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Alright, so we'll continue tonight
in our series in Colossians chapter 3, and as we have gone through
this section, We have gotten to verse number 16, which is
really the crux of this chapter. It's really where this chapter
has built up to. So let's read verse 16. It says, 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. So the last time we were together,
we looked at the, actually I think it was two times ago, we looked
at the command in this verse, and the command is to let the
word of Christ dwell in you richly. And the idea there is that we
are to be controlled by the word of God. We're to allow the word
of God to fill us up and then be controlled by it. So we read
it, we think about it, we meditate on it, and then we do what it
says, we put it into practice. And then, there are two consequences
that we see in this passage that come out of a person's life that
is filled up with and controlled by the Word of God. And the last
time we were together, we looked at the first of those consequences,
and that was the teaching and admonishing. And so tonight,
we're going to look at the second of those consequences, and that
is going to be worship, and that is singing Psalms, hymns, and
spiritual songs. And so we're going to look at
that here this evening, and that is the second result or consequence
that comes from a life that is filled up and controlled by the
Word of God. So we see here it says, 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. So we're going to look
at that second half of the verse. Let's pray. Heavenly Father,
thank you for your goodness to us. Thank you for this time that
we can meet together and hear your word and worship you. We ask that you'd help us to
have hearts that are open and ready to learn and willing to
change where needed in Jesus name. Amen. So, the second point
here is worship. So, a result of having a life
that is filled up with the Word of God, being controlled by the
Word of God, is worship. And God wants to be worshipped. He wants to be worshipped. God
wants to receive worship. John chapter four tells us that
God wants to be worshiped. He says, God is a spirit and
they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth. And
the previous verse before that says that the father seeks such
to worship him. He is seeking after true worshipers,
worshipers that worship in spirit and in truth. And so God wants
to be worshiped. And specifically here tonight,
we're gonna see that God wants to be worshiped with singing,
with singing. So we're going to look at the
content here of this worship and of this singing, and we're
going to look into it and see what it is, see what Paul was
referring to here when he gave this passage to the Colossian
people. And so it says here that we are
to sing with grace in our hearts to the Lord, but what is it that
we're to be singing? Well, the content of our singing is found
in the middle of the verse there, and it's psalms and hymns and
spiritual songs. Now, scholars across the board
disagree very heavily as to what the exact meaning of those three
terms is, psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. There's a lot
of disagreement. Traditionally, and when I say traditionally,
we traditionally from now all the way back A long time ago,
traditionally, Psalm referred to the Old Testament Psalms,
the Book of Psalms, what we see in the Old Testament, and then
those were put to music. Hymn was a common term in the
culture. that denoted some kind of poetic
expression of praise to God. So a psalm was from the Psalms,
a hymn was a poetic expression of praise to God for who he is
and for what he has done. So these are songs that directly
praise God for who he is and for what he has done. These would
be songs like Wondrous King All-Glorious, O For a Thousand Tongues to Sing,
all people that on earth do dwell, when morning gilds the skies,
and holy, holy, holy. This is just a sampling of what
traditionally we have called hymns. And then a spiritual song
was a generic term, or it was a broad category of singing that
would include songs of praise, songs of testimony, or songs
of doctrine in an expression in song of what God has done
for us. And the term spiritual here would
designate these songs as specifically spiritual as opposed to something
secular or worldly. So there's some sort of spiritual
aspect to this song. These would be hymns or songs
like Blessed Assurance, It Is Well With My Soul, Amazing Grace,
When I Survey the Wondrous Cross, and Trust and Obey. Another sampling
of songs that we could say are, they're in our hymn book, but
they're, you could say, a song that is a spiritual song that
is a song of testimony, or a song about something that God has
done spiritually for you. So this is traditionally how
these terms have been taken. Now, some people will say, well,
psalms are psalms and hymns are the hymn book and spiritual songs
are like courses, you know, like the song the kids sing in junior
church, you know, Father Abraham or whatever. Those are the spiritual
songs. I don't think that's what it's
talking about here. We're going to get into that here in just a minute. The proper
interpretation of scripture, however, requires that we look
at scripture and we discover not what we mean or how we have
traditionally defined these terms when we use them today, but what
the inspired writer, and here it's Apostle Paul, meant when
he used them. So we're going to look at that
tonight. We're going to look at what was Paul referring to when he
said psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs. The fact is that all three
of these terms are used in the Bible to designate various selections
contained in the Old Testament Book of Psalms. In the Greek version of the Old
Testament, that's the Septuagint. Now I'm going to preface this
to say the Septuagint is not inspired, but it's the Greek
translation of the Old Testament. which in Paul's day, they would
have been using some sort of Greek translation of the Old
Testament. So we don't know exactly what
he was using. You know, it may have turned
into at some point what the Septuagint became or some version of that.
