Calvin's Preface to the Psalter
The preface written by Calvin to
his Genevan Psalter.
Calvin's Preface
As it is a thing much
required in Christianity, and one of the most necessary, that every one
of the faithful observe and uphold the communion of the Church in his
neighborhood, frequenting the assemblies which are held both on Sunday
and other days to honor and serve God: so also it is expedient and
reasonable that all should know and hear that which is said and done in
the temple, thus receiving fruit and edification.
UNDERSTANDING IS ESSENTIAL
For our Lord did not institute the order which we
must observe when we convene in his Name, solely to amuse the world by
seeing and looking at it; rather, however, he wished that profit would
come from it to all his people: as Saint Paul witnesseth, commanding
that all which is done in the Church be directed towards the common
edification of all: this the servant would not have commanded had it not
been the intention of the Master. But this cannot be done unless we are
instructed to have intelligence of all that has been ordained for our
profit. Because to say that we are able to have devotion, either at
prayers or ceremonies, without understanding anything of them, is a
great mockery, however much it is commonly said. This is a thing neither
dead nor brutish, this good affection toward God: rather it is a lively
movement, proceeding from the Holy Spirit, when the heart is properly
touched, and the understanding enlightened. And, in fact, if one is able
to be edified by the things which one sees, without knowing that which
they signify, Saint Paul would not forbid so rigorously speaking in an
unknown tongue: and he would not use this reasoning, that there is no
edification, unless there is a doctrine. However, if we really wish to
honor the holy ordinances of our Lord, which we use in the Church, the
primary thing is to know what they contain, what they mean to say, and
to what end they tend, in order that their usage may be useful and
salutary, and consequently right ruled.
ELEMENTS IN WORSHIP
Now there are briefly three things which our Lord
commanded us to observe in our spiritual assemblies: namely, the
preaching of His Word, prayers public and solemn, and the administration
of the sacraments. I abstain from speaking about sermons at this time,
because there is no question about them. Touching the other parts which
remain, we have the express commandment of the Holy Spirit that prayers
should be made in a language commonly known to the people; and the
Apostle has said that people ought not to answer Amen to that prayer
which has been said in a foreign tongue. However, this is because that
prayers are made in the name and person of all, that each should be a
participant. Thus it is a very great impudence on the part of those who
introduced the Latin language into the Church where it is not generally
understood. And there is neither subtlety nor casuistry which can excuse
them, because this practice is perverse and displeasing to God.
Moreover, there is no reason to assume that God finds agreeable to him
that which runs directly counter to his wishes, and, so to speak, in
spite of him. And so nothing affects him more than to go thus against
his forbidding, and to boast of this rebellion as if it were a holy and
very laudable thing.
SACRAMENTS CONJOINED WITH DOCTRINE
As for the Sacraments, if we look thoroughly at their
nature, we will recognize that it is a perverse custom to celebrate them
in such a manner that the people may not merely look upon them, but may
understand the mysteries which are there contained. Because if they are
visible words (as St. Augustine calls them) it is necessary, not only
that there be merely an exterior spectacle, but also that the doctrine
be conjoined with it, to give it intelligence. And also our Lord in
instituting them has well demonstrated this: because he says that these
are testimonies of the alliance which he has made with us, and which he
confirmed by his death. It is necessary, therefore, to give them their
meaning that we might know and understand that which he has said:
otherwise it would be in vain that our Lord opened his mouth to speak,
if he had around him no ears to listen. And so there is no need for a
long dispute about that. And when the matter is examined with common
sense, there is no one who will not confess that it is a pure frumpery
to amuse the people with symbols which have no meaning for them.
Therefore it is easy to see that one profanes the Sacraments of Jesus
Christ by administering them so that the people do not at all understand
the words which are being said about them. And in fact, one may see the
superstitions which arise from such practice. Because it is commonly
considered that the consecration, for instance of the water for Baptism,
or of the bread and wine of Our Lord's Supper, is like a sort of
incantation; that is to say, when one has breathed and pronounced with
the mouth the words, creatures insensible of feeling feel the power,
although men understand nothing. But the true consecration is that which
makes itself through the word of faith, when it is declared and
received, as St. Augustine has said: that which is expressly contained
in the words of Jesus Christ. Because he did not say to the bread that
it is his body: rather he addressed the word to the company of the
faithful, saying, take, eat, and so forth. If we wish therefore to
celebrate truly this Sacrament, it is necessary for us to have the
doctrine, by means of which that which is there signified is declared to
us. I say that that seems very strange to those who are not accustomed
to it, as it happens with all new things: but it is very reasonable if
we are disciples of Jesus Christ to prefer his institutions to our
custom. And that which he instituted from the very beginning ought not
to seem new to us.
If that is still incapable of penetrating into the
understanding of anyone, it is necessary for us to pray to God that it
please him to illuminate the ignorant, to make them understand how much
wiser it is that all the men of the earth should learn not to fix
themselves on their own senses, nor on the single mad wisdom of their
leaders who are blind. However, for the usage of our Church, it has
seemed good to us to make public as a formulary these prayers and
Sacraments in order that each may recognize that which he hears said and
done in the Christian assembly. However, this book will profit not only
the people of this Church, but also all those who desire to know what
form the faithful ought to hold to and follow when they convene in the
name of Christ.
TWO KINDS OF PRAYERS
We have thus gathered in a summary the manner of
celebrating the Sacraments and sanctifying marriage; similarly the
prayers and praises which we use. We shall speak later of the
Sacraments. As for public prayers, there are two kinds. The ones with
the word alone: the others with singing. And this is not something
invented a little time ago. For from the first origin of the Church,
this has been so, as appears from the histories. And even St. Paul
speaks not only of praying by mouth: but also of singing. And in truth
we know by experience that singing has great force and vigor to move and
inflame the hearts of men to invoke and praise God with a more vehement
and ardent zeal. Care must always be taken that the song be neither
light nor frivolous; but that it have weight and majesty (as St.
Augustine says), and also, there is a great difference between music
which one makes to entertain men at table and in their houses, and the
Psalms which are sung in the Church in the presence of God and his
angels. But when anyone wishes to judge correctly of the form which is
here presented, we hope that it will be found holy and pure, seeing that
it is simply directed to the edification of which we have spoken.
EXPRESSION THROUGH SINGING
And yet the practice of singing may extend more
widely; it is even in the homes and in the fields an incentive for us,
as it were, an organ of praise to God, and to lift up our hearts to him,
to console us by meditating upon his virtue, goodness, wisdom and
justice: that which is more necessary than one can say. In the first
place, it is not without cause that the Holy Spirit exhorts us so
carefully throughout the Holy Scriptures to rejoice in God and that all
our joy is there reduced to its true end, because he knows how much we
are inclined to rejoice in vanity. As thus then our nature draws us and
induces us to seek all means of foolish and vicious rejoicing; so, to
the contrary, our Lord, to distract us and withdraw us from the
temptations of the flesh and of the world, presents us all possible
means in order to occupy us in that spiritual joy which he recommends to
us so much.
IMPORTANCE OF MUSIC
Now among the other things which are proper for
recreating man and giving him pleasure, music is either the first, or
one of the principal; and it is necessary for us to think that it is a
gift of God deputed for that use. Moreover, because of this, we ought to
be the more careful not to abuse it, for fear of soiling and
contaminating it, converting it our condemnation, where it was dedicated
to our profit and use. If there were no other consideration than this
alone, it ought indeed to move us to moderate the use of music, to make
it serve all honest things; and that it should no give occasion for our
giving free rein to dissolution, or making ourselves effeminate in
disordered delights, and that it should not become the instrument of
lasciviousness nor of any shamelessness.
POWER OF MUSIC
But still there is more: there is scarcely in the
world anything which is more able to turn or bend this way and that the
morals of men, as Plato prudently considered it. And in fact, we find by
experience that it has a sacred and almost incredible power to move
hearts in one way or another. Therefore we ought to be even more
diligent in regulating it in such a way that it shall be useful to us
and in no way pernicious. For this reason the ancient doctors of the
Church complain frequently of this, that the people of their times were
addicted to dishonest and shameless songs, which not without cause they
referred to and called mortal and Satanic poison for corrupting the
world. Moreover, in speaking now of music, I understand two parts:
namely the letter, or subject and matter; secondly, the song, or the
melody. It is true that every bad word (as St. Paul has said) perverts
good manner, but when the melody is with it, it pierces the heart much
more strongly, and enters into it; in a like manner as through a funnel,
the wine is poured into the vessel; so also the venom and the corruption
is distilled to the depths of the heart by the melody.
WHY THE CHOICE OF THE PSALMS
What is there now to do? It is to have songs not only
honest, but also holy, which will be like spurs to incite us to pray to
and praise God, and to meditate upon his works in order to love, fear,
honor and glorify him. Moreover, that which St. Augustine has said is
true, that no one is able to sing things worthy of God except that which
he has received from him. Therefore, when we have looked thoroughly, and
searched here and there, we shall not find better songs nor more fitting
for the purpose, than the Psalms of David, which the Holy Spirit spoke
and made through him. And moreover, when we sing them, we are certain
that God puts in our mouths these, as if he himself were singing in us
to exalt his glory. Wherefore Chrysostom exhorts, as well as the men,
the women and the little children to accustom themselves to singing
them, in order that this may be a sort of meditation to associate
themselves with the company of the angels.
SINGING WITH UNDERSTANDING REQUIRED
As for the rest, it is necessary to remember that
which St. Paul hath said, the spiritual songs cannot be well sung save
from the heart. But the heart requires the intelligence. And in that
(says St. Augustine) lies the difference between the singing of men and
that of the birds. For a linnet, a nightingale, a parrot may sing well;
but it will be without understanding. But the unique gift of man is to
sing knowing that which he sings. After the intelligence must follow the
heart and the affection, a thing which is unable to be except if we have
the hymn imprinted on our memory, in order never to cease from singing.
For these reasons this present book, even for this cause, besides the
rest which has been said, ought to be singular recommendation to each
one who desires to enjoy himself honestly and according to God, for his
own welfare and the profit of his neighbors: and so there is need of all
of it being much recommended by me: seeing that it carries its value and
its praise. But that the world may be so well advised, that in place of
songs in part vain and frivolous, in part stupid and dull, in part foul
and vile, and in consequence evil and harmful which it has used up to
now, it may accustom itself hereafter to the singing of these divine and
celestial hymns with the good king David. Touching the melody, it has
seemed best that it be moderated in the manner we have adopted to carry
the weight and majesty appropriate to the subject, and even to be proper
for singing in the Church, according to that which has been said.
From Geneva, this 10th of June, 1543 |
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