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Peter J. Leithart

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Songs of the Church Militant

Christian worship is inherently political. As Bernd Wannenwetsch points out, this isn’t because worship is a tool for ginning up enthusiasm for a candidate or for stirring the fires of patriotism. On the contrary, “It is just because Christian worship is not a means to an end that it is political.” Worship is political because it “opens out into” the kingdom of God, and because in her worship the Church “anticipates the city of God” with its eternal liturgical assembly.

Peter J. LeithartThough the notion of “political worship” has become axiomatic in recent theology, it is rarely applied to church music. Tastes in liturgical music are often based on nostalgia on the one hand, and a desire for relevance on the other. When musical choices are made more deliberately, the standards are typically aesthetic. We want to offer our best, and our praise should be suitable to the God we worship: What music is fitting to the Church’s entry into his presence?

Worship music should of course be beautiful and appropriate to the occasion, but if worship is political, worship music should be political too.

No scene in the Bible makes this more obvious than John’s vision in Revelation 4-5. When the Spirit catches John to heaven, he enters a worship service already underway. At the center is an enthroned Someone, surrounded by four cherubim and twenty-four white-clad ancient ones on thrones of their own. Creatures and elders are engaged in continuous rounds of praise—the Sanctus, prostrations, acclamations to the King on the throne, again and again.

But something is missing. Beside the Enthroned One is a sealed scroll, and initially no one anywhere is found worthy to open its seals. Then the Lamb appears and takes the scroll, and the eternal worship of heaven rises to a pitch of ecstatic intensity. Initially, John sees no lyres. The cherubim and ancient ones are shouting praise, but not singing. But when the Lamb ascends the throne, the creatures and elders have harps to accompany their new song.

This escalation of heavenly worship mimics a sequence in the Old Testament, and that gives us a clue to the significance of John’s vision. When Moses sets up the tabernacle in the wilderness, he is given no instructions about instruments or choirs. Tabernacle worship may have included song, but we are not told so. As David prepares for Solomon’s temple, however, he creates new orders of Levites to sing and to play harps, lyres, and cymbals, to raise songs of joy before the throne of God.

In both the Old Testament and Revelation, the shift from spoken worship to sung worship occurs because of the enthronement of a king. At the beginning of the Davidic dynasty, music and song are added to the smoke of the sacrifices. When the Lamb who is the Lion of Judah takes his throne, the heavenly hosts take up lyres and begin to sing.

Scholars have discovered analogies between the heavenly worship of Revelation and the ceremonial of the Roman imperial court. Some condemn John for making an obsequious accommodation to worldly power, but the point is the opposite: The acclamations and praise of the Lamb show that the Lion-Lamb, not Caesar, wears the crown. Worship music is coronation music, praise to a King now enthroned.

Judged by Revelation’s political liturgy, hymn writers have served the Church poorly in recent centuries. Too often, hymns reflect the privatized role to which our world confines religion. They give little place to themes of battle, judgment, oppression, and rule. For every “For All the Saints,” “The Son of God Goes Forth to War,” and “A Mighty Fortress,” there are a dozen hymns about intimate encounters with Jesus in the warmth of his Spirit. To judge by hymnody, the Church Militant has largely been replaced by the Church Quiescent.

The Psalms, on the other hand, provide a standard for the proper political song of the Church Militant. Psalms are sometimes embarrassingly intimate, but you don’t go very far in the Psalter before encountering nations in turmoil and the enthronement of God’s son (2). Psalm after psalm calls on the Lord to bring justice to the nations (7, 9, 50, 96, 98, 135), and psalm after psalm identifies him as the world’s true king (10, 22, 24, 29, 47, 84, 95, 98, 145). Psalm 72 portrays an ideal king, and Psalm 82 and 94 issue bone-chilling warnings to oppressors. But the Psalms, with their exultant praise of God’s kingship, their hard-edged realism, their acknowledgment of conflict, and their passion for justice, have disappeared from some churches and are expurgated in others.

The songs of Revelation, like the Psalms, exalt the power, might, and glory of the enthroned Lamb and his Father. They are acclamations to “him who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb,” sung prayers that “blessing and honor and glory and dominion” would be his forever. A church that sings such praise is inoculated against hope in princes. A church singing such praise is prepared to be a kingdom because a church that sings such praise is genuinely and properly the Church Militant.

Peter J. Leithart is on the pastoral staff of Trinity Reformed Church in Moscow, Idaho, and Senior Fellow of Theology and Literature at New St. Andrews College. His most recent book is Between Babel and Beast: America and Empires in Biblical Perspectives (Wipf & Stock).

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Comments:

7.20.2012 | 3:22am
Rick says:
There is something for every taste in the Bible, and you have chosen to focus on the most militant. The touching descriptions of intimacy with God in the Psalms you find to be "embarrassing." It is true, of course, that the books of Deuteronomy and Joshua provide us with blood-curdling descriptions of the total extermination of Caananite cities by the Israelites, right down to the babies. Joshua, we are told, "left no survivors," and "destroyed all who breathed" in his military campaigns. All this was certainly political, as was the phenomenon of Liberation Theology in Latin America a few years back, with its focus on justice for the poor. Today, the most highly politicized example of modern religion we can find is the radical Salafist suicide bomber.

On the other hand, we might take a second look at the Sermon on the Mount and Jesus's admonition to "pay no attention to wars and rumors of wars..."
7.20.2012 | 6:32am
edmond says:
Please explain when does worship become political? Or what do you exactly mean by political? You might have been clearer if you meant anti-government? But then political worship presumes too much in my humble opinion. Worship in all its facets means to lift God high above all else and nothing more, no side issues at all. All your heart, mind and strength, so I don't see there is any room left for political filters. After all God truly and only wants worship in spirit and in truth.
7.20.2012 | 8:02am
Dan C says:
One doesn't read pray Liturgy of the Hours for many cycles before one realizes that the psalter speaksfor the poor and denounces the rich and the powerful.

This politics is oft ignored by the right and denounced as Communist.

The liberation theology which arose from this understanding is closer to Catholicism, far closer, than the liberal economics that is supported by Acton Institute and its extremely wealthy supporters.

Worship is political. From the Canticle for Zacchariah to the Magnificat, Catholic worship in the Liturgy of the Hours announces a Kingdom in which the poor are blessed. Current religious right economic attachments deviate far away from this and are a worse example than left wing economic matters. The religious right may desire aggressive Church militant, but at an altar of economic libertinism, professing a base and perverse attachment to ensuring that "the poor will always be with you."
7.20.2012 | 10:29am
Craig Payne says:
Because worship is not partisan to earthly politics, it is political? Or because it transcends the political world, it is political?

I understand the point being made, but the terminology seems a bit confusing.
7.20.2012 | 12:42pm
Did we read the same article? The subject was worship music focusing on the "enthroned Lamb and his Father" and the politic of the city of God, which inoculates the worshipping church "against hope in princes".

A great article Mr. Leithart.
7.20.2012 | 12:49pm
Kameron E says:
Edmond and Craig,

The liturgy of the church is political because it proclaims another is King of kings (and its not Caesar). It declares that all rulers and judges must submit to this King. The very allegiance in worship to another King and another City is itself political. The church is militant because she is doing battle with enemies of the Lord in worship (Or the Lord is doing battle for her). God’s people have always done battle in worship. The people cry out for God to deliver them from their oppressors and to bring justice. The church is also doing battle on behalf of others. She pleads with God to crush the enemies who are persecuting and oppressing His people.
7.20.2012 | 2:23pm
Every time we declare, "Jesus is Lord", we are making a political statement are we not? The scariest statement to those who live without Christ ought to be this very one. Evidence for this is the dread which "New" and other atheists have of the american branches of the church taking over the country and making it a theocracy. Good grief! We can't even get Roe vs. Wade repealed and they're worried over us taking over somehow? At least they get the fact that if God's in control, and they are not, they have a reckoning coming.
7.21.2012 | 2:47am
Frank Pray says:
Mr. Leithart uses terms with unduly confined application. "Worship" he implies is found in a building, and "Church" he implies are people singing songs or engaged in liturgy in such buildings. Worse, the "kingdom of God" he implies is somewhere "out there" and worship "opens out into" that Kingdom.

Worship is anything offered as praise, honor, love, and sacrifice to God. Church is a community of believers, living and physically deceased, but spiritually alive, across the generations. The Kingdom of God is now, eternal, and living. As Jesus declared: "the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand."