But the Greek translation of the Old Testament in that translation,
67 of the titles within that translation, they translate the
word psalm in the titles of the psalms. So if you go to a psalm,
just flip back to the book of psalms, you don't see this necessarily
as easily in English. But if you just turn to any psalm,
there's a title that every psalm has a title, like psalm Chapter
46 says to the chief musician for the Sons of Korah, a song
upon Alamoth. And each one of the Psalms has
these titles at the beginning of them. In the Septuagint, in
the Greek translation of the Old Testament, 67 of those titles
within the book, the word Psalm is used. However, in six of the
titles, the word hymn is used. The word hymn is used in the
title. rather than the word psalm. And in 35 of the titles, the
word song appears. So we see in the titles of the
psalms in the Greek New Testament, or the Greek translation of the
Old Testament, the word psalm, the word hymn, and the word song
being used for each one of those psalms. Even more interesting
is that 12 of the titles use both the term psalm and song. And two of the titles have the
words psalm and hymn. And Psalm 76 says it is designated
as a psalm, a hymn, and a song. And then at the end of the first
72 psalms in that translation that you read that the hymns
of David, the son of Jesse are ended. And so you say, okay,
what are you trying to get at there? Well, when Paul, said
psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs to the people in Colossae
and in Ephesus. He says the same kind of thing
in Ephesians 5. There's no more reason to think
that when he said that, the people would have understood what he
was saying. when he referred to Psalms, when
he said Psalms, then when he said hymns and songs. For the
simple reason that all three, Psalms, hymns, and songs, are
biblical terms for the Psalms. I hope I didn't confuse you there,
but all three of these terms that we see in Colossians 3,
Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, are all found in the titles
of each one of the Psalms. And so we can get in the habit
of using the terms hymns and songs for compositions that are
not psalms. In other words, people will say
psalms are psalms. Hymns are compositions not inspired
by God, but just written by man. And spiritual songs would be
also songs not necessarily inspired by God, but written by man. Traditionally,
that's been the interpretation and understanding. But here,
Paul and the Christians at Ephesus and Colossae would have used
these terms as the Bible itself uses them, namely as titles for
the various Psalms in the Old Testament Psalter. So I believe
that it's most likely when Paul says this here, he's referring
to the Psalms. Now, there is a doctrine out
there, or a belief out there, that is based solely off of this
passage and this passage alone that says that we must then,
therefore, because that's what Paul was saying, sing only Psalms
in church. Only psalms can be sung for worship. There's a belief out there that
actually enforces that, and it's mostly, I would say, in Protestant
churches, maybe like Presbyterian and so on. There's maybe some
reform that do that. They only will sing out of a
psalter. Now, historically, Baptists have not done that. Historically,
Baptists have sung psalms, and they've sung other songs that
are not directly inspired by God. But when we seek to determine
the meaning of this expression, Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual
Songs, from this verse in Colossians 3.16 and Ephesians 5.19, we cannot
do so without reckoning with the high probability that the
author here would have been familiar with these pre-existing categories
in the Book of Psalms. Now this is not to say that there
is not something to the traditional understanding or application
of these three words, psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, and
how we apply them today. But I believe that when Paul
wrote these and when these churches read it, they weren't thinking
of three different genres or styles of music or styles of
song, but rather three different titles of the psalms in the Old
Testament. So you might say, well, it seems
strange that he would use three separate words for the same concept
or the same idea. Maybe that's unnecessary, that
the Holy Spirit would use a variety of titles to describe one thing,
the Psalms. But the fact is that he does
do it, and he does it with other things. Just as the Holy Spirit
speaks of in Deuteronomy 30, verse 16, his commandments and
his statutes and his judgments. and of his miracles and wonders
and signs in Acts chapter 2 and verse 22, so he speaks of his
psalms and hymns and spiritual songs here in Colossians chapter
3. As commandments and statutes and judgments are all divine
laws in the language of scriptures, and as miracles and wonders and
signs are all different kinds of supernatural works of God
in the language of scripture, psalms, hymns, and spiritual
songs are all referred to in the Psalms, in the titles, as
the inspired composition of the Old Testament Psalter in the
language of Scripture itself. And there is New Testament evidence
that sustains this conclusion. Look at Matthew chapter 26 and
Mark chapter 14. What I'm establishing here is
that Psalms are psalms, psalms are
hymns, and psalms are spiritual songs. Look at Matthew chapter 26 and
verse 30. Matthew says, and when they had
sung a hymn, they went out into the Mount of Olives. And if you
look at Mark 14, 26, it's a parallel passage here. Pastor Stagger
has recently talked about this in one of his messages in the
last couple weeks. This was the traditional understanding
of this hymn that was sung was the Hallel, the Hallel, which
is Psalm chapter 113, through Psalm chapter 118. So on the
night of the Last Supper, the Bible says that Jesus and his
disciples sang a hymn. Bible expositors and theologians
and scholars and historians and commentators all alike, almost
every single one of them agree that that hymn that they sung
was Psalm 113 to Psalm 118. which was a hymn or a psalm that
was always sung at the Passover. So assuming that this is correct,
and by all accounts it seems to be so, that this was the song
that they sang, Matthew and Mark both call this section of the
psalms a hymn. So Psalm 113 to Psalm 118 is
a hymn. Because a psalm is a hymn in
the terminology of the Bible. To the same effect is the Old
Testament quotation in the book of Hebrews, chapter 2 and verse
12, which likely refers to this same occasion. And in that occasion,
the Greek word hymn is quoted from the book of Psalms, chapter
22 and verse 22. And in this quotation from the
Old Testament, Psalm, the word hymn is used to denote the singing
of Psalms. Why? Because the Old Testament
really makes no distinction between the two. A psalm is a hymn. So
I don't believe that you can say with any certainty or prove
based on these verses in Ephesians 5 and Colossians 3 and these
verses alone that Paul was instructing the Ephesians and Colossians
to sing something other than the Psalms. I don't think you
can prove that. First, at the very least, these
passages include a mandate to sing the Psalms. So when we look
at this passage, what we do know for sure is this, we should be
singing the Psalms. And there are a lot of churches
out there that are not singing the Psalms. They're singing hymns,
they're singing songs, But they don't sing the Psalms. Why? Well,
there's various different reasons for that. They're too hard. Maybe
it doesn't fit in with their philosophy of inviting unsafe
people in the church. They won't like the Psalms. But
people are not singing the Psalms. We say, well, we sing the Psalms. So we're all good. We got that
box checked. Let's go back to the first thing
we talked about. God wants to be worshiped how? In spirit and
in truth. If we stand and we sing our Psalter
on Sunday mornings, and we're not doing it in spirit, in sincerity
from the heart, you're not being obedient to this passage. Because
it's not being done in spirit. It's not being done in sincerity.
There's no heart behind it. It's not internal. It's just
an outward, just something outward we're doing. But we're singing
the Psalms, right? We're good. We got that checked off. But
we need to be engaged when we're singing these Psalms. We need
to be thinking. We're singing the words of God. We're singing about God. We're singing to God. And so
we need to make sure that we are engaged and we are thinking
about what we're singing. And we're offering that song
up to God as praise to Him, as worship to Him. It's one of the
elements of our worship, is singing. And so we need to make sure that
we're engaged when we do that. Outward, just like the Pharisees,
just out on the outside, look good on the outside, but on the
inside, it's not sincere, it's not real. So I don't think this
is as certain as just, well, we'll move on from that.
