What Is A Cappella Music?

Wayne Jackson
Wayne Jackson
What Is A Cappella Music?

What is meant when it is stated that churches of Christ use only a cappella music?

The phrase a cappella derives from a Latin expression that, via Italian, means “in the style of the church” or “as is done in the church.” It reflects the historical reality that instrumental music in Christian worship was not practiced for many centuries, and that its rather late introduction constitutes an innovation without New Testament authority.

Professor Everett Ferguson, one of the premier historians of church history, has noted that the nonuse of the instrument in worship was the “majority tradition of Christian history” until “comparatively recent times” (83).

Between 1708 and 22, Joseph Bingham, an Anglican cleric, produced his magnificent ten-volume work, The Antiquities of the Christian Church, a prodigious effort that took twenty years to compose. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church describes this work as not superseded (Cross, 173). Regarding the use of instrumental music in church worship, the celebrated English scholar wrote:

Music in churches is as ancient as the apostles, but instrumental music not so: for it is now generally agreed by learned men, that the use of organs came into the church since the time of Thomas Aquinas, anno 1250. For he in his Sums has these words, “Our church does not use musical instruments, as harps and psalteries, to praise God withal, that she may not seem to judaize” (I.315).

He then catalogs considerable testimony from ancient writers of the post-apostolic age to support the point. There is little controversy regarding this historical matter.

In their massive twelve-volume Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature (1876), John McClintock and James Strong (denominational scholars) noted:

The Greeks as well as the Jews were wont to use instruments as accompaniments in their sacred songs. The converts to Christianity accordingly must have been familiar with this mode of singing; yet it is generally believed that the primitive Christians failed to adopt the use of instrumental music in their religious worship.

These scholars further noted that: “The general introduction of instrumental music can certainly not be assigned to a date earlier than the 5th and 6th centuries [A.D.]” (VI.759).

They also observed that the early reformers (e.g., Martin Luther, Calvin, and Knox) protested against the use of instruments. The same could be said of Clarke (Methodist) and Spurgeon (Baptist). The men were the leaders of their respective movements.

In my library, I have a volume titled Instrumental Music in Public Worship. It was written by John L. Girardeau, a professor at Columbia Theological Seminary, a Presbyterian institution. The book was first published in 1888. This volume of 208 pages was initially delivered as a series of lectures requested by some seminary students. A dear lady who heard one of Girardeau’s lectures offered to have them published at her expense so that the evidence might stand as a “testimony to the truth.”

Girardeau argued:

A divine warrant is necessary for every element of doctrine, government and worship in the church; that is, whatsoever in these spheres is not commanded in the Scriptures, either expressly or by good and necessary consequence from their statements is forbidden (9; emp. original).

The professor contended that the evidence shows that instrumental music was not commonly used in churches “until the thirteenth century” (156).

In 1965, James W. McKinnon prepared a dissertation at Columbia University on “The Church Fathers and Musical Instruments.” In this exhaustive document, McKinnon contended that “early Christian music was vocal” and there was a “patristic polemic against instruments” (1-2; quoted in Bales, 351-352).

The truth is, there is no authority in the New Testament for the use of instrumental music in Christian worship — neither command, precedent, nor necessary implication. This is so elementary that it is like rehearsing one’s ABCs all over again.

In view of this, it is both shocking and disheartening that so many who profess allegiance to Jesus Christ and his New Testament revelation have incorporated mechanical instruments into their worship. As Christ once said of his contemporaries:

These people honor me with their lips; but their heart is far from me. In vain do they worship me, teaching as their doctrines the precepts of men (Matthew 15:8-9).

Scripture References

1 Thessalonians 5; Matthew 15:8-9

Sources

Bales, James D. 1973. _Instrumental Music and New Testament Worship_. Searcy, AR: Resource Publications.
Bingham, Joseph. 1865. _The Antiquities of the Christian Church_. London: Henry Bohn.
Cross, Frank, Ed. 1958. _The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church_. London: Oxford University Press.
Ferguson, Everett. 1972. _A Cappella Music in the Public Worship of the Church_. Abilene, TX: Biblical Research Press.
Girardeau, John L. 1983. _Instrumental Music in the Public Worship of the Church_. Havertown, PA: New Covenant Publication Society.
McClintock, John & Strong, James. 1969. _Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature_. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker.