members who wanted to copy the denominational practices that appealed to them most. This time the church supported institutions and sponsoring churches came before the instrument. Recreation at church expense and church support of colleges, camps, the bus ministry, etc., followed. If I may be allowed to get out of my field and act as a prophet, I will say that the more liberal churches in the recent division between the liberal and conservative elements in the church will add the instrument before the end of the century. It belongs among people that freely admit that they do many things for which there is no scripture.

The instrument was definitely involved in the division that came more or less one hundred years ago. In many localities the separation came the day the instrument was brought into the building. It was the key in those days that opened the flood gap for the flood of innovations that came in rapid succession. It was the thermometer that indicated that the church was too sick and weak to discern between the scriptural and the unscriptural.

Individuals will cross the line of separation in each direction, but the two groups will remain and the differences will become more conspicuous over the decades. There could be a sort of unity if the faithful brethren would give up their convictions and join in copying the churches based on human wisdom. There could be precious unity of the Spirit if those who have gone beyond scriptural authority would give up all the unauthorized practices and come back to the narrow way that leads unto life. The instrument and other items that have been borrowed from decadent Protestantism would have to be returned to those who teach for doctrines the precepts of men for the unity of the Spirit to return.

Questions

  1. Mention and discuss two words that may be used to describe unity among brethren.
  2. Is it possible for a pleasant unity to prevail among those whose doctrine and practice are unscriptural?
  3. List three ways the Lord may indicate His approval of a practice so that we may be confident in accepting the things under consideration.
  4. Moses said nothing in the law about one of the tribes of Judah serving as priest. Did that mean that one of the tribes of Judah could or could not be a priest?
  5. Christ said nothing about the use of an instrument of music in worship to God. Does that mean that we may or may not use the instrument with the approval of Christ?
  6. The instrument was added in a great number of churches of Christ in the last half of the last century bringing division when it was added. Describe further changes that came and identify the group that mode these changes.
  7. Did the group that added the instrument cause the division or was it caused by those who refused it? Which will bear the guilt before God?
  8. Does the division over the bringing in of unscriptural innovations tend soon to be healed and unity restored, or do the differences between the two groups tend to become more pronounced as time passes?
  9. What will be the results in the lives of the children and grandchildren when a family decides to “go along” with some innovation rather than face the social pressure from those who promote it?
  10. Is it fair to charge those who add church support of recreation, the instrument, the inter-church and intro-church organizations of copying the denominations about them rather than walking by faith?
  11. Who among church people have used the word “anti”? What did they mean and to whom did they refer?
  12. Is “anti” a prefix for a word or is it a word in itself? Explain.

Truth Magazine XXIV: 22, pp. 360-361
May 29, 1980

Evolution of Defense for Instrumental Music

By Ron Halbrook

During the first half of the 1800’s, the work of restoring New Testament Christianity in America grew and prospered. But in the decades following the War Between the States, the ship of Zion floundered on, the sandbar of apostasy. The rise of liberal attitudes toward Bible authority resulted in an effort to centralize the work of churches through human institutions and in an effort to modernize the worship by using instrumental music. After a few observations, this article will trace several stages in the defense of and debate over instrumental music in worship.

The arguments evolved in the introduction and defense of instrumental music, in practical effect, nullify the Bible plea for adherence to the inspired standard of truth in all things. The all-sufficiency and unity in truth, coupled with an abhorrence of human traditions, are reflected in Thomas Campbell’s famous maxim of 1809: “Where the Bible speaks, we speak; and where the Bible is silent, we are Silent” (see 2 Tim. 3:16-17; 1 Cor. 1:10; Jn. 17:20-21; Matt. 15:7-8). When one man objected that such a plea would preclude the precious tradition of infant baptism, Campbell, himself a paedo-Baptist at the time, replied, “Of course, if infant baptism be not found in Scripture, we can have nothing to do with it.”(1) By the same token, Jesus dared not pretend to be a priest under the Old Law because He was of Judah, “of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning priesthood” (Heb. 7:14). God’s specific approbation of a given thing in a class of things serves as a specific prohibition of all others. “Wherefore, Divine revelation gives bounds, positively and negatively, unto the worship of God.”(2)Arguing, “Either there is a divinely authorized order of Christian worship . . . or there is not, ” Alexander Campbell reduced the no-pattern position to an absurdity which precludes “no disorder, no error, no innovation, no transgression. ” Since he believed that “our whole religion, objectively and doctrinally considered, is founded in a book,”(3) he believed that the action of worship is limited to positive divine revelation in the Bible. Noting that religious dances, harps, psalteries, and trumpets are not once named in the New Testament, he condemned them and dismissed them for “all spiritually minded Christians” as useless “as a cow bell in a concert.”(4)