First, at the very least, there's this mandate to sing in spirit-inspired
Old Testament psalms. No matter how narrowly or how
broadly one interprets these terms, that Paul commands believers
to sing psalms is clear. It is as clear as it can be. We are to be singing the psalms.
Whether these psalms are paraphrases, whether these psalms are exact
quotes, whether they're versifications, that's beyond Paul's instruction
here. That's beyond his purview. But
churches wishing to actively apply his instruction must regularly
incorporate Old Testament psalms into their worship. And so if
a church is singing psalms and even only the psalms, then you
are actually singing hymns and spiritual songs as well. So you
could sing psalms and psalms only. We don't do that, but you
could. And you could still be singing
hymns and spiritual songs because psalms are hymns and psalms are
spiritual songs. Second, and conversely, there's
no clear argument that can be made from these passages alone
concerning the warrant for singing songs beyond the Old Testament
Psalms. And the key here is these passages
alone. If you just take your Ephesians
5 and Colossians 3 and read that, I don't see a clear warrant for
singing songs beyond the Old Testament Psalms. Because these
terms likely refer only to the different types of Psalms, based
on what they would have understood when Paul wrote this in that
day. One cannot argue then with certainty that Paul intended
to broaden the church's singing beyond inspired psalms in these
passages. Now, we're going to get into
some other stuff here because I'm sensing some tension right
now. We're going to talk about some
other stuff here in a minute. Other New Testament passages
may imply the allowance of non-inspired songs in Christian worship, but
this cannot be proven, I don't believe proven, by these verses
and these verses alone. Third, and on the other hand,
these passages do not clearly restrict Christian song to Old
Testament songs. So while I don't think you can
prove that these passages teach other than Psalms, they don't
restrict New Testament singing to Psalms and Psalms alone. As
with the previous point, the ambiguity of these terms presents
enough uncertainty to prevent any dogmatic argument for or
against an exclusive psalmody position. Exclusive psalmody
meaning that you have to sing the psalms and psalms only. There's
not enough in these passages alone without looking at the
rest of Scripture to guide us in a position there. So what
about singing out of a hymn book, the blue book? So, the Blue Book
is full of songs, hymns that are uninspired, meaning they
are written by man. What about singing out of that?
Obviously, we do. We do it as a Church, so what
about that? Well, I want to give you a few
reasons why I believe that our Church does. and why I believe
that it's an acceptable thing to do to sing uninspired hymns,
hymns composed by human authors. But Colossians 3.16 alone isn't
that. It is related to these verses,
but I don't think these verses prove the case in and of themselves.
Now, first, and this is really not the strongest argument, but
neither Ephesians nor Colossians prohibit the singing of uninspired
songs. But I do think it's an argument,
but I don't think it's the strongest argument. We can't prove or we
don't prove or affirm a position in Scripture, especially as it
relates to worship, simply because Scripture or a passage doesn't
say that you can't do something. We talk about the regulative
principle of worship, meaning that our worship is to be guided
by what Scripture says, not by what it doesn't say. That principle
requires that we have warrant in the Word of God for every
element of our worship. With that said, though, there's
not a single verse in the Old Testament or in the New Testament
that prohibit uninspired songs in public worship or that you
have to sing only the Psalms in the public worship of the
church. So that's number one. Second,
and this one is really where I think we could really develop
this and spend weeks probably talking about this, but I'm not
going to do that. I'm going to hit the main points. This second
one here is really the one where I think when you look at the
whole of Scripture and you open up Scripture and you look at
music, This is the one I think really nails it home, so it's
the one I'm going to talk about here the rest of this evening.
What do we see in the rest of Scripture? Well, God's mighty
acts of wrath and grace throughout all of Scripture were appropriate
occasions and acceptable occasions before the Psalms and after the
Psalms for the composition of new songs in Scripture that celebrated
and memorialized these great and mighty acts of God. This
is why new songs, other than the Psalms, are found in the
historical books of the Old Testament before the Psalms, the prophetic
books of the Old Testament after the Psalms. These mighty acts
of God in every single generation, going all the way back to the
very beginning, every generation, these mighty acts were put to
music and they were sung by God's people. But they weren't Psalms.
They were different songs. The people of God had the liberty
in the Old Testament and the New Testament to write new songs
of praise to God, and they were not restricted to the Psalms.
So what I want to do here this evening is just take a look at
a few of these songs in the Bible. We don't have the time to read
the entire passages, but I'm going to give you the references,
and if you'd like to read them at a later time, you can do that,
because some of them are actually pretty lengthy. The first is
found in Exodus chapter 15, verses 1 through 18. This is called
the Song of Moses. And in Exodus 15, verses 20 and
21, we see the Song of Miriam. So what were these songs about?
Well, during the Exodus, Pharaoh burned in his heart with regret
because he let the children of Israel go. And what did he do? He decided to go after them,
decided to pursue them. And so one final barrier stood
in his way, and that was the Red Sea, or it stood in the children
of Israel's way, and that was the Red Sea. They couldn't get
across it. And God, through Moses, parted the Red Sea. The children
of Israel crossed on dry ground. Pharaoh's army followed. And
what happened? God brought the water in and
destroyed Pharaoh's army and wiped it out completely. Upon
the deliverance of the children of Israel, immediately upon that
deliverance, Exodus chapter 15 gives a spontaneous burst into
praise to God in song about this wonderful deliverance. This deliverance
song sung by the children of Israel here is a detailed recap
of God's miraculous deed and his power to defeat the enemy.
But as Israel collectively sang about God's strength and his
provision and his mercy and his grace and his justice and his
deliverance, the words of these songs turned into a faith-filled,
prophetic view of God's continued victory on their behalf. So this
is a song of victory. that the children of Israel authored
and sang in praise to God. So that's the first song we see
in the Bible. The last song in the Bible is found in the book
of Revelation. Scripture refers to this final song as the song
of Moses and of the Lamb in Revelation chapter 15 and verse 3. In this passage of scripture,
we see John having just witnessed the saints overcome the power
of the beast through their faithful obedience to Christ. Seven final
tribulation plagues come and are administered by these seven
angels. But the saints stand by a fiery sea of glass and they
sing their song of triumph to the one who has secured their
redemption. A song of redemption. Both the
first song and the last song in Scripture center on what? God's redemptive power to deliver
His people out of slavery, out of bondage, and into the promises
prepared for them. Judges 5, verses 1-31 is another
Old Testament song. It's one of the oldest songs.
recorded in scripture, and it is a song of victory sung by
the prophetess Deborah. After she leads Barak into the
battle against the Canaanite, God empowers their outnumbered
army to overtake the enemy. And then we have the whole story
of Sisera and jail and the nail. the stake driving this tent peg
through the skull of Sisera. And Deborah and Barak, what do
they do? They follow up with a song of
victory, a song to the Lord, doing what? Giving Him full credit
for the victory, giving Him full credit for the win as they recount
these specific details in song in this battle, or the details
of the battle in this song. Now, not all the songs in Scripture
celebrate victory. The first mournful song in Scripture
we see is found in 2 Samuel 1, verses 17-27. This is a song
by David, and he composes a song of lament after he learns that
his best friend Jonathan and King Saul were killed in battle.
And so David writes a song. And what does he do? He commands
that all of Judah learn this song. All of them were commanded
to learn it and to sing it. And you see in the Old Testament,
in the prophets, much of the books of Isaiah and Jeremiah
and Lamentations, Ezekiel, containing these songs lamenting about God's
judgment against Israel and about his judgment coming against the
surrounding nations. And in fact, frequently the prophets
express God's grief over wayward Israel through these kind of
dirges or laments in song. So we see these Old Testament
songs, but we also see new songs written in the New Testament.