Frankly, the matter of song used in worship is to me a diversion or tangent to the much more interesting question of how we are living eternal lives now in the Kingdom of God. But, I agree with Mr. Leithart that "the Church" has developed a hymnody that is detached from the public sphere. Political questions too are part of the Kingdom, and just as we worship within a building on Sundays, we also need to live lives of worship daily within the public square.
7.21.2012 | 9:53am
Rory Cooney says:
Not new stuff at all, but pretty well presented in brief. The responses show the difficulty - people hear "political" and get confused. Jesus's point is - there are two entities claiming to be God - Caesar and Abba. The entire gospel is the peaceful fight for the hearts of both the captives and the loyal subjects of Caesar to repent (turn away from one) and believe the gospel (good news of a military victory) of God. So the issue is that it's a battle, yes, but one without weapons, violence, or manipulation. I don't think that paramilitary imagery and warlike hymns is going to help much. And the solidarity-comfort music-and-words are maybe more to the point. It's hard fighting a war without weapons, and we need to be reassured we're doing it together, and that Christ is with us.
7.21.2012 | 12:45pm
ferd says:
When our world philosophy/politics increasingly exclude reference to God in a "progressive" attempt to help the anawim (the poor, the widow, the orphan, the stranger in your land) through evil means...ie...covetousness of the "rich", then the mere existence of the public Christian--to say nothing of public worship--is backwards at best and heartless at worst.
7.21.2012 | 7:13pm
Fred says:
I believe those that wre making out the poor as Progressives define that term,are politicizing everything. The poor are those in spirit and those that are abused by the powerful. This could mean the poor are the middle class who are exploited by the powerful, who while claiming to be for the poor are in fact in raping the finances of the richer for their own gain.

Greed is an attitude of the heart as is its worser evil twin, envy, which is running rampant in America today spurred on and jutified by hate---hate of those that have more.

So some of you may need to look at the supposed high ground you think you have. But this whole thing misses the point of the article---one that I agree with.
7.21.2012 | 7:17pm
Fred says:
Rory, the Scriptures are chock full of "para- military imagery. We do not want to imply that this kind of imagery in Scripture is not useful.
7.21.2012 | 9:49pm
Religion became political the moment a political leader first tried to make us give up our faith. Because the same thing has been going on somewhere in the world (and today almost everywhere in the world) ever since, for two millennia now, of course we must connect our faith with politics. Politics have always connected itself to our faith, usually adversarially. In addition, however, we must remember that we are warring not against flesh and blood but against spiritual enemies in the spiritual realms, and that is the true battle we face every day.
Since becoming a Christian in mid-adulthood, I have always felt uplifted, joyous and strengthened when I sing of victory. One of my favorite hymns is "Christ Arose." When I first sang it my heart soared: Up from the grave He arose, with a mighty triumph o'er His foes; He arose a victor from the dark domain and He lives forever with His saints to reign." What could anyone see against a little encouragement?
7.22.2012 | 6:29pm
Leithard does not use the adjective in the limiting sense of party politics or ideological agendas: "political" is that which relates to the polis or city, a more comprehensive notion than the struggle to rule the modern state. He writes, "Worship is political because it 'opens out into' the kingdom of God, and because in her worship the Church 'anticipates the city of God [polis theou] with its eternal liturgical assembly."

Just two days ago we had the feast of St. Apollonaire whose basilicas (the houses of the King) demonstrate so beautifully in stone and mosaics how in the liturgy we join with the heavenly warriors (God's angels), the saints, and the martyrs in giving glory to the true King of Kings: the picture at http://ex-corde-ecclesiae.blogspot.com/2007/11/in-mass-we-celebrate-with-all-warriors.html

The Council fathers drew on this to describe the mass: "8. In the earthly Liturgy we take part in a foretaste of that Heavenly Liturgy which is celebrated in the holy city of Jerusalem toward which we journey as pilgrims, where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God, a Minister of the Holies and of the true Tabernacle [Cf. Apoc.[Rev.] 21:2; Col. 3:1; Heb. 8:2.]; we sing a hymn to the Lord's glory with all the warriors of the heavenly army; venerating the memory of the saints, we hope for some part and fellowship with them; we eagerly await the Savior, Our Lord Jesus Christ, until He, our Life, shall appear and we too will appear with Him in glory [Cf. Phil. 3:20; Col. 3:4.]." Sacrosanctum Concilium, [The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy.]

The issue of who is the true King of Kings has important implications for politics in the more limited sense. Father Neuhaus often cited James Madison's warning that the only true guarantee of our liberty is the acceptance that there is an Authority greater than the state. As Peter Leithart puts it with the lightness of a deft deer: "The acclamations and praise of the Lamb show that the Lion-Lamb, not Caesar, wears the crown." That is worth chanting about in martial hymns.
7.23.2012 | 12:07am
edmond says:
Thanks for you inputs on the "politicalness" of worship, but none of this is found in the magisterium. So what is the origin of the concept of political worship. From which vine does it grow? I see no need to force-fit the concept of true worship into a political statement.
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