The instrumental music controversy was protracted and heated because the new practice compromised the restoration plea. The instrument was but a straw in the wind, evidence of a drift away from strict dedication to the imperatives of Christ in Scripture. Oft the desire for instruments in worship was accompanied by polite excuses for social dancing, so that the two are discussed jointly.(5) Many of the churches which became broad-minded about such practices also became breeding grounds for the modernism of the late 1800’s with its compromises on the verbal inspiration of Scripture, the necessity of immersion, the reality of Bible miracles, evolutionary philosophy, and cooperation with denominationalism. Moses Lard had warned in 1864 that since the instrument is without “affirmative or positive sanction” in the New Testament, a church which “sets up an organ in its house . . . reaches the first station on the road to apostasy.” Drawing from the experience of other religious bodies which introduced entertainments in worship, C.L. Loos warned that “the progress is onward, or rather, downward.”(6) This analysis was confirmed some twenty years later when David Lipscomb decried the rationalism and infidelity which had followed in the trail of earlier innovations – “one innovation but prepares for a dozen others to follow.” In effect, a church which adds the instrument “rejects God that he should reign over them.” Though the organ is small from a human standpoint, “it tests our willingness or unwillingness to abide in the appointments of the Lord.”(7)

The evolution of defense for instrumental music is the story of debate and division. The instrument gained ground first in larger Northern cities, in larger established churches, among the affluent and socially prominent. Benjamin Franklin estimated in 1868 that about 50 out of 10,000 churches used an instrument, but by the century’s end the proportions were nearly reversed. By then, a number of differences could be seen between the two groups, but the instrument continued to serve in debate as a test case which reflected the rationale for all the other differences. The rise and history of the instrument’s defense among brethren did not occur in a vacuum. The practice and major arguments for it were borrowed from denominationalism. A wide range of arguments was available from the start, though various ones attained more or less prominence from time to time. Proponents strained their ingenuity in adapting and using a proliferation of rationalizations, a process occurring only after the desire for the instrument had arisen. It is not the case that godly, humble saints pouring over the Bible at long last concluded that an element of New Testament faith or practice had been overlooked, and thus demanded the instrument and defended it at the price of division. The basic desire was to keep up with the denominations.

First Signs of Trouble: Early Introduction and Defense (1850-66)

Early in 1851, J. Henshall was asked by a man who said “we are far in the rear of Protestants” whether “instrumental music in our churches” would consummate “the great object of Psalmody.” He replied that the worldly minded might seek such “helps to their devotion,” but true spiritual worship had no place for an entertaining display, a choir, and “a wooden devotion quickener.” This opened discussion in the Ecclesiastic Reformer for a short time. John Rogers, in astonishment that any preacher would defend the instrument, wrote to Alexander Campbell, who called upon all preachers to “cry aloud and spare not” in opposing the practice. Campbell shortly added that “the argument drawn from the Psalms in favor of instrumental music” befits Catholic and Protestant churches which seek “the Jewish pattern of things” to stir their carnal hearts.(8) The 1850s saw precious little advance in the instrument cause; almost no one favored it. “It is scarcely necessary for us to say to our readers that we regard the organ and violin worship, and even the fashionable choir singing of our country, as mockery of all that is sacred,” said Tolbert Fanning in the 1856 Gospel Advocate.(9) The next flare-up revealed that fifty years after Thomas Campbell’s Declaration and Address (1809), Dr. L. L. Pinkerton had placed a melodeon in the church at Midway, Kentucky. Answering a question in January 1860, Benjamin Franklin mused that a church without the Spirit of Christ might need an instrument for amusement and entertainment in place of religion and worship. This stung Pinkerton because he was the only church known to be using one. Offering the aid argument, he said the singing had been so bad as to “scare even the rats from worship.” Practice sessions with its use had been followed by use in regular worship.(10)

The aid or expediency argument was to play a major role. A large segment of brethren granted that instruments fell into the realm of expediency but felt they were inexpedient. Isaac Errett pled for better singing in 1861 but regarded the instrument as not expedient, as hindering congregational participation and emphasizing artistic performance. In 1864, W.K. Pendleton was asked about the “Pew-Renting and Organ-Music” appearing in a few churches. He warned that such things represented the spirit of “monied nabobs” and were inexpedient because interfering with the “free, full, grateful, heartfelt singing of the whole congregation.”(11)

Many other brethren believed that expediency was not the basic issue since God specified singing, which is a specific in the generic class of music. In an 1864 exchange on a different subject, Thomas Munnell argued from the “absence of any Scripture condemnation” and J.W. McGarvey answered that the restoration plea – “the Bible alone” -confines men “to what is taught in the Bible . . . . the omission of anything from scripture teaching is sufficient to justify us in objecting to it as religious doctrine.”(12) These divergent positions were to play a major role in the instrument controversy. Observing that the earlier “unanimity in the rejection of instrumental music from our public worship” was beginning to erode, McGarvey called in 1864 for a fresh and thorough study of the subject. He noted that its defense was being made (1) the Jewish temple worship, (2) John’s vision of heaven with angels harping, (3) the silence of the New Testament, and (4) the aid argument. But McGarvey called for positive authority from the New Testament for every element of worship “in the Christian dispensation.” Only by express revelation can we know “what acts of worship are acceptable to God.” Vocal music is specifically authorized (which permits the use of singing aids such as song books), but instrumental music introduces another “chief element in the joyful sound” of worship.

To introduce any such element is unscriptural and presumptuous. It is will worship, if any such thing as will worship can exist. On this ground we condemn the burning of incense, the lighting of candles, the wearing of priestly robes, and the reading of printed prayers. On the same ground we condemn instrumental music.

Thus McGarvey argued that the New Testament positively authorized singing and is silent about playing instruments -presumptive proof against the latter practice. A.S. Hayden immediately answered that McGarvey must produce “affirmative proof” (i.e. direct statements) condemning instruments, and added that the instrument antedated Moses’ Law and so did not pass away with it. McGarvey’s response pointed out that the Law of Moses included instruments by specific mention and that the burden of proof for their introduction in the gospel age requires similar specific, affirmative statements of revelation. The exchange ended with Hayden claiming the Jews were not required to use instruments in worship and it is only a matter of liberty today, and McGarvey countering that specific revelation in Moses’ Law made the practice both a privilege and a duty whereas its omission from the New Testament condemns the practice today.(13) The lines of battle were now set.

The Middle Years Debate and Division (1866-1906)

The defeat of those who granted that the instrument was an expediency issue and who opposed it on inexpediency was doomed to fail as soon as enough brethren were swayed by the times to desire instruments in music. Other forces than the instrument controversy were at work. For instance, in a major address defending missionary societies in 1866, Pendleton, respected editor of the Millennial Harbinger, came out with sweeping denial of the established concept of taking “the silence of Scripture on a given subject as a positive rule of prohibition.” Instead, silence means liberty.(14) Likewise, in 1868 A.S. Hayden renewed under the banner of “Expediency Progress,” his protest against any argument from silence in the Bible by brethren opposing instruments. A worried McGarvey retorted that the instrument issue “is becoming a serious one” and the kind of “progress” which promotes such practices “finds in me an enemy.” There must be total war “against everything not expressly or by necessary implication authorized in the New Testament.” Hayden then claimed that he was not promoting the instrument but only opposing those who treat the question as “a subject matter of the faith” rather than one of expediency.(15) I.B. Grubbs next engaged Hayden that year on the same ground of battle, each man writing two articles. Then it was Grubbs and J. S. Lamar, Lamar claiming that Psalm 87 predicts instruments in New Testament worship (as an expedient or nonessential), Grubbs replying that his interpretation is fanciful and the New Testament itself is the all-sufficient rule. Other writers joined the discussion, adding nothing new, and Pendleton tried unsuccessfully to close the debate. He was frustrated on one side by those who shared his expediency concept but would not take his word that the organ was inexpedient and, on the other side, by those who shared his opposition to instruments but opposed them on grounds of principle. In the years which followed, the silence-means-liberty argument couple with the desire for instruments trampled under foot Pendleton’s attempt to keep them out as inexpedient. Through about 1885 several well-known preachers such as McGarvey, Robret Graham, and Moses E. Lard tried to oppose the instrument on principle but accept the missionary societies as expedients. This compromise also drew fire from both sides and utterly failed, sweeping the churches which followed it into the instrument cause. In the long run, only those brethren who consistently applied the restoration principle to exclude both the society and organ could preserve the New Testament pattern of worship.

In the early years of debate, three basic positions had emerged, which were to be repeated and adapted in the years ahead. They are (1) There are passages which specify that the instrument is authorized. (2) No passage specifies that the instrument is authorized, but it may be considered on grounds of expediency. (3) There are passages which specify singing but none which specify the instrument; the revelation which prescribes one proscribes the other. During 1868-69, the Christian Standard published exchanges between H.T. Anderson, who argued there is no law against organs and therefore expediency applies, and Robert Richardson, who answered that expediency must be first within bounds of law. He explained that Paul was under law to Christ and that all expediencies must be proven lawful (1 Cor. 9:21; 6:12).

Law prescribes the things that may be done. Expediency selects from among them what is most suitable in a given case. Hence, expediency must always occupy a place within and under law, and in no case can go beyond or contrary to law.

This (the instrument, RH) can never be a question of expediency, for the simple reason that there is not law prescribing or authorizing it. If it were any where said, in the New Testament, that Christians should use instruments, then it would become a question of expediency what kind of instrument was to be used, whether an organ or a melodian, the “loud-sounding cymbals,” or the “light guitar;” whether it should cost $50, or $500, or $1,000; and what circumstances should regulate the performance. It happens, however, that this is no where said; and, consequently, no such questions of expediency can ever arise in a church that is truly and really governed by the law of the Lord.

When someone attempted to show that instruments were “implied in the word psalms” (as in Eph. 5:19), Richardson commended the effort to find Bible authority, which would open the way to discuss expediencies. But Richardson rebuffed the attempt because instruments cannot fulfill the demands of the law to speak and teach in psalms and because it is perfectly well known that instruments were added to Christian worship several hundreds of years after the New Testament period. He concluded that the demands of Scripture did not produce instruments in worship but the desire for instruments demanded “plausibilities” to justify the innovation.(16)

Isaac Errett, editor of the Christian Standard, advised against using organs because he knew they caused division, but he battled those who opposed instruments on principle. He claimed their use resulted from poor singing in the churches and from advanced musical culture in the homes, but denied that any vital principle of truth was involved. But J. W. McGarvey said that using a musical instrument is not a method of singing so is not authorized as an aid or expediency under the command to sing; he denied that organs represented true growth or progress. “True progress is still backward – backward toward the apostles, toward the doctrine, the terms of pardon, the worship and the discipline which they instituted.”(17) An exchange between Errett in the Standard and antagonists in the Apostolic Times occurred in 1870. After J.B. Briney went over to the instrument cause, he and McGarvey debated in the Times during 1881.

From time to time, proponents of the instruments attempted to prove that it inheres in psallo, from which is translated “speaking . . . in psalms . . . singing and making melody in your heart” (Eph. 5:19). About 1866-67, an exchange appeared in one periodical, with one man claiming the term in the New Testament meant worshipping with musical instruments accompanied by singing and the other saying the term in the New Testament meant praising God with the voice in song. It was discussed again in 1869. George P. Slade in the 1878 American Christian Review attacked McGarvey’s ground of New Testament silence by appealing to psallo. Having examined this approach for many years, McGarvey said in 1895 that anyone taking it “is one of those smatterers in Greek who can believe anything that he wishes to believe. When the wish is father to the thought correct exegesis is like water on a duck’s back.” Such strictures did not keep Briney from resorting to the argument again a decade later.(18)

During the 1880s, an argument circulated which claimed that the organ may be used as an aid to singing without being considered “in the worship” because the worship takes place altogether in the heart. McGarvey countered that the Bible speaks of ceremonial washings of persons, cups, pots, and brazen vessels, and of many other outward actions as being in the worship (Mk. 7:3, 7; Col. 2:20-23). Even the Psalms speak of praising God in worship with the sounds of instruments. “To deny, then, that the present use of instrumental music in the church is a part of the worship, is a subterfuge and an afterthought ingeniously against vain worship and will worship.”(19)

All the pros and cons were reiterated in public debates. Clark Braden used the aid argument in meeting Joe S. Warlick in Dallas, Texas, about 1896. The Hall L. Calhoun-M.C. Kurfees exchange in the 8 and 15 1900 Gospel Advocate was distributed in booklet form the next year, with Calhoun claiming the instrument as an aid was not in the worship. He later gave up the organ and its defense. J. Carroll Stark in a November 1903 debate with Warlick at Henderson, Tennessee, appealed to the Old Testament and psallo. In the J. D. Tant-W. J. Frost debate (printed 1904), Frost used the Old Testament, angels of heaven, and aid arguments, adding that the warning against transgression in 2 John 9 applied only to the Deity of Jesus and not to His teachings.(20)

The process of debate and division over the instrument, other innovations, and the underlying issue of Bible authority continued throughout the period of 1866-1906. As early as March 1864, Moses Lard called upon brethren to abandon churches which trampled upon the authority of Christ by introducing instruments. In church after church, the organ was pushed in over the protests of brethren whose only option was to leave, as McGarvey was forced to leave his beloved Broadway in Lexington, Kentucky in 1902. Before making the switch to organ defense, J.B. Briney wrote in 1870 that the choice was between the organ or the gospel and concluded concerning the man who took the organ, “Ephraim is joined to his idols, let him alone.” But McGarvey, F.G. Allen, and others lost their influence in opposing instruments because they were “inconsistent in hobnobbing” with those who used them, as James A. Harding said. McGarvey admitted this with regret about the time he was forced out of Broadway.(21) Only those who both regarded the organ as an imposition upon the authority of Christ and marked and avoided brethren who accepted the divisive innovation upon apostolic doctrine, could ultimately keep the organ out. The U.S. Census Bureau finally recognized in 1906 that final division had occurred.