In Luke chapter 2, the angels open up the age of the new covenant
with a glorious song, glory to God in the highest and peace
on earth, peace, goodwill toward men. One of the most profound
examples in the New Testament of a song is the Song of Mary. In Luke 1, verses 46-55, the
angel Gabriel visits Mary and he announces that she will conceive
a child. And he tells her that her cousin
Elizabeth will also bear a son in her old age. And we know the
story there, that Mary visits Elizabeth, and when she does,
the baby leaps in the womb for joy upon hearing the greeting
of Mary. And what is Mary's response?
Mary's response is affirmation. Mary's response to Elizabeth's
affirmation is a song of faith, a wonderful song of faith and
confidence in the mighty hand of the Lord. who was going to
perform this wonderful, great act. Matthew chapter 21, verses
8 and 9, Luke 19, verses 37 through 38. Here we see the crowds composing
a new song to celebrate the triumphal entry of Jesus Christ. So we
see the ringing in of the Old Testament. We see the ringing
in of the New Testament, the New Covenant being celebrated,
not with Psalms, but with new compositions of music. But what about at the end of
the New Covenant? Revelation chapter four and verse 11. Revelation
chapter five, verses nine through 14. What do we see here? Do we see the saints in heaven
singing Psalms? No, we don't. We see them singing
a new song to God. And so as we see these angelic
songs beginning the New Testament, we see also these songs, new
songs, closing out the New Testament. So what do we see? In the New
Testament, in the Old Testament, God's people had the freedom
God's people had the freedom to compose new songs to God. For what? For what purpose? To
celebrate the wonderful covenantal acts of God in their own generation. So now what about us today? You
look back in the Old Testament, God did these great and wonderful
things, and immediately they burst into song. A new song. And what do we see in the New
Testament? The same thing. God does a wonderful act, a great
act. Immediately, there's a song of
praise to God. So if the people of the Bible
had the freedom to compose songs when God performed a great act,
don't you think that the greatest act of all time Jesus Christ
coming to this earth and dying for sinners would be an act worthy
of new songs being written about. So I believe there is a basis
for singing uninspired hymns in addition to the Psalms. But
these uninspired hymns must follow after the pattern that we see
in the Psalms. They must be rich in their doctrine.
They must be rich in content. These songs must be about God's
goodness and about his mercy. Yet we also must sing songs about
God's anger and his judgment and his hatred of sin, just like
we see in the Psalms. Our songs must follow after what
we see in the Psalms. And so that's the content. The
content is Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs. What are they? Well, specifically in Colossians,
I think they were Psalms, but when we take a look at the whole
of Scripture, we should be singing Psalms, we should be singing
hymns, songs of praise to God for who He is and what He does,
and other songs of testimony, like we had mentioned earlier.
All of those songs are great things that have spiritual truths,
and we can sing them in church, and we can sing them at home,
we can sing them in the car, we can sing them in the shower,
we can sing them anywhere. and offer up praise to God, and
He will accept that offering of worship. The second characteristic
is singing. So, we have the content, sorry,
the first characteristic is singing. What is singing? Well, singing
simply means to make music with the voice. Make music with the
voice. You may sing well. You may sing poorly. You may
just be right in the middle. No matter where you fall on that
spectrum, God wants to hear you sing. It is to be part of your
worship of Him. Now, if you look at the parallel
passage, which is Ephesians 5.19, that passage adds the phrase
singing and making melody to the type of music. The word melody
here comes from the Greek word solo, and that word means specifically
to pluck on a stringed instrument. So what do we see? We see singing
with our voice. So music with our voice, but
we also see music with instrument in scripture. And there's a whole
bunch of different passages. We can look at Psalms. I mean,
you could spend I don't know how many weeks on music. Pastor
Brandenburg wrote a whole book on it. So there's plenty of passages
you could read about our voice and singing and music and also
instrumental music. But let's expand on this a little
bit and expand on some of the ramifications of our passage
for us. First, notice that there's no
mention about the quality of music. There's no mention here
about the quality of music. Now, while it's beneficial and
it's nice to have those who have better ability performing special
music, performing special presentations, every believer is to be involved
in singing. Whether you have perfect pitch
or you can only carry a tune in a bucket, it doesn't matter.
