Saturday 15 September 2012

Christians and Hymns, part 7


One of the reasons why music did not take a central place in early Christian worship is that the central element of their meetings was the sharing of the bread and wine, the Communion or Eucharist, whether in the context of a church service or in the agapé, the 'love feast' in homes. Ignatius was made bishop of Antioch in AD 67, when many of the apostles were still alive and active, and he describes the Christian church as "a Eucharistic community" which realised its true nature when it celebrated Communion.

In turn, this emphasis might be due to the belief among first generation Christians that the sharing of the bread and wine was to be done "until Jesus returns", which they believed would be soon, perhaps in their lifetime. When this did not materialise, a Christian liturgy for worship began to develop, described for us by early apologists like Justin Martyr and Hippolytus. It involved greeting, reading from scripture, responsive (antiphonal) singing, baptisms, a sermon, prayers, the offertory, the communion and a blessing.

The first hymn with actual musical notation which we possess, the "Oxyrhynchus hymn", is from the 3rd century. At the same point, the Apostolic Tradition, attributed to the theologian Hippolytus, shows that the singing of psalms with Alleluia as the refrain was a feature of early Christian agape feasts.

It wasn't until around 375 that antiphonal singing of psalms became popular in the Christian East; in 386, Ambrose of Milan introduced this practice to the West. Around 410, St. Augustine described the responsive singing of a psalm at Mass. Sources are few and inconclusive regarding how Christian chant / song developed, but we do know that by 678, Western (Roman) chant was being taught at York. Distinctive regional traditions of Western plainchant arose during this period, notably in the British Isles (Celtic chant), Spain (Mozarabic), Gaul (Gallican), and Italy (Old Roman and Ambrosian).

We can safely say that by this stage, sung worship was an established part of Christian services, albeit without instruments. For the arrival of the earliest church organs we must wait until the mid-11th century.

6 comments:

  1. I appreciate the honesty of this post. Does this not suggest that we should return to the original plan? Would it not have been the one established by the apostles themselves?
    I don't think the liturgy was "developed" in response to the Lord not returning as quickly as hoped, I am more and more persuaded that the liturgy you describe was instituted by the apostles, and refined and edited over the years. All the elements you mentioned are described in the NT.

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  2. Nice to pick up on your blog this morning. Suzy and I are celebrating this moning, our 40th aniversary of the day I asked her to marry me in Mexico City. It is also Mexico's independace day frm Spain.
    Your old friend,
    Steve Johnson
    Phoenix, Arizona

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  3. Steve, I was only thinking of you this week! 40 years is an amazing achievement, all through God's grace. Hope you like the blog! It has a small but loyal band of followers. Love to you both. Trevor

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    1. Pass on our greetings and love to Angela. Steve & suzy

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  4. Such a very nice and informative post you have. Thanks for sharing this.
    BTW Im a choir member :)

    the family karen zerby

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  5. Tinita, thanks for this. Let's pretend you're not in the choir for a moment and ask: how would you feel about a church service with singing but without instruments? A capella, perhaps?

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