Subsequent Developments Not a Dead Issue (1906-1980)

Debates and division over the organ quees ion and the deeper issue of Biblical authority continue to today. Literally scores of debates have been held to study these matters. For instance, R.O. Rogers met W.W. Otey at Portland, Indiana, in 1909, claiming the instruments wer commanded in 1 Corinthiansd 14:7-8 but they are optional expedients. Otey protested that a practice cannot be both commanded and optional, and 1 Corinthians 14:7-8 says nothing of instruments in worship. Otey and Briney debated in Louisville, Kentucky in 1908, with Otey affirming the instrument “is opposed to New Testament teaching and sinful.” Briney replying the Bible does not forbid organs and they are allowed by psallo. An exchange by M.D. Clubb and H. Leo Boles appeared jointly in the Christian-Evangelist and Gospel Advocate, the whole being printed as a book in 1927. The usual arguments were made. G.C. Brewer answered a tract by Homer Strong about 1923 and then reviewed the positions of three men (F.W. Strong, O.L. Mankamyer, and Percy E. Krewson) in 1948. “This can never be a dead issue as long as some people who profess to be Christians use instruments of music in worship and others do not use them,” said Brewer. And he explained, “If we are going to restore the New Testament church, we cannot restore something that was not in it.” Other debates occurred between G.K. Wallace and Burton W. Barber at Cedar Rapids, Iowa in 1950, Eugene S. Smith and Julian O. Hunt in Dallas, Texas during 1953, and Morris B. Book and James P. Miller in Orlando, Florida in 1955. Barber and Book used both the aid argument and also held to the contradictory position that instruments are both permitted and required, but Hunt stuck more closely to the aid approach.(22) Many other examples might be given.

The psallo argument has been avidly pursued. M.C. Kurfees published Instrumental Music in Worship in 1911 showing that psallo did not carry the inherent idea of the use of instruments in the New Testament period. Briney responded with Instrumental Music in Christian Worship in 1914, trying to show that psallo always continued to carry the idea of an instrument. He said the organ may be “a mere help in worship” or “a means of worship.” When O.E. Payne maintained in a 1920 book that instruments are essential to psallo, Kurfees published a review pointing out that such an argument binds the instrument, a position with which Payne and his friends were very uncomfortable. From 31 May through 5 June of 1923, Ira M. Boswell defended the instrument in debate with N.B. Hardeman before crowds of 6,000-7,000 in Nashville, Tennessee. Briney said the organ was used in connection with but not in worship, then stressed psallo, swaying between the position that instruments inhere in it and that they are merely optional. Tom Burgess is caught in the same dilemma in his more recent Documents on Instrumental Music. Making most of the tralditional defenses but stressing psallo, Dwaine Dunning was unable to extricate himself from this dilemma in his 1976 debate at Mason City, Iowa with Rubel Shelly. Everett Ferguson has provided additional helpful material on the psallo claim, as has James D. Bales in his thorough study of the whole instrumental question.(23)

Periodic respite has come in the number and intensity of this debate at times. The two groups have gone opposite directions, their contacts become more limited, and each has been forced to devote more time to other controversies in their respective ranks. The Christian Churches with the instrument were increasingly embroiled in battles begun in the 1890s over open membership and full-blown modernism, which entailed a wholesale abandonment of any semblance of a restoration plea. The battle raged over control of pulpits, colleges, and various institutions, with a fuil institutional split finalizing in 1968. Meanwhile, churches of Christ had fought recurrent battles over the efforts of some brethren to gain financial support from churches for independent service institutions, especially colleges. The efforts, which had very limited success, were renewed in vigor during the 1950s with more success by emphasis on church support for orphanages, followed in the 1960-70s with the advance of church support for colleges, summer camps, and a plethora of social services and institutions. Also advanced were centralized cooperative projects which coordinated the financial support of many churches through the eldership of one church, as in the Herald of Truth in Abilene, Texas, area-wide preaching campaigns, and the support of preachers on foreign fields. These trends portend an end to the respite from heated internal controversy over instrumental music. It will be advocated and advanced on the coat-tails of these other innovations. Already the Gospel Advocate of 20 March 1980 reports that the Belmont Church of Christ in Nashville, Tennessee has voted through its elders to allow instruments to be used in worship (see p. 164). Churches which have consistently opposed all the innovations of the past thirty years will not be nearly so vulnerable on the renewal of the instrument problem but will feel some of the effects and must gird for the battle.