You are to be involved in this act of worship. And when you
think about in the book of Psalms, we have the phrase, make a joyful
noise unto the Lord. That phrase occurs several times
in Psalms, and so while there were special opportunities for
musicians who had the skills and the talents to offer special,
beautiful sounds as is detailed in temple worship, they had these
opportunities to perform special music. We do it in church. We
have groups that come up in small groups, or we have solos, or
piano solos, or we have an instrumental piece that's done. Well, that
is certainly an acceptable thing, There's also an important place
for every single person to be involved in music. So when we
sing as a congregation, if that's as far as your talent will take
you, that's just fine. Sing. Lift up your voice. Don't
feel bad about being off or being out of tune. It's okay. Make
a joyful noise. Offer up praise to the Lord from
your heart. He will hear it. So one, there's
no mention here about the quality, just that those people who are
controlled by the Word of God are going to be doing this. So
sing. Sing it out. Second, while there
are many new good and wholesome songs that are written in accordance
with this passage, this verse, I'm sure, would probably come
as a shock. to all the CCM, Contemporary
Christian Music people who are all involved in all of this kind
of worldly music that is full of just empty, vain, repetitious
phrases that have no depth whatsoever, no content. Many of these songs
make allusions to something. They allude to something, but
they never make clear exactly what that allusion is to. One
person that I read as I was studying for this refers to these genres
of contemporary music as Jesus is my boyfriend songs. Because
you can't tell if the song is referring to Jesus or if it's
talking about your boyfriend, but they're Christian songs.
A classic example of this, and this is what I read, I don't
know this song, it's from the 70s, but it's a CCM song that
was entitled, You Light Up My Life. And in the song, apparently
it was very popular back then, it contained the phrase, how
could it be wrong when it feels so right? But this is a Christian
song. doesn't apply to Jesus, so the
song's not about him. Yet the great ignorance of the
word of Christ gives cover for the delusion that these are true
worship songs. And really, it's only become
worse since then. Even now, you cannot tell the
difference between, you hear the song and you think, are they
singing about Jesus? You can't even tell anymore.
If you were to examine the words and the lyrics of many of the
popular CCM artists of today, it would be hard to know why
they are even called Christian songs, considering that they
never even, or rarely, use the words Jesus or God in them. They
don't even talk about God. They don't even refer to God. They're songs to please the flesh.
They're not designed to offer praise and worship to the Father. Now let's expand on this a little
bit. Paul's statement here says that a person who is filled up
with and controlled by the word of God, what will that result
in? That will result in worship whose content is psalms and hymns
and spiritual songs. And I don't believe it's just
referring to what is performed in church. Or at a worship service, but
rather that which should fill up our entire life, all of our
days, and our fellowships with one another. So as a Christian,
you need to be careful and you need to be thoughtful about the
music that you make a part of your life. I'm talking about the music that
you listen to. I'm talking about the music that
you play for other people. Do your musical choices help
the word of Christ to dwell in you richly? Do they teach you
about God? Do they teach you about his character?
Do they teach you about his will? Do the songs you listen to teach
you how to live a righteous life? Do these songs warn you against
straying from the narrow way that leads to righteousness?
Or do they lead you from the narrow way? I already know that for the greater
Christian world out there, there's very little discernment when
it comes to music. Professing Christians freely
will listen to all kinds of music that glorifies evil, instead
of music that warns against evil. And these supposed Christian
music songs, these CCM songs that people listen to, they're
filled with all these tofu lyrics. They have no depth. There's no
doctrinal content. And sometimes they even contain
heresy in them. And my fear, church, is that
you can fall victim to these as well. And so I challenge you today
and going forward to become and be discerning in the music that
you listen to. We must be discerning that the
message of the music that we sing in church and the message
of the music that we listen to on our own time outside of church
fits within the parameters of what God has set in Scripture. So a person who's filled up with
God's Word, what's gonna come out of them? What are they gonna
listen to? What are they gonna fill their life up with? It's gonna
be Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs. And so we must listen to and sing music that
honors God. God must be honored in it. Righteousness
must be promoted in the music that we are involved in. Sin
must be admonished in the music that we sing and listen to. And
any music that glorifies sin or glorifies or mocks righteousness
or mocks God or disparages Him, that music must always be unacceptable. So what do we do? We don't listen
to it. We get rid of it. We get it out
of our playlists. We get it off of our ringtones.
We make sure that every aspect, every area of our life is full
of God-honoring, God-pleasing music. The final phrase of this
verse brings in again the use of music in the worship of God.
It says this, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. We
are to sing with grace or thankfulness in our hearts. to the Lord. When the Word of Christ dwells
richly within you, then there will be a proper response of
worship to God for what? Everything that He has done for
us. The word grace here is the word charis. It's one of the
familiar Greek words that you may have heard before. It is
also translated in various locations as thankful, thankfulness. Why?
Because it is our response. It is how we respond to the grace
that we receive from God. And we respond with gratefulness,
with thanksgiving, in our hearts, singing in our hearts to Him.
Now, the idea of singing in your heart, some may say, well, you
just have to have a song in your heart. You don't actually have
to verbalize it. No. Remember how we define singing?
To make music with the mouth, OK? The idea of singing here
is not a reference to emotion or singing silently, though it
is certainly fine to have a song in the heart. but rather it is
a reference to a response of worship that arises from within
our being, from inside of us. This is that sincerity, worshiping
in spirit. The origin of true worship is
always internal. It always starts on the inside.
Many people can sing with their lips. They can make skilled sounds
on instruments. They could play their instrument
really well. They could come up here and sing
a solo and do it really well, but if the heart If the heart
is not included, it is not spirit-filled music, and it's not of worship,
and so it will lack in its ability to truly praise God. So kids,
when you sing your solos and you play your pieces, do it from
the heart. Think about what you're singing.
Think about what you're playing. And parents, can I encourage
you? Don't get comfortable just throwing
your kids up here to do it. If you can sing, sing. If you
can play a solo, play a solo. If you don't think you can do
a solo, do a duet or a trio, okay? But let's all be involved
in this. If you can do it, whatever level
you're at, if it's just congregational and that's all you can do, when
we have congregational singing, sing it out, belt it out. For
what? For the Lord, because he is great. Great is the Lord and greatly
to be praised. A non-Christian can sing a song
about our Lord as many of them do in singing Christmas carols
and all kinds of popular gospel songs, but it's not worship.
It's not true worship. Only a true Christian who's redeemed
and regenerated and reconciled to God through faith in Jesus
Christ, only they can fulfill this command to sing with grace
in their hearts to God in true worship of Him. So let's make
sure as a church that we're doing that. We're singing from the
heart. We're offering up this wonderful praise to God for the
wonderful things that He's done for us. What has God done for
you? Think about all the wonderful spiritual blessings that you
have from God, the grace, the mercy, all of the love, the long-suffering,
the death of Christ on the cross. If you fill in your life up with
Scripture and you're reading about all these things, what's
going to come out? What's going to come bubbling out? It's going
to be teaching and admonishing, okay, and it's going to be music. It's going to be song. So let's
make sure we're doing that and doing it from the heart unto
the Lord. Let's pray. Father, thank you
for your goodness to us. We ask that you be honored and
glorified. I pray that you'd help us to put this into practice
and that you would help us to do the things that we know we
ought to do for your honor and glory in Jesus' name.
Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs
Series Putting on the New Man
Colossians 3:16
| Sermon ID | 31424335523295 |
| Duration | 47:57 |
| Date | |
| Category | Midweek Service |
| Bible Text | Colossians 3:16 |
| Language | English |
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