The instrument will never be a dead issue as long. as professed Christians are divided over its use! Eternal vigilence is the price for purity in worship. “The loudest call that comes from heaven to the men of this generation is for warfare, stern, relentless, merciless, exterminating, against everything not expressly or by necessary implication authorized in the New Testament.”(24)

Endnotes:

1. Robert Richardson, Memoirs of Alexander Campbell, 2 volumes (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott and Co., 1868-1870), Vol. 1, pp. 237-238.

2. John Owen, Hebrews, second edition (Edinburgh: J. Ritchie, 1814), 5:467, quoted in James D. Bales, Instrumental Music and New Testament Worship (Searcy: Arkansas: James D. Bales, 1973), p. 155. See also the excellent study by Joe Neil Clayton, The Thunderous Silence of God (Marion, Indiana: Cogdill Foundation Publications, p. 1972).

3. On worship, see Campbell’s “Restoration of the Ancient Order of Things, No. 5,” Christian Baptist, II (4 July 1825):239-43; on religion, see his “Anecdotes, Incidents and Facts, No. I,” Millennial Harbinger, Series 3, Vol. 5 (May 1848): 279-83.

4. “Dancing,” Millennial Harbinger, Series 4, Vol. I (September 1851):503-507 and “Instrumental Music,” Millennial Harbinger (October 1851):581-582.

5. See for instance John Rogers, “Dancing,” Millennial Harbinger, Series 4, Vol. I (August 1851):467-468 for report of defenses of both practices in Ecclesiastical Reformer; A. Campbell, “Dancing”; Moses E. Lard, “Instrumental Music in Churches and Dancing,” Lard’s Quarterly, I (March 1864):330-336.

6. Lard, “Instrumental Music in Churches and Dancing,” Lard’s Quarterly, I (March 1864):330-336; Loos, Millennial Harbinger, Vol. 39 (May 1868):280-285.

7. Lipscomb, respectively in three Gospel Advocate articles: 6 January 1886, p. 6; 1897, p. 292; 1911, p. 174. See Earl West, The Life and Times of David Lipscomb (Henderson, Tennessee: Religious Book Service, 1954), 189-190, 244; Robert E. Hooper, Crying in the Wilderness: A Biography of David Lipscomb (Nashville: Tennessee: David Lipscomb College, 1979), p. 311.

8. Henshall, “Instrumental Music In Churches,” Ecclesiastic Reformer, Vol. 4 (15 March 1851):171; Rogers, “Dancing”; Campbell, “Dancing” and “Instrumental Music,” Millennial Harbinger (September and October, 1851):503-507 and 581-582.

9. On p. 199, quoted in John T. Lewis, The Voice of the Pioneers on Instrumental Music and Societies (Nashville: Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1932), p. 120.

10. Franklin and Pinkerton articles entitled “Instrumental Music in Churches,” American Christian Review, Vol. 3 (31 January and 28 February -1860):19, 34. See Earl West, The Search For The Ancient Order, 3 Volumes (Nashville: Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1949; Indainapolis, Indiana: Religious Book Service, 1950, 1979), 1: 310-312.

11. Errett, “Church Music,” Millennial Harbinger, Series 5, Vol. 4 (October 1861): 551-560; Pendleton, Millennial Harbinger, Series 5, Vol. 7 (March 1864):122-130.

12. Munnell, “Review of J. W. McGarvey on Grace,” Millennial Harbinger, Series 5, Vol. 7 (April 1864):158-162 and McGarvey, “A New Definition of Grace,” Millennial Harbinger (May 1864): 227-230.

13. McGarvey, “Instrumental Music in Churches,” “Instrumental Music,” and “Reply” in Millennial Harbinger (November 1864):510-514; 36 (February 1865):88-91; (April, 1865):186-188 respectively; Hayden: “Instrumental Music in Churches” and “Instrumental Music” in Millennial Harbinger (January 1865):38-40 and (April 1865):182-186.

14. Pendleton, “Address,” Millennial Harbinger 37 (November 1866):494-514, see 501-505. For an incisive analysis of the speech, see Earl West, “Learning A Lesson From History, Nos. 1-3,” Gospel Guardian, Vol. I (16 and 23 February, 2 March 1950):3, 4, and 5.

15. Hayden, “Expediency and Progress,” and “Reply to Brother McGarvey,” Millennial Harbinger 39 (January and June 1868):36-42 and 327-334; McGarvey, “Brother Hayden on Expediency and Progress,” Millennial Harbinger (April 1868):213-219.

16. “Expediency,” Christian Standard 3 (26 December 1868):409.

17. See Errett, “Instrumental Music in Our Churches,” Christian Standard 5 (30 April 1870):140 and J.S. Lamar, Memoirs of Isaac Errett, 2 vols. (Cincinnati: Standard Publishing Co., 1893), 2:22-44; reprint from the Apostolic Times by McGarvey, “Instrumental Music in the Church Unauthorized and Sinful,” Gospel Advocate, 74 (21 and 28 January 1932): 72-73, 104-105, and “True Progress,” Apostolic Times, 3 (26 October 1871):228.

18. Alexis, “Alexis on Instrumental Music in the Worship of God in Christian Congregations,” Christian Standard, Vol. 5 (30 April 1870):140; McGarvey, Biblical Criticism Reprinted From the Christian Standard 1893-1904 (Nashville: Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1956), pp. 115-117; Briney, Christian Companion (15 February 1905):4, quoted by M.C. Kurfees, Instrumental Music in the Worship (Nashville: Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1911; reprint 1969), pp. 53-54.

19. McGarvey and F.G. Allen, What Shall We Do About The Organ? (Nashville: Tennessee: McQuiddy Printing Co., 1903), pp. 4-5.

20. Calhoun-Kurfees, Instrumental Music In The Worship (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Publishing Co., 1901); A Debate Between J. Carrot! Stark and Joe S. Warlick (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., [ca. 1903]), Tant-Frost, Debate on the Organ and Society Work in the Church of Christ (Cincinnati, Ohio: F.L. Rowe, 1904).

21. Lard, “Instrumental Music in Churches and Dancing,” Lard’s Quarterly, I, pp. 330-336; Briney, “The Organ, or The Gospel Which?”, American Christian Review, 13 (18 February 1870): 50; Harding, “Another Inconsistency,” Gospel Advocate, 25 (23 May 1883):323; see personal remarks of McGarvey to Jesse P. Sewell, related in his “Biographical Sketches of Restoration Preachers,” Harding College Lectures 1950 (Searcy, Arkansas: Harding College Press, 1951), pp. 66-75 on pp. 74-75.

22. Otey-Briney Debate (Cincinnati: F.L. Rowe [ca. 1908]); Merrell Dare Clubb-H.L. Boles Debate (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate, 1927); Brewer, A Medley on the Music Question (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1948), see pp. 5, 102; Wallace-Barber Debate (Abilene, Texas: Beacon Publications, 1953); The Smith-Hunt Debate on Instrumental Music (Dallas: Good News Press, Inc., 1953); Book-Miller Debate (Gainesville, Florida: Phillips Publications, 1955).

23. Kurfees, Instrumental Music in Worship (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1911); Briney, Instrumental Music in Christian Worship (Cincinnati: Standard Publising Co., 1914); Payne, Instrumental Music Is Scriptural (1920); Kurfees, Review of O.E. Payne’s Book on “Psallo” (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate, 1937); BoswellHardeman Discussion (Nashville, Tennessee: Gospel Advocate Co., 1923; reprint 1957); Burgess, Documents on Instrumental Music (1966); ShellyDunning Debate (West Monroe, Louisiana: William C. Johnson, Inc., 1977); Ferguson, A Cappella Music in the Public Worship (Abilene, Texas: Biblical Research Press, 1972); Bales, Instrumental Music and New Testament Worship (Searcy, Arkansas: James D. Bales, 1973).

24.

    1. Explain in your own words the plea for unity in truth; include several passages.
    2. Show that the no-pattern argument reduces itself to an absurdity.
    3. What are some other so-called “broad-minded” ideas and practices which have accompanied the introduction of instrumental music?
    4. How does Thomas Campbell’s famous maxim apply to such things as infant sprinkling and instrumental music?
    5. What three positions emerged in the early years of controversy over the instrument?
    6. Why do you think the defense of the instrument evolved from the aid argument of earlier years to the psallo approach later?
    7. Why did proponents of the instrument evolve an argument claiming the instrument is not really “in” worship when used?
    8. What must we do when “Ephraim is joined to his idols,” and what happened to the influence of brethren who did not learn this lesson?
    9. In what dilemma are proponents of the psallo argument trapped?
    10. Explain why the instrument is or is not a dead issue.

 

Truth Magazine XXIV: 22, pp. 354-359May 29, 1980

Correct “Evolution of Defense” Article

Those who save their copies of Truth Magazine may wish to write in these corrections in the 29 May 1980 “Evolution of Defense for Instrumental Music” article.

(1) The paragraph on pp. 354-355 should read near the end, “This stung Pinkerton because he was the only preacher publically advocating the instrument in Kentucky and Midway was the only church known to be using one.” (2) Near the bottom of column 1 on p. 255, “He noted that its defense was bing made from . . .” (3) The last paragraph of column 2, p. 255, should begin, “The position . . .” rather than, “The defeat . . .” A few lines down, Hayden’s article should be “Expediency and Progress.” (4) With a missing line supplied, the quotation at the top of p. 357, column 2, reads, “To deny, then, that the present use of instrumental music in the church is a part of the worship, is a subterfuge and an afterthought ingeniously got up to obscure the fact that it come under the condemnation pronounced against vain worship and will worship.” (5) The last paragraph in column 1 on p. 358 should begin, “Periodic respite has come in the number and intensity of efforts in this debate at times.”

It is to be understood that such errors will occasionally occur, but the Monroe Country Press of Tomkinsville, Kentucky is to be commended for keeping Truth Magazine on schedule and for consistently good quality in printing.

(Editor’s Note: We always try to keep the copy of material in Truth Magazine as free from errors as possible. The unusual number of errors in brother Halbrook’s article stems from the fact that we received it for publication so late that we had no opportunity to proofread it prior to publication.”

Note appeared in Truth Magazine XXIV: 28, p. 461
July 17, 1980

We Called Him “Paw”

By Royce Chandler

Never have I seen such a funeral. Well before time to begin, all the rooms in the funeral home were filled; many stood in the hallways and on the porch, and others had to be turned away. That, plus the presence of fifty to sixty gospel preachers testified to the great love and respect earned from Christians and non-Christians alike. But its more profound uniqueness lay in the pervading atmosphere of joy . . . of confidence . . . of victory. Any lesser attitude would have dishonored the faith, the work and the character of such a servant as B.G. Hope: a man of God who rose above years of incessant pain, above severe disappointments from thoughtless brethren, and above the heartache of loved ones leaving the Lord, to stand tall in casting an unending shadow of kindness and warmth over all who knew him. It is, I confess, difficult to be purely objective about this preacher, whom his grandchildren knew intimately as “Paw.”

Personal insights and incidents would fill a book: hearts he cheered, underdogs he encouraged, an affinity for young people, his keen sensitivity to one’s feelings and needs, a readiness to give of himself to both friend and enemy, wise and instructive counsel to many young preachers, cooking breakfast for his grandchildren, early preaching appointments on horseback, his friendship with N.B. Hardeman, years as a school principal, the hundreds he baptized and married and buried – and even then, only the hem is touched. But a great part of both his work and his character was summarized in a few events of his final days on earth.

Physical pain was his close companion for many years and certainly so during the last days of his life which he spent in a hospital bed. As she had been for fifty – seven years, Maw was right there with him day and night. When he grew restless from the Buffing and began to toss and turn, Maw would read to him from her Bible, and he soon would be soothed and go to sleep. At such times, Maw said he often “would preach a little, then pray a little, and he’d quote the Scriptures . . . .” And finally, after almost thirty years of physical pain and four months of a bed-ridden struggle against too many odds, our Paw softly sighed his final earthly breath; then, throwing the cloak of eternity round his shoulders, he soared with the angels to heights unfathomed – there, we believe by faith, to be fitted for his golden crown of everlasting glory.

A perfect complement to brother Hope was Lena, his wife – but we know her as “Maw.” Paw’s preaching was often matched by hers, just as personal example occasionally speaks more loudly than words. And in Maw’s conduct following Paw’s death, she did some great preaching! Two incidents, I’ll never forget.

Paw died around noon on a Saturday. Tears flowed and hearts ached as night approached, but Maw gathered those in her house together and said, “Tomorrow is the Lord’s day, and we’ve got to settle down and get to bed early tonight, so that we’ll be able to worship God in the morning.” While in worship, she sang the songs and she prayed and she heard the sermon: what greater commentary on her love for her Lord and for His servant, her husband?

That afternoon was spent receiving all who came to the funeral home to pay their respects. But at five o’clock, Maw instructed us that it was time to go home and to get ready to worship. While custom may have been offended, her family saw and learned. She said, “That’s where B.G. would want me, and that’s where I ought to be, anyway. If he were alive, he would just close the doors to this place and say, `There won’t be any more visiting; let’s go to worship.”‘ As Paw would playfully say, “Ya done good, Maw!”

The funeral soon ended and the crowd of relatives began to return home. But that night Maw took me into her bedroom, opened the closet, and removed one of Paw’s newer suits. Handing it to me, she said, “This is the suit of a great man, who preached an even greater gospel. I want you to wear this suit in your preaching; B.G. would be proud for you to have it.” Then she grasped my shoulders with her strong hands and my heart with her moistened eyes and said, “Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and doctrine.” With that, she hugged me tightly and kissed me.

With a little alternation, I can wear the suit. But will it ever enjoy the dignity, godliness and charm as once graced it? Yes, I and others can wear Paw’s suits, but who can fill his shoes?

Truth Magazine XXIV: 21, pp. 344-345
May 22, 1980